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Alphabetical    [«  »]
refused 4
refuses 4
refusing 1
refutation 38
refuting 1
regain 2
regard 9
Frequency    [«  »]
39 however
39 sometimes
38 least
38 refutation
38 seen
38 still
38 taken
Edgar J. Goodspeed
History of early christian literature

IntraText - Concordances

refutation

   Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,4 | his principal work, the “Refutation of Gnosticism” (also known 2 4,3 | Hippolytus of Rome, in his Refutation of All Heresies (v. 7, 9), 3 4,7 | contemporary Hippolytus (Refutation v. 7. 20). The infancy gospel 4 4,8 | had taught them privately (Refutation vii. 20), may well have 5 4,10| used among the Cainites (Refutation 1. 31. 1; see also Epiphanius, 6 6,1 | Valentinus wrote (Hippolytus, Refutation vi. 37. 7).~ ~ 7 8,1 | Against the Greeks, the Refutation, On the Sovereignty of God, 8 8,1 | Minucius Felix. Hippolytus (Refutation viii. 9 [Gr. 16]), and other 9 8,3 | his heretical views in the Refutation i. 28; some of them are 10 8,4 | other schismatics m the Refutation. He associates him with 11 8,4 | with him briefly in his Refutation (vii- 17; x. 15), bracketing 12 10,2 | Against Heresies or Refutation.~ Irenaeus was not only 13 10,2 | heresy and called his book a Refutation of Gnosticism (“Gnosis falsely 14 10,2 | constructive books of his Refutation, Irenaeus still has his 15 10,4 | against Gnosticism, with his Refutation, which was particularly 16 10,4 | work against heresies, or Refutation ofGnosticism, and by Clement 17 13,2 | most notable works was his Refutation of All Heresies, which seemed 18 13,2 | Origen's Philosophurneua or Refutation of All Heresies. But it 19 13,2 | Hippolytus, being his long-lost Refutation of All Heresies, mentioned 20 13,4 | Refutation.~ It is as an antiheretical 21 13,4 | have come down to us, his Refutation of All Heresies is the longest 22 13,4 | Cerinthus.[81]~ But the Refutation was Hippolytus' great work 23 13,4 | made use of the earlier Refutation written by Hippolytus' teacher 24 13,4 | misrepresenting their views. The Refutation was written in the years 25 13,4 | 23o-certainly after the Refutation, which makes no mention 26 13,4 | Hippolytus may perhaps call the Refutation, x. 5), bringing it up to 27 13,5 | he mentions it as his in Refutation x. 28, so that it was evidently 28 13,7 | the rules of the church (Refutation ix. 11).~ The Apostolic 29 13,11| called forth as a reply to a Refutation ofthe Allegorists, which 30 13,11| 260-61 Dionysius wrote his Refutation and Apology against Sabellius, 31 13,11| whom he replied with this Refutation. It will be seen that he 32 13,11| Trials, On Promises, the Refutation and Apology, and his partial 33 16 | Against All Heresies (the Refutation?); no text~ On the Sovereignty 34 16 | Harmony (?); no text~Irenaeus, Refutation of Gnosticism; no Greek 35 16 | no text~Hippolytus, Refutation of All Heresies; no complete 36 16 | Promises; no complete text~The Refutation and Apology; no text~Exposition 37 16 | no text~Nepos of Arsinoe, Refutation ofthe Allegorists; no text~ 38 16 | Heresies 1. 26. 1; Hippolytus Refutation vii. 33.~ [16] Epiphanius


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