bold = Main text
Book, Paragraph grey = Comment text
1 Pre | it certainly is in very perfect and clean condition, yet
2 Pre | years ago, -- as plain and perfect as ever it was. ~From this
3 1, 31 | courses of the stars, or be perfect in the precepts of the grammarians
4 1, 43 | good, is preserved (as) the perfect, that with the perfect he
5 1, 43 | the perfect, that with the perfect he may be led on. To Him
6 1, 43 | Cultivator of all, he renders the perfect fruit of that praise which
7 1, 69 | as) among those that were perfect, apart from this his state
8 1, 73 | wisest of men, or even more perfect than those that are on the
9 1, 73 | himself, with his (future) perfect state, be nothing better
10 1, 73 | shall have proceeded to the perfect measure of man's estate,
11 1, 73 | what sort the return of perfect fruit of this seed shall
12 1, 74 | midst; he would not find a perfect equality as to the child,
13 1, 74 | child, with respect to the perfect man; and of the perfect
14 1, 74 | perfect man; and of the perfect man, with respect to the
15 1, 74 | he, who has come out the perfect man, and is contemplated
16 1, 75 | to its more complete and perfect growth, should, when it
17 2, 64(119)| the more full grown and perfect, the better. This victim
18 2, 94 | inviting (them) to the perfect knowledge of God, and to
19 2, 97 | prepared to receive the perfect doctrine relating to God ;
20 3, 1 | prepared to receive the perfect doctrine relating to God;
21 3, 20 | with Him, they had the most perfect peace and friendship (with
22 3, 21 | whole of their lives in perfect holiness.~
23 4, 32 | kept122 themselves in perfect holiness, and the state
24 5, 30 | Whence then, had they this perfect agreement of testimony respecting
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