Chapter, Paragraph
1 1 | century, the Christians of the East had neither a fear of intellect,
2 1 | not accepted either in the East or in the West.~The intellect
3 1 | comparison to the Hellenized East, and the weakness of its
4 1 | learned from the Christian East, as once stern Rome learned
5 1 | significance was possessed in the East by many works of St. Athanasius
6 1 | activity of the Christian East flourished during the era
7 10 | characteristic of the ancient East. Absent, for the most part,
8 10,6 | Mediterranean world and the Middle East, with concentrations in
9 15,2 | walking ape-man, lived in east Africa and the Middle East
10 15,2 | east Africa and the Middle East some 4 to 5 million years
11 15,2 | age Europe to the Middle East. Modern man (Homo Sapiens
12 16,1 | number of people who left east Africa about 50,000 years
13 16,1 | some of Europe and the Near East.~ Dr. Richards and his colleagues
14 16,1 | both in Europe and the Near East, from western Iran through
15 16,1 | Egypt, because the Near East is the probable source of
16 16,1 | sub-branch was older in the Near East than Europe, it indicated
17 16,1 | from Europe to the Near East.~ The geneticists working
18 19 | around Mesopotamia, the Near East, Asia Minor and South of
19 19,3 | from the vicinity north and east of Mount Ararat all the
20 22 | expectation reigned in the East of a great change in the
21 22 | coming of the Magi from the East to salute the new-born Savior
22 App,1| powerful force in the Middle East from 1750 B.C. until 1200
23 App,1| a great impact on Middle East archaeological study. Because
24 App,1| practices of the ancient Middle East.~ ~Sodom and Gomorrah~ The
25 App,1| for the Dead Sea. On the east side six wadies, or river
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