Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,1| block of stone and on that a door, seeing in this a semblance
2 2,1| rock of salvation and the door through which whosoever
3 2,5| sanctuary by a wall with a door, or only by columns or a
4 2,7| almost all the time. The door on the left of the Royal
5 2,7| is called the “northern door,” while that on the right
6 2,7| southern” or “deacons’ door.” On these two doors there
7 2,7| the church, is an entrance door leading into the vestibule,
8 2,7| and called the “beautiful door,” because it usually is
9 2,7| also simply the “church door,” because it leads into
10 5,5| comes out through the north door, preceded by the deacon
11 5,5| entrance through the north door instead of the Royal Gates
12 7,1| out, through the northern door, the Gospel which lies on
13 7,1| come out of the northern door, and, stopping before the
14 8,1| race since it opened the door to salvation, is celebrated
15 8,1| coming through the northern door, in token that Christ, although
16 8,2| watch before my mouth, and a door of enclosure round about
17 8,2| enters through the northern door, bearing on his head the
18 9,1| mother, and not before the door of a church, but at home,
19 9,1| the Cross before the main door, says: “The servant (or
20 9,3| Bema, above the western door, and the northern and southern
21 9,3| lectern before the western door of the church, or before
22 9,3| temporarily in the place of that door.~ ~Standing before the closed
23 9,3| Standing before the closed door of the church, the bishop
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