Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | and Ig-~natius ended their lives as martyrs. The persecutions,
2 I, 4,3 | exist many parallels in the lives of Theodosius and Sergius,
3 I, 6,2 | but by readings from the Lives of the Saints, as at ~meals
4 I, 6,3 | When one reflects on the lives of Tikhon and Seraphim,
5 I, 7,4 | Lebanon). The Patriarch, who lives in Damascus, has been an ~
6 I, 7,5 | most notable event in their lives: after a walk of perhaps
7 I, 7,9 | synod of ten bishops (one ~lives in Canada, and another in
8 II, 0,11| kept by the Church — it lives in the~Church, it is the
9 II, 0,12| Church, but as something that lives and is understood within
10 II, 1,1 | intends him to be. Our private lives, our personal relations,~
11 II, 1,5 | the divine likeness if he lives a common life~such as the
12 II, 1,5 | such as the Blessed Trinity lives: as the three persons of
13 II, 2,1 | visible, or upon~earth, lives in, complete communion and
14 II, 2,1 | the Age to Come, and it lives in both Ages at once.~Orthodoxy,
15 II, 2,4 | death and~judgement, and lives already in the Age to Come.
16 II, 6,3 | Counter-Reformation, but lives still in that older Tradition
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