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| Alphabetical [« »] god-bearer 1 god-given 1 godly 1 gods 18 goes 16 going 10 gold 2 | Frequency [« »] 18 east 18 fathers 18 further 18 gods 18 hebrew 18 homily 18 hymn | Edgar J. Goodspeed History of early christian literature IntraText - Concordances gods |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,10| to offer sacrifice to the gods and are therefore beheaded; 2 7,2 | may well imply that pagan gods are deified dead men. When 3 7,2 | because they do not last, the gods are recognized as merely 4 7,3 | moon. The Greeks worship gods like men, as beings full 5 9,3 | the frailties of heathen gods, and the absurdities of 6 14,3 | Christians do not worship the old gods but holds that they are 7 14,9 | it piously worshiped the gods; it is wrong for the Christians 8 14,9 | worship of dead heroes as gods ought not to weigh at all. 9 14,9 | weigh at all. The heathen gods were really deified men, 10 14,9 | that these images are not gods. Their rites are grotesque 11 14,9 | by violence. Demons, not gods, are behind the auguries 12 14,10| offered sacrifice to the gods, made libations, and tasted 13 14,12| failure to worship the old gods, puts the blame for these 14 14,13| entitled That Idols Are Not Gods (Quod idols dii non sint), 15 14,13| statement that the heathen gods are simply ancient kings 16 14,17| Cristianity prevailed. The gods should not be displeased 17 14,17| not worship the national gods by saying that their worship 18 16 | treatise That Idols Are Not Gods, also shows the influence