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3004 IX, 12, p. 177 | Universe. For what reverence or propriety is there in talking of the 3005 I xl(2) | work up to η παιδισκη και ο προσηλυτος (page 14 of this translation). [[ 3006 Int, 7, p. xx | in place of a sacrifice (προσφερειν αντι θυσιας)." ~This (μνημη 3007 II, 3, p. 87 | from their own land, but prospered in that whereto they were 3008 Int, 1, p. xi | Celsus had been followed as protagonist against Christianity by 3009 X, 8, p. 231 | character of shepherds, to protect like good sheepdogs their 3010 IV, 10, p. 184 | Wisdom and Power oversees and protects the heaven itself and the 3011 IV, 3, p. 167 | respects its likeness to its prototype? And how could (b) there 3012 II, 1, p. 68 | to the Circumcision, who proudly and boastfully claim, that 3013 V, 1, p. 231 | glorify It. ~Passage quoted, Prov. viii. 12-31.] ~THE divine 3014 I, 3, p. 18 | I have quoted makes this provision: ~"The soul which shall 3015 I, 9, p. 53 | certainly not forbidden, but the provisions are similar to those followed 3016 X, Int, p. 191 | Humanity. With this necessary proviso, let us now consider the 3017 V, 1, p. 236 | Who —— the all-wise and prudent plans of the only wise Father . . . . ~[ 3018 VIII, Int, p. 98 | and all-seeing Justice, pruning them like a wild and dangerous 3019 IX, 17, p. 188 | and their lances into (d) pruning-hooks; nation shall not take up 3020 III 143(77)| mi=n a)rxo&ntwn for tw~n prw&twn a)ndrw~n par' h(mi=n.   3021 IX, 9, p. 172 | and chant, with music of psaltery and choir and all kinds 3022 III, 5, p. 138 | the house, behold, many publicans and sinners came and sat 3023 Int, 1, p. xi | moment was opportune for the publication of a book, "shewing what 3024 III, 5, p. 133 | that after this they had publicly discussed the questions 3025 III 137(63)| solum expectatur quod odio publico necessarium est, confessio 3026 I, 3, p. 20 | up "like unto him"; and publishes the good news that he should 3027 VI, 24, p. 45 | preacheth the gospel, who publisheth peace, who preacheth the 3028 Int, 4, p. xv | the lecture-hall and the pulpit. Much of the warmth, directness, 3029 IV, 5, p. 171 | all those effects with one pulse of their being. ~Fire, again, 3030 X, 3, p. 203 | this ministry. Now this man purchased a field with the reward 3031 III, 6, p. 153 | mere Name of Jesus and the purest prayers to drive away all 3032 IV, 10, p. 182 | be found in thee one who purges his son or his daughter 3033 V, Int, p. 227 | mind and body, a complete purging of the heart, which having 3034 I, 6, p. 41 | divers other similar external purifications. Hut I, introducing the 3035 IV, 5, p. 171 | Fire, again, by its nature purifies gold, and melts lead: wax 3036 VIII, 1, p. 115 | sins, washing them away and purifying (b) their old garments and 3037 III, 5, p. 141 | contumely, the soldier's purple coat thrown round Him like 3038 IV, 1, p. 162 | of His own treasures, He purposed to create the whole reasoning 3039 IV, 12, p. 186 | to Him; nay, rather, He pursued him from behind and drove 3040 III, 5, p. 129 | to passion and pleasure, pursuing only the life of the moment 3041 III, 5, p. 126 | instruction, and pupils always, in pursuit of that instruction, come 3042 VI, 15, p. 23 | invisible and opposing powers by pushing and butting them. And agreeing 3043 IX, 14, p. 181 | induce them to inquire of pythons and the daemon oracles, 3044 II 88(34)| kai apo twn nhswn thV qalasshV. ~ 3045 III 143(77)| ndrw~n par' h(mi=n.   d'qen ei0j e1ti for ei0s-e0ti 3046 III 100(1) | work itself, h9 au0th_ 9upo&qesij, which is an examination 3047 II 91(39)| efelkusamenon ena laon sunhxe twi qewi . . . . sugkrotoumenon. ~ 3048 II 73(12)| 2 thn kata dianoian qewroumenhn skhnophgian. Or, "the Feast 3049 III 113(21)| o9dw~| au0tou~ e0planh&qh. ~ 3050 V, 20, p. 264 | did the fortress of hell quake when they saw thee?" prophesy 3051 VIII, 2, p. 138 | were first conscious of a quaking and a sound, and afterwards 3052 VII, 2, p. 83 | be simply of God, but is qualified as of the God of Jacob, 3053 Int, 6, p. xx | quidem credere quid aliud est quam horrendae impietatis crimine 3054 Int, 6, p. xx | perhaps so much disposed to quarrel with adventurers into the 3055 VIII, 2, p. 129 | Aristobulus nnd Hyrcanus, were quarrelling with each other, Pompey, 3056 III, 5, p. 130 | the Roman Empire, and the Queen of Cities itself, and others 3057 Int, 5, p. xx | leave history a mass of questionable documents and disputed statements. ~( 3058 Int, 8, p. xx | et syllabus scriptorum, qui veritatem religionis Christianae 3059 VII, 3, p. 90 | b) passage decides the quibble of the Jews already noticed 3060 Int, 6, p. xx | in glory to judge (the) quick and dead,' and concluded 3061 Int, 6, p. xx | Lord: "Quod quidem credere quid aliud est quam horrendae 3062 Int, 6, p. xx | David, to be his Lord: "Quod quidem credere quid aliud est quam 3063 Int, 6, p. xx | established and somewhat quiescent theology was exactly where 3064 VIII, Int, p. 98 | Christ, instilling the (c) quintessence of wisdom, be in harmony 3065 Abb viii | the Bible, 1898-1906. ~E.R.E.   Encyclopedia of Religion 3066 III 119(30)| 1 e0pi\ spei/raj: spei~ra, equivalent of Roman "manipulus" ( 3067 VII, 1, p. 70 | one that is sent." ~And Raashim again was king of the idolatrous 3068 VII, 2, p. 82 | Genesis, where it is said of Rachel, "And they buried her in 3069 III 121(36)| blood-offerings as he did on more radical grounds than themselves 3070 IX, 1, p. 151 | leaders of Moab, and the raid on the sons of Seth, and 3071 III 119(30)| 1 e0pi\ spei/raj: spei~ra, equivalent of 3072 X, 2, p. 202 | with their mouths, as a ramping and roaring lion." And also, " 3073 IV, 3, p. 166 | Father. And the ray has its range of activity solely from 3074 VII, 1, p. 68 | and it understands two ranks of invisible enemies and 3075 VIII, 2, p. 117 | end of the war which is rapidly completed, in desolations. 3076 Int, 5, p. xv | actual warfare, and there are rapier-strokes of satire, which the hand 3077 III, 5, p. 140 | and suggest that they are rascals and clever sophists, who 3078 VI, 18, p. 26 | plundered, and the women ravished, and half of the city shall 3079 IV, 10, p. 181 | wild beasts that devour the raw flesh of men, and to lie 3080 Int, 3, p. xi | argument. By an elaborate rc.ditdio ul. absitrdum the 3081 III, 6, p. 145 | there are eunuchs who we're made eunuchs of men, and 3082 Int, 3, p. xi | fulfilment of prophecy. Book X reaches the Passion and is especially 3083 Int, 6, p. xx | Dr. Sanday has said: "The reaction against Sabellianism (which 3084 III, 7, p. 162 | limited value to the general reader.]~ 3085 X, 8, p. 223 | be ashamed, how much more readily and specially wilt Thou 3086 III, 7, p. 159 | ensure their courage and readiness to devote themselves to 3087 Int, 5, p. xx | God's presence with men, realised to a new degree, and 'specialised' ( 3088 X, 8, p. 228 | Yet He, seeing the impious realm of the tyrant so strong 3089 V, 26, p. 268 | fleeing the nations shall reap the great harvest of being 3090 VII, 1, p. 62 | neither ploughing, sowing, nor reaping, possessing no flocks of 3091 I, 6, p. 35 | the pre-Mosaic men of God reappeared. And the blessing assured 3092 II, 3, p. 92 | gathers standing corn, and reaps the grain of the ears; 6. 3093 I, 2, p. 11 | in which he was born and reared, and to have followed God, 3094 I, 9, p. 52 | foresight for producing and rearing children. They knew they 3095 III, 3, p. 118 | cause of meekness, "sweet reasonableness," 27 purity, and every virtue 3096 IV, 9, p. 180 | They became vain in their reasonings: and their senseless heart 3097 III 118(28)| 2 Or "reassembled."  ~ 3098 VII, 1, p. 59 | other, of those who had rebelled from Jerusalem, that is 3099 VII, 2, p. 81 | the Jews, the number of rebellions against them is shewn by 3100 VIII, 2, p. 125 | was sent by Artaxerxes to rebuild Jerusalem, in the one hundred 3101 VIII, 2, p. 127 | both at the head of the rebuilding of the (393) Temple, when 3102 V, 27, p. 269 | with Him is not himself the rebuker, but tells of another Lord. 3103 VIII, 1, p. 99 | your father."  ~Then, after rebuking his elder sons, one for 3104 I, 1, p. 6 | this, as it will assuredly rebut the empty lies and blasphemy 3105 IV, 10, p. 181 | and birds. Why should I recall the cruel and terrible human 3106 Int, 1, p. viii | a state prepared for the reception of the higher truths." It 3107 VI, 13, p. 16 | gloomy chasms, and in the recesses of the body) might melt 3108 Int, 5, p. xv | Demonstratio is an elaborate rechauffee of past apologetics, but 3109 II, 1, p. 65 | dear to God. So there is reciprocal blessing, they enjoying 3110 X, 8, p. 233 | in which He says: "I will recite thy name with my brethren, 3111 III, 5, p. 128 | else that is evil; that he recommends them to endeavour so to 3112 VI, 14, p. 19 | confidence, which has great recompense of reward. For ye have need 3113 IV, 10, p. 182 | was polluted, and I have recompensed (their) iniquity upon it, 3114 IV, 1, p. 162 | the place to approach more recondite doctrine, I mean the more 3115 VI, 23, p. 44 | HERE the Lord Himself recording plainly His Coming among ( 3116 VI, 13, p. 16 | the ruling spirits shaken, recovering from the cruel and ceaseless 3117 III, 5, p. 136 | then, being refuted, let me recur to the truth of the sacred 3118 Int, 4, p. xv | Demonstratio. We have a constant recurrence to the massive evidence 3119 VI, 18, p. 34 | After this the prophecy recurring to the Coming of the Lord 3120 V, 8, p. 252 | theology in our opinion rightly recurs to one Source of being and 3121 IX 149 | IT remains for me now to redeem my promise to go on to expound 3122 Int, 4, p. xv | dialogue-form. Where they are redolent of the open air, and the 3123 I, 3, p. 18 | plunder he has seized, or redress the injustice he has committed, 3124 X, 2, p. 202 | else, you must yourself reduce the passage to harmony. 3125 Int, 1, p. x | constructs his powerful reductio ad absurdum of the suggestion 3126 V, 17, p. 260 | Lord, in a common form of reduplication, as one reckoned as God 3127 III 142(76)| passage. W. E. Barnes' recent reexamination of the question makes out 3128 II 80(23)| accuracy as Aquila, but at more refinement of expression. ~ 3129 IV, 8, p. 177 | the unseen shone in them, reflected as in a mirror. 3130 III 121(36)| the appeal to religious reformers like Apollonius of Tyana; 3131 VI, 20, p. 37 | have power no more, and refrain from answering their (c) ./. 3132 Int, 6, p. xx | of Faith; like Origen, he refrains from speculation on the 3133 VI, 18, p. 36 | and drink."~Then after the refreshing saving spiritual blood has 3134 II, 3, p. 100 | locations are in (), scripture refs in [[]].  This page was 3135 II, 3, p. 91 | Christ.39 And these same refugees from the lost race of the 3136 Int, 4, p. xv | nature of his proofs with "refutations and contradictions of opposing 3137 III, 5, p. 136 | of argument, then, being refuted, let me recur to the truth 3138 IV, 10, p. 182 | Himself to men, bringing reinforcement to His angels for the salvation 3139 VII, 3, p. 91 | truth the girdle of his reins." For if one can only interpret 3140 Int, 4, p. xv | the apologetic writer but reiterated in a new form against the 3141 I, 2, p. 9 | Judaism, nor does one who rejects the Jewish worship become 3142 VI, 13, p. 17 | His coining, proceeds to relate His birth among men, and 3143 III, 6, p. 151 | craftsman; and these things are relatively insignificant and human; 3144 Int, 2, p. xi | persecution, that had but recently relaxed its pressure, as present. 3145 IX, 13, p. 179 | from all the world, and releases them that come to Him from 3146 IV, 12, p. 186 | predictions as reviling death, and releasing the souls that are bound 3147 IX, 8, p. 171 | for their joy, viz.: their relief from the external yoke of 3148 Int, 8, p. xx | scriptorum, qui veritatem religionis Christianae adversos atheos . . . 3149 I, 5, p. 25 | errors of polytheism, they relinquished idolatrous superstition, 3150 Int, 6, p. xx | If Eusebius signed with reluctance, he signed with sincerity. ~ 3151 I, 10, p. 62 | beyond the first few) have reluctantly been omitted]~ 3152 Int, 4, p. xv | on which he prefers to rely. By "works" he means the 3153 V, 3, p. 241 | is said, "Thou art, and remainest, a priest for ever." ~Since, 3154 I, 9, p. 51 | brethren, the time is short: it remaineth that they who have wives 3155 Int, 5, p. xx | 15, 16. It is worthy of remark that in selecting five passages 3156 IV, 13, p. 189 | physicians heal men with (169) remedies akin to and resembling them. 3157 III, 3, p. 123 | moreover He persisted in reminding men of a (d) divine judgment, 3158 I, 3, p. 15 | shall choose." ~And he again reminds them, saying: ~"5. Thou 3159 VII, 3, p. 89 | life, which is called the removal of the moon. And our Saviour' 3160 VIII, 2, p. 133 | Ismael the son of Pheba, and removing him shortly afterwards appointed 3161 VIII, 1, p. 107 | Rome nor from the seed of Remus and Romulus, but from many 3162 I, 5, p. 25 | itself to be such, being a renewal of the ancient pre-Mosaic 3163 X, 4, p. 209 | the Lord, and moulds and renews the souls of them that enter. ~ 3164 VIII, 1, p. 109 | nation, with its men of old renown has from that day to this 3165 I, 3, p. 19 | ordained, by requiring him to repair with all speed {5c} to the 3166 I, 3, p. 19 | again, after confession and reparation the transgressor had to 3167 IX, 8, p. 171 | to the last farthing, and repaying every garment and vestment 3168 IX, 13, p. 179 | judging in righteousness, He repays justly to the Jewish people 3169 IV, 16, p. 205 | on our behalf, as one who repels attacks against us both 3170 IX, 15, p. 183 | medicine, nor bruise the repentant with hard judgment, so He 3171 X, 4, p. 208 | seeing that he was condemned, repented and returned the money to 3172 IV, 15, p. 202 | throne, O God," clearly replacing o( Qeo&j by Qee/, the Hebrew 3173 IX, 3, p. 157 | Increase and multiply and replenish the earth," which in them 3174 VI, 20, p. 38 | His flesh was "thick" as representing bodily substance, "light" 3175 Int, 7, p. xx | i.e. it includes what it represents. It is the archetype of 3176 Int, 8, p. xx | Donatus (Rome, 1498) was reprinted at Basle in 1542, 1549, 3177 I, 6, p. 41 | against the unjust, and reprisal, when it said: ~An eye for 3178 I, 9, p. 50 | concerned with marriage and reproduction, while we to some extent 3179 III 122(39)| of growth and decay; cf. Republ. viii. 546. ~ 3180 VIII 123(1) | 1 Cf. Plato, Republic, 543 A. ~ 3181 Int, 6, p. xx | shines (188). He comes to republish the true doctrine, from 3182 I, 6, p. 38 | animals of every kind, repulsive monsters, fire and earth, 3183 VI, 20, p. 40 | the one and true God, and rescuing the victims from the daemons 3184 III 122(39)| 96 A. (P. E. 26) on the research into the natural laws of 3185 IX, 7, p. 167 | say must not be spoken and reserve for God alone; but I have 3186 III, 2, p. 103 | only to that part of it resident in the land of Judaea or 3187 I, 6, p. 41 | And again, it commanded resistance against the unjust, and 3188 VIII, 2, p. 121 | perceive that God is no respecter of persons, but in every 3189 I xl | successors, who shone forth with resplendent godliness, and the blessed 3190 IV, 9, p. 180 | and cures and such like in response to human sorcery. ~ 3191 IX, 2, p. 154 | From Isaiah. ~How the Lord resting in the Sacred Body which 3192 II, 3, p. 94 | valley of Achor shall be a resting-place for the herds of my people, 3193 IV, 10, p. 184 | active, even as far as the resting-places of the dead, that He might 3194 VII, 1, p. 56 | height, by reason of the restitution of His divine glory from 3195 VII, 1, p. 73 | clearly to them that are restive under and rebel against 3196 IV, 16, p. 209 | Shame the Jews His Enemies, restoring the Sanctuary of the Father. ~" 3197 IX, 4, p. 159 | it fitting for (d) Him to restrain Herod from his self-chosen 3198 I, 6, p. 34 | then they had done without restraint. He rescued them from their 3199 I, 5, p. 25 | of its kingdom are to be restricted in no way whatever. Considerations 3200 III, 5, p. 136 | and meat, and much bodily restriction besides, with prayers and 3201 Int, 1, p. x | notably where Eusebius restricts himself to unfolding the 3202 II, Pre, p. 62 | My present object is to resume the argument at a point 3203 III, 7, p. 158 | at the hands of the Jews, retailed simply the noble and the 3204 V, Int, p. 225 | rites of the mysteries, retailing their own Adulteries and 3205 Pre v | based his arguments. To have retained them in full would have 3206 IX, 15, p. 182 | same. ~Concerning Christs Reticence about His Miracles. (452)  ~[ 3207 III, 6, p. 145 | from His seeking periods of retirement in d) the mountains, and 3208 IV, 16, p. 215 | drama for a short time, retires as one reckoned among mortals, 3209 Int, 5, p. xx | was unworldly, pure, and retiring; sorcerers are the reverse. 3210 III, 7, p. 159 | am irresistibly forced to retrace my steps, and search for 3211 VIII, Int, p. 99 | not long ago. We will now, retracing our steps, examine in detail 3212 I, 8, p. 50 | is for them that times of retreat and instruction, and days 3213 VIII, 1, p. 106 | of the twelve, I mean (c) Reuben, according to the divine 3214 Pre v | his indebtedness to the Rev. W. K. Lowther Clarke, the 3215 III, 5, p. 143 | followers did not cease to revere him. For he appeared to 3216 III 120(34)| Christianity, though he reverenced Christ as a man, and wrote 3217 III, 7, p. 154 | immortal, and they speak of Him reverently." ~And lower down he adds: ~" 3218 IX, 1, p. 152 | the picture of a complete reversal and change in days to come: " 3219 III, 4, p. 124 | WE must now proceed to review the number and character 3220 I, 6, p. 30 | of our Saviour. Thus in reviewing his life in his apology 3221 VII, 1, p. 57 | the multitude of Jews who revolted from the law of God, made 3222 III, 6, p. 152 | barbarians temperate, and revolutionized every lawless and uncivilized 3223 IV, 5, p. 169 | soul-power of all things.) Be it rhythm, beauty, harmony, order, 3224 V, 30, p. 270 | PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY~RICHARD CLAY & SONS, LIMITED,~BRUNSWICK 3225 IV, 1, p. 165 | their powers and forms, richly and ungrudgingly from Himself. ~ 3226 VIII, 1, p. 108 | sprung from this family, got rid of and slew Hyrcanus, the 3227 I, 3, p. 20 | He speaks of Christ in a riddle. He orders his followers 3228 VII, 1, p. 61 | prophecy was cloaked in riddles, in many (b) other contexts, 3229 VII, 1, p. 63 | is expressed in dark and riddling figures. For I have already 3230 VI, 15, p. 22 | mountains."~I believe this rider on the bay horse who stands 3231 VI, 20, p. 38 | he says, "Behold the Lord rides on light thickness, and 3232 I, 6, p. 40 | on a very lofty mountain ridge, with the others left below 3233 Int, 1, p. xi | faith and hope, and were now ripe to sit at the feet of teachers 3234 I, 5, p. 26 | commands the sun and it rises not, and he seals up the 3235 VII, 3, p. 90 | root of Jesse, and he that riseth to rule the nations, in 3236 VII, 2, p. 80 | other nations; there were risings of nations against nations 3237 III 121(36)| 150, where G. quotes from Ritter and Preller "a brief summary 3238 IV, 16, p. 207 | abase myself in the house of rny God, rather than to dwell 3239 IX, 5, p. 161 | straight, and the rough roads into smooth by saying to 3240 III, 7, p. 154 | severed from wisdom it ever roams. ~That soul is the soul 3241 I, 1, p. 4 | of their ancient worship, robbed of the independence of their 3242 VIII, Int, p. 97 | on their neighbours like robbers, and gained their livelihood 3243 III, 5, p. 128 | of so many, a harmony of rogues? Whence their general and 3244 III 102(3) | had evidently read—a0naph&roij ou]si.~ 3245 VII, 1, p. 70 | as was also the son of Romelias of the Jews in Samaria who 3246 VIII, 1, p. 107 | from the seed of Remus and Romulus, but from many different 3247 VIII, 4, p. 142 | increased, as the mourning for Roon cut down in the plain. 12. 3248 II, 3, p. 94 | that they have fixed and rooted their teaching throughout 3249 III 108(11)| E.: maqhta&j. W.H.: e9te/rouj.  ~ 3250 Int, 3, p. xi | passages of an Arian ring have roused the anger of orthodox commentators. ~ 3251 Int, 6, p. xx | 220 a) which especially rouses the anger of de Billy, a 3252 V, 2, p. 237 | Presence among men, by which He routed the hostile invisible powers 3253 VIII, 1, p. 112 | His Church, these too He routs with invisible hand and 3254 III 116(25)| 3 E.: kai\ ta_j de/rreij tw~n au0lai/wn. ~ 3255 IV, 2, p. 165 | and helmsman holding the rudder-lines of the creation of the universe. 3256 IV, 6, p. 175 | unholy, with all manner of rude and dissolute actions, living 3257 I xl | request, and labour with rue henceforward in your prayers 3258 III, 5, p. 127 | and more, they must never ruffle the sublime calm of the 3259 III, 6, p. 145 | pleasures, with the object of ruining women by magic, and seducing 3260 VIII, 3, p. 141 | choosing stores from its ruins as they will for private 3261 IX, 3, p. 157 | who came from Israel, Who ruleth many nations, having lain 3262 V, 5, p. 248 | oracle upon earth, his word runneth swiftly." ~Now it is evident 3263 VIII, 2, p. 138 | in which destruction (b) rushed on them like a flood with 3264 III, 7, p. 156 | thought good to use the most rustic and common men as ministers 3265 III, 3, p. 118 | from which all lovers of (ruth would agree that He was 3266 III 143(77)| ouj. tw~n par' h(mi=n a)rxo&ntwn for tw~n prw&twn a) 3267 V, 30, p. 270 | BRUNSWICK ST., STAMFORD ST., S.E. I,~AND BUNGAY, SUFFOLK. ~ 3268 III 139(67)| singular participles. E.: o#sa a!n and pl. ~ 3269 IV, 16, p. 207 | for Feasts, New Moons and Sabbaths, which the Apostle teaches 3270 Int, 6, p. xx | sign it. Safeguarded from Sabellian implications it was harmless. 3271 Int, 6, p. xx | astringere!" (Billius, Obs. Sac. I. 29, p. 48). ~It is clear 3272 X, 6, p. 213 | lamentation. And I will bring sackcloth (d) on all loins, and baldness 3273 VIII, 3, p. 141 | public buildings. And it is sad for the eyes to see stones 3274 X, 8, p. 220 | the divine Name—such as Saddai, Jao, El, and the like. ~ 3275 II, 3, p. 80 | predictions had showered sadness. But the succeeding passages 3276 Int, 6, p. xx | conscientiously sign it. Safeguarded from Sabellian implications 3277 III 121(36)| silence five years: then he sailed away to Egypt, afterwards 3278 III, 4, p. 125 | while His disciples were sailing? — and how when they were 3279 Int, 5, p. xv | point. It seizes the real salients in the evidential controversy, 3280 I, 7, p. 43 | of a legislation new and salutary for all men, so that He 3281 IV, 15, p. 191 | called Jesus and Christ, and saluted beforehand by name by so 3282 VI, 11, p. 10 | Nation. ~[Passages quoted, 2 Sam. xxii. 1, 10-12, 44-46.]~( 3283 Int, 6, p. xx | when employed by Paul of Samosata. Athanasius used it sparingly 3284 VIII, 1, p. 104 | Labclon of Ephraim, and Samson of Dan; then there being 3285 IX, 11, p. 175 | He had commanded Moses to sanctify the whole people for three 3286 X, 1, p. 192 | enemy done evilly in thy sanctuaries, | 4. and they that hate 3287 Int, 6, p. xx | neither did Origen. As Dr. Sanday has said: "The reaction 3288 VII, 1, p. 65 | Him had changed from the sands and thorns of their ancient 3289 III, 6, p. 144 | virtuous way of life, and of sane and reasonable doctrines, 3290 Int, 5, p. xi | teaching, in purity, meekness, sanity of mind, benevolence, love 3291 IX, 14, p. 181 | idolaters of the Gentiles would sap their foundations and induce 3292 IV, 17, p. 217 | And so, also, in naming Sara Sarra, and Isaac called 3293 III, 5, p. 129 | life of the moment and the satisfactions which belong to it, are 3294 Int, 5, p. xx | feet of Christ. He alone satisfies their majestic anticipations. ~" 3295 VIII, 1, p. 104 | followed by the first king, Saul, of the tribe of Benjamin. 3296 V, Int, p. 223 | that the Gods, the very Saviours of men, and the good daemons, 3297 Int, 6, p. xx | Semi-Arians rejected it as savouring of Sabellianism. No wonder 3298 III, 5, p. 140 | neither understand what thou sayest; and he went into the outside 3299 I, 6, p. 42 | prophets material for much scandal, and to those of the circumcision 3300 III, 6, p. 153 | not?) unholy in his ways; scandalous, base, atheistic, unjust, 3301 II, 3, p. 100 | in [[]].  This page was scanned at a time when I thought 3302 III, 5, p. 132 | them our Master's death, to scare them;54 so we will destroy 3303 X, 8, p. 230 | stripped him, and put on him a scarlet robe. 29. And when they 3304 IV, 15, p. 199 | of God, honoured with a scat on the right hand of His 3305 VI, 20, p. 41 | within them, and I will scatter their counsel."~And they 3306 II, 3, p. 98 | race, even in their (d) scattering remembered God, so that 3307 Int, 6, p. xx | its ray, as myrrh to its scent, as a king to his portrait. 3308 IV, 15, p. 193 | holiness far better than the scents of earth, and hold the smell 3309 I, 1, p. 3 | one of His disciples, the schemes of enemies, the accusations 3310 VI, 18, p. 31 | is figuratively meant the schisms and heresies and moral declensions 3311 Int, 5, p. xx | and the twentieth-century scholar choose three out of the 3312 Pre v | for his constant interest, scholarly guidance, and invaluable 3313 Int, 4, p. xi | of extraordinarily wide scholarship, which marshals and buttresses 3314 Int, 8, p. xx | 1559 and 1570, and with the Scholia of J. J. Grynaeus at Paris 3315 I, 6, p. 41 | those who have him for a schoolmaster and have kept the earlier 3316 III 110(17)| Eus., H.E. i. 7. 11. See Schürer, History of the Jewish People, 3317 V, Int, p. 222 | ungrudgingly for all men the science of foretelling the future, 3318 I, 6, p. 31 | But if I had gone with scorners, and if my foot has hasted 3319 IX, 7, p. 169 | walking upon serpents and scorpions, not allowing them to be 3320 III, 5, p. 137 | disciples, he is let off scot-free, though he be convicted 3321 III, 5, p. 129 | foreign to the nature of scoundrels. ~And once more consider 3322 VI, 15, p. 23 | which should come forth and scour the plains, so that soon 3323 III, 5, p. 133 | took them in charge and scourged them as a punishment ./. 3324 III, 5, p. 128 | disposition quite cleverly with a screen of holy teaching and a novel 3325 II 93(41)| 6 a, owing to error of scribe because of touV katoikountaV 3326 III, 7, p. 158 | Jesus in their ancestral script and language. And yet who 3327 Int, 8, p. xx | argumentorum et syllabus scriptorum, qui veritatem religionis 3328 III, 5, p. 136 | had any sense would not scruple to set down one who acted 3329 III 130(51)| receiving Parthia, Andrew Scythia, John Asia, Peter the Jews 3330 III, 5, p. 130 | race, and yet others to the Scythian, that some already should 3331 Int, 6, p. xx | horrendae impietatis crimine se astringere!" (Billius, Obs. 3332 X, 8, p. 230 | Now the coat was without seam woven from the top throughout. 3333 VIII, 5, p. 149 | the other Scriptures were searched at leisure much more could 3334 VII, 1, p. 68 | Samaria, which we (330) call Sebaste. Concerning whom God said 3335 III 143(77)| has e0kei=non for tou~ton. sebome/nwn for dexome/nwn. tou~ ' 3336 VI, 1, p. 2 | by, "making darkness his secret-place, and darkness under his 3337 Pre v | K. Lowther Clarke, the Secretary of S.P.C.K., for his constant 3338 I, 8, p. 49 | trade, and the other more secular interests as well as for 3339 III, 3, p. 121 | thereby beyond all other men secure His favour and good will, 3340 Int, 8, p. xx | that a satisfactory text is secured by the use of the Parisinus 3341 IX, 7, p. 169 | has: ~"Thou, Lord, art my security, thou hast set thy dwelling 3342 | seeming 3343 IV, 10, p. 181 | dear to Him might not be seethed in the gulf of sin, sent 3344 V, 8, p. 252 | the earth, and Lot entered Segor, and the Lord rained upon 3345 Int, 5, p. xv | full and to the point. It seizes the real salients in the 3346 Int, 8, p. xx | having fewer readers, was seldom copied. There is, therefore, 3347 Int, 5, p. xx | worthy of remark that in selecting five passages of typical 3348 Int, 4, p. xv | series of prophecies, whose selection, systematic arrangement 3349 III, 2, p. 117 | at your leisure to make selections relating to the subject, 3350 VIII, 2, p. 128 | high-priestly office: in whose day Seleucus conquered Babylon and put 3351 III, 4, p. 125 | flesh and blood, the very self He was before, to His own 3352 III, 3, p. 119 | holy wise, God their King, self-born." ~Here the writer called 3353 IV, 5, p. 172 | dowering all mankind with self-conscious mind able to (b) contemplate 3354 Int, 5, p. xx | and again the purity and self-control, the justice and love of 3355 Int, 7, p. xx | It is a choral, prayerful self-dedication and Eucharist. ~(ii) 223 3356 III, 3, p. 121 | we must offer our own "self-discipline" 35 as a holy sacrifice 3357 III, 6, p. 150 | or teachers, self-taught, self-educated, is assumed to have discovered 3358 X, 8, p. 233 | whole dispensation of His self-emptying and humiliation, and prayed 3359 V, 1, p. 231 | living Wisdom of God and self-existent, saying: "I, Wisdom, have 3360 V, 5, p. 250 | regarded generally is a self-movement and activity of thought. 3361 III, 5, p. 133 | characteristic clement is self-preservation, would ever be able for 3362 Int, 5, p. xx | The Greeks boast of the self-sacrifice of Democritus and Krates, 3363 I, 9, p. 52 | from the right way through self-will. And this explanation of 3364 III, 5, p. 131 | people, and yet his aims were selfish beyond those of the people, 3365 I, 3, p. 15 | thee; 24. and thou shall sell them for money, {2b} and 3366 VIII, 2, p. 133 | common and unknown men, selling and peddling the office, 3367 Int, 6, p. xx | of victory. Later on the Semi-Arians rejected it as savouring 3368 III, 5, p. 136 | as they stand, surely any sensible person would be inclined 3369 III, 5, p. 136 | dragged in the train of sensual pleasure, not enslaved by 3370 VI, 20, p. 38 | it was not formed of the sensuous passions of corruption, 3371 III 120(34)| to Marcellus, Anebo and Sententiae. See also note p. 155. ~ 3372 III, 3, p. 120 | teaching, have expressed such sentiments as these in their writings— 3373 V, 1, p. 233 | united to Him, afterwards separating and coming apart from the 3374 III 121(36)| the wife of the Emperor Septimius Severus, is accessible in 3375 III 119(33)| 4 Cf. Sib. Or. iii. 218 seq. for an eulogy of the Jews: " 3376 Int, 1, p. xi | the objections of Porphyry seriatim. His aim in the Demonstraiio 3377 III, 6, p. 145 | Saviour's words commend a serious and severe tone of behaviour: 3378 IX, 7, p. 169 | His own of walking upon serpents and scorpions, not allowing 3379 II, 3, p. 94 | for the sake of him that serves me, for his sake I will 3380 VIII, 2, p. 138 | was their custom, for the services, said that they were first 3381 III 110(17)| 1.) The stories of his servile and Philistine origin, common 3382 VII, 1, p. 66 | ancient Temple, and the settling of foreign races on their 3383 VII, 3, p. 89 | ruled the Jewish nation seventeen years, being a wicked king), 3384 VIII, 2, p. 124 | For when Cyrus after the seventieth year of the Captivity spontaneously 3385 X, 1, p. 195 | the body of Christ, and severally members?" And by the rule 3386 III, 7, p. 154 | forth immortal after (its severance from) the body.~Thou knowest, 3387 Int, 5, p. xx | both by their leniency and severity have assisted the divine 3388 III 121(36)| of the Emperor Septimius Severus, is accessible in Phillimore' 3389 IV, 10, p. 185 | umvedded maiden, and not of sexual union and corruption. ~ 3390 Int, 7, p. xx | unique victim" (θυμα και σφαγιον), and "delivered us a memory ( 3391 III, 2, p. 109 | see his prophecy in the shadows of illimitable and unmeasured 3392 IX, 3, p. 157 | Word of God, defeated with shafts of mind and spirit His enemy 3393 X, 3, p. 206 | to them. They saw me, and shaked their heads at me." (478) ~ 3394 I, 5, p. 26 | mighty and great; 6. Who shakes the (earth) under heaven 3395 IV, 16, p. 208 | None Account, and suffering shamefully, and His People reviled 3396 VIII, 2, p. 138 | convicted not only of a shameless opposition to truth ./. 3397 IV, 5, p. 172 | mixings, combinations, forms, shapes and fashions, and their 3398 V, 3, p. 240 | former one, "Thy arrows are sharp, O mighty one, in the heart 3399 Int, 1, p. viii | either of these objects too sharply in the case of any particular 3400 II, 3, p. 81 | Jewish people (c) will be shattered. For the whole portion refers 3401 I, 3, p. 15 | calf, and thou shall not shear thy firstborn sheep: 20. 3402 I, 2, p. 9 | the terebinth that is in Shechem, and destroyed them to this 3403 X, 8, p. 231 | shepherds, to protect like good sheepdogs their Master's spiritual 3404 II, 3, p. 85 | coming like sheep into the sheepfold of Christ, the one as yet 3405 VII, 1, p. 64 | spiritual harvest, that the sheeplike and simpler souls can delight 3406 II, 2, p. 70 | 19. From Isaiah. ~(c) A Shelving forth of the Birth of Christ 3407 I, 2, p. 8 | be the Lord God of Seth (Shem), . . . and may God make 3408 X, 2, p. 202 | own light. For, "The light shineth in darkness, and the darkness 3409 IV, 5, p. 171 | applied to agriculture, to ship-building, to steering and to house-building. 3410 II, 3, p. 91 | And they shall fly in the ships of strangers ; they shall 3411 Int, 6, p. xx | Justin had not  ./. v shirked the phrase δευτερος θεος, 3412 III, 5, p. 127 | minds as from the roots the shoots of sin: they must try to ( 3413 II, 3, p. 88 | compared to the sand of the shore. The prophetic word speaks 3414 IV, 16, p. 210 | earthen vessel, like a lamp, shot forth to all men the rays 3415 V, 10, p. 255 | a son is given, on whose shoulder shall be the rule, and his 3416 I, 1, p. 3 | the earth to see it, but shouted it out with the greatest 3417 II, 3, p. 80 | his former predictions had showered sadness. But the succeeding 3418 IV, 5, p. 171 | reaching through all things, showers light on sun and moon and 3419 III, 2, p. 114 | wonderful prophet, (b) in no way shrinking, clearly rebukes the Jews 3420 III 141(70)| and the Church has not shrunk from the minutest examination 3421 Int, 5, p. xx | and that they even now shudder at His Name. Think of His 3422 III, 6, p. 153 | daemon and unclean spirit shudders  at the Name of Jesus as 3423 Int, 6, p. xx | diocese becomes no mere shuffling apology, but an honest statement. 3424 III, 6, p. 146 | in d) the mountains, and shunning the vicious society of the 3425 III 102(3) | evidently read—a0naph&roij ou]si.~ 3426 III 119(33)| 4 Cf. Sib. Or. iii. 218 seq. for an 3427 III 119(33)| 36, for an account of the Sibyl in early Christian literature. ~ 3428 III 119(33)| good works." See Bate, The Sibylline Oracles, S.P.C.K., pp. 31- 3429 III 120(34)| Eusebius' life lived in Sicily. He died about 305. His 3430 I, 3, p. 16 | thou beginnest to put the sickle in the corn, 10. and thou 3431 VII, 3, p. 87 | the abomination of the Sidonians, and after their king, the 3432 Int, 6, p. xx | a divine and mysterious signification." Thus, he says that it 3433 V, 5, p. 249 | and syllables and their significations, and is produced by the 3434 III, 2, p. 112 | vii. 14.]] for Emmanuel signifies this. ~(b) Such were the 3435 Int, 6, p. xx | explained by Constantine, signing it involved no violent wrench 3436 III 113(22)| th~| tapeinw&sei h9 kri/sij au0tou~ h0rqh. ~ 3437 IV, 16, p. 206 | cried: My God, | be not silent before me, | Lest I be like 3438 IX, 15, p. 183 | in the Hebrew. And it is silently omitted by the other translators, 3439 Int, 6, p. xx | Eusebius uses the well-worn similes of the Apologists: the relation 3440 XV 237 | four world-powers under the similitude of the four beasts. I consider, 3441 VII, 1, p. 64 | that the sheeplike and simpler souls can delight in it, 3442 IV, 3, p. 166 | they exist together and simultaneously. But the Father precedes ./. 3443 I, 3, p. 12 | pigeon or a turtle-dove for a sin-offering to the door of the tabernacle 3444 X, 1, p. 199 | witnesses boldly to His own sinlessness, although He had said before, " 3445 VIII, 2, p. 128 | flourished Jesus, son of Sirach, who wrote the excellent 3446 VIII, 2, p. 133 | which was very conveniently situated, in a magnificent manner, 3447 X, 1, p. 193 | him. And he took of them sixty men and slew them in one 3448 Int, 5, p. xx | the above is but a sorry skeleton. It is void of all the life 3449 IV, 15, p. 199 | And so he is said to have sketched a kind of copy of the order 3450 II 73(12)| kata dianoian qewroumenhn skhnophgian. Or, "the Feast of Tabernacles 3451 III, 2, p. 116 | place of thy tent, and the skins of thy hangings 25 peg down, 3452 III, 5, p. 140 | and handed down in writing slanders against themselves to unforgetting 3453 X, 1, p. 197 | the meaning of: "When he sleepeth he shall surely never rise 3454 Int, 4, p. xv | every turn of the trail of a slippery foe: his opponent, so to 3455 VI, 18, p. 31 | sinful, and the one who slips away from healthy and orthodox 3456 I, 3, p. 15 | oxen or sheep, or wine, or slrong drink, or for whalsoever 3457 VI, 14, p. 20 | not tarry. Lo, if he be sluggish, my soul is not true in 3458 X, 8, p. 233 | is not separated by the smallest space, but is actually saying 3459 I, 6, p. 41 | evil; but whosoever shall smite thec on thy right cheek, 3460 IV, 17, p. 219 | him to be in labour, and smitten, and afflicted: He was wounded 3461 III 122(38)| 2 genhto_j o9 ko&smoj, cf. note by Gifford in 3462 IX, 5, p. 161 | and the rough roads into smooth by saying to them, "Bring 3463 III, 7, p. 161 | since the Supreme God had smoothed the way before them, and 3464 X, 8, p. 230 | him, and took the reed and smote him on the head. 31. And 3465 V, Int, p. 229 | poisonous creeping things, like snakes and weasels, and such things, 3466 VI, 13, p. 15 | Sion and Jerusalem and the so-called "mount of the house" are 3467 III 120(34)| Vit. Plot. vii. 107) "the soberest of the Neoplatonic philosophers" ( 3468 Int, 1, p. xi | possibly been a convert (Soc., H.E. iii. 23) and a pupil 3469 IV, 5, p. 171 | piece of clay, and then softening it in his hands give it 3470 Int, 8, p. xx | with the words η παιδισκη σοι, p. 17, and ending at της 3471 VII, 1, p. 53 | defilement, and the pure of being soiled by the flesh, and the passionless 3472 VIII, 2, p. 125 | revolutions, being exceeded by one solar by 11¼ days. Therefore the 3473 VII, 1, p. 63 | of rational bread, and of solid spiritual food, and are 3474 IV, 5, p. 170 | down below by its natural solidity, but always remaining on 3475 III, 2, p. 117 | greater and more excellent in solitary preeminence than all the 3476 V, Int, p. 224 | would have been the need of Solon or Draco or any of the other 3477 III 137(63)| Tertull., Apol. c. 2: "Illud solum expectatur quod odio publico 3478 VIII, 2, p. 126 | give a more (c) elaborate solution of the problem to my readers. 3479 I, 1, p. 7 | inquiry we shall record the solutions of all the points investigated. ~ 3480 III, 7, p. 158 | even so no light problem to solve in gaining easily the adherence 3481 | somehow 3482 III, 5, p. 140 | they are rascals and clever sophists, who invent what never took 3483 III, 6, p. 144 | for the sake of base and sordid gain. Our Lord and Saviour 3484 I, 1, p. 4 | beginning of the train of sorrows. ~But the prophecies of 3485 Int, 7, p. xx | our Salvation (την υπερ σωτηριας ημων ευχαριστιαν) by means 3486 Int, 8, p. xx | p. 17, and ending at της σωτηρος ημων παρακελευσεως, p. 688. 3487 III 116(24)| LXX: kai\ tw~n au0lai/wn sou. ~ 3488 IV, 5, p. 169 | is the life-power and the soul-power of all things.) Be it rhythm, 3489 V, 5, p. 249 | consists essentially of sounds and syllables and their 3490 V, Int, p. 230 | stronger support from all sources. With this introduction, 3491 VI, 15, p. 22 | age He will come from the southern part of the heaven. For 3492 V, 28, p. 269 | this prophecy is God, the Sovereign of the Universe. ./. 3493 VII, 1, p. 57 | them that were under the sovereignty of David's successors. The 3494 I, 6, p. 32 | my hands; 8. then let me sow, and others eat, and let 3495 V, 9, p. 254 | in person from that time sowed the seeds of holiness among 3496 I, 9, p. 52 | corn, we must not blame the sowers, nor those who tended the 3497 VI, 12, p. 12 | be confirmed which thou spakest to thy servant David my 3498 I, 2, p. 10 | or the Britons, or the Spaniards: such nations and others 3499 X, 8, p. 221 | agrees when he says, "Who spared not his own Son, but delivered 3500 Int, 6, p. xx | Samosata. Athanasius used it sparingly in its hour of victory. 3501 II, 3, p. 84 | kept like fruitful and spark-like seed, who it is said, should 3502 II, 3, p. 79 | tow, and their works as sparks of fire, and the transgressors 3503 II 64(2) | quotes Plato, Theat.: "sparring for mere amusement."~


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