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 1  Abb          viii|          E.R.E.   Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics. ~Enc. Bib.  
 2  Int,   3, p.   xi|        while rejecting the Jewish religion, establish the thesis that
 3  Int,   3, p.   xi|    republication of the primitive religion of the patriarchs, from
 4  Int,   3, p.   xi| patriarchs, from which the Mosaic religion was a declension, allowed
 5  Int,   4, p.   xv|          defence of the Christian Religion. ~
 6  Int,   6, p.   xx|    appropriated for the Christian Religion long ago by the Apologists.
 7  Int,   9, p.   xx|        Character of the Christian Religion.~3. That the System of Moses
 8    I,   1, p.    3|         proclaim the new ideal of religion preached by Him to all men,
 9    I,   1, p.    7|           is the character of the religion set before Christians. And
10    I,   2, p.    7|        Character of the Christian Religion. ~I HAVE already laid down
11    I,   2, p.    7|         Judaism, but that it is a religion with its own characteristic
12    I,   2, p.    9|      conceive some other ideal of religion, by which they must have
13    I,   2, p.    9|        exactly that third form of religion midway between Judaism and
14    I,   2, p.   10|           unmentionable vice. The religion of others lay in slaughter,
15    I,   2, p.   11|   foreigner and a stranger to the religion which he afterwards embraced,
16    I,   2, p.   11|         to set up another kind of religion different from the law of
17    I,   4, p.   23|          they had fallen from the religion of their forefathers, and
18    I,   5, p.   25|         of the ancient pre-Mosaic religion, in which Abraham, the friend
19    I,   5, p.   26|          clearly partakers of the religion of these men of old time.
20    I,   5, p.   26|        And if we partake of their religion we shall surely share their
21    I,   6, p.   33|          form of their ancestors' religion, as the new covenant does
22    I,   6, p.   35|       more perfect life. Yes, the religion of those blessed and godly
23    I,   6, p.   38|     ancient and venerable form of religion, is followed by the Egyptians,
24    I,   6, p.   42|            and provided a form of religion, reduced and inferior to
25    I,   7, p.   43|           unfriendly to their own religion, on the other as being the
26    I,   8, p.   50|          interests as well as for religion: and it is for them that
27    I,   9, p.   50|          men of God, and that our religion is the same as theirs, and
28    I,   9, p.   50|    preserved the ancient ideal of religion. But it is possible for
29    I,   9, p.   51|    compete with their leisure for religion; they were able to worship (
30    I,   9, p.   52|           life of true wisdom and religion, unmingled with other men.
31    I,   9, p.   52|           fiery seed of their own religion; they did not intend that
32   II, Pre, p.   62|       survey of the ideal of true religion brought before all men by
33  III,   1, p.  102|       vision of the light of true religion those who of old in their
34  III,   2, p.  105|         all men the knowledge and religion of the one Almighty God.
35  III,   2, p.  105|        first and only lawgiver of religion to the Jews, and Jesus Christ
36  III,   2, p.  105|    miracles authenticated (d) the religion that he proclaimed: Christ
37  III,   2, p.  117|       coming of a prophet and the religion of a lawgiver like Moses,
38  III,   3, p.  120|              wonderful teacher of religion Who, with invisible and
39  III,   3, p.  120|        simply by His power a like religion to that of the prophets
40  III,   4, p.  126|           teachers of the highest religion to all the nations. Such
41  III,   5, p.  134|      suffer a like fate for their religion, and continued to bear witness
42  III,   6, p.  147|    exactest information about our religion. No, in spite of all, none
43  III,   6, p.  151|          that the Teacher of true religion to men, Who worked such
44  III,   6, p.  152|           heralded a new and real religion. What similar daring has
45  III,   6, p.  153|       could He teach others about religion, or temperance, or the knowledge
46  III,   7, p.  156|     Himself as the teacher of the religion of One Almighty God to all
47  III,   7, p.  161|      places of instruction in the religion of the One Supreme God. ~
48   IV,   4, p.  169|          judging, proclaiming the religion of the Father. ~
49   IV,   8, p.  177|         who failed of the highest religion of the Almighty to prosper,
50   IV,  12, p.  187|           and lay down one way of religion for all the Greeks and Barbarians;
51   IV,  16, p.  213|          goats offered in the old religion of types, being admitted
52    V, Int, p.  227|           days who began the said religion, and predictions and proclamations
53    V, Int, p.  227|           the Teacher of the same religion, and be revealed as Saviour (
54    V, Int, p.  227|        them in every form of true religion, to give a record of those
55    V, Int, p.  227|     afterwards fell away from the religion of their forefathers, and
56    V, Int, p.  227|         herald the sharing of the religion of the ancient Hebrews by
57    V, Int, p.  227|           all men a light of true religion, purity of mind and body,
58    V, Int, p.  228|           the Teacher of the true religion to Greeks and Barbarians
59    V,   2, p.  237|       filled every place with the religion proclaimed by Him; so that
60    V,  30, p.  270|         idolatrous error to godly religion. And this prophecy, moreover,
61   VI,  16, p.   24|          God from their ancestral religion, and made them a spoil for
62   VI,  16, p.   24|      under the yoke of the Jewish religion. And the Lord says that
63 VIII, Int, p.   97|    idolatry, the knowledge of the religion of God the one Supreme Creator.
64 VIII, Int, p.   97|         God, nor the path of true religion, yet inspired by conceptions
65 VIII, Int, p.   97|         by conceptions of natural religion they agreed in self-taught
66 VIII, Int, p.   98|           truth and light of true religion, the kingdom of Heaven,
67   IX,  11, p.  174|         lawgiver and a teacher of religion to men, except our Saviour,
68   IX,  11, p.  174|         lawgiver and a teacher of religion to men, such as none but
69   IX,  11, p.  176|        Lawgiver to all men of the religion of the God of the Universe,
70   IX,  15, p.  183|         that of the Father of the religion with which they are associated.
71   IX,  15, p.  183|    darkness and ignorance of true religion, by Him freed from their
72   IX,  16, p.  185|        being led to the Christian religion, is so obvious to them,
73    X,   1, p.  193|      their law and their father's religion, and he inflicted all sorts
74    X,   2, p.  201|          die as martyrs for their religion, and much more would be
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