Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  25|        to look up to Him with faith,-is this an execrable and
 2   I,  33|     guide and teacher, in the faith of uncorrupted innocence,
 3   I,  56| syllables, at once to mar the faith of the cautious and to impair
 4   I,  57|    are brought forward on the faith of witnesses, those of yours
 5  II,   5|      proofs at least give you faith to believe, viz., that already,
 6  II,   5|      and is roused to zealous faith by the very attempt to hinder
 7  II,   5|   they receive the grounds of faith with which they have become
 8  II,   8|     been wont to laugh at our faith, and with droll jests to
 9  II,   9|      as it were, like that of faith? Does not he who says that
10  II,   9| origin of all things, pin his faith to Thales or Heraclitus?
11  II,  10|       unjust that you mock at faith in us, while you see that
12  II,  12|     accord to accept the same faith. For the deeds can be reckoned
13  II,  12| importance; of robbing you of faith, and putting scorn in its
14  II,  27|    other conclusions, and put faith in their own arguments with
15  II,  66|       not abandon the ancient faith which you had inherited
16 III,   1| common rancour to destroy all faith in it.
17  VI,   8|       he is proved not to put faith in his own religion, to
18  VI,  24|       if justice, peace, good faith, possessed the hearts of
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