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3504 III, 7, p. 158 | audience? How could untrained speakers, quite deficient in education, 3505 X, 8, p. 233 | saying to Him: "While thou speakest, I will say, I am here." ~ 3506 IX, 16, p. 184 | and said to him, Why (d) speaketh thou unto them in parables? 3507 X, 8, p. 229 | the Lamb of God "with a spear, and forthwith came there 3508 Int, 5, p. xx | realised to a new degree, and 'specialised' (if the word may be used) 3509 Int, 1, p. xi | conquered by the bright spectacle of their endurance, had 3510 VII, 1, p. 66 | with astonishment at these spectacles? And who would not agree 3511 VII, 1, p. 70 | Himself named: "Take the spoil speedily, keenly rob," and why the 3512 III, 6, p. 148 | joy of bodily progeny, and spending all their care on the soul, 3513 IV, 5, p. 171 | him with many different spheres of knowledge, for the same 3514 X, 8, p. 218 | the sepulchre, bearing the spices which they had prepared, 3515 VII, 3, p. 92 | true Israel which sees God spiritually. ~"For he is not a Jew," 3516 VI, 18, p. 33 | western half of the Mount was split asunder, and rolling four 3517 VIII, 2, p. 124 | seventieth year of the Captivity spontaneously allowed every one who wished 3518 I, 3, p. 14 | determined the ritual of the sprinkling with water. He said that 3519 X, 8, p. 231 | and the Pharisees, who spurred on the whole multitude to 3520 III 137(65)| Hastings' D.B. vol. iii. p. 296 sq.), who postulates Palestinian 3521 III 129(48)| 1 e0fanta&sqhsan, cf: P.E. 17 c, of learning 3522 Int, 7, p. xx | spontaneous way. ~(i) 37 b. sqq.-Jesus the Lamb of God by 3523 VIII, Int, p. 97 | were tyrannized over by squalid folly and sin, and a strange 3524 X, 8, p. 217 | remainder? What was the ssvord, the dog, and the lion? 3525 IV, 15, p. 192 | product of one matter, never stable, having no firmness in its 3526 VI, 18, p. 33 | asunder, and rolling four stadia stopped at the eastern mountain, 3527 III 131(52)| 1 oi[a mu&stai tw~n a0porrh&twn au0tou~ 3528 I, 10, p. 54 | launching far into wickedness stained the altars with the sacrifice 3529 I, 6, p. 40 | who have ascended by the stair of Gospel teaching. If you 3530 Int, 6, p. xx | as to the main point at stake, His eternal relation to 3531 V, 30, p. 270 | LIMITED,~BRUNSWICK ST., STAMFORD ST., S.E. I,~AND BUNGAY, 3532 V, Int, p. 223 | were convicted of having stamped as the truth, though they 3533 IV, 13, p. 188 | and shapeless by nature, stamping His own beauty and unembodied 3534 VIII, 1, p. 101 | rank, according to their standards, according to the houses 3535 V, 19, p. 263 | for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground."  ~So, then, 3536 Int xx(10)| 2] Stanley, Eastern Church, iii. 80. ~ 3537 III 135(61)| o martu&rwn kai\ triw~n staqh&setai pa~n r9h~ma. ~E.: 3538 X, 8, p. 230 | bones," and also, "They came staring and looking upon me," and " 3539 X, 8, p. 230 | dust of death." ~And then, starting again from what was now 3540 IV, 17, p. 220 | the argument from another starting-point, and pass on to the more 3541 III 135(61)| kai\ triw~n martu&rwn suni/statai pa~n r9h~ma. ~ 3542 VII, 1, p. 61 | that is to say their (b) statecraft and military power. And 3543 X, 4, p. 207 | weighed unto him thirty staters." ~And this agrees with, " 3544 V, 4, p. 244 | and the Sabeans, great in stature, shall pass over to thee, 3545 I, 3, p. 13 | it shall be a perpetual statute to the children of Israel 3546 I, 6, p. 29 | and my judgments, and my statutes." ~So there were before 3547 I, 1, p. 6 | animals to shut their eyes and staunchly obey what we say without 3548 III 132(55)| 3 staurwqe/nta supplied by Gaisford. ~ 3549 VI, 18, p. 30 | sight. And as they gazed steadfastly into heaven while he went 3550 Int, 6, p. xx | No wonder it seemed to steady conservatives like Eusebius, 3551 III, 5, p. 127 | unbridled lust, and so far from stealing they must lavish their own 3552 III, 4, p. 125 | Cross were His legs cut with steel like those of the others 3553 IV, 10, p. 184 | is with the Father, and steers the Providence of the Universe 3554 IV, 15, p. 192 | every horrible and offensive stench, while on the other hand 3555 Int, 2, p. xi | reference to the Quaestiones ad Stephanum in Dem. 353 c, but this 3556 III, 2, p. 116 | tells of the soul once sterile and empty of God, or perhaps 3557 V, 20, p. 265 | his share, a greater and sterner (d) battle and contest is 3558 III 135(61)| sto&matoj triw~n martu&rwn sth&setai pa~n r9h~ma. ~W.H. ( 3559 VII, 1, p. 66 | land, enslaving them with stings, that is to say with harsh 3560 X, 8, p. 226 | womb of Elizabeth, so that, stirred by My divinity, he leapt 3561 II 85(29)| 2 to men eiseti stoixeioumenon, to de hdh dia tou loutrou 3562 X, 1, p. 192 | it down with hatchet and stone-cutter. | 7. They have burnt thy 3563 VIII, 3, p. 141 | as the Hebrew has it, a stone-quarry. ~So Aquila says, "Therefore 3564 IV, 16, p. 210 | killeth the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto 3565 | Stop 3566 VIII, Int, p. 97 | progressive; they set no store on arts and sciences, they 3567 X, 1, p. 192 | they have made Jerusalem a store-house of fruits, they have given 3568 VIII, 3, p. 141 | inhabitants of the city choosing stores from its ruins as they will 3569 Int, 5, p. xx | reveal their modesty and straightforwardness in unexpected ways. It has 3570 IV, 10, p. 181 | sisters and daughters, to strangle their old men, and cast 3571 III 113(20)| 1 E. omits: o3ti a0pe/straptai to& pro&swpon au0tou~. ~ 3572 I, 9, p. 52 | turned out wicked, like straw growing up with the corn, 3573 II, 3, p. 92 | xiii. 11.]] fawn, or as a straying sheep." ~In this too the 3574 IV, 15, p. 193 | a cheerful countenance, streaming with rays like light, making 3575 VI, 18, p. 31 | and eastern nations; it stretches to the western sea, and 3576 III, 2, p. 117 | throughout the world and stretching from sunrise to sunset, 3577 V, 1, p. 234 | reasoning of men according to strict logic. But the Scriptures 3578 VI, 18, p. 34 | underwent their final ruin, the striker received authority and struck 3579 Int, 1, p. viii | exact knowledge of the most stringent proofs of God's mysterious 3580 IV, 13, p. 189 | a lyre is struck, or its strings torn asunder, if so it chance, 3581 II, 3, p. 93 | nations, as if one should strip an olive tree, so shall 3582 VII, 3, p. 92 | ancestor, for David means "strong-handed," preached judgment and 3583 VII, 1, p. 75 | hast broken down all his strongholds." And a few verses later: ~" 3584 V, 20, p. 265 | teaching him that though he has struggled more than his share, a greater 3585 II, 3, p. 92 | ears in a rich valley, and stubble is left. Or as the berries 3586 III, 6, p. 147 | than themselves; so medical students would witness to the excellence 3587 VII, 3, p. 90 | above Libanus. And if the studious consider this Psalm in its 3588 XV 237 | just as iron crushes and subdues everything, so did Rome 3589 VI, 2, p. 3 | apostles and prophets, by subduing those that believed on Him 3590 VI, 20, p. 41 | being the first Roman to subjugate Egypt, captured Cleopatra 3591 III 130(51)| inaccessible to the Romans subjugated to Christ." About A.D. 150 3592 VIII, 1, p. 108 | should have been changed to submission to Rome, and to the Gentile 3593 V, Int, p. 229 | the Holy Spirit, and to submit to the discipline of their 3594 VI, 2, p. 3 | given Him by the Father He subordinated to His apostles and prophets, 3595 VII, 1, p. 62 | church, one of rulers, two of subordinates, since the Church of Christ' 3596 III, 5, p. 138 | Matthew a publican, nor subordinating him to Thomas, for he knows 3597 IV, 9, p. 180 | novel, being introduced subsequently to the worship of the ancients, 3598 IV, 5, p. 170 | seem another instance of subservience to the Word of God and His 3599 V, 18, p. 262 | For which Aquila substitutes: "Since thou art the Lord 3600 II, 3, p. 71 | Jewish Race, and the (54) Substitution of the Gentiles in their 3601 IV, 1, p. 164 | were a kind of material and substratum of the genesis and constitution 3602 VI, 18, p. 27 | never free from all kinds of successive calamities, as you may gather 3603 X, 8, p. 228 | of Death and help Him in succouring the souls there. For in 3604 VIII, 2, p. 138 | sound, and afterwards of a sudden voice which said, Let us 3605 I, 6, p. 41 | other also. And he who will sue thee at the law, and take 3606 X, 8, p. 217 | church is it of which this sufferer says, "In the midst of the 3607 III, 2, p. 114 | his death." ~It would have sufficed for him to have concluded 3608 III, 7, p. 157 | the Creator of all? What sufficiency of speech have we to trust 3609 VIII, 2, p. 132 | by contriving to have him suffocated while swimming, as I have 3610 V, 30, p. 270 | ST., S.E. I,~AND BUNGAY, SUFFOLK. ~ 3611 VIII, 2, p. 120 | transgression," clearly suggesting that He would be the propitiation 3612 Pre v | guidance, and invaluable suggestions during the progress of the 3613 IV, 16, p. 216 | what name could be more suggestive of. ointment poured forth 3614 II 91(39)| sunhxe twi qewi . . . . sugkrotoumenon. ~ 3615 III 121(36)| Preller "a brief summary of Suidas of the life of this notorious 3616 Int, 1, p. viii | instruction and introduction, and suiting itself to our recent converts 3617 I, 2, p. 8 | God. Hellenism you might summarily describe as the worship 3618 Int, 5, p. xv | work. ~Its argument may be summarized as follows: ~[[87-102]] 3619 I, 3, p. 19 | have said, we find Moses summing up his whole system with 3620 VI, 18, p. 30 | to His disciples on the summit of the Mount of Olives the 3621 Int, 1, p. xi | which gathers together and sums up the labours of previous 3622 II, 3, p. 91 | the sea, and them from the sun-rising." [[Isa xi. 14.]] ~And the 3623 V, 18, p. 262 | fathers "in many ways and in sundry manners," no contradiction 3624 II 91(39)| 2 efelkusamenon ena laon sunhxe twi qewi . . . . sugkrotoumenon. ~ 3625 III 135(61)| o kai\ triw~n martu&rwn suni/statai pa~n r9h~ma. ~ 3626 III, 2, p. 117 | world and stretching from sunrise to sunset, shewn forth very 3627 III, 2, p. 117 | stretching from sunrise to sunset, shewn forth very clearly 3628 II 76(15)| cutting it short." en . . . suntetmhmenon. Omitted by Aleph A.B. 47. 3629 II 83(25)| 1 S.: kai thi kardiai sunwsin. ~ 3630 Int, 1, p. xi | Church as a whole had been super naturally loyal. The future 3631 II, 1, p. 64 | shall proceed to show with superabundance of evidence,2 that the divine 3632 II 64(2) | rhetorical figure—"from superabundant evidence." Gifford [P. E. 3633 III, 2, p. 107 | same way, but with more superb power, the (c) Christ of 3634 Int, 5, p. xi | poor disciples wiser than supercilious philosophers, who seem proud 3635 II, 3, p. 76 | are of the Gentiles are supernumerary 13 and alien to the divine 3636 VII, 1, p. 71 | and Persians destroyed and superseded between them? And as none 3637 II, 3, p. 92 | precious than the stone of Suphir." And afterwards (d) it 3638 X, 2, p. 200 | clearly, "We together (b) supped sweetly on mysteries," and 3639 IV, 16, p. 205 | with His as He prays and supplicates the Father on our behalf, 3640 III, 5, p. 135 | hypothesis was, to make suppositions contrary to the records, 3641 X, 1, p. 199 | teaching the stability and sureness of His life and His preservation 3642 I, 1, p. 5 | happen long years after, may surety claim our confidence for 3643 XV 237 | compare the vast and mighty surge of life to a great sea. 3644 X, 8, p. 229 | powers and rulers of the air surging around Him on every side, 3645 V, Int, p. 223 | matter. What evil thing could surpass in absurdity the idea that 3646 III, 5, p. 135 | such instruction from Him, surpassed all men in cupidity and 3647 V, 9, p. 254 | side, and he in the midst surpasses them in honour. This would 3648 IV, 15, p. 197 | spirit, was so great and surpassingly glorious, that he called 3649 X, 8, p. 222 | He is surely shewing His surprise here that the Father does 3650 III, 3, p. 123 | race flying in the air (hat surrounds the earth, and that there 3651 II, Pre, p. 62 | without Aim or Object. ~IN my survey of the ideal of true religion 3652 Int, 2, p. xi | endurance and success, while surveying in one coup d'oeil the three 3653 III, 6, p. 154 | probable proofs, because you suspect me perhaps to be a special 3654 III, 5, p. 127 | where would be the sense in suspecting that hearers of such teaching, 3655 X, 8, p. 229 | eyes He saw His body being suspended on the tree, the unembodied 3656 III, 3, p. 122 | animal which it, or the air, sustains, to which there is not some 3657 III 112(19)| the manger in which He was swaddled; and that which is widely 3658 II, 3, p. 93 | that sees it will desire to swallow (b) it, before he takes 3659 IV, 12, p. 186 | Death has prevailed and swallowed men up"; and again: "The 3660 IV, 5, p. 170 | and without completely swamping everything, being hindered 3661 VII, 1, p. 76 | ancient pity, Lord, which thou swarest unto David in thy truth? " 3662 III, 7, p. 162 | if some of them under the sway of evil designed (d) to 3663 VII, 1, p. 55 | disinclination for holiness caused sweat and toil, and no common 3664 IV, 3, p. 167 | is poured forth from any sweet-scented substance, say from myrrh 3665 III, 3, p. 120 | most (d) acceptable and sweetest sacrifice to God to be the 3666 X, 2, p. 200 | We together (b) supped sweetly on mysteries," and Symmachus, " 3667 IV, 15, p. 192 | choice of bodies for their sweetness, nor preferred the pleasure 3668 Abb viii | Encyclopedia Biblica. ~S.   Swete's Old Testament in Greek 3669 VIII, 2, p. 132 | have him suffocated while swimming, as I have already related. 3670 Int, 5, p. xv | ardent conviction. It is not sword-play, but actual warfare, and 3671 III 113(20)| o3ti a0pe/straptai to& pro&swpon au0tou~. ~ 3672 Int, 8, p. xx | Delectus argumentorum et syllabus scriptorum, qui veritatem 3673 I, 1, p. 5 | clever words, or deceptive syllogistic reasoning, but in simple 3674 VIII, 2, p. 131 | is no place for him." And Sym-machus, "And after the weeks the 3675 V, 3, p. 241 | symbol, a kind of shadowy and symbolical Christ. He was one of course 3676 IX, 12, p. 177 | He performed a natural symbolism of something unspeakable. 3677 VII, 2, p. 85 | naturally had the qualities it symbolized, and also because He was 3678 Int, 7, p. xx | of His Body (αρτω χρησθαι συμβολω του ιδιου σωματος). ~This 3679 Int, 6, p. xx | Once Eusebius uses the word συναποθεοω, "to deify men with Himself" 3680 Int, 3, p. xi | coming of Messiah would synchronize with the downfall of the 3681 III, 7, p. 161 | wonderful sojourn among men synchronized with Rome's attainment of 3682 Int, 2, p. xi | in col. 912 - ωσπερ ουν συνεστησαμεν εν ταις ευαγγελικαις αποδειξεσιν. 3683 Int, 2, p. xi | the epitome or εκλογη εν συντομω, was added at a later date, 3684 IX, 1, p. 153 | call comets, or meteors, or tails of fire, or similar phenomena 3685 Int, 2, p. xi | ωσπερ ουν συνεστησαμεν εν ταις ευαγγελικαις αποδειξεσιν. 3686 III 123(40)| 1 taj o0fru~j a0naspako&twn, cf. 3687 III, 7, p. 158 | first time heard novelties talked of by men who brought with 3688 IX, 12, p. 177 | or propriety is there in talking of the God of the Universe 3689 VII, 3, p. 91 | and wild beasts becoming tame and laying aside their fierce 3690 III 113(22)| 3 E. omits: 0En th~| tapeinw&sei h9 kri/sij au0tou~ h0rqh. ~ 3691 IX, 7, p. 166 | He offered Himself as a target to those who wished to attack 3692 X, 8, p. 229 | wild and dreadful beasts of Tartarus, of which Isaiah said, addressing 3693 X, 7, p. 215 | would accrue to all that taste of the living spiritual 3694 Int, 4, p. xv | Athenagoras, Aristides and Tatian. There is a series of chapters 3695 II, 3, p. 78 | their eyes, now exacting tax and tribute,18 and now appropriating 3696 III, 5, p. 137 | came from those occupied in tax-gathering and over-reaching one another. [[ 3697 VIII, 2, p. 126 | that thenceforward it paid taxes, and obeyed the Roman enactments. ~ 3698 VIII, Int, p. 99 | governor of Judaea, Herod tctrarch of Galilee, and his brother, 3699 IV, 12, p. 186 | God has taken away every tear from every face." ~And the 3700 VIII, 2, p. 121 | old obscure and sealed, tearing away so to say the seals 3701 III, 7, p. 162 | Footnotes after that omitted as tedious to transcribe and of limited 3702 Int, 6, p. xx | of the world," the basis (θεμελιος) for all created things ( 3703 Int, 4, p. xv | perhaps the result of his own temperament than the production of a 3704 VIII, 1, p. 108 | Ascalon, and was son of some temple-server at the Temple of Apollo, 3705 III, 2, p. 109 | the greatest accuracy by temporal limits, hear how he speaks 3706 V, 3, p. 243 | brook" to mean the time of temptations: "Our soul hath passed through 3707 IX, 7, p. 166 | directed against Him by the tempter? ~It is worth our consideration 3708 VIII, 2, p. 122 | this idea at first sight is tempting. For up to the times of 3709 VII, 1, p. 59 | beliefs, the other that tempts them to moral ruin. Of these 3710 III, 5, p. 134 | rest of the disciples held tenaciously to Jesus, and were still 3711 VI, 18, p. 31 | the north, both signify tendency to evil. For "from the face 3712 Int, 7, p. xx | the service then) is the θεολογια of the worshipper. It is 3713 Int, 2, p. xi | b, ο και εστιν εις δευρο θεωρουντας ενεργουμενον, ef. 182 d ( 3714 III 137(63)| 1 Cf. Tertull., Apol. c. 2: "Illud solum 3715 Int, 8, p. xx | σοι, p. 17, and ending at της σωτηρος ημων παρακελευσεως, 3716 I, 6, p. 30 | statement. For Holy Scripture testifies that a covenant of some 3717 V, Int, p. 220 | Greeks and Barbarians alike testify to the existence of oracles 3718 II, 3, p. 91 | examine as I have done, testing each passage by yourself, 3719 III 142(76)| authenticity. (See H. St. J. Thackeray in Hastings' D.B. extra 3720 V, 12, p. 257 | CHAPTER 12 (d) ~Thai again in the Story of Jacob 3721 X, 8, p. 222 | heaven and said, Father, 1 thank thee that thou hast heard 3722 I, 3, p. 14 | thou hast vowed, and thy thank-offerings, and the firstfruits of 3723 I, 7, p. 44 | nations, and it was necessary, thanks to the love of God the All-good, " 3724 Int, 7, p. xx | and bringing to God our Thanksgiving for our Salvation (την υπερ 3725 II 64(2) | 64 a, 2] quotes Plato, Theat.: "sparring for mere amusement."~ 3726 VIII, 3, p. 141 | of idol temples, and of theatres for the populace. These 3727 I, 6, p. 41 | but whosoever shall smite thec on thy right cheek, turn 3728 II, 3, p. 73 | kingdom of God they plume them- (60) selves, as being His 3729 VIII, 1, p. 111 | other unseen hostile powers, thenceforth they (b) believed Him to 3730 VIII, 2, p. 126 | subject to Rome, so that thenceforward it paid taxes, and obeyed 3731 IV, 7, p. 175 | Moses, the first mystic theologian, initiated the Hebrews of 3732 VI, 18, p. 26 | and the events connected therewith are very clearly shewn in 3733 Int, 3, p. xi | religion, establish the thesis that Christianity is a republication 3734 II, 3, p. 97 | and a lion's whelp on the thicket of the Gentiles and on the 3735 VIII, 4, p. 142 | land of Eashan, for the thickly planted forest has been 3736 X, 8, p. 223 | according to Matthew— ~"Two thieves being crucified witli him, 3737 Int, 5, p. xv | were then except by a few thinkers like Porphyry, the argument 3738 V, Int, p. 223 | mere animals, actually (d) thirsting for human blood more than 3739 IX, 3, p. 157 | Iberia, saying that the Thobelian Iberians sprang from Thobel. 3740 VIII, 1, p. 104 | Gedeon's son, and after him Thola of the same tribe, then 3741 II, 3, p. 86 | he that thresheth, should thresh in hope of partaking." [[ 3742 II, 3, p. 86 | in hope, and that he that thresheth, should thresh in hope of 3743 I, 6, p. 34 | step of holiness at the threshold and entrance of the Temple 3744 I, 6, p. 30 | is to be said of Job the thrice-blessed, the true, the blameless, 3745 V, Int, p. 224 | oracle-mongers of theirs, driving the thrice-wretched race of men to incredible 3746 III, 6, p. 147 | without doubt how the Gentiles thronging to their teaching (were 3747 IV, 9, p. 179 | gave themselves over in throngs and swiftly to the snares 3748 V, Int, p. 224 | good thing that they should throw their aged people to the 3749 II 66(4) | for word translation, thus throwing great light on the then 3750 IV, 16, p. 212 | ascended to the heavens and has thundered: he will judge the extremities 3751 II 88(34)| ArabiaV. E.: kai apo twn nhswn thV qalasshV. ~ 3752 Int, 1, p. xi | felt that on the flowing tide of divine power he could 3753 III, 6, p. 149 | to tell of Him to all." [[Timaeus p. 28]] Yes, to him the 3754 IX, 9, p. 172 | imperfectly developed minds, and "timbrel-players "because of their devotion 3755 I, 3, p. 14 | And again: ~"Thou shall tithe a tenth of all the produce 3756 V, 1, p. 231 | and One called God by many titles, is honoured in this passage 3757 VII, 1, p. 73 | 336) ~From the same. ~That tlie Son to be Born of the Virgin 3758 III 117(26)| peri\ a0ndro_j koinou~ kai\ toi~j loipoi~j paraplhsi/ou. 3759 IV, 15, p. 193 | nourisher of light, healer of toilers, disperser of weariness, 3760 II 94(42)| adds: Parwxunnan me en toiV eidwloiV autwn—"They have 3761 II 68(6) | 1 ei\s pla&toj. ~ 3762 III, 5, p. 138 | sitting at the place of toll, and he saith unto him, 3763 VI, 2, p. 4 | proclaimed in stronger and louder tones than any other teaching 3764 IV, 10, p. 183 | His words, and with the tonic of His teaching. He freed 3765 II, 3, p. 92 | left, two or three on the topmost bough, or four or five on 3766 III, 7, p. 155 | has ever been exposed to torments,~But the soul of holy men 3767 VI, 20, p. 39 | all at once disturbed and tossed to and fro, and their heart 3768 I, 5, p. 26 | foundation and its pillars totter. 7. Who commands the sun 3769 V, Int, p. 223 | For this question is the touchstone of the whole matter. What 3770 II, 3, p. 79 | shall be as a thread of tow, and their works as sparks 3771 X, 1, p. 194 | that: ~"Jesus once took a towel and girded himself, and 3772 VIII, 2, p. 133 | be king he rebuilt this tower, which was very conveniently 3773 Int, 7, p. xx | His Body and Blood (την τουτου μνημην του τε σωματος αυτου 3774 VIII, Int, p. 99 | Ituraea and the land of Trachonitis; and Lysanias tetrarch of 3775 IX 149 | have now devoted myself to tracing the Theology of His Person, 3776 III 130(51)| Bartholomew. ~Harnack regards all traditions of apostolic missions as 3777 Int, 4, p. xv | follow every turn of the trail of a slippery foe: his opponent, 3778 III, 6, p. 153 | every act and word, and training His pupils to resemble Him, 3779 VIII, 4, p. 142 | nations; every one that tramples on it shall utterly mock 3780 IV, 15, p. 197 | forever. Now this would transcend human nature. For it is 3781 III, 6, p. 151 | and that He altogether transcended humanity? ~And supposing 3782 III, 7, p. 162 | that omitted as tedious to transcribe and of limited value to 3783 X, 4, p. 209 | mistake of some careless transcriber of the Holy Gospels, who 3784 Int, 8, p. xx | free from the errors of transcribers, with the exception of some 3785 VII, 1, p. 55 | the Jews according to the transcript of Aquila [Aquila was a 3786 V, 1, p. 236 | metaphorically, we must transfer the meaning to spiritual 3787 IV, 15, p. 194 | first called him Christ, transferring the name from its spiritual 3788 III, 2, p. 107 | high mountain,7 and he was transfigured before them, and his face 3789 III, 2, p. 110 | the (c) change that will transform all races of men, both Greek 3790 I, 3, p. 17 | also himself is defiled and transgresses, 3. or if he touch the uncleanness 3791 V, 1, p. 232 | to liken Him to anything transitory and mortal, since it is 3792 Int, 2, p. xi | proves nothing, for we must translate with Lightfoot, not "my 3793 X, 8, p. 221 | that in neither of these translations does the expression "of 3794 Pre v | inclusion essential. ~The translator would gratefully record 3795 Int, 5, p. xx | from the simplicity and transparent honesty of these "unlearned 3796 Int, 6, p. xx | It was capable of being transplanted into the creed of Eusebius. 3797 VI, 14, p. 20 | and will not tarry," by transposing the clauses, and (278) adding 3798 VIII, 1, p. 113 | Saviour from Hades, as from a trap for wild beasts. The kneeling 3799 Int, 7, p. xx | and His saving Blood (επι τραπεζης δια συμβολων του τε σωματος 3800 III, 2, p. 116 | forth and cry, thou that travailest not; for more are the children 3801 X, 8, p. 225 | the Holy Spirit from My travailing mother, putting (d) forth 3802 X, 8, p. 227 | that which dies can only travel the road to death which 3803 II, 3, p. 91 | will, they have not only traversed the continent, but the isles 3804 III 119(31)| 2 traxhlisqe/nta. Cp. Heb. iv. 13. The 3805 IV, 16, p. 215 | inspired apostle, who says when treating of the law of Moses: "Who 3806 V, 20, p. 265 | warders of hell seeing thee tremble?" and He naturally gave 3807 I, 3, p. 18 | shall make atonement for his trespass of ignorance, and he knew 3808 III, 5, p. 137 | to them: "Ye shall have tribulation," [[John xvi. 33.]] and 3809 III, 6, p. 153 | knowledge of God, or about the tribunal and judgment of Almighty 3810 III, 5, p. 135 | dispute, either in legal tribunals or in ordinary (b) disagreements, 3811 III, 6, p. 153 | certainly not their slaves and tributaries. And how could He Who (133) 3812 II, 3, p. 78 | eyes, now exacting tax and tribute,18 and now appropriating 3813 X, 4, p. 209 | as if they were fired and tried in a furnace. Hence Aquila 3814 I, 6, p. 32 | here: ~"13. And if I have trifled with the cause of my servant, 3815 Int, 6, p. xx | distinctions in the Holy Trinity, asserting each Person to 3816 V, Int, p. 226 | time, or about slight and trivial things, but the illumination 3817 V, 20, p. 265 | the spring of the sea, and troddest thou the traces of the depth? 3818 VI, 1, p. 2 | which He made surrounded by troops of angelic and divine powers. 3819 VIII, 1, p. 112 | also He has received the trophies of victory over His enemies, 3820 V, Int, p. 228 | is not a far better and truer argument, which says that 3821 II, 3, p. 87 | the prophecy "they were trusting in God, the holy one of 3822 VI, 14, p. 20 | prediction, saying, that he that trusts it, shewn by his very faith 3823 III, 5, p. 140 | and clear proof of their truth-loving disposition. And as for 3824 III 110(17)| foundation: e.g. Just. Mart., Tryph. 52: 9Hrw&dhn 0Askalwi/tthn: 3825 III 110(17)| Tryph. 52: 9Hrw&dhn 0Askalwi/tthn: Julius Africannus ap Eus., 3826 III 102(3) | a0nable/pousi suggests a0mbluw&ttousi. Diodatus had evidently 3827 II 94(44)| LXX : tw daimoni . . . thi tuchi. ~ 3828 VIII, 2, p. 138 | caused a great outburst of tumult and disorder among the Jews." 11 3829 IV, 11, p. 186 | He departed from men, in tune with and similar to its 3830 I, 3, p. 12 | and a young pigeon or a turtle-dove for a sin-offering to the 3831 VIII, 2, p. 137 | Temple was wholly rent in twain, and from that moment the 3832 Int, 8, p. xx | Parisinus 469," of the twelfth century, ./. xiii registered 3833 Int, 5, p. xx | the fourth-century and the twentieth-century scholar choose three out 3834 Int, 1, p. viii | originally consisted of twenty books, of which only ten 3835 Int, 1, p. xi | kata_ Porfori/ou, a work in twenty-five books; this in all probability 3836 VIII, 2, p. 130 | Darius, when he says: "On the twenty-fourth day of the eleventh (c) 3837 VIII, 2, p. 128 | according to Josephus, for twenty-nine years.3 After him Aristobulus 3838 VIII, 2, p. 129 | the head of the State for twenty-seven years. To whose date is 3839 I, 9, p. 53 | after becoming the father of twins by one wife, to have ceased 3840 Int, 7, p. xx | sacrifice and unique victim" (θυμα και σφαγιον), and "delivered 3841 Int, 5, p. xx | selecting five passages of typical Messianic prophecy, the 3842 VII, 2, p. 80 | all nations being under tyrannical or democratic constitutions, 3843 VIII, Int, p. 97 | their livelihood mostly by tyrannizing over those weaker than themselves. 3844 III 120(34)| at Batanea, probably of a Tyrian family, Vit. Plot. 8; Jerome, 3845 Int, 7, p. xx | sacrifice (προσφερειν αντι θυσιας)." ~This (μνημη is "celebrated 3846 III 106(6) | reads for di/dwmi ("give"), u3w—"rain down."~ 3847 III 133(56)| 1 u9p0 au0tou~ (P.). Amended to 3848 III 133(56)| au0tou~ (P.). Amended to u9pe/r by Gaisford. ~ 3849 IV, 13, p. 189 | ourselves debarred from ubiquity, nor hindered from divine 3850 Int, 7, p. xx | sacrifices were foreshadowings uf it. They were but symbols 3851 V, Int, p. 229 | the blood of hateful and ugly monsters, and in the bodies 3852 IV, 6, p. 174 | anything on earth to remain uhdestroyed, for everything alive and 3853 II 96(49)| 4 ou peri uiouV anqrwpwn. ~ 3854 Int, 3, p. xi | By an elaborate rc.ditdio ul. absitrdum the impossibility 3855 Int, 5, p. xx | of the Christian is the ultimate Court of Appeal for the 3856 Int, 6, p. xx | to that which the Council ultimately framed: it was emphatic 3857 IV, 10, p. 185 | world from an undefiled and umvedded maiden, and not of sexual 3858 Int, 6, p. xx | was not," because of the un-Scriptural nature of such expressions. 3859 V, 11, p. 255 | For He is invisible, and unalterable, and the Highest of all 3860 VII, 2, p. 79 | conditions of the nation were unaltered, the prescription being 3861 III, 5, p. 131 | they have witnessed to them unanimously, and guaranteed their evidence 3862 Int, 4, p. xv | what was for it the most unanswerable defence of the Christian 3863 I, 3, p. 19 | and offer for his sin an unblemished ram, and the priest was 3864 I, 6, p. 38 | raised to Him an altar of unbloody and reasonable sacrifices 3865 IV, 3, p. 166 | the eternal light, and the unblurred mirror of the activity of 3866 Int, 6, p. xx | Logos-theology stressed the unchangeable-ness of the Father, and His distinction 3867 X, 8, p. 216 | knowledge (c) of God with unchanging reason, with unruffled soul, 3868 Int, 6, p. xx | with adventurers into the uncharted realms "of the ineffable 3869 I, 6, p. 28 | priest of the Most High God, uncircumdsed, not anointed with prepared ./. 3870 III, 4, p. 125 | commend my spirit"; thus uncompelled and of His own free will 3871 VIII, 2, p. 122 | remained unfulfilled and uncompleted, until He came and brought 3872 IV, 15, p. 194 | conceived of as simple, uncompounded, and unmingled with any 3873 I, 9, p. 51 | away, and involve us in uncongenial thoughts, and seduce us 3874 III, 6, p. 152 | that they should last on unconquered and invincible for long 3875 I, 3, p. 18 | soul which shall be really unconscious, and shall sin unwittingly 3876 V, 1, p. 235 | forth an immaterial and uncorrupted fragrance; for as the God 3877 V, 6, p. 250 | twice, and you will have undeniable evidence of what we seek. 3878 X, 8, p. 232 | to mean the powers of the under-world, which it is not in my power 3879 V, 13, p. 258 | them like wild and thorny undergrowth. So they say that the bush 3880 V, 1, p. 233 | a ray of light, the Son underlay from infinite ages or rather 3881 Int, 6, p. xx | philosophical theories that underlie them, and that the Word 3882 IV, 15, p. 198 | in existing things, and underlying things that are only grasped 3883 III, 5, p. 135 | should ./. succeed in their undertaking. And note, what a remarkable 3884 II, 3, p. 90 | and intact, unwounded and undespoiled according to (b) the prophecy 3885 IV, 8, p. 177 | around the earth unknown and undistinguished by men, and the good spirits 3886 III 141(70)| that would be considered unduly rigorous in other fields 3887 I, 1, p. 7 | due not to emotional and unexamined impulse, {11} but to judgment 3888 II, 3, p. 72 | Jewish Cities, and of their Unfaithfulness to their God.  ~[Passage 3889 VI 1 | predictions concerning them were unfavourable; because they would most 3890 X, 8, p. 225 | other bodies, I was free and unfettered, as Thy Lamb, O God, though 3891 VIII, 2, p. 127 | building of the Temple remained unfinished. This is why (c) the divine 3892 X, 8, p. 227 | then, our Lord and Saviour unfolds, not as being in nature 3893 III, 5, p. 140 | slanders against themselves to unforgetting ages, and accusations of 3894 IV, 15, p. 193 | nor as sympathy for the unfortunate, but as that which the fruit 3895 I, 7, p. 43 | Moses either foreign or unfriendly to their own religion, on 3896 VI, 18, p. 29 | rightly withdrew from it as unfruitful, its mound and its wall, 3897 VI, 13, p. 18 | give my firstborn for my ungodliness, the fruit of my body for 3898 Int, 2, p. xi | language would seem to be too unguarded to allow it to be likely 3899 VIII, 2, p. 138 | profane place by profane and unhallowed men. Hear the witness of 3900 X, 1, p. 198 | this, and assured of an unhindered resurrection by His Father, 3901 VI, 21, p. 42 | prophecy, and according to the unimpeachable testimony of the Holy Gospels? 3902 VII, 1, p. 49 | by reason of their being uninhabited, and the houses by reason 3903 VIII, 2, p. 123 | our Saviour was anointed uniquely beyond all that ever were 3904 IV, 6, p. 173 | number of the Monad and the Unit, since the essence of things 3905 III, 6, p. 144 | was He Who undertook to unite things which have never 3906 IV, 5, p. 172 | suns than one, or moons, or universes, or anything else, like 3907 Int, 5, p. xx | transparent honesty of these "unlearned and ignorant men" has ever 3908 III, 2, p. 109 | shadows of illimitable and unmeasured time, but circumscribed 3909 I, 2, p. 10 | daughters, some of them unmentionable vice. The religion of others 3910 VIII, Int, p. 95 | foretell that there will be unmistakable signs of the Coming of Christ. 3911 I, 1, p. 3 | move our wonder, when they unmistakably proclaim the new ideal of 3912 III 121(36)| 472, 518.) "As against unmodified Judaism the Christians could 3913 V, 1, p. 232 | compare His unspeakable and unnameable generation and coming into 3914 V, 1, p. 233 | conception, unexplained and unnamed, inconceivable and unimaginable 3915 I, 10, p. 61 | all nations. Whence not unnaturally through the chrism of myrrh 3916 I, 6, p. 32 | and if I laid my hand on unnumbered (treasures)." ~And again 3917 IX, 2, p. 155 | reveals clearly to the most unobservant the Egyptians rescued from 3918 III, 5, p. 133 | expected to suffer anything unpleasant because of their witness 56 3919 I, 6, p. 40 | it has left behind Jewish unprofitable observances, designed by 3920 III, 7, p. 160 | was not given by simple or unproven words, but came with the 3921 Int, 7, p. xx | were but symbols that were unreal, the Eucharist is a symbol 3922 IV, 5, p. 170 | think it right to say that Unreason, and Chance, and random 3923 Int, 2, p. xi | But there seems nothing unreasonable in supposing that an historical 3924 III, 6, p. 152 | c) man's history, things unrecorded before in human annals have 3925 V, 8, p. 252 | punish the ungodly. Yet if we unreservedly confess two Lords, we do 3926 X, 8, p. 216 | unchanging reason, with unruffled soul, and with sober mind, 3927 VII, 1, p. 50 | comes after them is left unsaid. And the divine and heavenly 3928 Int, 5, p. xx | justice and love of truth, the unselfishness and benevolence of the Christian 3929 V, 3, p. 239 | confirmation the honour unshakeable and immutable of the continuous 3930 II, 3, p. 92 | more precious than gold unsmelted, and a man shall be more 3931 I, 3, p. 20 | that Moses' enactments were unsuitable to their needs, since neither 3932 V, 1, p. 235 | everlasting light, and an unsullied mirror of the action of 3933 VII, 3, p. 91 | laying aside their fierce and untameable nature through His sojourn 3934 VIII, Int, p. 97 | that men were like wild and untamed beasts. They knew nothing 3935 IV, 3, p. 168 | division, but unspeakably and unthinkably to us brought into being 3936 III, 5, p. 142 | though untortured and ./. unthreatened by rulers. For surely if 3937 III, 5, p. 141 | denied Him thrice though untortured and ./. unthreatened by 3938 III, 7, p. 158 | such an audience? How could untrained speakers, quite deficient 3939 IV, 9, p. 179 | and left no sort of device untried, and with base myths of 3940 III, 5, p. 128 | large a body of men were untrustworthy, who embraced a holy and 3941 IX, 13, p. 178 | preach Him—whose evidence unvarnished and veritable is confirmed 3942 II, 1, p. 65 | superstition, but is now unveiled in our time, through the 3943 I, 3, p. 19 | that would not pardon the unwitting offender before he had confessed 3944 Int, 5, p. xx | and manner of life. He was unworldly, pure, and retiring; sorcerers 3945 II, 3, p. 90 | were kept safe and intact, unwounded and undespoiled according 3946 I, 6, p. 28 | independent ideal of holiness was upheld. They cared nothing for 3947 II, 3, p. 82 | counsel on the earth, to uplift and to glorify the remnant 3948 II 76(14)| kataleimma. LXX : D.F. K. L.P.— upoleimmaAleph A.B. ~ 3949 II 80(22)| 1 'upostolh xrhtai, "a lowering of diet," 3950 II 90(37)| 2 'uposuronteV. Cf. P.E. 317 a, Of the 3951 VII, 1, p. 52 | his enemies was rightly upraised again by one that was sinless 3952 III 119(33)| which springs a race of upright men, ever given to wise 3953 I, 6, p. 32 | others eat, and let me be uprooted from the earth." ~How he 3954 VIII, 2, p. 134 | truth the whole nation, now upsetting the established order of 3955 III, 5, p. 136 | their truth, and turn them upside down. But just as no one 3956 VII, 3, p. 91 | Rising from the Seed of David upspringing, and the same a King of 3957 III 119(33)| There is on earth a city, Ur of the Chaldees, from which 3958 IX, 13, p. 179 | encourage others, and to urge them to cling to the salvation 3959 VII, 1, p. 63 | Lord hisses, and as it were urges them on and encourages them, 3960 VIII, 2, p. 117 | the vision"; (d)  ~clearly urging him to a deeper consideration 3961 VII, 1, p. 70 | this is the meaning of Uriah), and that the other being " 3962 IV, 6, p. 174 | destruction than of (155) usefulness to all, not that it is his 3963 III, 5, p. 133 | honour Him the more—His utter uselessness to us—we must strain every 3964 III, 3, p. 123 | our strength, even if they usurp for themselves without limit 3965 X, 2, p. and | in the midst of it, | and usury and craft have not left 3966 Pre v | must for some time fill the vacant place in English bookshelves 3967 Int, 8, p. xx | Diario Italico, p. 408) by Valeriano of Forli. One of the four 3968 VIII, 2, p. 133 | Josephus writes: (399) ~8 "Valerius Gratus the Roman General, 3969 I, 10, p. 55 | had nothing better or more valuable than their own life to sacrifice, 3970 III, 5, p. 142 | Him at all, but that He vanished laughing at them from the 3971 II, 3, p. 81 | which they made to worship vanities." ~Thus speaking, it would 3972 IV, 3, p. 167 | one and not many. For what variation could there be from this 3973 VII, 1, p. 59 | and into a diversity of varied beliefs, the other that 3974 IV, 8, p. 177 | all by the analogy of the vastness and beauty of created visible 3975 III, 7, p. 155 | just, and dwelling in the vaults of heaven. He, then, being 3976 IV, 5, p. 172 | qualities, in the animal and vegetable world, and in souls, and 3977 III, 3, p. 120 | 105) From Porphyry 34 On Vegetarianism ~[II. 34. Cf. Praep. Evan. 3978 IV, 5, p. 172 | again, and not many suns, veils the flashings of all things 3979 VIII, 4, p. 146 | encircling Judaea, and their venerated Temple and its Holy Place 3980 Int, 8, p. xx | 1543, and was written at Venice (or 1533 according to Montfaucon, 3981 IX, 1, p. 153 | by applying to Him the verb from "Rising," "a star shall 3982 V, 5, p. 249 | compounded of nouns and verbs: for we know that our speech 3983 IX, 13, p. 178 | evidence unvarnished and veritable is confirmed by trial of 3984 Int, 8, p. xx | syllabus scriptorum, qui veritatem religionis Christianae adversos 3985 Int, 8, p. xx | and was used by Donatus of Verona for his Latin version, first 3986 IV, 17, p. 216 | prophet, who was deeply versed in the significance of ./. 3987 IX, 1, p. 151 | head, so to say, and, ./. vertically above Judaea, hastened to 3988 III 130(50)| e0f0 h9suxi/aj. Cf. Arist. Vesp. 1517. ~ 3989 IX, 8, p. 171 | repaying every garment and vestment they will be burned with 3990 II 66(5) | about A.D. 180 (it is a very vexed question) or earlier. It 3991 I 2 | changes of times, national vicissitudes, the coming of foretold 3992 IV, 12, p. 186 | the Christ of God, called Victor, is represented in the prophetic 3993 II, 3, p. 97 | of Christ. ~And then His victories are proclaimed to Him : " 3994 Int, 4, p. xv | invincible force, and its victorious power against its enemies" ( 3995 III 118(29)| the way of": "Plura mihi videnter emendationis egere" (Gaisford). ~ 3996 III 130(51)| Churches, e. g. Lyons and Vienne. (G. P. Fisher, History 3997 X, 8, p. 231 | entrusted to them with all vigilance, and to bark if necessary 3998 Int, 8, p. xx | of Robert Stephen, 1548. ~Viguier's Praeparatio was published 3999 I, 6, p. 39 | unspeakable vice and all sorts of vileness, men who lived like wild 4000 X, 8, p. 227 | of this world himself the vilest of them all, who because 4001 III 120(34)| vi. p. 58. He met Origen (Vincent Lerin. Commonit. i. 23) 4002 V, Int, p. 229 | But I will close here my vindication of the divine power of the 4003 III, 5, p. 141 | pierced, His being given vinegar to drink, struck on the


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