Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   1, p.   xi|     ripe to sit at the feet of teachers who could philosophically
 2  Int,   5, p.   xx|        so utterly outstrip His teachers, and institute a new nation
 3  Int,   5, p.   xx|      Gospels, and of the first teachers of Christianity, has been
 4    I,   9, p.   52|    They knew they could be the teachers and guides of their families,
 5    I,   9, p.   52|     say we are able to provide teachers and preachers of the word
 6  III,   3, p.  120|       would not please his own teachers, who, it may be, assisted
 7  III,   4, p.  126|       done, He proclaimed them teachers of the highest religion
 8  III,   5, p.  134|      by the chief priests, and teachers of the Jews what he thought
 9  III,   6, p.  150|        books, or education, or teachers, self-taught, self-educated,
10  III,   6, p.  151|      the instruction of modern teachers, who had done like things
11  III,   6, p.  151|     knowledge of their ancient teachers, and that collecting His
12  III,   6, p.  151|        greater than He, and no teachers antecedent to Him in time,
13  III,   7, p.  155|      God, admitted by your own teachers to be, not an enchanter
14  III,   7, p.  156|    even if they were appointed teachers to only one person, far
15  III,   7, p.  156|      already to be workers and teachers of holiness to all the nations,
16    V, Int, p.  224|      to use their own gods for teachers, why did the Greeks ever
17   VI,  13, p.   13|  system and the seats of their teachers, here called Mountains metaphorically,
18 VIII,   3, p.  141| prophets, priests and national teachers loved to interpret, is a
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