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Alphabetical    [«  »]
corrupters 3
corruptible 17
corrupting 2
corruption 32
corruptions 2
cost 3
could 152
Frequency    [«  »]
32 cannot
32 chief
32 cities
32 corruption
32 fully
32 purpose
32 sufficient
Eusebius Pamphilii of Caesarea
On the Theophania

IntraText - Concordances

corruption

                                             bold = Main text
   Book, Paragraph                           grey = Comment text
1 Pre, 0(6)| Syriac] for probably; a corruption so great as to bid utter 2 1, 47 | born, and are subject to corruption ; because the one provision 3 1, 47 | the blood of us all, the corruption of the body, and (its) dissolution 4 1, 69 | be tied interminably to corruption. Soon therefore, shall this 5 1, 69 | which is impervious to corruption. On this account, well have 6 1, 72 | darkness and the place of corruption. The judgment of God moreover, 7 1, 73 | these injurious bonds of corruption ?—these humid and wasting 8 1, 75 | from its participation in corruption, and shall have laid down 9 1, 75 | changed his nature from corruption to incorruption ; his shall 10 1, 76 | without shall dissolve through corruption;—then will it shew itself 11 1, 77 | should it be freed from the corruption which surrounds it, and 12 1, 77 | seed) is not subject to corruption : it is only the part that 13 1, 77 | in every thing subject to corruption, when released by death71? 14 1, 77 | resides within him, cede to corruption? And, as to the knowledge 15 1, 77 | taken away ./. from the corruption which is of the earth, and 16 2, 13 | this, in the madness and corruption of (their) mind, to such 17 2, 19 | evidently (so), a greater corruption than all the (other) vices. 18 2, 26 | incorporeal and foreign to corruption. He was also cognizant of 19 2, 41 | implicated) in generation and corruption !—that Father of all, both 20 2, 41 | of sense, and subject to corruption ? It seems right to me therefore, 21 2, 44 | dissoluble, and subject to corruption ! But we may hear him,—as 22 2, 46 | e. as we are, subject to corruption), with that which always 23 2, 64 | so far had this entire corruption of soul destroyed human 24 2, 95 | fierceness attending (this) corruption of mind,—by bitter punishments, 25 3, 39 | Essence. Nor did he suffer corruption from His ./. former) nature; 26 3, 46 | means of His person, to corruption and perishing ; He would 27 3, 47 | given up His Interpreter to corruption and ruin.~ 28 3, 55 | up (His vessel) to entire corruption and destruction, and (so) 29 3, 55 | own vessel when subject to corruption: -- for delivering up His 30 3, 55 | His own Godhead, to the corruption of death ? -- for Him to 31 3, 61 | and were reconciled to the corruption resulting from this, which 32 3, 61 | all, the dissolution and corruption both of bodies and souls;


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