Dialogue, Chapter
1 I, III | prosperous, by the will of God, had been the voyage. I
2 I, IX | mind, and had promised to God first to visit16 the desert
3 I, X | should rather learn to serve God in humility, and not to
4 I, XIII| them. It may indeed be that God, knowing beforehand that
5 I, XIII| him. As if commanded by God, the beast modestly withdrew
6 I, XV | called upon the name of God, he touched with his hand
7 I, XX | fervent supplication to God, he is said to have prayed
8 I, XXI | honored by the munificence of God, inasmuch as all necessary
9 I, XXII| would be more acceptable to God than if he, content with
10 II, I | recently saw a certain man (God is my witness), not without
11 II, II | offer the sacrifice5 to God. And then on that very day-I
12 II, IV | the heathen the word of God, so utterly different from
13 II, IV | that you are a friend of God: restore me my son, who
14 II, IV | acknowledged Christ as God, and finally began to rush
15 II, X | such beauty and worthy of God; for nothing is to be compared
16 II, XIV | compel men to deny Christ as God, while he maintained rather
17 III, III | dread lest the blessing of God, bestowed on the vessel
18 III, IV | him, ' Does the servant of God lie at your threshold, and
19 III, IV | bolts, that the servant of God may suffer no harm.' But
20 III, V | who lives in obedience to God; for, indeed, Martin does
21 III, XIV | cried out, ' Save us, O God of Martin,' upon which the
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