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Alphabetical [« »] godlessness 3 godliness 5 godly 42 gods 66 goes 34 goeth 1 gog 3 | Frequency [« »] 66 calls 66 fire 66 fulfilment 66 gods 66 none 66 subject 65 hands | Eusebius Pamphilii of Caesarea Demonstratio evangelica Concordances gods |
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1 Int, 4, p. xv | worship of them whom they call Gods." But he admits that there 2 Int, 5, p. xi | finer than to make both gods and men our enemies for 3 I 4(7)| as fallen angels, heathen gods, and oracles, cf. P.E. 329. 4 I, 1, p. 6 | apostasy from our ancestral gods, and make a great point 5 I, 2, p. 8 | describe as the worship of many Gods according to the ancestral 6 I, 2, p. 9 | 2. Remove the strange gods from your midst, 3. and 7 I, 2, p. 9 | gave to Jacob the strange gods, which were in their hands, 8 I, 4, p. 22 | he is terrible above all gods. | 5. For all the gods of 9 I, 4, p. 22 | all gods. | 5. For all the gods of the nations are demons, | 10 I, 6, p. 35 | utterly destroy all the gods of the nations of the earth. 11 I, 6, p. 37 | longer to their ancestral gods. It foretells that Moses 12 I, 10, p. 54 | nor burn incense to the gods, but "herbage, which they 13 II, 3, p. 74 | longer on their ancestral gods, nor on idols, nor on daemons, 14 III, 3, p. 119 | theology, to worship many gods? Remember that this was 15 III, 3, p. 119 | the oracles of their own gods mention the Hebrews in terms 16 III, 5, p. 132 | ages about their ancestral gods. Let us bid the Romans first 17 III, 5, p. 132 | of all not to worship the gods (c) their forefathers recognized. 18 III, 5, p. 132 | but declare war on their gods, not going back to Moses' 19 III, 5, p. 132 | destroy the faith in the gods which from immemorial time 20 III, 5, p. 132 | finer than to make both gods and men our enemies for 21 III, 5, p. 132 | the nations, to war on the gods that have been acknowledged 22 III, 5, p. 133 | the total rout of their gods, would expect to undergo 23 III, 6, p. 154 | hear your own daemons, the gods I mean who give the oracles, 24 III, 7, p. 154 | to some. It is that the gods have pronounced Christ to 25 III, 7, p. 157 | give up their ancestral gods, and worship the Creator 26 III, 7, p. 157 | the laws about their own gods that have been established 27 III, 7, p. 159 | despise their fathers' gods, condemn the folly of all 28 III, 7, p. 160 | Jesus, as if they had been gods. [[Acts xiv. 12.]] And the 29 IV, 3, p. 166 | only-begotten Son, and not of more Gods or sons. Even so, light 30 IV, 5, p. 171 | creative powers, and name many gods, and not confess that that 31 IV, 9, p. 179 | and with base myths of the gods and impure stories he tempted 32 IV, 9, p. 179 | conceptions of their own gods, and worked their lust with 33 IV, 9, p. 179 | thing supposed to please the gods. Hence soon, according to 34 IV, 10, p. 181 | human sacrifices of the "gods," I mean the evil daemons, 35 V, Int, p. 222 | argument could prove that the gods, or divine powers, or good 36 V, Int, p. 223 | absurdity the idea that the Gods, the very Saviours of men, 37 V, Int, p. 224 | instruction provided by the gods for the lovers of philosophy. 38 V, Int, p. 224 | laid down for them by the gods would not have used different 39 V, Int, p. 224 | systems of law. For if the gods existed and were good they 40 V, Int, p. 224 | barbarian legislators, if the gods were present and gave all 41 V, Int, p. 224 | prove that they were not gods, but (c) vicious and evil 42 V, Int, p. 224 | whereas the famous Greek gods and oracles are not proved 43 V, Int, p. 224 | to them to use their own gods for teachers, why did the 44 V, Int, p. 225 | And if it had been the gods or the good daemons, who 45 V, Int, p. 225 | truth from the gift of the gods. Who, then, were they? Whoever ( 46 V, Int, p. 225 | the many contests of the gods, enmities and wars of gods 47 V, Int, p. 225 | gods, enmities and wars of gods against gods, not one of 48 V, Int, p. 225 | and wars of gods against gods, not one of them has ever, 49 V, Int, p. 227 | and secret tales about the gods. Against these they warned 50 VI, 4, p. 5 | AFTER saying that the God of gods shall be seen, he prays 51 VI, 20, p. 37 | Coming of the Lord. And their gods, that is to say the daemons, 52 VI, 20, p. 41 | oracles and diviners of their gods, and of the daemons that 53 VI, 20, p. 41 | they will inquire of their gods, and their idols, (b) and 54 VI, 20, p. 41 | that falsely appear to be gods, they will receive no help, 55 VII, 3, p. 93 | will no more serve strange gods, but bear fruit and please 56 VII, 3, p. 93 | d) shall not serve other gods, but shall serve the Lord 57 VIII, Int, p. 97 | lustful deeds as works of the gods. How could the wise and 58 VIII, Int, p. 98 | whom they regarded as their gods, with the result that human 59 VIII, 3, p. 141 | deserting their fathers' gods and their old superstitions, 60 VIII, 5, p. 147 | deserting their ancestral gods and calling upon the God 61 VIII, 5, p. 148 | efforts to question their own gods and the idols and them that 62 VIII, 5, p. 148 | renouncing their ancestral gods, some of them raising political 63 VIII, 5, p. 148 | even now calling upon their gods and images and them that 64 VIII, 5, p. 148 | beasts or reptiles as their gods, nor on wild animals and 65 IX, 1, p. 151 | Moabites had of old considered gods? But others were not mentioned, 66 IX, 1, p. 151 | mean by those regarded as gods by the Moabites (for they