Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 2,2 | were occasions when Popes fell into heresy, on the whole ~
2 I, 2,3 | the In-~carnation. They fell, as so many puritans have
3 I, 2,4 | particular the Byzantines often fell into the error ~of identifying
4 I, 2,4 | people. Certainly Byzantium fell far short of the high ideal
5 I, 3,3 | Later the same day the city fell to the ~Turks, and the most
6 I, 4,3 | Sergius, the Byzantine Empire fell to the Turks. The new ~Russia
7 I, 5,1 | political, ~the bishops fell a prey to ambition and financial
8 I, 5,2 | Protestant diplomats, Cyril also fell under Protestant influence
9 I, 6,1 | della Mirandola; he also fell under the influence of Savonarola,
10 I, 6,2 | divided against itself and fell a victim to outside ene-~
11 I, 6,3 | the contemporary west, and fell back once more upon the ~
12 II, 0,11| Living~Church:’ the one party fell into an extreme conservatism
13 II, 1,2 | language of the Church, Adam fell, and~his fall — his ‘original
14 II, 1,2 | of man’s state before he fell, is also less severe than
15 II, 1,2 | consequences of the fall. Adam fell, not from a great height
16 II, 1,2 | the fault into which it fell, and so came to lack freedom’~(
17 II, 1,3 | 1265-1308).~But because man fell, the Incarnation is not
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