Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  31|     God Thyself alone, whom no bodily shape may represent, no
 2   I,  47|        by all, infirmities and bodily sufferings, if deafness,
 3   I,  60|    invisible, and which has no bodily substance, have come upon
 4   I,  63|    afflicted with troubles and bodily ills, bring them back and
 5   I,  65|       free from such countless bodily distresses? And though it
 6  II,  14|       everlasting, and without bodily substance, he vet says that
 7  II,  26|      is not connected with any bodily form is not hampered by
 8  II,  28|       are spirits, and have no bodily substance, being exalted
 9  II,  69|     men that is either done by bodily exertion and manual labour,
10 III,  12|      end of life, is devoid of bodily features, and does not have
11 III,  19|        so far from attributing bodily shape to the Deity, that
12  IV,   5|     time, and according as our bodily position with regard to
13  IV,  17|        you who, by the fear of bodily tortures, urge us to worship
14   V,  18|      us to go through them all bodily: nay, more, to tell the
15  VI,  15|     retain when bulk up in the bodily forms of statues. What stupidity
16 VII,  28| supported by any excellence of bodily strength, an odour is of
17 VII,  28|       that which does not have bodily strength and corporeal substance,
18 VII,  34|      form, or is limited by no bodily outline, does anything or
19 VII,  34|      ill-health, sickness, and bodily disease, they would not
20 VII,  45|       used food also, by which bodily existence is kept up, he
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