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romances 2
romans 20
romantic 2
rome 139
romische 1
root 1
rope 1
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141 paul
140 there
139 new
139 rome
139 works
138 all
128 more
Edgar J. Goodspeed
History of early christian literature

IntraText - Concordances

rome

    Chapter, Paragraph
1 Pref | offense to the Church of Rome.~And yet what we know as 2 1,2 | first letter of Clement of Rome to the Corinthians ( 3:1; 3 2,2 | Clement of Rome.~Toward the end of the first 4 2,2 | that news of it reached Rome and distressed the Church 5 2,2 | of God that sojourns in Rome to the Church of God that 6 2,2 | wrote to Soter, bishop of Rome between 166 and 174, that 7 2,2 | of God that sojourned in Rome. The apology with which 8 2,2 | doctrine and discipline at Rome, not primarily to literary 9 2,2 | of Christian attitudes in Rome toward the end of the first 10 2,5 | through western Asia Minor to Rome, where he was to be executed. 11 2,5 | after he left Troas for Rome; and it may be that his 12 2,5 | one to the Christians of Rome, preparing them for his 13 2,5 | would pass on his way to Rome. He asked Polycarp to do 14 2,5 | the rest of his journey to Rome. And a few weeks later we 15 2,6 | Ignatius' departure for Rome, for he had no news of his 16 2,6 | Ignatius' departure for Rome. Chiefly because of this 17 2,6 | Marcion left Asia Minor for Rome, about A.D. 135. It is possible, 18 2,10| was prefect of the city of Rome. The Martyrdom of Justin 19 2,11| 154 Polycarp had visited Rome to confer with the Roman 20 2,11| in Asia, his journey to Rome to seen Anicetus, and his 21 2,13| their apostolic founders: Rome took pride in the names 22 3 | was probably well known in Rome in the last years of the 23 3 | was a Christian~prophet in Rome, who understood Hebrews 24 3 | was or had been a slave in Rome. His work, which probably 25 3 | brother of Pius, the bishop of Rome, and as having written during 26 3 | brother of Pius, bishop of Rome in A.D. 140-55, on every 27 4,3 | enough, however, that in Rome at that time materials also 28 4,3 | gospels with it. Hippolytus of Rome, in his Refutation of All 29 4,5 | and wrote his Apology at Rome, soon after 150, may have 30 4,6 | question of paying tribute to Rome is discussed. Another, badly 31 5,2 | mentions it. Hippolytus at Rome, early in the third century, 32 5,3 | predict his work and fate in Rome.~ 9. The Greek proceeds 33 5,3 | conviction that he must go on to Rome. He embarks on a ship the 34 5,3 | to Paul, urges him on to Rome, and goes before the ship, 35 5,3 | welcomed by the brethren at Rome and addresses them. He is 36 5,4 | boiling oil, apparently at Rome, although the episode appears 37 5,4 | about A.D. 200, he speaks of Rome as the place “where the 38 5,5 | history of the Church of Rome, as we have seen. II Peter, 39 5,5 | of Peter, especially in Rome, where he had suffered martyrdom 40 5,5 | Apostles brought Paul to Rome, but not Peter. How did 41 5,5 | did Peter come to visit Rome and how was their work there 42 5,5 | 185, that the Church of Rome had inherited her tradition 43 5,5 | Spain. Simon Magus comes to Rome, and the church, left without 44 5,5 | vision that he is needed in Rome to resist his old enemy 45 5,5 | 31] Peter sets out for Rome. The ship is becalmed, the 46 5,5 | at Puteoh and proceed to Rome. Peter rallies the believers. 47 5,5 | does so, disappears from Rome, and dies at Terracina.~ 48 5,5 | replies that he is going into Rome to be crucified again. Peter 49 5,5 | centuries. That there was in Rome a statue in honor of Simon 50 5,5 | that Simon Magus visited Rome. The inscription was doubtless 51 5,5 | Peter as first bishop of Rome.~ The Acts of Peter does 52 5,5 | Peter the first bishop of Rome, and thus make him head 53 5,9 | ostensibly written by Clement of Rome in the first person, describes 54 6,2 | letter-a letter of Clement of Rome.~ It evidently owes this 55 6,2 | letter to Soter, bishop of Rome, about A.D. 165-75. He is 56 6,2 | letters from the church at Rome to that at Corinth from 57 6,2 | the way of a message from Rome to Corinth that might not 58 6,2 | to see why the church of Rome should send a sermon, of 59 6,2 | link between II Clement and Rome becomes still stronger, 60 6,2 | becomes still stronger, for Rome would appear to be the one 61 6,2 | Alexandria, Ephesus, Corinth, or Rome. And while the Gospel of 62 7,1 | twenty-five years ministry in Rome also rests upon it.~ In 63 7,2 | them with the burning of Rome. So to the official hostility 64 7,4 | Bar-Cochba rebellion against Rome (A.D. 132-35), and Eusebius 65 8,1 | by 150 found himself in Rome, where he wrote the only 66 8,1 | He suffered martyrdom in Rome between A.D. 163 and 167.~ 67 8,1 | practiced in the church at Rome in the middle of the second 68 8,3 | journeyed westward to Athens and Rome in the pursuit of his studies. 69 8,3 | book describing them. In Rome he met Justin and became 70 8,4 | letters of Paul. He went to Rome about A.D. 138 and gave 71 8,4 | for Justin, writing in Rome some ten years later, says 72 8,4 | the Jew Trypho, written in Rome within five or ten years 73 8,4 | Against Marcion, probably at Rome, about A.D. 180-90, but 74 8,4 | Gnostic who had come to Rome a little before him and 75 9,1 | Ephesus, writing to Victor of Rome when the controversy was 76 10,1 | its height, he was sent to Rome with a letter of introduction 77 10,3 | and Ephesus and Victor of Rome. The important letter written 78 10,4 | there, proceeding thence to Rome, perhaps about A.D. 155- 79 10,4 | Eleutherus was bishop of Rome (A.D. 174-89), probably 80 10,4 | said that on his journey to Rome he met many bishops and 81 11,3 | produced the ordinary gospel at Rome and had gone to Alexandria. 82 12,1 | course of it he traveled to Rome, visited the church there, 83 12,4 | translation published in Rome in A.D. 398-99 by the diligent 84 12,6 | written to Fabianus, bishop of Rome, in defense of his works, 85 12,7 | subsequently (Anastasius, bishop of Rome, condemned him in A.D. 400), 86 13,1 | spent his mature life in Rome, where he became a presbyter. 87 13,1 | presbyter. When Origen visited Rome, about 215, he heard Hippolytus 88 13,1 | survived his exile and died in Rome the following year is uncertain. 89 13,3 | that Origen on his visit to Rome heard Hippolytus preach 90 13,4 | the leading Montanist in Rome, had maintained that the 91 13,5 | Hippolytus did not regard Rome as the kingdom of Antichrist 92 13,8 | Testament as understood at Rome in his day. He gores no 93 13,8 | upon Greek Christianity in Rome. He was a Puritan in morals 94 13,9 | rebuilt as Nicopolis. At Rome he designed a beautiful 95 13,10| contemporary with Soter, bishop of Rome from A.D. 166 to 174) ; 96 13,10| Dionysius, bishop of Rome, A.D. 259-68; and Dionysius 97 13,10| them. He corresponded with Rome, Antioch, Laodicea in Phoenicia, 98 13,11| to Dionysius, bishop of Rome. It was in four books and 99 13,11| these to Xystus, bishop of Rome, in the single year of the 100 13,11| irregularity before Dionysius of Rome, to whom he replied with 101 13,11| correspondence with the bishops of Rome, writing to Stephen, Xystus, 102 13,13| persecutionPierius lived in Rome, and it may be that the 103 14,1 | It was there, and not in Rome, that Latin Christianity 104 14,2 | have visited Athens and Rome in early life, studying 105 14,2 | life in those centers. At Rome he seems to have practiced 106 14,5 | taught by the church at Rome, where he was converted. 107 14,6 | North African Christians to Rome, the only church in the 108 14,6 | close upon Italy, you have Rome, from which there comes 109 14,6 | action of Calixtus, bishop of Rome, in declaring that the sins 110 14,8 | in Africa who had come to Rome in the time of Hadrian and 111 14,8 | manuscript Mai afterward found at Rome. It also contained some 112 14,9 | Felix, probably a lawyer in Rome, replied to Fronto with 113 14,9 | the Octavius is laid in Rome. Minucius, or Marcus, as 114 14,9 | providence in the universe. Rome flourished as long as it 115 14,9 | by Xystus II, bishop of Rome, if he wrote the discourse 116 14,10| probably warned by news from Rome of what was in the wind. 117 14,10| concealment the bishop's chair in Rome had been vacant, and now 118 14,10| Cornelius, the new bishop of Rome, was banished and died, 119 14,11| mirror the march of events in Rome and Carthage that decade 120 14,11| churches of both Carthage and Rome. There was a group in each 121 14,11| Such people were led in Rome by Novatian, and in Carthage 122 14,11| Cyprian and two bishops of Rome, Cornelius and his successor 123 14,11| Cornelius was chosen bishop of Rome (March, 251) in the face 124 14,11| succeeded Lucius as bishop of Rome in A.D. 254 and continued 125 14,12| Church, to the church at Rome, where a movement was on 126 14,12| the kindred situation in Rome brought on by Novatian, 127 14,12| treatise On the Lapsed to Rome, probably in the summer 128 14,12| when the struggle with Rome over the rebaptism of heretics 129 14,13| it to Victor, bishop of Rome A.D. 189-99, of whom Jerome 130 14,15| Novation of Rome.~ The ablest Christian leader 131 14,15| ablest Christian leader at Rome in Cyprian's day was cleaely 132 14,15| Novatian must have left Rome for a time in the persecution 133 14,15| by Xystus II, bishop of Rome, so that we really do not 134 14,16| compelled to be away from Rome to avoid arrest in the persecutions 135 14,20| X. 2) and by Clement of Rome (To the Corinthians 25). 136 15,2 | speaks of a public library at Rome where one could find Philo' 137 15,2 | Hippolytus, and Gaius of Rome (vi. 20). To judge from 138 16 | Against Montanism written in Rome in the time of Hippolytus 139 16 | Apocalipsin libri duodecim, Rome: American Academy, 1930.


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