Book, Chapter
1 5, IV | through thee, whom all things serve, even though he does not
2 6, VI | unrelaxed, continued to serve his masters as Firminus,
3 6, IX | Jacob, that the elder should serve the younger and thou mightest
4 7, V | to forsake the world and serve thee because my perception
5 7, VI | and I am determined to serve God; and I enter into that
6 7, X | deliberating whether I would serve the Lord my God now, as
7 8, II | And what purpose would it serve that people should consider
8 8, V | reasons my determination to serve thee and also my insufficiency
9 8, IX | other except what might serve toward their reconciliation.
10 8, XIII | and heart and writings I serve, that as many of them as
11 9, IV | thou hast commanded me to serve if I desire to live with
12 9, IV | whom thou commandest me to serve, I will declare, not what
13 9, XXI | asked whether they wished to serve as soldiers, one of them
14 9, XXI | first one would wish to serve as a soldier and the other
15 9, XXI | other would not wish to serve, both from no other motive
16 9, XXXI | which land and water and air serve our infirmity), even our
17 9, XXXVI| the cold men might have to serve him, mimicking thee in perverse
18 9, XLIII| was born of thee and did serve us. Rightly, then, is my
19 10, II | alone but longs as well to serve the cause of fraternal love.
20 12, I | God. It is not that I may serve thee as if thou wert fatigued
21 12, I | Instead, it is that I may serve and worship thee to the
22 12, XV | thy yoke, and invite me to serve thee for nothing else than
23 12, XXXII| from above - the sun to serve the day, the moon and the
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