Book, Chapter
1 Int | itself and his baptismal confession of Jesus Christ as Lord
2 Int | meant, for Augustine, the “confession of sins.” But, at the same
3 Int, 1 | declamation than a serious confession, although this inept expression
4 4, XIV | whence comes my confident confession to thee - that I loved him
5 5, V | it, when piety comes from confession to thee. From piety, therefore,
6 5, X | my God - to whom I make confession of thy mercies - as infinite
7 6, XX | between presumption and confession - between those who saw
8 6, XXI | godliness - the tears of confession, thy sacrifice, a troubled
9 9, I | what I wish to do through confession in my heart before thee,
10 9, II | while he is yet ungodly. My confession therefore, O my God, is
11 9, III | conscience makes her daily confession, far more confident in the
12 9, VI | the earth made the same confession. I asked the sea and the
13 9, XXXIV| about which I must make my confession in the hearing of the ears
14 11, XXIV | this book an offering of confession to thee,492 and I beseech
15 11, XXXII| This is the faith of my confession, that if I could say what
16 12, XII | 13. Go forward in your confession, O my faith; say to the
17 12, XV | words that so persuade me to confession and make my neck submissive
18 12, XXIV | understand.~But let also my confession be pleasing in thy eyes,
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