Book, Chapter
1 0, Life | and well has my pitiful judge disposed my life for me;
2 I, XV | the disposal of the just Judge, it ravaged all the neighbouring
3 I, XXVII| Gregory answers.—You may judge, my brother, by the condition
4 I, XXVII| beyond your own authority and judge the bishops of Gaul, but
5 I, XXIX | zeal of Christ; let them judge rightly, and carry out their
6 I, XXXI | should always carefully judge yourself in your heart,
7 I, XXXII| with good works to meet our Judge. Thus much, my illustrious
8 II, VIII | tribunal of the Supreme Judge that is to come, the rewards
9 III, III | instructed person can easily judge. But the Scots which dwelt
10 III, XIV | more of this, nor will. I judge of what or how much of our
11 III, XV | was made manifest by the Judge of the heart, with the testimony
12 III, XXII | mankind; Who governs and will judge the world in righteousness,
13 III, XXV | the history of the Church, judge contrary to the Law and
14 IV, III | great power and majesty, to judge the quick and the dead.
15 IV, XXV | averted the anger of the just Judge.~For there was in that monastery
16 IV, XXV | the same by the righteous Judge. Betaking himself, therefore,
17 V, XIII | examined by the Supreme Judge, and will in the end be
18 V, XIX | Peter, to whom Christ, the Judge of all the earth, gave the
19 V, XXI | man of this world could judge truly of the philosophy
20 V, XXI | of Him who is the Supreme Judge, and by their example and
21 V, XXIV | of combat, and under what judge they overcame the world.~
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