Book, Chapter
1 Int, 1 | this when read. What some people think of them is their own
2 1, XVI | so necessary to persuade people to your way of thinking;
3 3, II | there were some unhappy people so that he might commiserate
4 3, VII | same righteous will. These people should see that in one man,
5 3, VIII | gladiatorial shows or the people who deride and mock at others.
6 3, XII | to do this when he found people ready to receive it - he
7 4, III | his living by beguiling people. “But you,” he said, “have
8 4, XIV | unpraised, and these same people had criticized him and had
9 5, VII | not one of those talkative people - from whom I had endured
10 5, X | intimate friendship with these people than with others who were
11 5, XII | together in my home a few people to whom and through whom
12 5, XII | fees. My heart hated such people, though not with a “perfect
13 5, XII | illicit acts. Still, such people are base indeed; they fornicate
14 5, XIII | abundantly provided thy people with the flour of thy wheat,
15 5, XIII | as he preached to the people. I was trying to discover
16 6, III | to him by crowds of busy people to whose infirmities he
17 6, III | word of truth”154 among the people. And I became all the more
18 6, IV | Ambrose, in his sermons to the people, often recommending this
19 6, V | assurance I believed which two people were my parents, though
20 6, II | What could this imaginary people of darkness, which the Manicheans
21 6, IX | so that thy first-born people worshiped the head of a
22 6, IX | which thou didst allow thy people to take from Egypt, since
23 6, XIII | things of the earth, and all people; princes, and all judges
24 6, XXI | heart, the salvation of thy people, the espoused City, the
25 7, II | and who had inspired the people with the love of Osiris
26 7, II | full sight of the faithful people, in a set form of words
27 8, II | purpose would it serve that people should consider and dispute
28 8, III | continence among his own people in Africa, and bringing
29 8, VII | the Arians. The devoted people kept guard in the church,
30 8, VII | should be sung, so that the people would not be worn out with
31 8, VII | learned the reason for the people’s tumultuous joy, rushed
32 8, XIII | Jerusalem, for which thy people sigh in their pilgrimage
33 9, III | cure all my infirmities? People are curious to know the
34 9, III | confessions? Many different people desire to know, both those
35 9, IV | O Lord my God, that many people should give thanks to thee
36 9, XV | signified. Nor would sick people know what was meant when
37 9, XXI | further, there are many people who would like to be eloquent,
38 9, XXI | it - nevertheless, these people have noticed through their
39 9, XXXI | by bread. And, thus, the people in the wilderness truly
40 9, XXXV | to be made sad and pale. People fear lest they should see
41 9, XXXV | succumb? How often, when people are telling idle tales,
42 10, II | administer thy sacraments to thy people? And even if I could do
43 10, II | hast called thy faithful people to adoption, and me among
44 11, XVII | reveal in this way. For the people to whom he spoke were rude
45 11, XXV | may patiently bear with people who talk like this! It is
46 11, XXVII| interpretations. For some people, when they read or hear
47 11, XXVII| suggests to them.~In these people, who are still little children
48 11, XXXI | understanding of many different people, who should see truths in
49 12 | the division between the people of God and the conspiracy
50 12, XV | over the infirmities of the people below the heavens, where
51 12, XV | is spread abroad over the people, even to the end of the
52 12, XIX | 25. But you, O elect people, set in the firmament of
53 12, XX | thy word. The needs of the people who were alien to the eternity
54 12, XXIII| invoking thee, so that the people may answer, “Amen.”630 The
|