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| Alphabetical [« »] according 40 accordingly 1 accords 3 account 46 accounts 12 accumulated 1 accurately 2 | Frequency [« »] 48 ofthe 47 end 47 views 46 account 46 came 46 scripture 46 thought | Edgar J. Goodspeed History of early christian literature IntraText - Concordances account |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,2 | to him (I Cor. 11:23, the account of the Last Supper; I Cor. 2 2,2 | 1 Barakat (1363), in his account of Christian Arabic literature, 3 2,5 | himself, as we learn from his account of his dealings with the 4 2,6 | writing them on his own account a kind of covering letter. 5 2,7 | a late and unhistorical account of the Martyrdom of Ignatius, 6 2,7 | the age of eighty-six. An account of this, substantially historical, 7 2,10| court reporting, as in the account of the Roman Christian Justin, 8 2,11| Martyrdom of Polycarp.~ Another account of martyrdom comes from 9 2,11| Christians everywhere, and an account of his last days and death 10 2,11| and generally convincing account of a tragic and heroic story, 11 2,13| the West through Eusebius' account of it, especially in Rufinus' 12 3 | in A.D. 140-55, on every account difficult to accept. From 13 3 | A.D. 177-78, in his True Account, Origen says, charged them 14 3 | passages in Epiphanius' account of certain types of Gnostic 15 4,4 | of sin. This carries the account in Matthew a long step further. 16 4,4 | those that sleep.' “ This account is clearly intended to establish 17 4,4 | a variant version of the account preserved in Luke 7:36-50. 18 4,5 | Jesus, continued with an account of the crucifixion and the 19 4,10| the desire to set forth an account of the early life of the 20 4,10| miraculous, very much like the account of Samuel's birth in I Samuel. 21 4,10| entitle it a narrative, or account; Origen calls it the “Book 22 5,2 | the Book of Acts is some account of what became of Paul. 23 5,3 | The Greek proceeds with an account of Paul's stay in Corinth. 24 5,4 | views in an imaginative account of the wonders, discourses, 25 5,8 | iii. i. i, z, to Origen's account, now lost, of the labors 26 5,8 | Patras. Gregory prefaced his account of it with a summary of 27 6,3 | design of giving a connected account of the Lord's oracles. So 28 7 | begin to appear in Luke's account of Paul's address in Athens 29 7,3 | apologist begins with an account of the Christian idea of 30 7,3 | clearly seen in Aristides' account of the Christians; indeed, 31 8,1 | grateful to Justin for his account (Apology 65-67) of early 32 8,1 | fortunate enough to possess an account of his martyrdom that seems 33 8,1 | between 163 and 167). This account, preserved in four Greek 34 10,4 | Hegesippus being the latter's account of the life and martyrdom 35 10,4 | Hegesippus only from Eusebius' account of him. But Philip of Side 36 12,1 | and publisher. Eusebius' account of this connection gives 37 13,9 | and Jewish, among them the account of the Jewish kings written 38 13,10| Dionysius answered with a full account of what actually happened ( 39 14,6 | Felicitas was a slave. The account is written from a Montanist 40 14,13| Pontius. There is also an account of his trial and death written 41 14,15| died.~ Eusebius gives an account of the Novatian affair in 42 14,15| Roman church. Jerome, in his account of him (On Illustrious Men 43 15,3 | Eusebius himself added the account of the Gallican martyrs ( 44 15,3 | iv. 21). Longevity cannot account for this confusion. W. Telfer 45 15,3 | are surprising gaps in his account. He knows nothing of the 46 16 | text.” I have not taken account of scattered fragments.~ ~