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tigris 2
till 2
tim 1
time 88
timely 1
times 29
timesthe 1
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89 than
88 2
88 gospels
88 time
88 writings
87 hippolytus
86 revelation
Edgar J. Goodspeed
History of early christian literature

IntraText - Concordances

time

   Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,2 | had come to mean in their time. From the point of view 2 2,2 | read Clement's letter from time to time in its meetings. 3 2,2 | Clement's letter from time to time in its meetings. So religiously 4 2,5 | Greco-Roman rhetoric of his time, with its fondness for paradox 5 2,6 | chaps. 1-12) written at a time of crisis in the Philippian 6 2,6 | Marcion in view at this time.~ ~ 7 2,9 | sins.” This was just at the time when the Roman church (A.D. 8 2,9 | flourished at just that time. On the whole, the Epistle 9 2,11| comes from about the same time. This is the Martyrdom of 10 2,11| eighty-six years of age at the time of his martyrdom and had 11 2,11| an editor after Eusebius' time; this editor, impressed 12 2,12| precarious; they might at any time be reported to the authorities, 13 3 | introduced, for the first time, the pagan ideas of heaven 14 3 | Alexandria, about the same time, accepted it as the work 15 3 | to the third century-the time when Christian hands, having 16 4,2 | Christian anywhere might at any time have set out independently 17 4,2 | confusions, and at the same time enriching them from oral 18 4,3 | however, that in Rome at that time materials also employed 19 4,3 | regarded as suspect. By the time of Clement of Alexandria, 20 4,4 | scripture, that is, the time when it came to be read 21 4,6 | which should be at the same time shorter than the fourfold 22 4,6 | as heretical for a long time. Neither can we identify 23 4,10| Valentinian views, although in its time it may have stood fairly 24 4,10| Philip was written by this time and probably as early as 25 5,3 | overtake him, in no long time, for the righteous blood 26 5,5 | Chronicle written about that time by Hippolytus. So by the 27 5,5 | by Hippolytus. So by the time of Pontianus Roman writers 28 5,7 | shook his head for a long time” (chap. 10).~ This can hardly 29 6,1 | certainly written in Greek some time near the middle of the second 30 6,2 | preserve it and read it from time to time. “From it,” he writes, “ 31 6,2 | and read it from time to time. “From it,” he writes, “ 32 6,2 | Corinthians could read from time to time for their edification. 33 6,2 | could read from time to time for their edification. This 34 6,2 | in Corinth, perhaps at a time when crowds were gathering 35 6,2 | is considerable. For the time of its origin is reasonably 36 6,2 | Christian centers of the time, such as Antioch, Alexandria, 37 6,2 | attached to it.~ After the time of II Clement we encounter 38 6,3 | them lay the dream of a time when nature would respond 39 6,3 | Christ lived on until the time of Hadrian, who became emperor 40 6,3 | Book of Revelation, and as time went on he was pushed further 41 7,2 | they were alive for some time, so that some of them lived 42 8,1 | said about Justin after the time of Eusebius seems to have 43 8,1 | Christian writer up to his time, and his Dialogue was probably 44 8,1 | him as a man “neither in time nor virtue far removed from 45 8,1 | Harnack called the blooming time of the sects, the middle 46 8,1 | congregation as long as time permitted. Even after his 47 8,3 | the group arrested at the time when Justin was martyred ( 48 8,4 | and against him, and for a time he seemed to bid fair to 49 9,1 | shows (3:1-6), and in the time of Marcus Aurelius its bishop 50 9,2 | went unmentioned for a long time in Christian antiquity; 51 9,3 | been written after that time. But the earliest mention 52 10,4 | historian, but for a long time little was done to carry 53 10,4 | Corinth, and spent some time there, proceeding thence 54 10,4 | Against Marcion about this time, as we have seen in connection 55 11,1 | second century. For a long time it was headed by Pantaenus, 56 11,3 | cannot trace him after that time. Alexander tells of the 57 11,3 | epithets, twelve of them at one time, recalls the Isis litany 58 11,3 | materials Clement never found time or inclination to write 59 12,1 | about A.D. 217. About this time Origen found an able assistant 60 12,1 | settle in Alexandria for a time to hear them (Church History 61 12,1 | of sixty-nine.~ About the time of Origen's return to Alexandria, 62 13,8 | doctri issues. He worked in a time of conflict with laxity, 63 13,9 | removed to Alexandria for a time to hear the lectures of 64 13,10| queen of Palmyra, who for a time wrested Egypt from the Romans.~ ~ 65 14,3 | Christianity: “We multiply every time we are mowed down by you; 66 14,6 | Virgins also belong to this time, 204-5 to 206-7.~ But by 67 14,6 | For it may be that by the time of Tertullian's death, soon 68 14,8 | had come to Rome in the time of Hadrian and foun fame 69 14,9 | leading citizen there at that time is probably little more 70 14,10| brother bishops.~ In the time of Cornelius, Cyprian had 71 14,11| Letters 5-43 belong to the time of Cyprian's concealment, 72 14,11| going into hiding in the time of persecution. The Roman 73 14,11| successor Lucius. About the time the persecution relaxed 74 14,11| Nos. 67-75, come from the time of Stephen, who succeeded 75 14,12| generally. Cyprian was by this time bishop of Carthage, so that 76 14,15| must have left Rome for a time in the persecution under 77 14,16| A.D. 359.~ As early as the time of Rufinus (d. 410) the 78 14,17| Arnobius. He was for a long time a pagan and a vigorous opponent 79 14,18| says Lactantius was by that timeextremely old” and that 80 14,18| very likely, belong to the time before his conversion. The 81 14,19| probably well before that time, although the dedication 82 14,19| the Institutes at the very time that his old professor Arnobius 83 14,20| Lactantius says is true.~ To this time, probably to 314, belongs 84 15,1 | you will hear of, in good time, from Seleucus himself. 85 15,3 | addition-martyrdoms in his own time. In addition, he says, he 86 15,4 | non-Christian literature of the time remains to be analyzed.~ ~ ~ 87 16 | of Eusebius, and it was a time of great scholars and great 88 16 | Montanism written in Rome in the time of Hippolytus has been conjectured


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