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| Alphabetical [« »] divide 2 divided 5 divination 1 divine 22 division 3 divisions 1 do 41 | Frequency [« »] 22 chapter 22 commentary 22 derived 22 divine 22 gave 22 here 22 holy | Edgar J. Goodspeed History of early christian literature IntraText - Concordances divine |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 3 | theosophical speculations about the divine wisdom and intelligence. 2 3 | Clement in mind.~ Direct divine revelation, or apocalyptic, 3 3 | affecting Dante, in the Divine Comedy, with its accounts 4 4,5 | feeling that Jesus, being divine, could not have suffered 5 6,1 | quoted by Lactantius in his Divine Institutes 4:12 (A.D. 311). 6 8,3 | Those Who Have Discussed Divine Things (40). Eusebius had 7 9,3 | about A.D. 325, who in his Divine Institutes i. 23 speaks 8 11,3 | find the truth and spoke by divine inspiration-Plato and Socrates 9 11,3 | too, Clement often finds divine truth expressed. But the 10 11,3 | in the name of Jesus, the divine Instructor. “We are the 11 12,1 | his commentaries on the divine scriptures being urged thereto 12 13,10| man, though filled with divine power from his birth — and 13 14,5 | in his solicitude for the divine unity identified Father, 14 14,9 | perceived that these imply a divine ruler controlling it all. 15 14,9 | mentioned by Lactantius (in his Divine Institutes i. 11 and v. 16 14,17| reconcile with Christ's divine nature. Book ii maintains 17 14,17| soul as not necessarily of divine origin or immortal unless 18 14,18| his principal book, the Divine Institutes. But the intensification 19 14,18| On the Wrath ofGod, the Divine Institutes (in seven books), 20 14,19| The Divine Institutes.~ In 304 he was 21 14,19| already at work upon the Divine Institutes; he refers to 22 15,3 | the heathen against the divine word, along, with the noble