Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   5, p.   xx|       for the character of their Master. They afford "clear evidence
 2  Int,   5, p.   xx|         to the uniqueness of the Master. ~It is quite remarkable
 3  Int,   5, p.   xx|         It was the method of the Master Himself, and therefore the
 4  Int,   6, p.   xx|         But the school, like its master, was marked by its devotion
 5    I,   8, p.   48|         people, according to the Master's will, delivered on the
 6    I,   8, p.   48|    teaching given by the perfect master to those who rose above
 7   II,   3, p.   77|       his owner, and the ass his master's manger, but Israel doth
 8  III,   4, p.  125|        at once, as fearing their Master's voice? ~When He filled
 9  III,   5, p.  126|        why the disciples and the Master were associated. For a teacher
10  III,   5, p.  127| instruction did they rank Him as Master? ~Is not the answer clear?
11  III,   5, p.  127|        sin: they must try to (b) master anger and every base lust,
12  III,   5, p.  127|  invented their account of their Master's work? How is it possible
13  III,   5, p.  128|      consistent account of their Master. Such would be the right
14  III,   5, p.  128|       being the pupils of such a master. Come, tell me, if such
15  III,   5, p.  129|   nothing that was good in their Master, in His life, or His teaching,
16  III,   5, p.  130|      pupils of a base and shifty master, who had seen His end, discussed
17  III,   5, p.  131|         of him, the deceiver and master of deceit of yesterday,
18  III,   5, p.  132|        arraying against them our Master's death, to scare them;54
19  III,   5, p.  132|          but by the power of our Master Crucified. ~Let us go to
20  III,   5, p.  132|         evil bravely, having our Master as our model. For what (
21  III,   5, p.  132|        for ages, to say that our Master, who (was crucified) 55
22  III,   5, p.  133|         on behalf of their (116) Master? At least the record about
23  III,   5, p.  133|          shewing, that after the Master's death they were taken
24  III,   5, p.  134|          who dared to betray his Master while He lived, dying by
25  III,   5, p.  136|     turning from but welcoming a Master, Who forbade the possession
26  III,   5, p.  136|        Acts iii. 6.]]  ~When the Master gave them gloomy prophecies,
27  III,   5, p.  137|         after pleasures. And the Master also, as One Who would not
28  III,   5, p.  140|        gratuitously to their own Master what He never did? ~I think
29  III,   5, p.  141|          these liars about their Master, who handed down in writing
30  III,   5, p.  141|      deceive, and to adorn their Master with false words, they would
31  III,   5, p.  142|          dignified side of their Master they would have had to deny
32  III,   6, p.  145|           if they had seen their Master bent on making money, and
33  III,   6, p.  146|          suppose so far as every master is better than his pupils,
34  III,   6, p.  147|          the disciples of such a Master with the disciples of a
35  III,   6, p.  147|        regard any other as their master but a geometrician, and
36  III,   6, p.  147|        in the character of their master. And yet through all these (
37  III,   6, p.  147|     Jesus, it follows that their Master could not have been a sorcerer. ~
38  III,   6, p.  148|        like this, must not their Master have been so long before
39  III,   6, p.  150|         the cooperation of their Master to discover and to know
40  III,   6, p.  150|         may deduce that of their Master. ~But once more, let us
41  III,   6, p.  151|     Barbarian, has ever been the Master of so many pupils, the prime
42  III,   7, p.  157|     reasonably have answered the Master, "can we do it? How, pray,
43  III,   7, p.  157|      thus, or thinking thus, the Master solved their difficulties,
44   IV,   5, p.  172|       sole-begotten of His will, Master of fair crafts and Creator
45    V,  17, p.  260|    reckoned as God to be His own Master and Master of all others,
46    V,  17, p.  260|         to be His own Master and Master of all others, and His Own
47   VI,  18, p.   28|    become an olive-garden to the Master, which of old He planted
48  VII,   1, p.   63|   prophet says, their farmer and master expected them to bring forth
49  VII,   2, p.   79|          and mighty arm of their Master and Shepherd, from danger
50    X,   1, p.  196|        of the Jews to betray his master, no more (c) went as he
51    X,   1, p.  197|       for he alone went into his master as a friend and a disciple,
52    X,   1, p.  198|          men who after sharing a master's table, and the nurture
53    X,   8, p.  231|        like good sheepdogs their Master's spiritual flock and the
54    X,   8, p.  231|           and to fawn upon their Master and recognize Him, and to
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