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patrum 1
pattern 2
patterns 3
paul 141
paul-and 2
paula 1
pauli 1
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144 history
143 their
142 letter
141 paul
140 there
139 new
139 rome
Edgar J. Goodspeed
History of early christian literature

IntraText - Concordances

paul

    Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,2 | tradition was evidently known to Paul, who quoted it as something 2 1,3 | Gospels.~With the letters of Paul and the earliest gospels 3 1,6 | them — of the letters of Paul and of the Four Gospels — 4 1,6 | achieved the insight of Paul, the first of its authors, 5 2,1 | Paul's Letters.~The earliest 6 2,1 | constantly wrote. In the hands of Paul this simplest form of composition 7 2,2 | the collected letters of Paul is also clear; he is the 8 2,2 | Christian writer to quote one of Paul's letters expressly: “Take 9 2,2 | the letter of the blessed Paul, the apostle; what did he 10 2,2 | the collected letters of Paul on the part of Clement suggests 11 2,2 | of James] and those of Paul in the Harclean Syriac New 12 2,5 | and Greece, already were. Paul's letters to the Churches 13 2,7 | the blessed and glorious Paul, who...when he was absent 14 2,7 | Zosimus and Rufus... but in Paul himself and in the other 15 2,7 | suggesting that Ignatius, like Paul, is a martyr and so deserves 16 2,7 | the collected letters of Paul had possessed for the churches; 17 2,7 | collection of the martyred Paul in mind in creating this 18 2,7 | remark to the Ephesians that Paul “in every letter makes mention 19 2,7 | Ephesus as the place where Paul's letters had been collected 20 2,9 | Cephas, so often mentioned in Paul, really means Peter. Nathanael 21 2,9 | work, and martyrdom of Paul and describes the signs 22 2,13| in the names of Peter and Paul; Ephesus rejoiced in the 23 3 | shows much less influence of Paul and the early gospels, and 24 3 | 13) as did two letters of Paul, II Thessalonians (chap. 25 3 | also used in the Acts of Paul, especially in III Corinthians ( 26 3 | the Shepherd, the Acts of Paul, and the Revelation of Peter. 27 3 | called the Apocalypse of Paul. According to this work, 28 3 | According to this work, Paul met, on the way to Jericho, 29 3 | of James, follow that of Paul. In the first one, the Lord 30 4,8 | may have been suggested by Paul's use of the word in the 31 4,9 | Jerusalem, who had not accepted Paul's views and letters but 32 5,2 | The Acts of Paul.~ The sequel most obviously 33 5,2 | account of what became of Paul. Its narrative leaves him 34 5,2 | Pastoral Letters exaggerated Paul's views on the place of 35 5,2 | So he wrote the Acts of Paul.~ Paul had indeed said in 36 5,2 | wrote the Acts of Paul.~ Paul had indeed said in I Corinthians 37 5,2 | the province.~ The Acts of Paul described one of Paul's 38 5,2 | of Paul described one of Paul's women converts, Thecla, 39 5,2 | administering baptism unrebuked. Paul himself bids her go and 40 5,2 | the writer of the Acts of Paul was found out and made to 41 5,2 | done it out of love for Paul and was forthwith deprived 42 5,2 | was known of the Acts of Paul, and we did not even know 43 5,2 | Daniel iii. 29), “that when Paul was condemned to death, 44 5,2 | included not only the story of Paul and Thecla, but the two 45 5,2 | letters exchanged between Paul and the Corinthians which 46 5,3 | long known as the “Acts of Paul and Thecla,” the story of 47 5,3 | the story of the Acts of Paul ran somewhat as follows:~ 48 5,3 | somewhat as follows:~ 1. Paul is at Pisidian Antioch. 49 5,3 | populace becomes incensed and Paul is driven from the town.~ 50 5,3 | driven from the town.~ 2. Paul reaches Iconium. This is 51 5,3 | survived as the “Acts of Paul and Thecla.” It always seemed 52 5,3 | begin very abruptly: “As Paul was going up to Iconium 53 5,3 | who becomes interested in Paul's preaching, breaks off 54 5,3 | teach others her new faith. Paul approves her doing this, 55 5,3 | Thecla subsequently visits Paul at Myra and later retires 56 5,3 | modern forms of the life of Paul.~ 3. At Myra, where Thecla 57 5,3 | Myra, where Thecla had left Paul, he cures a man of dropsy 58 5,3 | repents and is cured.~ 4. Paul proceeds by way of Perga 59 5,3 | incenses the people, who hurry Paul and his companions to the 60 5,3 | happens there is lost.~ 5. Paul reappears at Tyre, where 61 5,3 | a cliff and killed, but Paul restores her to life and 62 5,3 | stichometry for the Acts of Paul, so that much is certainly 63 5,3 | from them). At Ephesus, Paul is thrown into prison. Two 64 5,3 | Hippolytus). The lion speaks to Paul, and Paul asks if this is 65 5,3 | lion speaks to Paul, and Paul asks if this is not the 66 5,3 | relate the later encounter of Paul and the lion in the stadium, 67 5,3 | converted. The lion escapes, and Paul is released and proceeds 68 5,3 | while in prison there that Paul received a short letter 69 5,3 | proceeds with an account of Paul's stay in Corinth. The brethren 70 5,3 | on the water, appears to Paul, urges him on to Rome, and 71 5,3 | its way like a star. As Paul lands, Jesus again appears 72 5,3 | to be crucified again.” Paul is welcomed by the brethren 73 5,3 | manuscript the title, The Acts of Paul, marks the end of the book.~ 74 5,3 | three-fourths of the Acts of Paul. Jerome says, “The travels 75 5,3 | Jerome says, “The travels of Paul and Thecla, and the whole 76 5,3 | says of God's power, “For Paul, when he preached, he made 77 5,3 | Epistle of Pelagia, another of Paul's reputed converts, Paul 78 5,3 | Paul's reputed converts, Paul meets a huge lion on a mountain. 79 5,3 | lion asks to be baptized. Paul complies. Later when a woman 80 5,3 | and leaves her husband, Paul is arrested and a huge lion 81 5,3 | baptized lion, and he and Paul prey and converse. They 82 5,3 | prey and converse. They let Paul go “with his lion,” but 83 5,3 | episodes are from the Acts of Paul; here are Jerome's baptized 84 5,3 | elder who wrote the Acts of Paul was acquainted with the 85 5,3 | century. So the Acts of Paul was probably written between 86 5,3 | under the titleJourney of Paul.”~ ~ 87 5,4 | of the romantic Acts of Paul (A.D. 160-70), some Docetist, 88 5,4 | his cue from the Acts of Paul; certainly he agreed with 89 5,4 | even before the Acts of Paul, but this loses sight of 90 5,4 | literary facts: (1) The Acts of Paul forms a far more natural 91 5,4 | breaks off, interest in Paul is at its height, while 92 5,4 | narrative. (2) The Acts of Paul is conceivably a counterattack 93 5,4 | the views they assert as Paul's that the Acts of Paul 94 5,4 | Paul's that the Acts of Paul denies. (3) The Acts of 95 5,4 | suggested by the Acts of Paul than by the Acts of the 96 5,4 | Pastoral Letters, Acts of Paul, Acts of John.~ In the fourth 97 5,4 | fourth century the Acts of Paul and the Acts of John were 98 5,4 | Peter, John, Andrew, Thomas, Paul. The collection was entitled 99 5,5 | apostolic novels as the Acts of Paul and Acts of John.~ The name 100 5,5 | The rise of the Acts of Paul and of John made it inevitable 101 5,5 | of the Apostles brought Paul to Rome, but not Peter. 102 5,5 | glorious apostles Peter and Paul. The Gospel of Matthew contained 103 5,5 | Gospels and the letters of Paul, the Acts of the Apostles, 104 5,5 | the Apostles, the Acts of Paul, the Acts of John (in chap. 105 5,5 | at Vercelli. It tells how Paul was released from his Roman 106 5,5 | Origen says that the Acts of Paul contained the saying of 107 5,5 | discovered Greek Acts of Paul, as we have seen, contains 108 5,5 | Evi~dently the Acts of Paul was used by the author of 109 5,5 | Andrew, John, Peter, and Paul that may imply that Origen 110 6,1 | 115-18) of the Hallel. Paul recommends the use of psalms, 111 6,2 | the principal letters of Paul, and I Peter. This list 112 7 | appear in Luke's account of Paul's address in Athens in Acts 113 7,4 | which is familiar from Paul's quotation of it in Gal. 114 8,3 | paraphrase certain utterances of Paul to improve their style. 115 8,3 | thought he was improving Paul's style. Rufinus' statement 116 8,4 | and to add the letters of Paul to its scripture. Marcion 117 8,4 | Luke and the ten letters of Paul. He went to Rome about A.D. 118 8,4 | Gnostic; he was too devoted to Paul and his doctrine of faith 119 8,4 | it not only assumes that Paul should be understood apart 120 9,1 | early Christian way, from Paul down (I Cor. 5:7), as symbolic 121 10,2 | 15) and the letters of Paul. In fact, Irenaeus is the 122 10,2 | Acts, thirteen letters of Paul (including the three Pastorals, 123 11,2 | who taught Clement that Paul was the author of Hebrews ( 124 11,3 | Hebrews to be the work of Paul and quoted the authority 125 12,2 | A.D. 638), for in 616-17 Paul of Tella, a Syrian bishop, 126 12,7 | Gospels, fourteen letters of Paul (including Hebrews and the 127 13,8 | acknowledged thirteen letters of Paul, but not Hebrews. His famous 128 13,8 | of Peter, and the Acts of Paul. He is the first Christian 129 13,10| The new bishop of Antioch, Paul of Samosata, had antagonized 130 13,10| opinion to the gathering. Paul was not only bishop of Antioch 131 13,11| and finally the case of Paul of Samosata, the bishop 132 14,6 | passion like his Lord's! Where Paul wins his crown in a death 133 14,6 | Luke and ten letters of Paul in place of the Jewish scriptures 134 14,6 | proposed scripture, Luke and Paul. In Books i and ii, Tertullian 135 14,6 | own scripture, Luke and Paul, to establish this.~ About 136 14,7 | and thirteen letters of Paul, besides I Peter, I John 137 14,14| Acts, thirteen letters of Paul (that is, it did not include 138 15,3 | the proceedings against Paul of Samosata,[104] and an 139 16 | the Apostles, the Acts of Paul, Irenaeus' Demonstration 140 16 | no text~The Acts of Paul; no complete text~The Acts 141 16 | Les actes du proces de Paul de Samosate, Paradosis,


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