Book, Paragraph

 1   I,   3| after the Christian religion came into the world, and after
 2   I,  12|      for you, or whether you came into it as sojourners from
 3  II,  20|    conceive it just as if we came into contact. Let us then
 4  II,  28|      long ago, and before it came into this world, there is
 5  II,  44|       44. But, you say, they came of their own accord not
 6  II,  44|      not matter whether they came of their own accord, or
 7  II,  48|   from which they issued and came, or aware that they are
 8  II,  52|    mixes, either their souls came, or that the locust, mouse,
 9  II,  63| their mortal state before He came? Can you, then, know what
10  II,  64|     opponents ask, if Christ came as the Saviour of men, as
11  II,  74|      the Saviour of our race came not lately, but to-day.
12 III,  12|     nature, since it neither came into existence at any time,
13  IV,  29|     the comely Attis; whence came the Egyptian Serapis and
14   V,   1|     Faunus and Martius Picus came to this place to drink,-
15   V,   1|     when overcome by thirst, came to their well-known haunts.
16   V,  39|   for her daughter, when she came to the confines of Attica,
17  VI,  14|   cast into these shapes and came out into the forms which
18 VII,  47|   pestilential diseases, and came without spurning the proposal
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