Book, Chapter
1 I, 7 | good to feed on wheaten bread, and to eat the finest wheat
2 I, 14 | if she be deprived of the bread of charity, how much more
3 I, 14 | is she deprived of that bread which cometh down from heaven,
4 I, 26 | put for him a table, and bread, and a candlestick, and
5 I, 28 | bold woman comes to want bread.” What bread? Surely that
6 I, 28 | comes to want bread.” What bread? Surely that bread which
7 I, 28 | What bread? Surely that bread which cometh down from heaven:
8 I, 36 | blamed for giving my wife bread: similarly if it was intended
9 I, 40 | tunic, bare feet, common bread, and drink of water, for
10 II, Int| be like Milo of Crotona) bread and water suffice. Horace (
11 II, 5 | Paul in the ship broke bread, not dried figs. When Timothy’
12 II, 11 | and drink. Where there is bread and water, and the like,
13 II, 13 | cress, salt, and black bread. Both the aforesaid Xenophon,
14 II, 13 | and drink. They seldom ate bread, that they might not load
15 II, 15 | that man does not live on bread alone, but on every word
16 II, 15 | pronounced a curse on him who ate bread before the evening, and
17 II, 15 | weeks; he ate no pleasant bread; flesh and wine entered
18 II, 15 | us that he ate ashes like bread, and mingled his drink with
19 II, 17 | thus teaches: “Deal thy bread to the hungry, and bring
20 II, 17 | particularly when a fast from bread is made up for by feasting
21 II, 21 | hunger steals a piece of bread is no less guilty than he
22 II, 29 | because of me. This is the bread which came down out of heaven.”
23 II, 37 | devour God’s people like bread: they have not called upon
24 II, 37 | For with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth the
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