Book, Paragraph

 1   I,  18|   reckoned as at all partaking of divinity. For wherever, as the philosophers
 2   I,  28|        having obtained their very divinity, so to speak, they feel
 3   I,  60|          own proper character and divinity? He took upon Him, therefore,
 4  II,  71| determined by its age, but by its divinity; and you should consider
 5 III,   2|        itself from which the very divinity of all gods whatever is
 6 III,  10|          prematurely delivered. O divinity, pure, holy, free from and
 7 III,  21|         by the power of a greater divinity, so that he may be rightly
 8   V,  19|       show yourselves full of the divinity and majesty of the god,
 9  VI,  13|         rather, to consecrate the divinity and image of Jupiter to
10  VI,  15|            and that that receives divinity from the appearance given
11  VI,  20|        let them show the might of divinity, and subject the sacrilegious
12 VII,   2|           nothing as respects his divinity; nor can that which is one
13 VII,   9|  unwittingly did violence to your divinity and majesty, being, as thou
14 VII,  14|         be more truly gods, their divinity being increased? And yet
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