Book, Chapter

 1   Int,       10|        discussed in iii. 14, His Godhead and His manhood being for
 2    II,     VIII|       The man born blind saw the Godhead with the eyes of his soul,
 3    II,       IX| revealing the essence of His own Godhead, says, "I and the Father
 4    II,       IX|          unalloyed nature of the Godhead, thou wouldst have decided
 5    II,       IX|     declares, is unique, and the Godhead underlies it. But the relative
 6    II,       XX|           and, binding it to His Godhead, He drew men up to heavenly
 7   III,     VIII|          And if by virtue of His Godhead He had made the rock tremble
 8   III,       IX|          was so convinced of His Godhead, that he was afraid to bring
 9   III,       IX|       worm round the hook of the Godhead, and, speaking through it,
10   III,     XIII|      terrifying them through His Godhead, He pities them through
11   III,      XIV|          cross, the odour of His Godhead spread through the whole
12   III,    XXIII|      life-giving medicine of His Godhead. Therefore when He spoke
13   III,    XXIII|    immortality of the immaculate Godhead, gives thereof to him that
14    IV,      XVI|        God by his union with the Godhead.271 So the world was like
15    IV,     XVII|        the lowly dwelling of the Godhead in flesh. Then afterwards
16    IV,      XXV|       For he |142 thus names the Godhead of the Three, by saying,
17    IV,     XXVI|    angels shine with a reflected Godhead, though they have no part
18    IV,      XXI|    because they are close to the Godhead, why do we dispute about
19    IV,   XXVIII|          an image that bears His Godhead, in the birth of the Only-begotten ?304
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