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1 I | that God really took our nature upon Him and delivered doctrines
2 I | who is able to show the nature of the heavenly things,57
3 I | the front rank, viz. His nature, in what sense He is Son
4 II | In the contemplation of Nature it is an act of piety if
5 IX | which have no law do by nature the things of the law, these,
6 IX | hearts and in Gentiles who by nature do the things of the law,
7 IX | law of common morality by nature written in our governing
8 IX | from the law, the law of nature, a righteousness of God
9 IX | truth is that the law of nature by no means witnesses to
10 XII | from it, according to the nature of the sounds thereof, either
11 XII | opposing faculties of our inner nature, we may say, are weakened
12 XII | these passages. Our inner nature is charmed; its better elements
13 XIV | Syrians. Just so, the Divine Nature taking thought not only
14 XIV | having more of the Divine Nature than other bodies should
15 XIV | wonderful that matter; by nature mutable and variable and
16 XIV | Jesus are related to the nature of the Divine Word,283which
17 XVII | mysterious subject, the nature of names. Shall we say,
18 XVII | we are able to show the nature of powerful names, some
19 XVII | We repeat, then, that the nature of names does not, as Aristotle
20 XVII | can give attention to the nature of charms variously appropriated
21 XVII | traced up to the Divine nature? For instance, some new
22 XVII | effect, either through the nature of the names or their power,
23 XVIII | to discuss the compound nature, and the parts of which
24 XVIII | Word to cure every rational nature and make it fit for God,
25 XIX | participated in the Divine Nature, were taken into God.390
26 XIX | result of vice; but the nature of the body is not polluted;
27 XIX | polluted; for as bodily nature it has no vice, which generates
28 XX | may deal with the whole of nature, as I promised, I will explain
29 XX | account of the whole of nature, and so pretentious as Celsus
30 XX | tell us about the whole of nature, and what light he throws
31 XX | general prefer rational nature to all irrational beings,
32 XX | assist us in our sport, while nature gave them their own weapons
33 XX | animals which were intended by nature to be domesticated, we tame
34 XX | beasts whose savage and cruel nature gives them the mastery over
35 XX | intercourse between the Divine Nature and men. The poet of Ascra 399
36 XX | beginning of the world human nature received more assistance
37 XX | results from an irrational nature and a creature's mere make.
38 XX | has created an irrational nature which by its very lack of
39 XX | we must admire the Divine nature, extending as it does to
40 XX | while we must admire the nature of the bees in these respects,
41 XX | must rather believe that Nature, mother of all things, has
42 XX | least without some trace of Nature's reason. It cannot be that
43 XX | that it is impossible for a nature created in the image of
44 XX | discuss the whole range of nature, and boasted of his truthfulness
45 XX | some secret contrivance of nature? But it is absurd to suppose
46 XX | more desirous to see the nature of the ruling principles
47 XX | using the antidotes which nature provides, for the name has
48 XX | through the mere promptings of nature, but partly by experiment,
49 XX | proof that in them it is not nature but reason that makes the
50 XX | adapted to the particular nature of each animal, shows that
51 XX | than the mortal side of his nature, but that some of the irrational
52 XX | creatures have a Divine nature and are wiser than man,
53 XX | treated of God and the Divine nature, for they were men. So,
54 XX | forsooth, understand the nature of God better than Pherecydes,409
55 XX | there were in them a Divine nature capable of predicting the
56 XX | creatures having a Divine nature and conceptions of God,
57 XX | exponents of God and the Divine nature, whose praises he sang not
58 XX | from reasoning, but from nature, it being nature's aim in
59 XX | but from nature, it being nature's aim in fashioning them,
60 XX | by the mere impulses of nature, he would never have said
61 XX | transgressed the promptings of nature,430He brings upon them judgment
62 XXI(432)| 2 Inanimate nature. ~
63 XXI(433)| 3 Animate nature. Lit., "by nature and a
64 XXI(433)| Animate nature. Lit., "by nature and a soul." Cf. Arist.
65 XXI | creatures the phantastic nature not only calls forth an
66 XXI | follows, its phantastic nature regularly urging it to do
67 XXI | more than its phantastic nature; and in the bee the instinct
68 XXI | addition to its phantastic nature has reason, which distinguishes
69 XXI | accordingly. Now it is the nature of reason to have promptings
70 XXI | for the most part 436the nature of animals is adapted to
71 XXI(436)| the greater part of the nature assigned to all things is
72 XXI | likely to be licentious by nature, while the most savage men
73 XXI | Pharaoh being of a perishing nature was therefore hardened by
74 XXI | Pharaoh was of an earthy nature; and if they answer "Yes,"
75 XXI | that the man with an earthy nature is altogether disobedient
76 XXI | Pharaoh was of a perishing nature. And we shall give the same
77 XXI | they have not a perishing nature? And on whom hath He mercy?
78 XXI | blessed on account of their nature? Unless, perhaps, since
79 XXI | neglect of the land; the nature of the land is one and the
80 XXI | We ought to attend to the nature and force of what is said,
81 XXI | perceive his own peculiar nature and the grace which God
82 XXI | has made the intellectual nature incorruptible and akin to
83 XXI | great Husbandman of every nature puts off the well-doing,
84 XXI | will ask how the perishing nature wills the better course;
85 XXI | that, so far as the subject nature is concerned, as there is
86 XXI | there is one common soul nature subject to God, and, if
87 XXII | a mystical and esoteric nature, concerning the original
88 XXII | and that of a mystical nature, about these things: with
89 XXIII | understanding, which transcends all nature, that His knowledge is,
90 XXIII | with me, father, what the nature of Astrology 583is, and
91 XXIV | proceed to inquire into the nature of evil. For once it is
92 XXIV | remain what they were by nature. If the qualities were not
93 XXIV | to say that He is weak by nature, you appear to imperil your
94 XXIV | itself, opposites being by nature opposed to things other
95 XXV | men are so constituted by nature that they must be saved.
96 XXV | Gospel of God not because his nature was specially endowed and
97 XXVI | working miracles, by the very nature of what they did brought
98 XXVII | conceptions of the Divine nature as we are investigating
99 XXVII | goodness, because his original nature neutralises his efforts
100 XXVII | being hardened, he had not a nature doomed to perdition. If
101 XXVII | responsible, he had not a nature doomed to perdition. We
102 Index | Happiness, its source and nature, 214 f., 222.~Heavens (the),
103 Index | unreasonable, 17, 19.~Law of nature, 49.~Libyans, their laws,