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 1      II|     tricks of wizardry, but to a divine and mysterious wisdom ;
 2      IV|       which of them was the more divine nor in what capacity one
 3      IV|      prophesied, thanks to their divine inspiration, by Hebrew sages
 4      IV|   converted to his own scheme of divine teaching so many people ;
 5      IV|         and still rallies to his divine teaching races from all
 6      IV|          mightier, thanks to his divine and mysterious power, than
 7      IV|        time rebelled against his divine teaching being now easily
 8      IV|       won over by him, while the divine doctrine which he firmly
 9      VI|    restrained from transgressing divine law by the rule and decree
10      VI|         too is determined by the divine laws, namely that beings
11      VI|          is yet circumscribed by divine bounds. Consequently he
12      VI|        is no reason to prevent a divine nature, being beneficent
13      VI|      allowed also by the rule of divine providence ; for according
14      VI|       well be described as truly divine, and as carrying in his
15      VI|      affording an example of the divine and inspired nature than
16     VII|          good compiler ? If as a divine being and superior to a
17     VII|          character claimed to be divine should, after shedding its
18    VIII|         is introduced to us as a divine man, who assumes from birth
19    VIII|          token of his being of a divine nature these very words
20    VIII|          Apollonius, that it was divine and superior to humanity.
21    VIII|       wooed philosophy in a more divine manner than Pythagoras,
22      IX|         language, and who by his divine power anticipated " the
23      XI|          be. If then he was of a divine nature, it follows that
24      XI|          in the book that he was divine is devoid of all truth.~ ~
25     XVI|          Philostratus to our own divine evangelists, on the ground
26    XVII| bestowing upon the teacher of so divine a philosophy the privilege
27   XXIII|         into some miraculous and divine being, our author, now that
28   XXVII|      make such forecasts by some divine impulse, and that it is
29   XXVII|        mounted, upon a lofty and divine mechanism before they wheel
30     XXX|        who forthwith proceeds to divine whose soul it was that the
31    XXXI|         he had been endowed with divine power and virtue. And the
32   XXXII|          from classing him among divine and extraordinary and wonderful
33    XXXV|   Apollonius, to wit that it was divine and superhuman ; for without
34    XXXV|      realised that he was indeed divine, and superior to the rest
35  XXXVII|          XXXVII~ ~NEXT this most divine of men composes in the most
36 XXXVIII|          ought to rank him among divine and philosophic men or among
37 XXXVIII|        of these things that this divine man, endowed with all virtue
38 XXXVIII|          be accounted truly more divine than Pythagoras and his
39     XLI|          you yourself being of a divine nature should transcend
40    XLII|       universe is ordered by the divine laws of the providence of
41    XLII|      punishes infractions of the divine law ; but for the motives
42    XLII|          him deny that anyone is divine in our humanity, that there
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