Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  25|          our opponents say, profane religious systems, and you practise
 2   I,  43|            angels of might, and the religious system of a remote country.
 3  II,  68|             changed that custom and religious observance, and has it not
 4 III,  38|           and in the performance of religious rites we are in danger of
 5 III,  42|           it evident even from your religious books that you neither hold
 6  IV,  30|            is anxiously thinking of religious rites, and slays spotless
 7  IV,  36|       indignation on behalf of your religious beliefs, you should rather
 8   V,  39|   considered mad to have received a religious ceremony got up without
 9   V,  42|           by name amongst the other religious ceremonies? Whether was
10  VI,   8|           much skill, and tend with religious care,-wherein if there is
11  VI,  13|            not moved by any fear or religious dread to call the god by
12 VII,  18|             of some reverential and religious scruple, another turn with
13 VII,  20|    yourselves do away with your own religious scruples and reasonings,
14 VII,  23| dispositions, is not only pious and religious, but also true; but that
15 VII,  24|            of the gods without some religious obligation, and that what
16 VII,  24|              and have mixed up with religious affairs? What, I say, is
17 VII,  26|            are used largely in your religious acts. And, first, with respect
18 VII,  26|        incense the performance of a religious service is imperfect, and
19 VII,  33|        sacred, and to be considered religious duties, what reason have
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License