Chapter
1 II | righteousness toward God, and human friendship, and glory, that
2 V | remained unknown to any human creature? Nor did it to
3 V | seen, answered, "These be human sufferings, which spring
4 V | ascertain it? This is beyond human nature, and is reserved
5 VII | on earth. But, when the human race again began to multiply,
6 VII | his purpose to pluck the human race from all unlawful worship
7 VII | which he took from us, his human nature suffered, while his
8 VII | them, peace on the whole human race. ~"After forty days
9 VIII | far as is attainable to human nature, then shall we know
10 XI | worthlessness and misery of human frailty, fell under the
11 XII | despise all earthly and human glory. ~"As to their dwellings,
12 XIV | eyes of my mind how all human life is wasted in these
13 XVIII | majesty is incomprehensible to human reasonings, and that no
14 XVIII | philosophy, and this more than human discipline" ~But Barlaam
15 XIX | and endured agony in his human nature, and for our transgressions
16 XX | and waxeth superior to human passions, and meriteth to
17 XXI | unto thee this more than human good, which doth even exceed
18 XXVII | himself, come we now to the human race, that we may know which
19 XXXII | though possessed of no human help, shineth from afar
20 XXXII | declare that it was wholly of human power. But now, seeing,
21 XXXII | could not, possessing such human support as it did, have
22 XXXVIII| marvellous and more than human life, dwelling with him
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