bold = Main text
Book, Chapter grey = Comment text
1 3 | his infatuation with the Manichean heresy, and his mother’s
2 3, VI(70) | For the details of the Manichean cosmogony, see Burkitt,
3 3, X | another man’s wickedness, some Manichean saint might eat it, digest
4 3, X | hungry man - who was not a Manichean - should beg for any food,
5 3, X(79) | Electi sancti. Another Manichean term for the perfecti, the
6 4, II | sacrifices of a sort by my own [Manichean] superstition. For what
7 5 | demonstration of the truth of Manichean doctrine. He decides to
8 5, VI | with unsettled mind to the Manichean teaching I had been looking
9 5, VII | piety, if he had not been a Manichean. For their books are full
10 5, VII | explanations contained in the Manichean books were better or at
11 5, VII | which I had plunged into the Manichean system was checked, and
12 5, XIII | persons, drunk with the Manichean vanities, to be freed from
13 5, XIII | was wandering around in Manichean deceptions, while the former
14 6, I | that I was now no longer a Manichean, though not yet a Catholic
15 6, IV | deluded and deceived by the [Manichean] promises of certainties,
16 6, XVI | disenchantment with the Manichean conceptions of God and evil
17 10, X(430) | was incorporated into the Manichean rejection of the Christian
18 12, XXX(647)| A reference to the Manichean cosmogony and similar dualistic
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