Book, Chapter

 1    I            xl| completing at the cost of great labour my Preparation for the Gospel {
 2    I            xl|         friend, my request, and labour with rue henceforward in
 3    I,   5, p.   28|        it is needless for me to labour the point, since it is possible
 4  III,   1, p.  102|       Come unto me, all ye that labour, and are heavy laden, and
 5  III,   5, p.  135|     deeds of Jesus, not without labour, and by bearing torture,
 6   IV,  13, p.  188|       Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden,  ./. 
 7   IV,  17, p.  219|         we thought him to be in labour, and smitten, and afflicted:
 8    V,   4, p.  247|      other translators render, "Labour of Egypt,'' so that the
 9    V,   4, p.  247|     that the passage runs: "The Labour of Egypt and the merchandise
10  VII,   1, p.   55|       God's struggle, where His labour and difficulty, if a woman
11  VII,   1, p.   55|         and toil, and no common labour and struggle to the prophets
12  VII,   1, p.   56|      what could the contest and labour or the toil of this God
13  VII,   1, p.   57|    there any divine struggle or labour attendant on his birth.
14  VII,   1, p.   62|    himself, who says of his own labour and that of his fellow-workers, "
15   IX,   2, p.  156|         would need considerable labour. ~
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