Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   9, p.   xx|      Predictions for us of the Foreign Nations.~1, 2, 3. From Genesis.~
 2    I             2|    history, and now in that of foreign nations. Such things as
 3    I,   5, p.   25|        to Jews  ./. inhabiting foreign soil. And I have shown that
 4    I,   6, p.   30|    Mosaic legislation, but not foreign to the teaching of our Saviour.
 5    I,   6, p.   35|     ordinances of his law in a foreign country, and as of necessity
 6    I,   7, p.   43|        the Law of Moses either foreign or unfriendly to their own
 7   II,   1, p.   64|      Predictions for Us of the Foreign Nations. ~(b) IN the first
 8  III,   5, p.  129|   about Him?—this is all quite foreign to the nature of scoundrels. ~
 9  III,   5, p.  132| Crucified. ~Let us go to other foreign lands, and overturn all
10   IV,   3, p.  166|  Everything surely (c) that is foreign to this would be darkness
11   IV,  13, p.  190|        could not be said to be foreign to one another. Whereas
12    V, Int, p.  224|      good at home and make for foreign lands, as if they wanted
13    V, Int, p.  229|      turning to the oracles of foreign races through a lack of
14    V,   1, p.  233|        of material bodies, but foreign to a nature without body
15    V,  19, p.  263|      of Palestine his enemies, foreign and most ungodly races,
16   VI,   9, p.    9|       mountain in imitation of foreign nations.  ./. 
17   VI,  21, p.   43|        places that belonged to foreign races. That would be the
18  VII,   1, p.   47|    subjection of their land to foreign enemies, and the flourishing
19  VII,   1, p.   57|    both the Jew and the one of foreign race, who had combined together
20  VII,   1, p.   60|        it means by this that a foreign military power will occupy
21  VII,   1, p.   65|        them, and given over to foreign idolaters to inhabit; and,
22  VII,   1, p.   66|    Temple, and the settling of foreign races on their land, enslaving
23  VII,   3, p.   87|      us much about him that is foreign and opposed to the adoption
24 VIII,   1, p.  109|     that they were under (375) foreign rule, and also the calling
25 VIII,   1, p.  109|        also the calling of the foreign nations from the East by
26 VIII,   2, p.  119|      of Rome, and of Herod the foreign King of the Jews, in whose
27 VIII,   2, p.  119|        case of the ancient (d) foreign inhabitants of the land
28 VIII,   2, p.  129|     being the first ruler of a foreign stock, and he destroyed
29 VIII,   2, p.  129|       Herod, the first king of foreign (b) stock, in whose reign
30 VIII,   2, p.  134|       understand the rulers of foreign stock who succeeded him
31 VIII,   2, p.  134|      but the (c) same Herod of foreign stock, and the others ruled
32 VIII,   3, p.  141|      being inhabited by men of foreign race it is even now like
33 VIII,   4, p.  146|      now has been inhabited by foreign nations. ~And it was when
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