Chapter
1 I | the transitory and fading nature of this present time, and
2 II | fellowship, but revolted against nature herself, and had no pity
3 II | to be fellow-workers with nature; and such they still are
4 II | be able to understand the nature of the things that are not.
5 V | it? This is beyond human nature, and is reserved for the
6 V | for death is a debt due to nature, laid on man from the beginning,
7 VII | the Holy Ghost, but in one nature and substance, in one glory
8 VII | to be an helpmeet of like nature for him. ~"And he planted
9 VII | good, and assume an evil nature; and he conceived spite
10 VII | estate. But even so our nature was in bondage by its freedom
11 VII | everywhere renewing our out-worn nature, instructing men both by
12 VII | All this he endured in the nature of that flesh which he took
13 VII | took from us, his divine nature remaining free of suffering:
14 VII | took from us, his human nature suffered, while his Godhead
15 VIII | as is attainable to human nature, then shall we know all
16 X | to the destruction of all nature, is to my thinking the extreme
17 X | is one God in three, one nature, one kingdom, one power,
18 XI | frailty and misery of our nature, hath not even here suffered
19 XII | the world, and denial of nature by desire of things above
20 XII | by desire of things above nature. These men therefore live
21 XV | its opposite. And like in nature to these choices are the
22 XVII | teaching, and from the very nature of the world. For the Scripture
23 XVII | out.' ~"So from mine own nature, I am led by the hand to
24 XVIII | philosophy, that far surpass the nature of these earthly men who
25 XIX | three, and one is their nature, one their substance, one
26 XIX | endured agony in his human nature, and for our transgressions
27 XIX | sufferings whatsoever to that nature which is free from suffering,
28 XIX | suffering and buried in that nature which he assumed, and in
29 XIX | virtue, which hath been by nature planted in us by our Maker,
30 XX | not all prayer is of this nature, but only such prayer as
31 XXIV | Thither he hath exalted our nature, and set it on the throne
32 XXIV | another by faith, even as by nature; or else, be well assured,
33 XXVII | to the inexorable law of nature, in common with the heavenly
34 XXVII | with itself, how in the nature of God shall there be such
35 XXVII | and discord? For if the nature of the gods were one, then
36 XXVII | thunder-stones, then is their nature no longer one, but their
37 XXVII | all this history of the nature of the gods is error. ~"
38 XXVIII| and steadfastness of his nature. Theatres, horse-races,
39 XXXI | his divine and intelligent nature and may lead our substance
40 XXXI | was never parted. And our nature, so worthless and senseless
41 XXXIII| aim at the impossible. By nature, or, it may be, by chance,
42 XXXIII| thou shalt do contrary to nature, and be no more called a
43 XXXIII| himself. For such is the nature of authority. Its subjects
44 XXXVI | same law is ordained by nature for every man born of woman,
45 XXXVI | nothingness of thine own nature, and the span-length and
46 XXXVII| desire of Christ conquered nature, and the thirst wherewith
47 XXXVII| thy bestial and crooked nature, and thy venomous and hurtful
48 XXXIX | Barlaam might pay the debt of nature, and, yielding up the ghost
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