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1 1, 23 | is within us, no man ever knew, either how, or why, it
2 1, 35 | made) by Him; and the world knew Him not" For, from ancient
3 1, 35 | times (and) hitherto, it knew Him not, until He manifested
4 1, 37(29)| 2 Our Author knew how to accommodate his reasoning
5 2, 20 | some things, with those who knew them ; but performing others
6 2, 30 | reprehension. Why? Because he knew God as He was; but honoured
7 2, 31 | affirmed : and they well knew their own fathers. It is
8 2, 34 | the gods, ./. he clearly knew, that he was introducing
9 2, 34 | who plainly said that they knew their own fathers. Nor does
10 2, 40 | affirmed; as they clearly knew their own Fathers. It is
11 2, 44 | every man : because " he knew God83, but honoured Him
12 2, 49 | more than all men, they knew was a non-entity! That is
13 2, 52 | called those Gods, which they knew more accurately than all (
14 3, 39 | and) invisible, whom they knew not from the multitude of
15 3, 55 | things of which no mortal knew, and which the eyes of man
16 3, 55(75)| Lord, and that these Demons knew Him. See Matt. viii. 28-
17 4, 6 | was it therefore, that He knew only, what should come to
18 4, 7 | Disciples, -- when they knew nothing of them, but were
19 4, 8 | the Syriac (only), and who knew nothing beyond the art of
20 4, 14 | God! Nor was it that they knew Him not; but, when they
21 4, 14 | Him not; but, when they knew fully and accurately, that
22 4, 15 | heard His parables, they knew that He spake against themselves,
23 4, 19 | and believed not on Him, knew not the things of their
24 5, 14 | whom one Plato formerly knew, but confessed that he durst
25 5, 21 | fraudulent31. But of these, He knew that it was desirable they
26 5, 25 | therefore, who formerly knew no good thing of their Master,
27 5, 25 | for another, who, as they knew with certainty, (and) better
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