Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  27|          the fault of our innate weakness, He allows Himself at all
 2   I,  38|  us-similar in mind, soul, body, weakness, and condition; is He not
 3   I,  38| acknowledge the measure of their weakness; who hath shown that we
 4   I,  49|          reason of a heaven-sent weakness.
 5  II,   7|       and crazy old age? Now the weakness and wretched ignorance of
 6  II,  33|        to ourselves from our own weakness, for we see that our nature
 7  II,  40|         borrowing help for their weakness from the dumb creatures;
 8  II,  47|          beyond the reach of our weakness and frailty, but beyond
 9  II,  50|         souls are, through their weakness, ready and prone to fall
10 III,  23|  ridiculed for their disgraceful weakness?
11  IV,   2|          spirit, and unfortunate weakness of body. For as these things
12  IV,  23|      lust, and inclined, through weakness of character, to yield to
13  VI,   2|          a mortal race and human weakness to act otherwise; and the
14  VI,   3|        temples? If you ask human weakness -something vast and spacious;
15 VII,   4|  everlasting, and freed from the weakness of mortals. Moreover, every
16 VII,  14|        alone, whom their natural weakness and love of standing above
17 VII,  42|        what had the women, whose weakness did not allow them to take
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