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| Alphabetical [« »] vienne 3 view 27 viewing 2 views 47 views-as 1 vigil 1 vigiliae 1 | Frequency [« »] 48 few 48 ofthe 47 end 47 views 46 account 46 came 46 scripture | Edgar J. Goodspeed History of early christian literature IntraText - Concordances views |
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1 2,5 | to suffer. Against these views, Ignatius insisted in his 2 2,5 | that the holders of such views were themselves but “semblance.” 3 2,5 | strongly ecclesiastical in his views; he certainly believes that 4 2,8 | second century took opposite views on them. But about A.D. 5 4,5 | produced to present sectarian views in gospel form.~ ~ 6 4,9 | had not accepted Paul's views and letters but came to 7 4,9 | revived some of the ways and views of the old Jewish monastic 8 4,9 | a gospel embodying their views. It was written in the first 9 4,9 | to promote the schismatic views of the Ebionite sect.~ Symmachus, 10 4,10| written to support heretical views; here is one written in 11 4,10| one written in support of views that were coming to be held 12 4,10| miraculously conceived are the views it was intended to promote. 13 4,10| presentation of Valentinian views, although in its time it 14 5,1 | useful in propagating their views of truth but it was valuable 15 5,2 | Letters exaggerated Paul's views on the place of women in 16 5,2 | the churches to ascetic views and the renunciation of 17 5,2 | 12). Against these Jewish views of the role of women in 18 5,3 | 160 and 170. Its feminist views repelled Tertullian, but 19 5,4 | undertook to embody his views in an imaginative account 20 5,4 | Timothy and Titus. It is the views they assert as Paul's that 21 7 | fire to the capital. Their views, too, were ridiculed, especially 22 8,3 | interweaves a sketch of Christian views, especially about demons 23 8,3 | discusses his heretical views in the Refutation i. 28; 24 8,4 | scripture, organization, and views. Certainly in organization 25 8,4 | Marcion, always to oppose his views. Origen, too, assails him 26 10,1 | ex-presbyter inclined toward the views of Valentinus. Irenaeus' 27 10,2 | positive statement of Christian views that forms more than half 28 10,4 | Bithynia, attacking Marcion's views, as Eusebius informs us ( 29 11,3 | Tatian. That Tatian's later views were very objectionable 30 11,3 | pupils; he committed his views to writing and expressed 31 11,3 | Address and the Tutor cast his views and arguments in literary 32 12,1 | won over from Valentinian views. Ambrose became his friend, 33 12,5 | objections to the Christian views and claims of his day were 34 12,7 | influence. His bold liberal views were much criticized subsequently ( 35 12,7 | dangerous liberality of his views no doubt contributed. Yet 36 13,2 | Greek work surveying the views of the Greek philosophers, 37 13,4 | seriously misrepresenting their views. The Refutation was written 38 13,8 | to hammer out Christian views of morals, practice, doctrine, 39 13,10| antagonized the churches by his views on the person of Christ-that 40 13,11| refuting the atomistic views of the Epicureans, with 41 13,11| disagreed with the millennial views of Nepos, he spoke of him 42 13,11| Arians in defense of their views on the relation of the Son 43 13,11| bishop of Antioch, whose views of the person of Christ 44 14,5 | Monarchian and modalistic views. Praxeas in his solicitude 45 14,6 | gradual shift in his religious views, which carried him in the 46 14,9 | he is one. Against such views, old fables and the worship 47 14,12| bishop to Cornelius, whose views on the lapsed he considered