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Book, Chapter grey = Comment text
1 Int | need and God’s abundant grace. But the unforeseen result
2 Int | God’s abundant mercy and grace - but he was also fully
3 Int | of the primacy of God’s grace, he vigorously insisted
4 Int | predestination and irresistible grace.~For all this the Catholic
5 Int | is the sovereign God of grace and the sovereign grace
6 Int | grace and the sovereign grace of God. Grace, for Augustine,
7 Int | sovereign grace of God. Grace, for Augustine, is God’s
8 Int | and the “city of God.” Grace is God’s unmerited love
9 Int | ground of human pride. God’s grace became incarnate in Jesus
10 Int | self-analysis.1 His pilgrimage of grace had led him to a most unexpected
11 Int | was sure that it was God’s grace that had been his prime
12 Int | prevenient and provident grace. Thus he follows the windings
13 Int | humility in the atmosphere of grace and reconciliation.~Thus
14 Int, 1 | briefer treatise on the grace of God and represents Augustine’
15 Int, 1 | in which the doctrine of grace was the exact epicenter.
16 Int, 1 | which God’s wholly unmerited grace has responded in the incarnation
17 Int, 1 | the appropriation of God’s grace lead naturally to a discussion
18 Int, 1 | the benefits of redeeming grace and weighs the balance between
19 Int, 1 | the celebration of God’s grace and glory by which his faithful
20 Int, 1 | declared there that God by his grace turns men’s wills to the
21 1 | mysterious pilgrimage of grace which his life has been -
22 1 | constant and omnipotent grace. In a mood of sustained
23 2, VI(54) | from God; this is sin. By grace it is turned to God; this
24 2, VII | wicked and evil deeds. To thy grace I attribute it and to thy
25 2, VII | as if it were ice. To thy grace also I attribute whatsoever
26 4, I | beseech thee, and give me the grace to retrace in my present
27 4, III | resisteth the proud and giveth grace to the humble.”92 But didst
28 4, XIII | for unless there were a grace and beauty in them, they
29 5, VI | wit and a sort of native grace. Was this not even as I
30 5, VIII | sea for the water of thy grace; so that, when I was purified
31 6, III | Catholic Mother156 through grace - as if they believed and
32 6, IX | resist the proud, but give grace to the humble,”184 and how
33 6, XXI | with the exaltation of thy grace. Thus, he who sees must
34 6, XXI | this death,”225 except thy grace through Jesus Christ our
35 7, I | servant of thine, and thy grace shone forth in him. I had
36 7, II | a glorious proof of thy grace, which ought to be confessed
37 7, II | about to enter into thy grace make from a platform in
38 7, V | body of this death” but thy grace alone, through Jesus Christ
39 8, V | reception of so great a grace. He recommended Isaiah the
40 8, VI | he were the same age in grace with ourselves, to be trained
41 8, XII | gracious sleep by night:~ ~Thy grace our wearied limbs restore~
42 9, III | and the sweetness of thy grace, by which he that is weak
43 9, XXX | thy more and more abundant grace, to quench even the lascivious
44 9, XXXI | he received the gift of grace and that, when he glories,
45 9, XXXV | thou dost also give me the grace willingly to follow thy
46 9, XXXVI | resistest the proud but givest grace to the humble.”383 Thou
47 9, XXXIX | they had them through thy grace, still without this grace
48 9, XXXIX | grace, still without this grace with their friends, but
49 9, XXXIX | but as if they envied that grace to others. In all these
50 10, X(429) | Carnality is the old nature; grace is the new"; cf. Matt. 9:
51 10, XX(437)| confidence in God's provident grace.~
52 12, III | nothing whatsoever but thy grace, since it had been turned,
53 12, XVIII | this same firmament - thy grace being thus manifest throughout
54 12, XXIII | Church, O our God, by the grace thou hast given us - since
55 12, XXIII | are equal in thy spiritual grace where, as far as sex is
56 12, XXIII | into the sweetness of thy grace, and which of them may continue
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