Chapter, Paragraph
1 1 | criticism of Christianity by the pagan savants and philosophers
2 1 | apologists from among former pagan philosophers and savants
3 1 | Christian idea and the age old pagan philosophy, an urgent need
4 1 | to and could respond to pagan philosophical systems. In
5 1 | science, nor an enmity towards pagan philosophers. St. John Chrysostom
6 1 | Chrysostom was a pupil of the pagan scholar Livanius, a teacher
7 1 | their higher education in pagan Athens.~All Greek theology
8 5 | attached great value even to pagan philosophy. In the words
9 10 | In a general survey of pagan natural religions, we come
10 10 | view of this, the ancient pagan religions portray more than
11 10 | Fathers reckoned that the pagan world was not excluded by
12 10 | supernatural Revelation, the pagan world was not deprived of
13 10 | natural religious development. Pagan religion could have been
14 10 | religious point of view, pagan religions will forever remain
15 13 | Not one of the ancient pagan religions ever rose to a
16 16 | not one of the systems of pagan morality contains a universal
17 16,2 | as we see, a blow to the pagan, polytheistic, mythological
18 20 | tendency common to all the pagan world. The universal expectation
19 20 | sacrifices. Among all the pagan peoples, through the sensual
20 20 | divinations of the ancient pagan world concerning the future
21 24 | creation of God. In contrast to pagan culture which deifies the
22 24 | wife. In contrast to the pagan neglect of children, Christianity
23 App,1| Much of what we know of the pagan religions and the intertestamental
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