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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
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