Book, Chapter

 1   II,   3, p.   81| shattered. For the whole portion refers to them, in the following
 2   IV,  16, p.  208|          the second time here it refers to some one else than Him,
 3    V,   8, p.  252|          that the second "Lord'' refers to him that was sent by
 4    V,  11, p.  256|          in a bush." But when it refers to the actual being who
 5    V,  13, p.  258|         say that the bush darkly refers to the wild, savage, and
 6   VI,  12, p.   12|       too, when it records this, refers the matter to Christ. Hear
 7  VII,   1, p.   58|       kings to whom the prophecy refers ruled these lands. It was
 8  VII,   1, p.   61|  conclude that the prophecy here refers to the Roman Empire. For (
 9  VII,   1, p.   61|      Assyrians in Holy Scripture refers to the Romans; that would
10  VII,   1, p.   68|          understand that here it refers to the (d) same beings,
11 VIII,   1, p.  101|       And later in the part that refers to the renewing of the sanctuary: ~"
12 VIII,   3, p.  141|     irrefutable that the prophet refers to the time of our Saviour'
13   IX,   1, p.  152|            And I think that this refers figuratively to Jerusalem,
14   IX,  17, p.  188|       world." And the same Psalm refers to the peace here described,
15    X,   3, p.  202|       witness that this prophecy refers to the traitor Judas, when,
16    X,   4, p.  210|          month," I think that it refers to the three divisions of
17    X,   8, p.  216|         convinced that the Psalm refers to Him and no one else,
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