Book, Chapter

 1    I,   1, p.    6|         us of apostasy from our ancestral gods, and make a great point
 2    I,   1, p.    7|    Greek ideas, and enslaved by ancestral ties in the deceits of polytheism.
 3    I,   2, p.    8|      many Gods according to the ancestral religions of all nations.
 4    I,   2, p.   11|     life, to have cast away his ancestral superstition, to have left
 5    I,   6, p.   37| prophets and no longer to their ancestral gods. It foretells that
 6   II,   3, p.   74|         call no longer on their ancestral gods, nor on idols, nor
 7  III,   5, p.  132|       held for ages about their ancestral gods. Let us bid the Romans
 8  III,   7, p.  157|        nations to give up their ancestral gods, and worship the Creator
 9  III,   7, p.  158|   writings about Jesus in their ancestral script and language. And
10    V,   2, p.  238|       of the nations, forsaking ancestral daemonic error, and purified
11   VI,  16, p.   24|        people of God from their ancestral religion, and made them
12 VIII,   1, p.  102|       And then instead of their ancestral and constitutional rulers
13 VIII,   2, p.  131|        longer on members of the ancestral line, but on obscure and
14 VIII,   5, p.  147|        own time deserting their ancestral gods and calling upon the
15 VIII,   5, p.  148|       His sake renouncing their ancestral gods, some of them raising
16   IX,  16, p.  185|      mankind, divorced from its ancestral superstition, is being led
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License