bold = Main text
   Book, Chapter          grey = Comment text

 1  Int,   1, p.   xi    |       He preferred to confront followers of the acute critic with
 2  Int,   4, p.   xv    | objections of Porphyry and his followers point by point, as Origen
 3  Int,   5, p.   xx    |         If He had been one His followers would have resembled Him,
 4  Int,   5, p.   xx    |       the whole world! And His followers were to do the work simply "
 5  Int,   5, p.   xx    |       Christ's effect upon His followers, he argues back from the
 6  Int,   5, p.   xx    |    back from the ideals of the followers to the uniqueness of the
 7    I,   1, p.    6    |     say that we only teach our followers like irrational animals
 8    I,   3, p.   20    |        a riddle. He orders his followers to obey him in these prophetic
 9  III           119(32)|                         3 i.e. followers of Porphyry. ~
10  III,   5, p.  143    |       of our rulers, his first followers did not cease to revere
11  III,   6, p.  148    |      from the character of His followers the character of their Head,
12  III,   7, p.  156    |      thus acquired them as His followers, He breathed into them His
13   IV,  12, p.  187    |   power those very friends and followers, whom He had selected for
14   IX,   2, p.  155    |   hereditary superstition, and followers of the God of the prophets
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