Section, Paragraph
1 I, 42 | 42. To call a king "Prince" is pleasing, because it
2 II, 100 | dislike is most dangerous. A prince may be the byword of all
3 II, 100 | interests more than that of the prince whom they serve; and so
4 VIII, 587| as David, and Isaiah, a prince of the blood, and so great
5 IX, 607 | was to be a great temporal prince. Jesus Christ, according
6 X, 684 | be without law, without a prince, and without a sacrifice;
7 X, 685 | Messiah—without king or prince.~The eternal law—changed.~
8 XI, 718 | without a king and without a prince, and for a long time. Hosea
9 XI, 721 | and at last overthrew the prince, and by him the daily sacrifice
10 XI, 721 | also stand up against the Prince of princes, but he shall
11 XI, 721 | Jerusalem unto the Messiah the Prince, shall be seven weeks, and
12 XI, 721 | off, and a people of the prince that shall come shall destroy
13 XI, 721 | as Appian says).~"But a prince shall oppose, his conquests," (
14 XI, 721 | conquer them, and even the prince with whom he has made a
15 XI, 727 | without a king, without a prince, without a sacrifice, and
16 XII, 792 | Archimedes to have acted the prince in his books on geometry,
17 XII, 792 | geometry, although he was a prince.~It would have been useless
18 XIII, 838| the world, over whom the prince of this world has no power,
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