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4006 1, 40(39) | Coeli porro siderumque substantiam appellamus setherem: non
4007 2, 81(146)| of these charges can be substantiated. See Luzacii de Theodoreto
4008 2, 57 | resembling these, should be substituted for them107. ~
4009 1, 6 | things), as those who are subtle in these matters love to
4010 3, 20 | was that, after all this subversion and destruction, raised
4011 Pre | of the extended, and then successfully extending, state of Christianity :
4012 5, 14(15) | Hunc ait Antisthenes in successionibus, cum in Tragoedia quadam
4013 2, 22(54) | Strato of Lampsaca, the successor of Theophrastus in the Lyceum. (
4014 3, 1(2) | been said above, about the successors of Alexander, Book ii. sect.
4015 2, 86 | souls,—by adequate aids succour those who suffered this
4016 4, 21 | her son, -- for she had a sucking infant, -- and said, "Wretched (
4017 4, 21 | moreover, should it have sufficed for her daily sustenance,
4018 Pre, 0(8) | martyre legitur," &c. "Socrati suffragatur Sozomemis," &c. Lib. in.
4019 Pre | my notes; which seems to suggest, that such additions were
4020 Pre | most happy in receiving suggestions which may improve my Work,
4021 5, 38(69) | memnhme/noj. e0n tw~ oi0kei~w suggra&mmati to&nd' i9storei~ to_
4022 5, 38(69) | a0lla0 o9 me\n louka~j sugkallu&ptwn to_ o1noma th~ a0rxaiote/
4023 1, 63(53) | the primitive Church: see Suiceri Thesaurus, sub voce, Ecorkismo&
4024 Pre | in Catalogo cap. 81. et Suida, quando inter Eusebii Scripta
4025 1, 48 | trains the animals that are suited to the chace; at another,
4026 2, 15(27) | Edit. 1698. "Illud vero summae impietatis ac sceleris,
4027 3, 40 | Disciples to approach the very summit of excellency with God;
4028 2, 20(43) | et dicat et sentiat: in summum tamen unam mentem mundo
4029 5, 39(75) | St Peter called himself sumpresbuteroj; and after the death of
4030 2, 18(32) | Deorum, i, 5.) " Non enim sumus ii, quibus nihil verum esse
4031 1, 75 | semblance of light, and of the sun-beam, shall he be; and of the
4032 5, 38(69) | protimw~n w9j krei/ttona to_n sunapo&stolon. tw~n loipw~n eu0aggelistw~
4033 5, 38(69) | u sunariqmei~. kai\ tou~ sunaposto&lou, deu&teron e9auto_n
4034 5, 38(69) | kai\ a9martwloi~j e9auto_u sunariqmei~. kai\ tou~ sunaposto&lou,
4035 3, 36(35) | observance of the seventh day (or Sunday). See also the Prep. Evang.
4036 4, 6(10) | prostetagme/non e0poi/ei: w9j de\ sune/kleisan plh~qoj i0xqu&wn
4037 5, 38(69) | teron e9auto_n katale/gei. sunezeugme/noj gou~n tw~ qwma~, w9j
4038 3, 39 | struck. This is moreover sung in the assemblies of the
4039 2, 64(118)| sacerdotes, non alieno, sed suo cruore sacrificant," &c.
4040 1, 37(29) | potentes ~Coelicolae, clarique suos posuere Penates. ~Hic locus
4041 3, 14 | Almighty God, cast out that superabundance of evil Demons from the
4042 3, 79 | the Gods, which are now superannuated, perished when (so) consigned
4043 2, 73 | of their being Gods was superfluous: nor did men truly ascribe
4044 5, 31 | every sort of calamity: superinducing as they did the destruction
4045 2, 74 | But, if they advance a superintending fate134, such as to take
4046 5, 16 | If then others, His superiors, appeared before Him, and
4047 1, 37(29) | so Ovid— ~Mac iter est superis ad magni tecta Tonantis, ~
4048 5, 16(20) | maleficae, the men of magical superstition. As Asclepiades, the judge
4049 2, 19(35) | est, dum nullo metu, nulla superstitione, aut alia quavis perturbatione
4050 5, 16(20) | Christians, Genus homimem superstitionis maleficae, the men of magical
4051 2, 15(27) | details the matter thus: " Rex Superum Phrygii quondam Ganymedis
4052 2, 41 | the sons of the Gods! He supplicates too,—subsequently to the
4053 5, 35 | the body; by prayer and supplication to God, and more particularly
4054 Pre, 0(1) | which may be considered as supplying tolerably good matter for
4055 5, 42 | system of contrariety be supported ? ./. For this, that (men)
4056 4, 33(125)| the 13th verse, powerfully supports this view. The exegetical
4057 4, 25(91) | proselytes: but the former supposition is the most probable. ~
4058 5, 16(20) | This is, by no means, a supposititious case. "Celsus," says Mr
4059 2, 80 | was quite useless, were supremely serviceable to man;—that,
4060 4, 6 | shewed by very deed, were sure and true. This Syrian fisherman
4061 2, 70 | What then, can constitute a surer proof as to these things,
4062 Pre | it has perhaps never been surpassed. The work of Theodoret,
4063 1, 19 | and, it is clear, greatly surpasses all mortal mind ? ~
4064 4, 35(144)| the reader must not be surprised in finding that they occasionally
4065 5, 18 | things ? And that we dare to surrender up ourselves to death in
4066 3, 68 | this world in shame, and surrendered their lives to the dominion
4067 4, 28 | brother to death." -- When one surrenders himself to fraternal affection,
4068 1, 39 | the name (which) they have surreptitiously assumed to themselves. Thus
4069 1, 43 | the life which is mortal surrounding it. If then, an enlightened
4070 4, 12(33) | Hebraei illi qui Christi fidem susceperunt." Again, as retained by
4071 2, 31(69) | illa vulgo disputanda, ne susceptas publice religiones disputatio
4072 5, 39(74) | styled "Elder," -- being suspected as spurious for some time
4073 4, 2 | Romans, was in a state of suspense, because his favourite boy1
4074 4, 8 | illiterate character which they sustained; on account of which, they
4075 1, 74 | brought up with milk and the swaddling bands; this,—who is now
4076 1, 57 | earth ; and, applying the sweat of his labour to agriculture,
4077 2, 19 | pompous in the streets, swelling with pride, and casting
4078 3, 2 | superiority of our Saviour swept away the authority of the
4079 2, 83 | various) kinds of beings that swim in the unseen depths, and
4080 1, 17 | and determined those swimming natures: and here again
4081 5, 6 | or the panther? and that swine, as to their soul, differed
4082 5, 28 | together, and that they swore to do this ? and that they
4083 5, 38(69) | telwni/aj kai\ pleoneci/aj sxolazo&ntwn. kai\ tou~to tw~n loipw~
4084 2, 92(170)| together with the Chapel and Sybilline books. Simson, Chron. A.
4085 2, 39(76) | Gentes. et Strom. v. 598. Sylb. (T. ii. p. 709. Potter)
4086 2, 20 | happened to have a complete symmetry of bodily limbs! These men
4087 Pre | express my thanks to the Syndics of the University Press,
4088 2, 62(110)| this to Gelo, a prince of Syracuse. See Viger's notes, ib.
4089 2, 9(7) | state of things : " Piscem Syri venerantur : omne fere genus
4090 4, 12(33) | called because written in the Syro-Chaldaic dialect in Hebrew letters.
4091 2, 39(76) | et Strom. v. 598. Sylb. (T. ii. p. 709. Potter) Stob.
4092 2, 92(170)| account of this answer. Comp. Tacit. Hist. Lib. iv. 54, and
4093 3, 16 | 16. Who moreover, tacitly, and by means of His invisible
4094 5, 14(14) | Agriculture, Painting, Tactics, on the Sacred Literature
4095 4, 21 | and to the world, the tale which alone is wanting to (
4096 5, 14(15) | congregasset circiter ducenta talenta, civibus ea divisisse: adeoque
4097 2, 69 | the bricks of gold of two talents (weight), the phials of
4098 2, 31(69) | publice religiones disputatio talis extinguat." Lib. ii. cap.
4099 2, 78 | these temples adorned. Much talk too was engaged in respecting
4100 4, 27 | indiscriminately was; and who indeed talked just as they might be circumstanced.
4101 2, 9(7) | utimur usitato: sed ecquem tam amentem esse putas, qui
4102 1, 48 | he avails himself of the tame animals for (his) service;
4103 Pre | quod qeofanei/aj. Sed id tamquam incertum omitto, quum Hebed
4104 2, 18(32) | quaedam adjuncta esse dicamus, tanta similitudine, ut in iis
4105 2, 91(168)| imbres ulli neque nubes, tantumque exiguus terrae motus antecessisset,
4106 3, 56 | beneath the air. Nor was it tardily that THE WORD OF GOD drove
4107 2, 12(11) | taken from the Jews. See the Targums on Gen. vi. 2. He further
4108 2, 65(120)| marauding tribes of Turcomans, Tartars, Bedouins, and others in
4109 2, 64(118)| also among the Nomades of Tartary. ~
4110 2, 19(33) | xiv. cap. ix. p. 740. Also Tatiani contra Graecos Oratio. in
4111 2, 64(118)| cap. xx.—"Erat lex apud Tauros...ut Dianae hospites immolarentur:
4112 2, 9(7) | ut Capram, ut Nepam, ut Taurum, ut Dionem; aut rerum inanimatarum,
4113 2, 52 | Temples together with ./. tavern-keepers, with men the refuse (of
4114 5, 37 | those whose business was tax-gathering and fraud. This however,
4115 1, 77(72) | jars, as may be seen in Mr. Taylor's Fragments to his Edition
4116 2, 86 | both (his) rebukes and teachings against the errors of Demons.
4117 1, 37(29) | iter est superis ad magni tecta Tonantis, ~Regalemque domum ;
4118 5, 14(15) | Tragoedia quadam cerneret Telephum sportulam tenentem, ad cynicam
4119 5, 40 | but that He forbade their telling this to any man. Now Mark
4120 5, 38(69) | e0k de\ tw~n a0mfi\ ta_j telwni/aj kai\ pleoneci/aj sxolazo&
4121 5, 14(15) | pallium ~Sed hyeme pannum, ut temperans evaderet."~See also Plutarch, "
4122 5, 19 | and, if He was Himself temperate, and a Teacher of temperance ;
4123 2, 76 | which the violent winds and tempests had fastened from every
4124 2, 88(164)| mutatum septies restituto templo." ~
4125 2, 91(168)| atque pulcherrimum: idem templorum omnium opulentissimum...
4126 5, 25 | only of the things of a temporal life, and the enjoyment
4127 1, 24 | comforts of a mortal and temporary life; to others, that they
4128 2, 64(118)| et id sacrificium multis temporibus celebratum est." (See Sect.
4129 3, 55(75) | otherwise overcame, them. The temptation in the desert was therefore
4130 2, 12(11) | falling into lust through the temptations of Satan, they at length
4131 Pre, 0(2) | not get more than nine or ten good authors, with a few
4132 4, 21(75) | ground for delicateness and tenderness, her eye shall be evil toward
4133 3, 78 | even the race of mankind tenders to God the King of all.
4134 Pre | peculiarities of language in it, tending to shew that it was not
4135 5, 40(80) | Gospel (i.e. Mark's) which tends to advance the honour...
4136 2, 13(21) | Fatum, Senectus, Mors, Tenebrae, Miseria, Querela, Gratia,
4137 2, 9(7) | Deos ; Alabandum Alabandi ; Tenedii Tenem ; Leucotheam, quae
4138 2, 58 | to pieces) ! and also in Tenedos, as Euelpis the Carystian
4139 2, 9(7) | Alabandum Alabandi ; Tenedii Tenem ; Leucotheam, quae fuit
4140 5, 14(15) | cerneret Telephum sportulam tenentem, ad cynicam philosophiam
4141 2, 44(81) | finem peccandi faciet, qua tenus depravatur, eatenus in brutorum
4142 2, 88(164)| ebeno esse tradunt. Mucianus ter consul, ex his qui proxime
4143 2, 15(28) | The Comedies of Plautus, Terence, and Aristophanes; the Epigrams, &
4144 2, 12(17) | seems to have taken the termination of the Greek accusative
4145 2, 11(9) | coeleste in ea re, quae fit ex terra." ...Quicquid enim simulatur,
4146 2, 91(168)| nubes, tantumque exiguus terrae motus antecessisset, seu
4147 2, 25(62) | et Coelum, et Astra, et Terram, et animos, et eos quos
4148 2, 91(168)| sive igni aliquo in ipso terrarum motu velut extrito, totum
4149 Pre | the month of the latter Teshrin." (February). And, just
4150 Pre | Vindobon. caesareo xlii., teste Lambecio comment, tom. iii.
4151 2, 64(118)| above) humanam hostiam Jovi Teucrus immolavit: idque sacrificium
4152 1, 75 | the body, and flies from tha lustful passions, it (then)
4153 2, 36(73) | cite this place. I have to thank Mr Professor Schole-field
4154 Pre | to adopt these, and to be thankful for them. Of the Work itself
4155 Pre | remember with the greatest thankfulness. To have had the privilege
4156 Pre | I have now to express my thanks to the Syndics of the University
4157 2, 30(67) | the 19th day of the month Thargelion. [...] ~
4158 2, 17 | herds into the midst of the theatres, old and young together ;
4159 5, 14(15) | This is, no doubt, the Theban Crates whose life is given
4160 4, 30(114)| xxii.) originated from Thebuthis, who, being mortified because
4161 5, 21 | should so labour against theft, that they should give of
4162 4, 8 | received His doctrine; and, thenceforward, even to this time, is He
4163 2, 81(146)| substantiated. See Luzacii de Theodoreto judicium, prefixed to Dr
4164 2, 3(3) | v. 51. and, above all, Theodoriti Hist. Eccles. Lib. i. capp.
4165 4, 6(10) | transcript. " Exscriptum e Codice Theol. graeco. Vindob. fol. 240.
4166 2, 3(3) | Marcellus. In Lib. ii. Eccl. Theolog. cap. xiv. he speaks, indeed,
4167 5, 16 | Philosophers, Poets, and Theologians? and, that he should send
4168 Pre | Eusebius' opinions on various theological issues, but I believe most
4169 5, 38(69) | sub Corderii Eusebio et Theophane, quem ille e Bessarionis
4170 1, 27(19) | Vol. ii. Edit. 1620.). His theory is manifestly taken from
4171 | thereby
4172 | thereupon
4173 1, 60 | unfailing source, and inundate (therewith) the hearing of all present. ~
4174 1, 63(53) | primitive Church: see Suiceri Thesaurus, sub voce, Ecorkismo&j --
4175 4, 35(139)| to is, most probably, 2 Thess. ii. 3. seq. The person
4176 2, 89(166)| in conjunction with the Thessalians, Lib. vni. 33. Eusebius,
4177 4, 35 | another in the Epistle to the Thessalonians, who (should be) in (the
4178 2, 47 | abundance of the uproar thickened—of the destroying and the
4179 4, 36(147)| shall the End of all these thimgs be. (Comp. Is. lxii. 12, &
4180 2, 66(122)| 24. are in the Heb. Bible thirty-one, in the Sept. Greek twenty-nine,
4181 4, 30 | from thorns, nor figs from thistles. So every good tree produceth
4182 2, 12 | and lawless enchantments, tho se invisible Demons11 and
4183 5, 22 | to suppose, that they all thoroughly lied ? They were, in number,
4184 1, 74 | defective, lame, infirm, and thoughtless being, will, when grown
4185 2, 77 | parts that bordered upon Thrace. From this time these, with
4186 2, 30(67) | with Artemis (Diana), a Thracian word: and, that Bendidia
4187 1, 37 | as it were) of the azure threshold, which exclude those who
4188 1, 62 | coming in of the seasons51, throw themselves open (as it were)
4189 2, 87 | of a plurality of Gods in thunderings and in ./. lightnings.
4190 2, 81(152)| l.c.) was done by the Tibareni. Theod. [Greek] ~
4191 2, 64(119)| annually thrown into the Tibur. (Edit. Steph. 1540. p.
4192 3, 1 | some ruinous) war-engine; tidings announcing good things were
4193 1, 69 | and that he may not be tied interminably to corruption.
4194 2, 12 | themselves, by means of the ties10 of those who used abominable
4195 4, 10 | happened. But He received the tiling done as a sign, and intimated
4196 5, 46 | operated) in the overcoming of tilings exceeding all description.
4197 1, 37(29) | verbis audacia detur, ~Haud timeam magni dixisse Palatia coeli.~
4198 1, 36 | bodies is one; while of tin's, some are in the heavens
4199 2, 62(111)| Syr. [Syriac]. Gr. Douma&tioi. See Vigor's notes. Perhaps
4200 2, 64 | therefore, having selected a tithe of the ./. men, and sacrificed
4201 2, 64 | the Gods that select part (Tithes) both of their fruits and
4202 4, 30 | times, whose name became the titular badge of the Manichean114
4203 4, 8 | after death ; they went out tllerefore, with confidence to make
4204 1, 57 | fruits consequent upon his toil. ~
4205 5, 38(69) | eu0aggelistou~ matqai/ou. ou[toj ga_r to_n pro&teron bi/on,
4206 Pre, 0(1) | considered as supplying tolerably good matter for proof, that
4207 2, 13(21) | probanda sunt, aut prima illa tollenda." Cic. de Nat. Deor. iii.
4208 5, 44(87) | to have had, oi9 to_ prw~ton. k. Probably not in the
4209 1, 37(29) | est superis ad magni tecta Tonantis, ~Regalemque domum ; Dextra
4210 3, 4 | should fill the hearing, and tongues of every people upon the
4211 1, 38 | to keep watch without; toothers, to dwell beyond (these),
4212 2, 65 | city and village, kings and Toparchs fully (established) from
4213 Pre | interest. They deal with topics such as Eusebius' opinions
4214 2, 58 | in Chios, when they had torn him (to pieces) ! and also
4215 4, 26 | simply foretold those obvious tortures which should, on His account,
4216 2, 91(168)| scilicet opus cunctorum tota urbo maximum fuit atque
4217 3, 36(35) | sabbath of the Jews was a totally different thing. That was
4218 5, 14(14) | quaerendique divinae delectationi toto se animo dedissent." And
4219 2, 91(168)| terrarum motu velut extrito, totum de improviso Pacis templum
4220 5, 38(69) | n loipw~n eu0aggelistw~n tounanti/on pepoihko&twn: -- Sequitur
4221 4, 30(114)| Christians; of which marked traces remain to this day among
4222 1, 47 | they scent better than the tracing dogs, which are taught to
4223 Pre | by Mr. Richard Watts, a tradesman long and well known for
4224 2, 64(118)| idque sacrificium posteris tradidit: quod est nuper Hadriano
4225 2, 88(164)| ambigitur: ceteri ex ebeno esse tradunt. Mucianus ter consul, ex
4226 2, 69 | Lacedemonians, against the Traezenians; the Locrians again, waged
4227 2, 68 | country of the Epirotae and Traezenii?—how they wasted the Lacedemonians;
4228 5, 14(15) | in successionibus, cum in Tragoedia quadam cerneret Telephum
4229 1, 31 | the whole, who had by one train of thought, and the exertion
4230 1, 40 | meditations on Him, and previously trained for its transition (conversion)
4231 1, 78 | instruction and careful training of those who would enlarge
4232 1, 48 | pleases : at one time, he trains the animals that are suited
4233 2, 76(135)| who lived in the times of Trajan, and wrote a very valuable
4234 4, 20(67) | literally described, the TRAMPLING DOWN of this impious city.
4235 2, 19(35) | secundum quam animus magna tranquilitate constantiaque beatus est,
4236 2, 94 | upon human life's becoming tranquillized, and the common conduct (
4237 3, 31 | times; -- How does this not transcend every sort of miracle30 ?~
4238 3, 33 | who has shewn forth such transcendent and divine power as He has,
4239 4, 6(10) | give Dr Kopitar's whole transcript. " Exscriptum e Codice Theol.
4240 2, 44 | body ; those of men being transfusable into the beastly nature.
4241 5, 23 | they should forthwith be transgressors of the Law; should act impiously,
4242 1, 64 | perishable and fleeting, transient and dissoluble. But that
4243 1, 40 | previously trained for its transition (conversion) to virtue.
4244 4, 33(128)| customary with the Syrians so to translate Greek compounds. See above,
4245 Pre | into which they had been so transplanted, or, to supply some new
4246 5, 38(69) | e0le/gxwn e9autou~ to_ trau~ma i3na qauma&shj th_n te/
4247 4, 16 | to the sight of those who travel thither. But, how those
4248 2, 81(156)| So Ibn Batuta tells us (Travels, p. 220,) that he saw, at
4249 3, 40 | land, causing His Vessel to traverse the back of the waters66?
4250 1, 47(46) | de\n a0kidno&teron gai~a tre/fei a0nqrwpo&io ."~" Nil
4251 3, 55 | these: (saying) "Thou shalt tread on the serpent and adder,
4252 1, 60 | filled with every sort of treasure. In one mind too, does he
4253 4, 21 | seized. The residue of her treasures moreover, should it have
4254 3, 56(80) | 116. seq. where (p. 134.) treating, of the assumed human nature, [...]~
4255 1, 1(3) | authors of the Bridgewater Treatises, will be read with interest. ~
4256 5, 52(111)| 10.), and Lactantius treats this matter much at length
4257 3, 62 | again, did (men) as formerly tremble at death, but they laughed
4258 Pre, 0(8) | wickedness, and the Demons trembled before him. -- Asseman gives, "
4259 5, 16 | attested of their Lord, by the trial of both fire and sword,
4260 5, 52 | being brought through trials, -- the purity and refining
4261 2, 65(120)| As indeed the marauding tribes of Turcomans, Tartars, Bedouins,
4262 5, 40(80) | miracle, in order to pay the tribute, is omitted by Mark. See
4263 3, 55(75) | purpose of being tempted, or tried, by Satan, [Greek] says
4264 1, 47 | be. The smell too, is the trier of scents, but not of doctrines.
4265 4, 1 | Nor will that again, be a trifling conviction as to His truth,
4266 2, 12(11) | lower down, from Hermes Trismegistus, that piety, consisting
4267 2, 24(61) | own divines have, in the trite comparison, which makes
4268 5, 16 | that they were (at once) triumphant and faultless?~
4269 5, 29 | compact among themselves, and (triumphantly) walk over the power of
4270 3, 61(94) | made a shew of them openly, triumphing over them in it" (His cross).~
4271 5, 28 | not be small, since the triumphs to which we should present
4272 5, 38(69) | mmati to&nd' i9storei~ to_u tro&pon. kai\ para&gwn e0kei~
4273 1, 37 | neither entered into, nor trodden, by the many. Some again
4274 4, 6(10) | sqh~nai: e0f0 oi[j o9 pe&troj a0poqauma&saj e0cepla&gh.
4275 2, 91(168)| in arcano habent Romani, Troja (ut perhibent) avectum."
4276 2, 12(19) | note ib. 0Amfia&rew. The Trojans also, according to Athenagoras,
4277 2, 50(91) | for the Temple of Jupiter Trophonius, which it contained. Syr. [
4278 2, 15(27) | rape of Ganymede, son of Tros king of Phrygia. Ovid. Met.
4279 2, 21 | the calamities of Ilium, (Troy) may again be expected:
4280 5, 24(37) | themselves, being one of the truest characters that the heathens
4281 2, 10(8) | i. Sat. viii. 1. "Olim truncus eram," &c. Athenagoras Legat.
4282 Pre | collection generally to the trustees of the British Museum, he
4283 4, 6 | not by their art, but by trusting in his word, -- to cast
4284 4, 6(10) | Parakeleu&etai me\n pe&trw o9 KC. xala&sai ei0j a1gran
4285 4, 11(30) | same way : (Dialog. cum Tryphone. p. 255. 48. Ed. Sylburg,) [
4286 5, 38(69) | kai\ barqolomai~oj. prota&ttei e9autou~ to_n qwma~n. protimw~
4287 5, 38(69) | qwma~n. protimw~n w9j krei/ttona to_n sunapo&stolon. tw~n
4288 1, 1(3) | our own writers, Paley, Tucker on the Light of Nature,
4289 4, 21 | thee in war, famine, and tumult? -- that thou shouldest
4290 5, 2 | together of ferocious and tumultuous inhabitants, and taught
4291 2, 65(120)| the marauding tribes of Turcomans, Tartars, Bedouins, and
4292 3, 69 | his forefathers, and will turn his face from their manner (
4293 2, 20(42) | i. p. 821. seq. Cicero (Tuscul. Qusest. Lib. i. cap. x.
4294 Pre | the year seven hundred and twenty and three, (and) was completed
4295 Pre | it 1432 years old, just twenty-five years less than this last
4296 2, 66(122)| thirty-one, in the Sept. Greek twenty-nine, in number. Our author thought
4297 Pre | conducted. If it once or twice appeals to the power of
4298 2, 30 | attached, and made (as it were) twin brothers, to virtue. Nevertheless,
4299 4, 33 | sharp and cutting than the two-edged sword, and passeth even
4300 2, 9(7) | Herculem, Aesculapium, Tyndaridas ; Romulum nostri, aliosque
4301 3, 13(16) | Heroes, as Hercules, the Tyndarides, Bacchus, &c.; the third
4302 Pre | being printed in a Syriac type, which was made some years
4303 2, 64(119)| as having happened to the Tyrrhenians. The author tells us moreover,
4304 5, 38(69) | to_n e9autou~ sthliteu/wn u9ion" (lego bi/on.) "kai\ kath&
4305 5, 38(69) | prosti/qhsin o1noma. di0 u9perbolh_n e0pieikei/aj. mh_ e0pikru&
4306 2, 11(9) | quin religio nulla sit, ubicunque simulacrum est. Nam si religio
4307 2, 91(168)| conterruit. Nam cum neque imbres ulli neque nubes, tantumque exiguus
4308 2, 25(62) | quod vero sine corpore ullo Deum vult esse, ut Graeci
4309 4, 36(146)| potentia, nec est videre ullum genus hominum, a quo haec
4310 4, 31(120)| their doubting as to the ultimate results of His Gospel. The
4311 1, 75(70) | habet chorum Angelorum una assistentem." ~
4312 4, 6 | was to Galileans, -- men unacquainted with any thing beyond the
4313 2, 20(43) | sentiat: in summum tamen unam mentem mundo praeesse testatur,"
4314 1, 36(28) | haben-tibus, actu simplex unaque sit, potentia multiplex
4315 2, 76 | about fate has been rendered unavailing: every war-making necessity
4316 2, 83 | merciless, as to give up, unavenged, the soldiers of his army
4317 3, 3 | eyes of thy understanding, unbar the doors of thy mind; and
4318 2, 80(142)| occasions of insult offered by unbelievers, the answer is this : Revealed
4319 5, 52(110)| persecutions, except from the unbelieving Jews. We have a remarkable
4320 3, 15 | perform the rational and unbloody services which are (offered)
4321 1, 62 | and whose revolving is an unceasing miracle,—to revolve with
4322 Pre | to leave in the state of uncertainty, in which I found it. ~I
4323 1, 50 | his) provision after the unchangeable manner and ./. usages of
4324 3, 39 | immaterial, incorporeal, (and) unchanged as to His (eternal) Essence.
4325 1, 50 | unprepared by agriculture, and uncleansed from the weed. He however,
4326 1, 72 | the earth, is humid and unclear,—that "it consists of many
4327 Pre | was copied: it being no uncommon thing with copyists to transcribe,
4328 1, 27 | also without parts, and is uncompounded; (placed) beyond, and far
4329 3, 1 | and the peaceless and uncompromising enmity, which had so long
4330 1, 25 | immaterial, bodiless, and unconscious (lit. unwise), became, as
4331 Pre | Abhandlungen zur Orientalischen und Biblischen Literatur;" in
4332 Pre | must, as before, remain undefined for many reasons. The ink
4333 2, 8 | published of these, after undergoing a common mortality, that
4334 Pre | find, that I had greatly underrated its age, as this must be
4335 4, 9 | Psalms. Then He opened their understandings that they should understand
4336 5, 49 | could not otherwise have undertaken this enterprise, than by
4337 1, 1 | arisen of itself, casually, undesignedly, and by blind (lit. foolish)
4338 3, 70 | all, has been taught to undo through Him, the whole race
4339 Pre | word, with several in the undoubted productions of our author.
4340 1, 68 | confirm : (viz.) that of this undying nature, and equal of the
4341 2, 94 | robust, but things that give uneasiness and pain; and, should it
4342 4, 6 | pass: for, these are fish unendued with either voice, or reason;
4343 1, 75(67) | far must the soul remain unenlightened, and in intellectual darkness. ~
4344 Pre | some other things quite unessential to vital religion ; we should
4345 2, 24(61) | extent which would prove unfavourable to himself in the end,—a
4346 2, 83 | there any good Shepherd, who unfeelingly neglects the (single) sheep ./.
4347 Pre | which would even then be unfit for general circulation ;
4348 2, 19 | being without beginning, ungenerated, and in their multitude
4349 2, 96 | for He imparted to them ungrudgingly, the gifts which were from
4350 4, 32(123)| thing most unnatural and unheard of, -- was sufficient to
4351 3, 59 | thence, the whole impure and unholy power of Demons was destroyed ;
4352 2, 18 | whole element of the earth, uniformly with all nations throughout
4353 2, 3(3) | Greek] "Et ille quidem unigenitus Dei Sermo, a saeculis principio
4354 1, 1 | of days and nights; the unimpeded production of the animals;
4355 5, 13 | to preserve their minds uninjured by any of the evil passions :
4356 2, 50 | wicked than those who were unintellectual: those (I say), who made
4357 5, 24 | object of them all was in unison ? And, Whence this doctrine
4358 1, 75 | another quarter, and is itself united with itself; then again,
4359 Pre | Style of Eusebius, which is universally allowed to be any thing
4360 2, 91(168)| futurum pessimo augurio universos conterruit. Nam cum neque
4361 5, 26 | add this also: They were unlearned, and altogether illiterate;
4362 1, 23 | river ever flowing from an unlimited fountain, and distilling
4363 4, 21 | have left this calamity (unmentioned) -- that I might not be
4364 3, 60 | might accept fearlessly, and unmoved in their minds by death,
4365 4, 22 | dragged them on forthwith, unopposed, to the Temple ; and viewed
4366 2, 83 | safety of his friends, and unpityingly neglect them when thus perishing,
4367 1, 50 | provision from the stem, unprepared by agriculture, and uncleansed
4368 3, 55 | have remained unknown, and unprofitable to man. But, as it was preached (
4369 4, 25 | straw He will burn with fire unquenchable." ~How Simon the chief of
4370 Pre | been made. And to this, its unquestioned reception in the Syrian
4371 2, 80(142)| would answer no good end. Unrevealed religion never has, and
4372 4, 16 | should conduct themselves unrighteously in His Church. ~Again,
4373 Pre | endure; and consequently, how unsafe it is to pronounce positively
4374 1, 42 | and in the mind of their (unsophisticated) nature: and Him alone did
4375 2, 86 | wealth, and of comforts, unsparingly : at another, by the chastisements
4376 1, 34 | and He directs by powers unspeakable", the Sun, the Heavens, ./.
4377 3, 61 | deserved death, and as if unsubdued by (the fear of) any impending
4378 2, 18 | foreign to propriety, and was unsuitable, to those seducing Spirits
4379 2, 12 | animals ; to every sort of untamed beast, and reptile; and
4380 3, 39 | concealed, invisible, and untangible, Essence, -- that unembodied
4381 Pre | considered as groundless and untenable, I mean those which contain
4382 Pre, 0(5) | libri recens exarati, et unus dumtaxat prior quinternio
4383 1, 25 | bodiless, and unconscious (lit. unwise), became, as from others,
4384 5, 17(23) | the modern doctrines about unwritten tradition. The Apostles
4385 1, 23(17) | Jerome: " Bonus Dominus uoster Jesus Christus ex bono Patre
4386 2, 85 | with Him: and so without upbraiding, evinced He the promptness
4387 1, 37 | are both enlightened and upholden by means of the rays which
4388 3, 2 | those had been previously uprooted who had been the cause of
4389 2, 79 | to be) the destroyer and uprooter of them all; nor yet, did
4390 2, 80 | with complacency on their uprooters, who were in the profoundest
4391 3, 64 | eyes; nor, when looking upwards and seeing the Sun, Moon,
4392 2, 12(16) | Syriac]. Probably the 0Obo_d, Uranius of Stephen of Byzantium,
4393 Pre, 0(7) | literis in schola Edessenae urbis, quae illi patria erat,
4394 2, 91(168)| scilicet opus cunctorum tota urbo maximum fuit atque pulcherrimum:
4395 5, 15(18) | 5 The Mohammedans urge an argument of this sort
4396 2, 14(26) | all quarters. A similar usage obtained among the Babylonians.
4397 2, 80 | to appearance was quite useless, were supremely serviceable
4398 | using
4399 2, 9(7) | quidem sermonis, utimur usitato: sed ecquem tam amentem
4400 2, 9(7) | genere nos quidem sermonis, utimur usitato: sed ecquem tam
4401 1, 40(39) | aliqui censuerunt, plurimum utique aberrantes circa potentiam
4402 3, 18 | object deserving of the utmost contempt, breathless, motionless,
4403 Pre, 0(8) | Scholae sacrarum literarum in utraque urbe erant. Caesareae nimirum,
4404 4, 35(140)| the thirty, on the first vacancy that afterwards occurred ;
4405 2, 20(42) | Quintum genus adhibet, vacans nomine; et sic ipsum animum
4406 2, 21(47) | contained, and that no void (vacuum) exists in him .. that the
4407 1, 62(52) | stellarum, vel inerrantium vel vagarum, dispares cursus, orbis
4408 2, 88(164)| the second time. See also Valerius Maximus, Lib. viii. cap.
4409 1, 37(29) | laevaque Deorum ~Atria nobilium valvis celebrantur apertis. ~Plebs
4410 1, 42(40) | much more ancient than the vanities of idolatry is admirably
4411 3, 66 | desires: for he was then vanquished, and could not overcome: (
4412 1, 72 | resulting) from the innumerable vapours which (arise) from the earth62."
4413 1, 2 | flowered pictures; their roofs variegated with gold and sculpture
4414 1, 34 | characters. He otherwise varies also and time after time, (
4415 2, 91(169)| seq. It. Simsoni de Sibyl. Vaticin. disquis. col. 1712. ~
4416 3, 3(9) | illorum" (Prophetarum sc.) " vaticinia videmus." De falsa religione,
4417 4, 36(146)| contemplatione ad illud vaticinium.....cum vidcat juxta illam
4418 1, 36(28) | Necesse autem est, ut anima vegetatrix in haben-tibus, actu simplex
4419 2, 25(62) | perspicue, et inter sese vehementer pugnantia." Of this Maker
4420 5, 14(14) | est animus sine corpore velox." See also his life by Diogenes
4421 2, 91(168)| aliquo in ipso terrarum motu velut extrito, totum de improviso
4422 5, 14(15) | prorupisse, illumque patrimonio vendito, erat quippe vir nobilis,
4423 4, 30(117)| principis apostasies serpentis venenum" of Irenaeus, Edit. Grabe.
4424 3, 12 | infatuated, and no more give that venerable name to beasts, reptiles,
4425 2, 9(7) | of things : " Piscem Syri venerantur : omne fere genus bestiarum
4426 3, 67 | will he again as formerly, venerate the Interpreter 98 of his
4427 3, 64 | did they address their veneration to them: but they acknowledged
4428 1, 19 | of THE WORD OF GOD ? or, venture upon a thing, the doing
4429 2, 17(30) | admiratione dignum ? Obscoena verba naso resonante effutiunt,
4430 1, 21 | He is elevated above all verbal description, but also above
4431 3, 39(45) | ib. p. 537. B. does not verbally agree with our text.~
4432 4, 3(4) | necessary here to follow the verbiage of the Syriac, which gives, [
4433 1, 37(29) | Hic locus est; quem, si verbis audacia detur, ~Haud timeam
4434 2, 11(9) | necesse est: nec potest unquam vere nomen accipere, quod veritatem
4435 Pre | thence the more easily to verify the identity of such work,
4436 4, 36(148)| says the Apostle, "Yes, verily their sound went out into
4437 2, 18(32) | videtur, sed ii, qui omnibus veris falsa quaedam adjuncta esse
4438 2, 20(44) | cautus non explicuit; verisimile tamen, Aristotelem ea inter
4439 2, 11(9) | vere nomen accipere, quod veritatem fuco et imitatione mentitur. ~
4440 2, 13 | universe, THE WORD OF GOD in verity, the King of all, and Maker
4441 1, 62(52) | dispares cursus, orbis ille dum vertitur exhiberet," &c. According
4442 2, 18(32) | enim sumus ii, quibus nihil verum esse videtur, sed ii, qui
4443 4, 30(113)| times of M. Aurelius and L. Verus. He first attached himself
4444 2, 9(7) | esse putas, qui illud, quo vescatur, Deum credat esse ?" ~
4445 1, 47(46) | infirmius aetheris aura vescitur." ~
4446 2, 91(168)| opulentissimum...inter qua; etiam Vestae templum, sic ut Palladium
4447 2, 22(59) | of the Fascinus of the Vestals, and of the Lingam of the
4448 5, 14(15) | nempe:~" Aestate crassum vestiebat pallium ~Sed hyeme pannum,
4449 4, 18 | that, in many places, no vestige of their foundations is
4450 4, 18 | this time, some remaining vestiges of these its ancient decorations.
4451 2, 17(30) | magistros filias et filii vestri spectant," &c. See the notes
4452 3, 55 | of the similitude to the viciousness of each of these: (saying) "
4453 1, 55 | eclipses of the moon, the vicissitudes of the seasons, and the
4454 4, 36(146)| Omnem enim humanam naturam vicit sermo praedicatus cum potentia,
4455 2, 64(118)| solitos immolare, et cum victi essent ab Agathocle rege
4456 2, 64(119)| the ashes of sacrificial victims. His words are (ib. p. 1,
4457 3, 61 | all, supreme over all, and victorious over all! Death, like an
4458 4, 36(146)| illud vaticinium.....cum vidcat juxta illam pradictionem
4459 3, 3(9) | Prophetarum sc.) " vaticinia videmus." De falsa religione, Lib.
4460 4, 36(146)| praedicatus cum potentia, nec est videre ullum genus hominum, a quo
4461 2, 15(28) | pugnas, proelia, vulnera, videremus ; odia praeterea, dissidia,
4462 2, 80(142)| gale, saying these words: "Videtisne, amici, quam bona a Diis
4463 2, 50 | sought did (the Gods), not in.vidiously, give their divinations.
4464 Pre, 0(8) | Graeca in Syriacum linguam vigebat, ut in Actis Martyrum Palaestinae
4465 5, 14 | women, children, slaves, and villagers! All this (then accrued
4466 2, 13(23) | exsectum a filio Coelum, vinctum itidem a filio Saturnum ? &
4467 2, 15(28) | intemperantia libidines, adulteria, vincula, cum humano genere concubitus,
4468 Ded | A LONG LOST WORK, AND TO VINDICATE THE OPINIONS, OF ONE OF
4469 2, 80(142)| forth miraculous powers vindicating its own authority, when
4470 2, 80(142)| revealed religion put forth vindictive powers, on occasions of
4471 4, 6(10) | e Codice Theol. graeco. Vindob. fol. 240. v. ad Luc. v.
4472 Pre | catena in Lucam in cod. Vindobon. caesareo xlii., teste Lambecio
4473 1, 50 | commodity, either of the vine, the olive, or of the fruit
4474 5, 42 | feet ? that they gave Him vinegar to drink ? that one struck
4475 4, 13 | fence, and planted in it vines, and built a Tower within
4476 2, 9(7) | possunt ? Cum fruges, Cererem; vinum, Liberum dicimus, genere
4477 5, 14(15) | patrimonio vendito, erat quippe vir nobilis, cum congregasset
4478 1, 30(21) | Among the poets, Orpheus, Virgil, Ovid, &c.: among the philosophers,
4479 2, 64(118)| quibus homines suis ipsi virilibus litant ;...alia Virtutis,
4480 3, 57 | the matter both well and virtuously as it was most convenient.
4481 2, 64(118)| virilibus litant ;...alia Virtutis, quam eandem Bellonam vocant,
4482 1, 29 | are many parts, members, viscera, and bowels, collected together,
4483 Pre, 0(2) | miles from Cairo. Asseman visited this Monastery in 1715,
4484 2, 88(164)| consul, ex his qui proxime viso scripsere, vitigineum, et
4485 5, 14(15) | See also Plutarch, " De vitando aere alieno," p. mihi, 831.
4486 2, 88(164)| proxime viso scripsere, vitigineum, et nunquam mutatum septies
4487 5, 17(23) | not written, but delivered viva voce; it is evident enough,
4488 2, 44(81) | Timaeus, (Edit. Lond. Tom. vn. p. 280. seq.)..." [Greek] "
4489 2, 89(166)| with the Thessalians, Lib. vni. 33. Eusebius, however,
4490 1, 40(39) | abhorrentem : origine vero hujus vocabuli inde ducta, quod semper
4491 2, 20(42) | Tum ipsa forma, quam vocamus entelecheian." The origin
4492 2, 64(118)| Virtutis, quam eandem Bellonam vocant, in quibus ipsi sacerdotes,
4493 2, 19(35) | statum, quam eu0qumi/an vocat, quse, ut quidam oblique
4494 5, 38(69) | rubrica excipit locum Lucae de vocatione Levi:) 1Acion qanma&sai
4495 1, 1(1) | Protagoras, qui Deos in dubium vocavit; et postea Diagoras, qui
4496 2, 15(28) | absurdiora sunt ea, quae Poetarum vocibus fusa, ipsa suavitate nocuerunt;
4497 5, 47 | streets; lifting up their voices, calling to those with whom
4498 2, 21(47) | are contained, and that no void (vacuum) exists in him ..
4499 3, 71(100)| It is my intention, Deo volente, to publish a more detailed
4500 2, 19(35) | interpretantur, non idem sit quod voluptas, rerum secundum quam animus
4501 1, 78 | foolish knowledge of that voluptuousness, which is too vain to be
4502 4, 30 | also shews the marks and vouchers of the evil concealed within
4503 3, 20 | creation; and who it was, that vouchsafed to afford to these things,
4504 Pre | that it is entirely without vowel marks, and that the interpunctuation
4505 2, 49 | worshipping with (their) vows, as Gods, the inanimate
|