Book, Paragraph

1   I,   3|         been devised against our sin, whence did antiquity know
2  II,  30|         from the very freedom to sin which it suggests, but even
3  II,  49|      never wavered and sunk into sin, yet we would have you tell
4  II,  54|        we fall into the opposite sin, doing despite to His supreme
5  IV,  32|          allows the wrongdoer to sin, strengthens his audacity;
6 VII,   8| multitude increases of those who sin, when there is hope given
7 VII,   8|        given of paying for their sin; and there is little hesitation
8 VII,  26|           the ancients fell into sin, nay rather, their whole
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