Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   3|   testimony of authors, how great nations, and what individual nations,
 2   I,   3|      nations, and what individual nations, and how often such nations
 3   I,   3|       nations, and how often such nations experienced dreadful famine,
 4   I,   5|    swollen torrent, overthrew all nations, and swept them beneath
 5   I,  14|           been extended, and that nations whose names we had not previously
 6   I,  16|          evils, for we are in all nations; or when you see blessings
 7   I,  28|          and in the most powerful nations, sacred rites are performed
 8   I,  46|       single word, was thought by nations far removed from one another
 9   I,  50|        being sent through various nations should perform all those
10   I,  54|     perhaps ask. Tribes, peoples, nations, and that incredulous human
11   I,  55|          a religion? or how could nations dwelling widely apart, and
12   I,  56|          and commentaries. But in nations which were unknown to the
13  II,   1|         fiercest soldiers; and of nations at peace from the beginning,
14  II,   4|          Christ did not teach the nations impiety, but delivered ignorant
15  II,  12|          in the gatherings of the nations, who would assent? who would
16  II,  12|           races, and peoples, and nations most diverse in character
17  II,  40|         force their way to remote nations at the risk of life, and,
18  II,  54|        cry out against us and all nations together, showing us their
19  IV,   4| themselves, who do not help other nations? and how can they be gods,
20  IV,   4|           impartially towards all nations everywhere? and where, I
21   V,  14|         What say you, O races and nations, given up to such beliefs?
22   V,  23|          terrifies and overthrows nations pale with fear, pursuing
23   V,  29|          you, O peoples? what, ye nations busied with the services
24  VI,  11|      unshapen stone; the Scythian nations a sabre; the Thespians a
25  VI,  14|          We would here, as if all nations on the earth were present,
26  VI,  24|          which is the majority in nations and in states, in order
27 VII,   9|          who imposed slavery upon nations? was it not man? Who mixed
28 VII,  12|         who gives it. What if two nations, on the other hand, arrayed
29 VII,  38|      other dangers, to states and nations; and that they again, being
30 VII,  38|           have been summoned from nations dwelling beyond the sea,
31 VII,  40|          were summoned from among nations dwelling beyond the sea,
32 VII,  44|           were brought from among nations dwelling beyond the sea,
33 VII,  48|         that in great peoples, in nations, nay, in all cities even,
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