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1 I, 5 | tells us that they all had wives and in accordance with the
2 I, 5 | history of mankind without wives and children. “There,” says
3 I, 5 | and his sons and their wives, was saved at the deluge,
4 I, 5 | whom the first had three wives, the second one, the third
5 I, 5 | all the patriarchs, had wives, and that God blessed them
6 I, 5 | And they who have wives as though they had them
7 I, 7 | continence put away their wives, and whether believing virgins
8 I, 7 | it were allowable to take wives, would the Apostle direct
9 I, 7 | direct that only Christian wives, or Gentiles also, should
10 I, 7 | Gospel, and to put away their wives? Whence it is that the Apostle
11 I, 7 | like manner dwell with your wives according to knowledge,
12 I, 7 | husbands to imitate their wives, because he has already
13 I, 7 | he enjoins. Husbands and wives are to dwell together according
14 I, 7 | intercourse, we give honour to our wives: if we do not abstain, it
15 I, 7 | honour. He also tells the wives to let their husbands “see
16 I, 7 | the law for husbands and wives, condemns outward ornament,
17 I, 10 | countrymen put away their wives. And the prophet Malachi
18 I, 11 | concerning husbands and wives to a comparison of Jew and
19 I, 11 | he debars those who have wives from putting them away,
20 I, 11 | reasons for not wishing wives to be forsaken. He therefore
21 I, 12 | respecting husbands and wives, does not dare to command
22 I, 13 | henceforth both those that have wives may be as though they had
23 I, 13 | is short, why do we take wives whom we shall soon be compelled
24 I, 14 | divided one flesh between two wives. Fratricide and digamy were
25 I, 15 | enjoins even those who have wives to be as though they had
26 I, 15 | this is why the number of wives which a man may take is
27 I, 16 | Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also loved
28 I, 16 | husbands also love their wives in chastity. And let everyone
29 I, 17 | were separated from their wives; but when he landed from
30 I, 19 | of Abraham who had three wives, as Jovinianus says, and
31 I, 19 | him in the number of his wives, let us also follow him
32 I, 19 | if Jacob had two pairs of wives and concubines, and our
33 I, 20 | keep themselves from their wives. I am out of order in violating
34 I, 23 | And seeing that they had wives, they would be rightly brought
35 I, 24 | David had numerous other wives, and afterwards received
36 I, 24 | And he had seven hundred wives, princesses, and three hundred
37 I, 24 | and yet before he had many wives, and fell into sins of the
38 I, 24 | unless he has seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines,
39 I, 24 | henceforth those that have wives may be as though they had
40 I, 26 | my abundance) had indeed wives, but those which they had
41 I, 26 | that all the Apostles had wives, he meets us with the words 4417 “
42 I, 26 | right to lead about women or wives” (for γυνή in Greek
43 I, 26 | women that are sisters, or wives?” This makes it clear that
44 I, 26 | we must understand, not wives, but those women who ministered
45 I, 26 | we take γυναίκας to mean wives, not women, the addition
46 I, 26 | destroys the effect of the word wives, and shews that they were
47 I, 26 | stated that the Apostles had wives; and since the statement
48 I, 26 | such description had no wives. Yet Jovinianus, who has
49 I, 28 | who, although he had many wives, nevertheless built the
50 I, 28 | this very man with his many wives and concubines thought of
51 I, 28 | that this was spoken of bad wives, I shall briefly answer:
52 I, 30 | henceforth both those that have wives may be as though they had
53 I, 33 | nor do I disparage those wives who maintain their chastity
54 I, 34 | for priests to touch their wives, they are so far holy in
55 I, 34 | by separating from their wives, nor would they drink wine
56 I, 44 | Barbarians have a plurality of wives. It is a law with them that
57 I, 44 | with her dead husband. The wives therefore vie with one another
58 I, 46 | that men in choosing their wives look for riches rather than
59 I, 48 | eloquence. Socrates had two wives, Xantippe and Myron, grand-daughter
60 I, 48(4619)| the third of Sulla’s five wives, had previously been married
61 I, 48 | and kingdoms, it is the wives and concubines who stir
62 I, 48 | to the use and issue, so wives stand on the border line
63 I, 49 | harsh gaoler over lovely wives. Seneca, too, relates that
64 I, 49 | have tried to teach their wives chastity after having taken
65 I, 49 | religion shone upon the world wives of one husband ever held
66 II, 7 | delicacies? The Scots have no wives of their own; as though
67 II, 14 | perpetual abstinence from wives, wine, and flesh, and made
68 II, 19 | for leaving children and wives, and in the world to come
69 II, 24 | and made a prey of the wives and children of the inhabitants
70 II, 25 | disobedience, and together with our wives and children, whom we preferred
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