Book, Chapter
1 11, III | didst form and separate this formless matter there was nothing:
2 11, VI | And still I called it formless, not because it was unformed,
3 11, VI | involving something like a formless condition, though not actual
4 11, XII | immutability. The other is so formless that it could not change
5 11, XII | thou didst not leave this formless, for, before any “day” in
6 11, XVII | invisible and visible (still formless but capable of receiving
7 11, XIX | that is formed from what is formless was formless before it was
8 11, XIX | from what is formless was formless before it was formed.~
9 11, XXI | God made was as yet the formless matter of physical things
10 11, XXI | earth was invisible and formless, and darkness was over the
11 11, XXII | beautiful a fashion, are not formless and invisible. But if they
12 11, XXIV | only newly begun and still formless. Whichever of these possibilities
13 11, XXIX | that God made matter first formless and then formed, he is not
14 11, XXIX | time we do not first utter formless sounds without singing and
15 11, XXIX | time. There is not first a formless sound, which afterward is
16 12, II | that the inchoate and the formless, whether spiritual or corporeal,
17 12, II | nothing at all. Still, these formless entities are held in their
18 12, II | thee.~Or, what has that formless spiritual creation deserved
19 12, XXXIII| world thou didst form from formless matter (de informi materia).
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