Book, Chapter

 1  Int,   2, p.   xi|      the three centuries of its past struggle, might very naturally
 2  Int,   5, p.   xv|         elaborate rechauffee of past apologetics, but in this
 3  Int,   5, p.   xx|      existed effectively in the past except in connection with
 4  Int,   6, p.   xx|         violent wrench with the past. It was capable of being
 5   II,   3, p.  100|      Gentiles, not in days long past, but now after the length
 6  III,   7, p.  159|       all who lived in the ages past, and put their sole belief
 7   IV,   7, p.  176|       only those of the distant past, who were made perfect in
 8   IV,  12, p.  186|       salvation of all for ages past, and that "He might bring
 9   IV,  15, p.  197|         speaks of the future as past, and as one predicting about
10    V,   1, p.  231|       record the things of ages past, He goes on to say: "The
11    V,  23, p.  266| generally regards the future as past, so that we must understand
12    V,  23, p.  266|     that we must understand the past to be meant in spite of
13    V,  23, p.  266|      must be understood for the past "I overthrew," and "ye will
14  VII,   1, p.   72|       other time in the distant past. No Hebrew sprung from the
15  VII,   3, p.   88|         holy prophets from ages past." ~The fact that our Lord
16 VIII,   2, p.  130|    despised these seventy years past?" ~This, then, was the very
17    X,   8, p.  218|   consider that His Passion was past at eventide on the approach
18    X,   8, p.  230|         again from what was now past, to comfort Himself for
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