Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   4, p.   xv|          warfare against Jews and Greeks, the lines of controversy
 2  Int,   5, p.   xx|        nurture of His words." The Greeks boast of the self-sacrifice
 3    I,   1, p.    7| Barbarians more than those of the Greeks. And on the other side I
 4    I,   1, p.    7|           that we were originally Greeks, or men of other nations
 5    I,   1, p.    7| invocation of the God of Jews and Greeks alike in our Saviour's Name
 6    I,   2, p.    8|          have been either Jews or Greeks. But yet they could not
 7    I,   2, p.    8|     Neither can we regard them as Greeks, inasmuch as they were not
 8    I,   6, p.   40|         suits not Jews alone, but Greeks and barbarians, and all
 9    I,   6, p.   42|       giving them to all men both Greeks and barbarians to keep He
10    I,   8, p.   50|          so that all men, whether Greeks or barbarians, have their
11    I,  10, p.   54|        ancient primitive men. The Greeks say that early men did not
12    I,  10, p.   54|           the view of the ancient Greeks, but it does not agree with
13    I,  10, p.   57|           been found for Jews and Greeks alike, the propitiation
14   II,   1, p.   64|    demonstrated that for Jews and Greeks the hope of the promise
15  III,   3, p.  119|        from Barbarians as well as Greeks. ~Such then is the more
16  III,   3, p.  119|           the most erudite of the Greeks pride themselves, forsooth,
17  III,   3, p.  120|        beasts, as well as learned Greeks, are taught simply by His
18  III,   5, p.  133|          who announced to Romans, Greeks, and Barbarians the total
19  III,   5, p.  143|         in addition many Jews and Greeks, He must evidently have
20  III,   5, p.  143|           attracted many Jews and Greeks, except by wonderful miracles
21  III,   5, p.  144|          many myriads of Jews and Greeks were brought under His yoke
22  III,   6, p.  149|        actual barbarians, and not Greeks only, learning from the
23  III,   6, p.  152|           while every race of the Greeks and Barbarians was being
24  III,   6, p.  152|          immemorial habits of the Greeks themselves, (b) and heralded
25  III,   7, p.  157|        language shall we speak to Greeks? How shall we persuade Persians,
26  III,   7, p.  158|       heathen, and Barbarians and Greeks alike possessed the writings
27  III,   7, p.  161|            and how they persuaded Greeks as well as barbarians to
28  III,   7, p.  161|   Macedonians, the Bithynians and Greeks, and in a word all the other
29   IV,   9, p.  180|       nations. It is time for the Greeks themselves, therefore, whose
30   IV,  12, p.  187|           eager to preach both to Greeks and Barbarians the holy
31   IV,  12, p.  187|           of religion for all the Greeks and Barbarians; a way which
32   IV,  13, p.  188|           evil and unholy, to the Greeks as well as the Hebrews,
33    V, Int, p.  220| beforehand what they proclaimed. ~Greeks and Barbarians alike testify
34    V, Int, p.  223|         by the confessions of the Greeks themselves already given,
35    V, Int, p.  224|   enumerate the lawless stones of Greeks and Barbarians, in order
36    V, Int, p.  224|         for teachers, why did the Greeks ever leave what did them
37    V, Int, p.  228|           of the true religion to Greeks and Barbarians alike. This
38 VIII, Int, p.   98|          for all nations, whether Greeks or Barbarians, to every
39 VIII,   2, p.  125|           11¼ days. Therefore the Greeks and the Jews add three intercalary
40 VIII,   2, p.  135|    Godhead to all equally whether Greeks or Jews. But after His Resurrection
41    X,   8, p.  233|        dog. (Whence, perhaps, the Greeks hearing of some such dog
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