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| Alphabetical [« »] p 16 pa 1 paedagogus 1 pagan 37 paganism 5 pagans 3 page 4 | Frequency [« »] 37 library 37 melito 37 mentions 37 pagan 37 resurrection 37 speaks 37 world | Edgar J. Goodspeed History of early christian literature IntraText - Concordances pagan |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 3 | for the first time, the pagan ideas of heaven and hell 2 3 | doubt embodying not a little pagan material with their own, 3 3 | came to be a combination of pagan, Jewish, and Christian materials.~ 4 3 | and unskillful in style-as pagan critics observed. Although 5 4,10| year, like that of some pagan vestal virgin, is altogether 6 5,5 | redeem the trivial and even pagan elem that form so much of 7 7,2 | He may well imply that pagan gods are deified dead men. 8 8,1 | of Greek mythology and of pagan festivals, and urges the 9 8,2 | apologetic patterns in attacking pagan idolatry and Jewish sacrifices, 10 9,3 | addressed to Theophilus' pagan friend Autolycus. As it 11 9,3 | continues the attack upon pagan religion and contrasts the 12 9,3 | exposes the immorality of pagan writers and the falsity 13 11,3 | Athens and was probably of pagan parentage. He traveled widely 14 11,3 | threefold organization of the pagan mysteries-Purification, 15 11,3 | Address, was directed to pagan readers and designed to 16 11,3 | Clement calls upon the pagan Greeks to repent and accept 17 12,3 | meanings. Like most ancients, pagan, Jewish, or Christian, he 18 12,5 | his reply to Celsus. That pagan thinker had directed a searching 19 12,5 | feeling to outweigh his pagan opponent. It has been well 20 13,4 | Greek philosophy and in pagan religions; this is why he 21 13,9 | to literary questions in pagan and Christian literature 22 13,10| parentage and was at first a pagan, then a Gnostic; a man of 23 14,3 | public shows, which were both pagan and brutal in character, 24 14,3 | He refers to the ancient pagan practice of exposing undesired 25 14,4 | immoral, and interwoven with pagan rites (On Idolatry). He 26 14,8 | made by one of the leading pagan Latin writers of the secon 27 14,9 | third of it, in which the pagan case against Christianity 28 14,9 | weather is fine, they and a pagan friend Caecilius go on a 29 14,9 | heroically endured. They avoid pagan shows and practices as impious, 30 14,9 | enough in a work addressed to pagan readers, as, of course, 31 14,9 | Cods, and Divination. The pagan side is first presented 32 14,12| conditions of life in the pagan world in which he had grown 33 14,17| He was for a long time a pagan and a vigorous opponent 34 14,17| trivialities, and indecencies of pagan mythology. Book v declares 35 14,17| religious practices from the pagan world of the third and fourth 36 14,17| while Arnobius was still a pagan (On Illustrious Men 80), 37 16 | unequal to preserving either pagan or Christian literature,