Book, Chapter
1 I, 5 | permission was given to eat flesh, 4277 “Every moving
2 I, 5 | forbidding to marry, and to eat food which God created for
3 I, 7 | on wheaten bread, and to eat the finest wheat flour,”
4 I, 7 | cow-dung, I may allow him to eat barley. Does it follow that
5 I, 14| heaven, and of which if a man eat unworthily, he shall be
6 I, 18| permission was granted to eat flesh, which had not in
7 I, 18| we circumcised, nor do we eat flesh, for the Apostle says, 4357 “
8 I, 18| It is good not to eat flesh, nor to drink wine.”
9 I, 30| drunk my wine with my milk. Eat, O friends: yea, drink and
10 II, 3 | to hear them say: “Let us eat and drink, and reign for
11 II, 5 | use of swine if we may not eat their flesh? of roes, stags,
12 II, 5 | forbidding to marry, and to eat meats, which God created
13 II, 5 | manner of deceivers said, I eat this, not that; I do not
14 II, 6 | good not to drink wine, and eat flesh. If you wish to be
15 II, 6 | dainties out of your mouth. Eat and drink, and, if you like,
16 II, 6 | play, and sing 4735 “Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow
17 II, 6 | to-morrow we shall die.” Let him eat and drink, who looks for
18 II, 7 | They think it wicked to eat the flesh of swine. Why?
19 II, 7 | you were to force them to eat the flesh of asses and camels,
20 II, 7 | with them it is a luxury to eat the 4737 xylophagus. Again,
21 II, 7 | or a native of Pontus to eat a locust, and he will think
22 II, 7 | Syrians are accustomed to eat land-crocodiles, and the
23 II, 7 | is considered a crime to eat veal. Accordingly the Emperor
24 II, 7 | become acquainted, p. 394 eat flesh half raw. Moreover
25 II, 7 | Atticoti, a British tribe, eat human flesh, and that although
26 II, 7 | you can, a Pelusiote to eat an onion. Almost every city
27 II, 10| the way with us that we eat, and walk, and sleep, and
28 II, 10| kitchen may induce us to eat, but when hunger is satisfied,
29 II, 11| bodies need only something to eat and drink. Where there is
30 II, 11| fear that if you do not eat flesh, fowlers and hunters
31 II, 15| one tree though he might eat the other fruit. The blessedness
32 II, 15| immediately receive permission to eat flesh; but only the fruits
33 II, 15| gave them liberty to eat flesh: so that while understanding
34 II, 15| Who shall give us flesh to eat? We remember the fish which
35 II, 15| remember the fish which we did eat in Egypt for nought; the
36 II, 16| One man hath faith to eat all things: but he that
37 II, 16| days, were commanded to eat herbs which are indifferently
38 II, 17| after His resurrection eat part of a broiled fish and
39 II, 17| food should be given him to eat, lest the resurrection should
40 II, 22| minister about the sacrifices, eat of the sacrifices, and they
41 II, 25| it. 4875 “Whosoever shall eat or drink unworthily shall
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