17-cried | crimi-giant | gibbe-nabad | nabat-shran | shrin-zion
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1501 I, XLII | left his throne to his son Nabath. He, from his wicked works,
1502 I, LIV | out of his prison. When Nabuzardan, one of the royal princes,
1503 I, XXXII | a desire for the kingly name-a name greatly disliked by
1504 | namely
1505 I, IX | maid of Rachel, Dan and Naphtali. But Rachel, after she had
1506 II, XXXVIII | Georgius of Laodicia, and Narcissus of Neronopolis.These had
1507 II, XIV | to what remains, and will narrate in as few words as I can
1508 I, XXXVIII | being severely reproved by Nathan the prophet, although he
1509 II, XVIII | extent, that numbers of the natives begged permission from Antiochus
1510 I, XXXVIII | the king: so great was his natural affection that he wished
1511 II, XX | marvelous courage he set at naught the profane enactments,
1512 II, XXXI(29) | later date under the name of Nazarites. They made use of what was
1513 I, IV(6) | the A. V.; he is called Nebrod by the LXX. We have, for
1514 I, IV | by name, begat the giant Nebroth,7 by whom the city of Babylon
1515 II, XXXIX(43) | Some for "ac tum" read "nec tum," and some, instead
1516 I, XLV | am all too well known to need any description from my
1517 II, X | and furnish the expense needful to that end. Accordingly,
1518 I, XVIII | be left for the poor and needy.~
1519 II, IX | money by rapine, and to neglect no opportunity of plundering.
1520 I, LIV | unfaithful disposition and neglectful of God, and not understanding
1521 I, I | to my readers, that they, neglecting the source from which my
1522 I, XL | happen that, through the negligence of transcribers, those things
1523 II, XXXVIII | Laodicia, and Narcissus of Neronopolis.These had got possession
1524 I, IX(18) | the broad bone, or broad nerve of the thigh. ~
1525 I, XLVIII | and even those infants newly born, are commanded to abstain
1526 I, XIII | royal edict to drown their newly-born male children. And no permission
1527 II, XL | views, and the Synod of Nice was regarded as having been
1528 II, XII | a young woman was sought niger to take her place as the
1529 I, XVII | Joshua slew the enemy until nightfall. At the same time, Jothor,
1530 I, XIX | there forty days and forty nights: During this time, he was
1531 II, I | their hands by his youthful nimbleness, while they were enfeebled
1532 I, IV(6) | This is the Nimrod of the A. V.; he is called
1533 II, X | possessed the sovereignty for nineteen years), by the permission
1534 I, LI | terror fled to the town of Nineveh, and being there slain by
1535 II, XVII | character, the sovereignty was nominally and in appearance given,
1536 II, XXV(21) | here taken Jonathan as a nominative, but the passage is very
1537 II, XXXVI(40) | qui etiam nostrorum judicio haereticus probatur."~
1538 II, XXV | king Demetrius; and we have noted that, because up to this
1539 I, XXXI(51) | in the Greek, and is also noticed by Josephus. See the LXX.
1540 II, XI | compassion. Accordingly, the king noticing that he, while waiting at
1541 II, XXI | generals had been conquered, notwithstanding their large armies. He therefore
1542 II, XLVI | women who were fond of novelties and of unstable faith, as
1543 II, L | and to pray in a state of nudity. Accordingly, Evodius pronounced
1544 I, XXXVIII | sudden desire seized him of numbering the people, in order to
1545 I, XXII | hands of Joshua the son of Nun, for Moses had appointed
1546 I, XXIV(43) | which we are familiar in the O.T. But they have generally
1547 I, VI | His wife, however, not obeying this precept (in accordance
1548 II, I | diet of pulse only. Asphane objected that the leanness which
1549 I, XXIV | people who lay under so many obligations to the goodness ofGod, being
1550 I, XXIII | order, I only carefully observe this, that twenty-nine kingdoms
1551 II, XLIII | hold back with excessive obstinacy, they should be driven into
1552 II, LI | striving with insane plans and obstinate inclinations against a few
1553 II, XXX | and at length, with minds Obstinately bent on death, they, of
1554 I, X | had lived. His other sons occasionally left him along with the
1555 II, XXX | Christ. For though on other occasions they were often given over
1556 II, XLVI(57) | arcanis occultata secretis": it is impossible
1557 I, XLVI | inhabitants of the land began to occupy their former position. Joachas,
1558 I, XLIX | have spoken of above as occupying the throne, was shin by
1559 I, VIII | Esau, enraged by these occurrences, plotted the death of his
1560 I, XXIV(43) | Many of the proper names occurring in this and other chapters
1561 I, XXXI(51) | No reference to this occurs in the Hebrew text, but
1562 I, XLV | than his father. After him, Ochozias his son obtained the kingdom.
1563 I, XLII | the kingdom,-a man equally odious to God and men. A portion
1564 II, XXIX | opinion of all cast the odium of causing the fire upon
1565 I, XVI | with worms, while its fetid odor was dreadful, yet that which
1566 II, XLIX | involving such manifest offences.~
1567 I, XLI | portion of the people, taking offense, revolted from him. For,
1568 II, XV | by God for their sins and offenses; and begging him to spare
1569 I, XLIV | distress, the Syrian king offers these conditions in the
1570 II, XLI | termination. Imperial47 officers, therefore, being sent through
1571 II, XLI(47) | magistris officialibus": Halm reads "magistri."~
1572 II, XLIX | proconsul as ruler, and officials were sent by the Master
1573 II, XLVIII(62) | magistro officiorum."~
1574 II, XXX | root were extirpated, the offshoot would speedily perish. Thus,
1575 I, IX | after she had despaired of offspring, bare Joseph. Then Jacob,
1576 I, XXIV | obligations to the goodness ofGod, being chastised with so
1577 I, XX | almost the whole is full ofinstructions connected with the priests.
1578 I, IV | world. Accordingly, the sons ofNoah were alone left in the then
1579 I, XI | she made advances to him oftener than once, and when he would
1580 I, LII | When he learned through Olda the prophetess that this
1581 I, XXXVII | same time, almost all the older men of the Hebrews conferred
1582 I, III | out, it brought back an olive leaf, in manifest proof
1583 I, XXVII | caught, while the vines and olive-trees were burnt to ashes. He
1584 I, LI(81) | author is here guilty of omission and consequent inaccuracy.
1585 I, XXXVI(62) | lacuna in the text: others omit the words "a plerisque autem."~
1586 II, III(2) | expressed by the words "omnibus ante regnis validissimum."~
1587 II, XXXIV(32) | admota militari manu atque omnium provincialium multitudine
1588 II, XLII | respecting the faith. He, onarriving at Seleucia, was received
1589 II, XXIII | causing immense terror to the onlookers. Then Judah, abandoning
1590 II, XXVI(22) | is "ultrorsum," farther onwards.~
1591 II, XLVII | affairs, did not venture to oppose the judgment, but those
1592 II, XLV | adversaries. But the Arians opposedthat to the utmost extent of
1593 II, XLIX | the lieutenant in Spain, ordering that all whom that disgraceful65
1594 II, XLVI | have been defiled with no ordinary evil, and all things thrown
1595 II, XXXII | time Leonida, the father of Origen, poured forth his sacred
1596 I, XLIX | Ere long being cut off by Osee, he lost the sovereignty
1597 II, XL | a prevalent belief that Osius from Spain had gone over
1598 II, XLIII | abolished the use of the word Ousia as being ambiguous, and
1599 II, XXXI | that was arranged by the over-ruling care of the Lord, in order
1600 I, LIII | Babylon (God undoubtedly overruling everything, having resolved
1601 I, XIX | descended from above, and so overshadowed the tabernacle that it prevented
1602 I, XXXIV | stones from a sling, he overthrew the Philistine; then he
1603 I, L | nations, as well as the overthrower of Samaria could not be
1604 II, L | means blame their zeal in overthrowing heretics, if they had not
1605 II, IX | Next, with the view of overturning the holy law, he published
1606 II, XLV | all the bishops publicly owned the error that had been
1607 I, XLVI | fourth year of the reign of Ozia, son of Amassia. By this
1608 II, XLIV | little progress towards a pacification, by degrees Foegadius began
1609 I, XLIV(72) | Egisse paenitentiam." ~
1610 II, XLV | refused were tortured with painful imprisonment and hunger,
1611 II, XV | soldiers, and took the greatest pains to cut off the Hebrews from
1612 I, III | three daughters-in-law. Pairs of birds also and of the
1613 I, XVI | of waters, with seventy palm-trees, and there they encamped.
1614 II, XVI | influence of a disgraceful panic, and fled before the enemy.
1615 II, XXXVIII | all the bishops of the two Pannonias, and many of the Eastern
1616 II, XLV | wickedness, he, in three papers publicly presented, begged
1617 I, XLVI(73) | Paralipomenis."~
1618 II, I | fathers which forbade him to partake of food from the table of
1619 I, LIII | his friendship, and made a partaker with him at his table and
1620 I, IX(19) | In parte turris Gadir": this is a
1621 I, V | the size of the household, parted from his uncle, that he
1622 II, LI | them through their hatred, partiality, fear, faithlessness, envy,
1623 I, XVII | one is desirous of knowing particulars regarding it, he must consult
1624 II, XXV(21) | as a nominative, but the passage is very obscure. ~
1625 I, X | flocks, for the sake of pasturage, but Joseph and the little
1626 II, VIII(8) | poposcit Implevitque mero paternam, quam Belus et omnes A Belo
1627 I, XLII(68) | maternis," instead of "paternis."~
1628 II, XLV | to Hilarius was broken. Paternus also of Petrocorii,55 equally
1629 II, XXXI | Evangelist to the island of Patmos. There he, secret mysteries
1630 II, XII(13) | patruele patre": words which have much
1631 II, LI | accomplished. Well, a certain Patricius, an advocate connected with
1632 II, XII(13) | patruele patre": words which have
1633 II, XXXIII | could not be joined by a pavement with the remaining part
1634 I, L | lately happened, were now paying the penalty of their impiety.
1635 I, XIX | might see the Lord in his peculiar majesty, he was answered
1636 I, XLV | any description from my pen. By him the son of a widow
1637 II, XIV | that he, as a conqueror, penetrated into Egypt and Ethiopia.
1638 I, XLVIII | could never be denied to the penitent.~
1639 | per
1640 II, XII | confess that I cannot easily perceive with what kings especially
1641 II, XXV | given in order might be perfectly dear. But now we shall arrange
1642 II, XLVI(59) | perfidiae istius." ~
1643 I, XXXI | whose business it was, perform a sacrifice to God, and
1644 II, XX | Hebrew who was publicly performing profane acts. A leader having
1645 II, XLV(55) | The modern Perigueux.~
1646 I, XXXV | had exposed his life to peril for the sake of the kingdom,
1647 II, XXXVI(37) | Different periods and events are here mixed
1648 II, XII(13) | words which have much perplexed the editors. ~
1649 I, XXXV | jealousy, for the wicked always persecute the good. He, therefore,
1650 II, I | especially by the remarkable persistency of Daniel in upholding the
1651 II, XXI | Gentiles, whom he had sought to persuade to abandon their long-established
1652 II, XLVI | common people by the arts of persuasion and flattery which he possessed.
1653 I, X | well? Afterwards, by the persuasions of Judah, they were brought
1654 II, VI | The king, therefore, in perturbation called for the magi and
1655 I, X | them he was delivered to Petifra, a governor of Pharaoh.~
1656 II, XLV | broken. Paternus also of Petrocorii,55 equally infatuated, and
1657 II, XXX | crucified the Lord. The Pharisees for a time maintained their
1658 II, XVII | while a certain Arridaeus Philippus, the brother of Alexander,
1659 I, XXXIV | sling, he overthrew the Philistine; then he cut off the head
1660 II, XXIV | task, he implored Ptolemy Philometor, king of Egypt, the father-in-law
1661 I, XLIII(71) | of the somewhat strange phrase, "promissorum fidem consecuta
1662 I, XLII | not from God, but from the physicians. In the beginning of his
1663 II, XXXIX(45) | Piacula profiteri."~
1664 I, XLIX(80) | Piaculo": a very old meaning is
1665 II, XL | for illustration's sake, a picture of a human body might be
1666 I, XXXV | his trouble, Saul tried to pierce him with a spear, and would
1667 I, XXXV | shed tears, extolled the piety of David, and blamed his
1668 II, XXXII | under the rule of Antoninus Pins. Then the fifth persecution
1669 II, XXXIV | They form then the plan of placing one who had recently died
1670 II, XXXIII(30) | decem plagis." ~
1671 I, XIV | and conquered by the ten plagues which were sent upon his
1672 I, XV | up in the widespreading plains were visible, when, as the
1673 II, XLVIII | abortion by the use of certain plants. When they reached Rome
1674 I, XXXIV | was accustomed often to play upon the harp. For this
1675 II, XLIX | Instantius was enjoined to plead his cause; and after he
1676 II, XLIII | communion, although they pleaded the force which had beenbrought
1677 II, XXX | Passover: doubtless, because it pleased God that the impious race
1678 II, L | excessively devoted to the pleasures of sensuality. He proceeded
1679 I, XVIII | is not to be taken as a pledge. A ruler of the people is
1680 II, XXIV | violate the faith which he had pledged. Accordingly, in the five
1681 I, VIII | enraged by these occurrences, plotted the death of his brother.
1682 II, XXXIX | to their side, the Arians plucked up their courage, knowing
1683 II, IX | neglect no opportunity of plundering. Then, after two years,
1684 I, XVI | was covered with a sort of pods,33 the appearance of which
1685 II, XIII(14) | poenam crucis": after the Greek.~
1686 II, XXXIX | and Hilarius, bishop of Poictiers, were driven into exile.
1687 II, XVI | eunuch, took him off by poison on an occasion of his suffering
1688 II, XXVI | Aristobulus, he fled to Pompey. That Roman general, having
1689 II, XXVI | and settled Armenia and Pontus, being, in fact, the conqueror
1690 I, XXVII | thinking himself as yet but poorly avenged, ceased not to harass
1691 II, VIII(8) | regina gravem gemmis auroque poposcit Implevitque mero paternam,
1692 II, IX | above, his whole empire was portioned out by his friends, and
1693 II, XLIV | inclemency of winter and positive want; and what then would
1694 I, XXVIII | point doubtful, as one not positively ascertained.~
1695 II, XXIII | besieged the Syrians who were posted in the citadel. They, being
1696 II, LI | island of Sylina. Tertullus, Potamius, and Joannes, as being persons
1697 II, XXI | kings now deeply felt the poverty due to his own wickedness),
1698 I, LII | Josia reduced these to powder, and also slew the priests
1699 I, XII(25) | benedictionis merito majori minorem praeposuisset, filios omnes benedictione
1700 II, XLII(50) | per vicarium ac praesidem": as Vorstius remarks, these
1701 II, XVI | extolled with the loftiest praises, and is said to have lived
1702 I, XVII | time, for the purpose of praying to the Lord, he went up
1703 I, XLVIII | shores of the77 Ninevites, he preached as he had been commanded,
1704 I, XX | Leviticus, in which the precepts bearing upon sacrifice are
1705 I, XLIX | repeated the conduct of his predecessor. Mane held the government
1706 II, II | know secret things, and to predict the future, in order to
1707 I, XXXIII(55) | here supplied, but some prefer "cotis," according to 1
1708 II, LI(66) | Halm prefers the form "Sylinancim" to "
1709 I, II | thought by the wise to have presaged a future mystery. Adam,
1710 II, XXXV(35) | heresy, and the other a presbyter of Alexandria bearing the
1711 II, XXXII | should exceed the limits prescribed to this work.~
1712 I, I | historians to fix dates and preserve the series of events unbroken,
1713 II, XXXIII | injury; and the earth still preserves the same appearance which
1714 I, VIII | had taken place. Under the pressure of this necessity, Isaac
1715 I, XXXIII | the king, with unlawful presumption, presented a burnt-offering,
1716 I, XXII | behind the city, Joshua, pretending fear, fled before the enemy.
1717 II, XXVIII | religion had obtained a wide prevalence in the city. Peter was there
1718 II, LI | factiousness, lust, avarice, pride, sleepiness, and inactivity.
1719 II, XLV | of the churches after its pristine form. Saturninus, however,
1720 II, XLIX | subsequently defended by the bishop Pritannius, he set them at defiance.
1721 I, LIII | ornaments either public or private, and all of mature age both
1722 I, I | required, I have made use of pro-fine historians to fix dates
1723 II, XXXVI(38) | and we can only make a probable guess at the meaning.~
1724 II, XXXVI(40) | nostrorum judicio haereticus probatur."~
1725 I, XXXVIII | regretted and repented of this proceeding, and implored pardon of
1726 II, XI(11) | jamque ad medium machinae processerant."~
1727 II, XXXVII | and not daring openly to proclaim their erroneous doctrines,
1728 II, XXXVII | the divine persons, but proclaiming that Christ had his beginning
1729 I, XXXIII | that day to have issued a proclamation that no one should help
1730 II, V | which had taken place, sent proclamations throughout his whole kingdom
1731 II, XXIX | Nero against them, with proconsular power, defeated them in
1732 II, XLVIII | Euchrotia and her daughter Procula, of the latter of whom there
1733 I, XXVIII | on their festival days of producing Samson as if to make a public
1734 II, XLVI(58) | profanarum rerum."~
1735 II, XXXIX(45) | Piacula profiteri."~
1736 I, LII | things with the utmost care, profiting largely by the aid of the
1737 I, XXIII | tribes, the Hebrews enjoyed profound peace; their neighbors,
1738 I, XX | behooved them to trust the promises of God, that these enemies
1739 I, XLIII(71) | somewhat strange phrase, "promissorum fidem consecuta est." ~
1740 I, XVI | however, as they were never prone to obedience, did not, in
1741 I, XXI | doubted, even after so many proofs of his miraculous power.
1742 II, III | same time, the remarkable prophecies of Ezekiel came out, the
1743 I, XLVII | too, is said to have first prophesied under this king); and, on
1744 I, XL(66) | Propheta." ~
1745 I, LII | learned through Olda the prophetess that this favor was granted
1746 II, I | listen to their unchaste proposals, was assailed by a false
1747 II, VI(6) | various emendations have been proposed, but the text may stand.
1748 II, XLVII | that by their decrees and prosecutions the heretics might be expelled
1749 II, LI | Accordingly, under him as prosecutor, Priscillian was condemned
1750 II, XV | affairs, they had either prospered Or the reverse, that, when
1751 II, IX | that enormous expense, to provide himself with money by rapine,
1752 I, XVI | restrain their desires, providing in their stores not merely
1753 II, XXXIV(32) | militari manu atque omnium provincialium multitudine in studia reginae
1754 II, XXVIII | demons (with the view of proving that he was a god), the
1755 II, XLI | the emperor had ordered provisions48 and lodgings to be provided.
1756 I, XXVIII | having been subdued by the prowess of a single individual.
1757 II, XLI | little learning and little prudencehad been selected; while, on
1758 II, XII | her beauty. But she, more prudent than the foolish king, and
1759 II, XLVI | unstable faith, as well as of a prurient curiosity in all things,
1760 II, XXV | desire for peace, and slew Ptolemais who had been received and
1761 II, XIII | were at once sent out to publish it through the whole kingdom
1762 I, XXXIV(57) | Puer": another mistake. ~
1763 II, XLVI | vain man, and was much more puffed up than he ought to have
1764 I, XXVII(47) | the meaning, and Halm's punctuation, "invocato Deo ex osse,
1765 II, XLVI | birthplace being Memphis. His pupils were a certain Agape, a
1766 II, XXI | s army with the hope of purchasing prisoners, and now were
1767 II, XXII | and bent his mind on the purification and restoration of the temple,
1768 II, XV | and ordered Achior to be pushed forward into the camp of
1769 II, XXX | bodies, except those which putrefaction had already laid hold of
1770 II, XXV | built those well-known seven pyramids of most noble workmanship,
1771 II, XXVIII | he also married a certain Pythagoras in the style of solemn alliances,
1772 II, VIII(8) | Implevitque mero paternam, quam Belus et omnes A Belo soliti;
1773 I, XI | gathered together an immense quantity, and, by increasing the
1774 II, XI(12) | upon a most interesting question-the ultimate destiny of the
1775 II, XXXVI(40) | qui etiam nostrorum judicio
1776 I, XII(25) | The original is, "quibus benedictis, cum tamen benedictionis
1777 I, XXVII(47) | invocato Deo ex osse, quod manu tenebat, aqua fluxit,"
1778 I, IV(8) | The LXX has xw/ra, instead of Ur.~
1779 II, IV | different kinds of death. The rabble, however, with the usual
1780 II, XXXI | when after torture and racking he found nothing in the
1781 I, XVIII | it will be your duty to raise it up. Thou shall not slay
1782 I, XLVI | kingdom to his son Joa. He raised civil war against Amassia,
1783 I, VII | spare the young man; and a ram was found at hand to be
1784 I, XXXV | land of Judah, and there ran in danger of his life. At
1785 II, VI(6) | were not thrown together at random, but so placed as to form
1786 II, XI | of both sexes and of all ranks-to such an extent had their
1787 I, XVII | water. But when they came to Raphidin, the Amalekites destroyed
1788 I, XXXV | have done so, had not he rapidly evaded the deadly blow.
1789 II, IX | provide himself with money by rapine, and to neglect no opportunity
1790 II, XLIV | late. In this way, at any rate, the council was brought
1791 I, III | decreasing, sent forth first a raven for the purpose of enquiring
1792 I, XLIII | depended for life on the ravens furnishing him with food,
1793 I, XVIII | her in marriage, then the ravisher shall give her a dowry.
1794 I, XL | their temple should be razed to the ground. We see that
1795 I, VII | concubines; and thus they we're separated from Isaac. Abraham
1796 I, XLVII | of the ten tribes, Joas, reaching the end of his days, had
1797 II, VIII | they, trusting in their ready-made trick, ordered the usual
1798 II, XL | yet possess nothing of the reality of a man. But some of them
1799 I, XVIII | seventh year are not to be reaped, but are to be left for
1800 II, XLIII | under an appearance of false reasoning, it abolished the use of
1801 I, XXXVII | And when the Syrians again rebelled, having formed a confederacy
1802 I, XXIV | they were found so often rebelling against the Lord. It is,
1803 II, III | occupied by foreign nations, or rebels, or that it has been given
1804 II, X | were content with having rebuilt the temple. At the same
1805 I, XLV | them in the way, and, after rebuking them ordered them to inform
1806 II, XXIX(26) | humanis rebus eximitur."~
1807 I, XXXV | desert, opening with a vast recess. David had thrown himself
1808 I, XII | craftily concealed his recognition of them, and accused them
1809 I, I | with the original should recognize here what he has read there;
1810 II, XXXVI | been condemned, should be reconsidered by the council. In the meantime,
1811 I, XXXV | a safe position behind, recounting the services he had done
1812 I, XLV | consult an idol about his recovery, Elijah, as instructed by
1813 I, XLIV | Syrian king returned with recruited strength into Samaria, burning
1814 I, XVIII | shall be stoned, or shall redeem himself by a price as large
1815 II, III | of the will of God), will reduce to nothing that world in
1816 II, XLI | bishop, was accustomed to refer to this conduct in a censuring
1817 I, XIX(38) | Halm here reads "referetur," but "refertur," another
1818 II, III(4) | resurrectionis," referring probably not to the rising
1819 II, XXXIX(46) | Instead of "refertam," some read "infectam." ~
1820 I, XIX(38) | reads "referetur," but "refertur," another reading, seems
1821 I, XXXV(58) | Reficiendi corporis gratia": different
1822 I, XXIV | Wherefore, as often as I reflect that those people who lay
1823 II, X | more urgent duty was to reform the people from the corrupt
1824 II, XLV | back all to repentance and reformation. In frequent councils within
1825 I, XXXV | purpose of taking58 bodily refreshment, and there, overcome by
1826 I, LI | impiety, and showed himself regardless of God: being entrapped
1827 II, VIII(8) | Virgil's words are,-~"Hic regina gravem gemmis auroque poposcit
1828 II, XXXIV(32) | provincialium multitudine in studia reginae certantium."~
1829 II, III(2) | the words "omnibus ante regnis validissimum."~
1830 I, XV | day was to be solemnly and regularly offered in coming ages,
1831 II, IX | Seleucus, who was at that time reigning. Seleucus dying in the twelfth
1832 I, XXXIV | himself for the contest, and rejecting the arms by which his yet
1833 I, L | day was spent with public rejoicing, and, after a long interval,
1834 I, IV | built. Many other towns are relatedto have been founded at that
1835 II, XXXIX | there continued without any relaxation of its bitterness. Then
1836 I, LIV | him, he did not venture to release the innocent man. Under
1837 I, LIII | a period of thirty years released, while he was admitted by
1838 II, XV | power on which the Hebrews relied in not bringing their minds
1839 II, XXX | subverted; for that these religions, although contrary to each
1840 I, V | the spoil. He restored the remainder to those from whom it had
1841 II, XXXVI(39) | It has been remarked that Sulpitius is in error
1842 I, XLII | in his feet, he sought a remedy, not from God, but from
1843 I, I | to period within our own remembrance. Many who were anxious to
1844 II, VI | answered nothing, the queen reminded the king that there was
1845 II, XXV | cities and territories), he remitted to them their annum tribute
1846 II, XV | begging him to spare the remnant of them who had recently
1847 I, XLIII | life, he retired to a more remote spot. There God addressed
1848 I, L | remained in Samaria, after the removal of the ten tribes, they
1849 I, III | covered it with pitch so as to render it impervious to water.
1850 I, VI | tendency of human nature which renders it difficult to abstain
1851 I, XXX | being beaten, prepare to renew the contest: they carry
1852 II, XXV | his father. Then Demetrius renewed his treaty with the Jews;
1853 II, X | account, and ordered to renounce all connections of that
1854 II, VII | more famous; and the king, repealing his former edict, issued
1855 II, XV | thought of submission. In reply, a certain man called Achior
1856 I, XXIII | cultivate estates; they repose upon gold; they buy and
1857 II, III | breast and the arms of silver represent the second kingdom; for
1858 II, III | which was seen furnished a representation of the world. The golden
1859 I, XXXIX | The bystanders could not repress their admiration at this
1860 II, XXVIII | by the wicked as casting reproach upon them. For, at that
1861 I, XVI | complaining of famine, heaped reproaches upon Moses, and longed for
1862 I, XXX | often reproved them, yet his reproofs were too gentle to serve
1863 II, VIII | terror to bear upon them, he reprovingly asked them who was in the
1864 I, XXXVII | thirty years of age. He repulsed in successful battles the
1865 II, VI | was held in the highest reputation, placed him at the head
1866 II, LI | capital charge (for it was requisite that the trial should be
1867 II, XLVI(58) | profanarum rerum."~
1868 II, XXXVI | bishop of Sirmion, was not rescinded; for even40 in the judgment
1869 I, VI | angels, however, speedily rescued him from danger, by causing
1870 II, XXX | it had the good effect of rescuing the state from the hands
1871 II, IX | years ago, provided the research I have made into the succession
1872 II, XXXIII(31) | size and grandeur, had some resemblance to a royal palace.~
1873 II, XLI | with the Arians, and to reserve every point, in its entirety,
1874 I, XII | seventeenth year of his residence in Egypt, suffering severely
1875 II, LI | guilty, had voluntarily resigned his bishopric: that was
1876 II, XIII | there made the whole place resound with his wailing and complaints,
1877 II, LI | bishopric: that was wisely and respectfully done, had he not afterward
1878 I, XLI | and so they retained their respective kingdoms on doubtful conditions.
1879 I, XLI | been promised to him by a response of the prophet Achia, he
1880 I, XXXV | overcome by sleep, he was resting. When David perceived this,
1881 II, XLVI | of great riches, bold, restless, eloquent, learned through
1882 I, XXVII | bear a son who would be the restorer of liberty to the Israelites,
1883 I, XVI | accordance with human nature, restrain their desires, providing
1884 II, III(4) | resurrectionis," referring probably not
1885 I, XXV | instructed by God, did not retain more than three hundred:
1886 II, V | aside his kingly power, retiring from all intercourse with
1887 II, XXI | but being defeated, he retreated to Antioch.~
1888 I, XXIV | idols. And speedily did retribution fall upon them thus sinning.
1889 II, XXIII | thus deprived of his ally, returns to the king. Then, after
1890 II, XXIX(27) | Rev. xiii. 3. ~
1891 II, XXXI | published his book of the holy Revelation, which indeed is either
1892 I, XXVIII | opportunity of righteous revenge. The Philistines had a custom
1893 II, XV | either prospered Or the reverse, that, when they did sink
1894 I, XVIII | not justify the wicked for rewards. Gifts are not to be accepted.
1895 II, XLVI | of no mean origin, and a rhetorician named Helpidius. By these
1896 II, XXIV | certain young man educated at Rhodes, by name Alexander, gave
1897 II, XLVI | of noble birth, of great riches, bold, restless, eloquent,
1898 II, XIV | also, he is related to have ridiculed the sacred rites of the
1899 I, XXXIV | by all, that might give rise to hatred against himself
1900 II, III(4) | referring probably not to the rising again of the dead, but to
1901 II, XIII | that she ought to run some risk in behalf of her fellow-countrymen,
1902 I, XIX | and the ark, and about the ritual of sacrifice-things which
1903 II, XXXIII | true, Licinius, who was a rival of Constantine for the empire,
1904 I, XLIII | food, while a neighboring rivulet furnished him with water,
1905 I, XVII | trumpets, and thick clouds rolled around with frequent flashes
1906 II, XXX | the Jews; and that, if the root were extirpated, the offshoot
1907 I, XLVIII | these times. That town, rounded of old by Assure, the son
1908 I, XLIII | sleeps, and that thus you may rouse him from the slumber in
1909 I, XXI | related by blood, and on that route he destroyed the king of
1910 II, XXXIV | been covered over by the rubbish of the ruined city. And
1911 II, XXVII | consulship of Sabinus and Rufinus. But we do not venture to
1912 II, L | led astray by Magnus and Rufus, and turned from the milder
1913 I, LIV | there was really no honor in ruling over these few wretched
1914 II, XLIX | defiance. Then, too, a faint64 rumor had spread that Maximus
1915 I, XXXIII | making any implement for rural purposes. In these circumstances,
1916 I, XXX | a divine impulse), they rush into battle with their whole
1917 I, XXXVIII | a certain general called Sabaea, who had stirred up all
1918 II, XXXVII | forward as an upholder of the Sabellian heresy.41 But Photinus had
1919 II, XXVII | December in the consulship of Sabinus and Rufinus. But we do not
1920 I, XIX | and about the ritual of sacrifice-things which I, as they were obviously
1921 I, VII | his son Isaac should be sacrificed to him by his father. Abraham
1922 I, XXIV | customs, yea, even in a sacrilegious manner to offer sacrifice
1923 I, XXXVIII | anointed with the royal oil by Sadoc the priest, received the
1924 I, LIV | pit, and restored to the safekeeping of the prison. In the meantime
1925 II, XI | that he might the more safely accomplish his journey,
1926 II, XLVII | theywould find themselves in a safer position. But then Ydacius
1927 I, XXXIX | the hidden truth by his sagacity. Accordingly, the kings
1928 I, XLVIII | forth into the deep, the sailors, constrained by the violence
1929 I, X | sent forward his company to Salem, a town of the Shechemites,
1930 II, XXVI | Aristobulus and Hyrcanus, Salina or Alexandra, his wife,
1931 II, XLVII | absence, and Instantius and Salivanus, bishops, with Helpidius
1932 II, XXII | inaccessible, as frequent sallies from above prevented persons
1933 II, XXX | as the fashion is, he was saluted as emperor by the army,
1934 I, XLIX | Assyrians guards are called Samaritan.79 Very many of their settlers
1935 II, XXXIX | Hilarius) was involved in the samepunishment. All these persons, however,
1936 II, X | sanctified, performed the rites sanctioned by the ancient law. But
1937 I, XXIII | present an appearance of sanctity, as if even that might be
1938 I, XXXIX | taking his stand before the sanctuary of God, he gave a proof
1939 I, XVI | enemy, by such a miracle,32 sang a song of praise to God,
1940 I, XLIII | he went to the town of Saraptae, and turned aside to lodge
1941 II, XXXIX | bishop of Caralis44 in Sardinia, were exiled. Dionysius,
1942 I, VI | of Sara, she was called Sarra. The mystery involved in
1943 II, VII | were instantly devoured to satisfy the hunger of the savage
1944 I, XI | Jacob, took in marriage Sava,21 a woman of Canaan. By
1945 II, XXXVIII | news, or with a view to saving his own life, since he would
1946 I, XVIII | his mother, and utter evil sayings against them, shall suffer
1947 I, VIII(14) | words, as they stand, are scarcely intelligible.~
1948 I, XI | had bound his hand with a scarlet thread to indicate which
1949 I, XXXVII | in Jerusalem far from the scene of strife.~
1950 I, XLII(69) | the kingdom of Ephraim the scepter was hardly ever transmitted
1951 II, XLIV | and his whole unfaithful scheme was condemned, while the
1952 II, LI(66) | reference is probably to the Scilly Isles. ~
1953 II, IX | Antiochus against whom Lucius Scipio Asiaticus made war;and he,
1954 II, X | the same time, Esdras the scribe, who was skilled in the
1955 II, XLIII | while it rested upon no Scriptural authority. The object of
1956 II, IX | While making war upon the Scythians, he fell in battle, in the
1957 I, XXV(44) | Non esse in se."~
1958 II, V | while I was engaged in searching out many points, I found
1959 I, XLII | with the king of Syria; secondly, that he cast into prison
1960 II, XLVI(57) | arcanis occultata secretis": it is impossible to say
1961 II, V | after having conquered Sedechia (whom he carried away captive
1962 II, XVII | to mingle all things with seditions, and to create disturbances,
1963 II, XLV(54) | seminarium": lit. seed-plot. ~
1964 II, XLVIII | better, they spread the seeds of their heresy. Above all,
1965 I, VII | enjoined his servant to seek a wife for him, but only
1966 I, XI | three sons,-Her, Onan, and Sela. Her was allied by concubinage22
1967 II, XLI | church, while the Arians select, as a place for prayer,
1968 I, XXXII | if they should show them,selves men so corrupt in mind as
1969 II, XLV(54) | seminarium": lit. seed-plot. ~
1970 I, XXXI | together, formed the design of sending back the ark to the Hebrews.
1971 I, IV | had mocked his father when senseless with wine, incurred his
1972 II, L | devoted to the pleasures of sensuality. He proceeded even to such
1973 II, LI | their confederates, were sentenced to a temporary banishment
1974 II, XVI | accordingly given to the sentinels and keepers of the gates.
1975 I, XXI | Canaanites. He smote also Seon the king of the Amorites,
1976 II, XLI | together, as we have said, a separation of parties took place. Our
1977 I, XXI(40) | septingenti et xiiii milia." ~
1978 I, VIII(15) | ei!dwla is the Septuagint rendering of the Hebrew
1979 I, XLVIII | old by Assure, the son of Sere, was the capital of the
1980 II, XL | exciting indeed, but no less serious, pressed upon the emperor,
1981 II, XXI | When a certain man, named Seron, who was then the ruler
1982 I, XIV | changed his rod into a serpent,27 and soon after convened
1983 I, XXIV | Hebrews who were once more serving idols, and exercised over
1984 I, XXXIV | David. Accordingly, Saul sets before David as the condition
1985 I, XLIX | Samaritan.79 Very many of their settlers accepted the divine rites
1986 I, XI | his brothers when he was seventeen years of age. ~
1987 II, XXVII | elapsed three hundred and seventy-two years.~
1988 I, XXIV | experiencing both the mercy and the severity of God, yet were by no means
1989 II, XXXII | place under the emperor Severus. At this time Leonida, the
1990 II, XI | than fifty thousand of both sexes and of all ranks-to such
1991 I, LIII | appointed; but while the empty shadow of the name of king was
1992 II, III | thoroughly uniting, are shadowed forth those future mixtures
1993 I, XVIII | his servant, that servant shah receive his liberty in due
1994 II, XLVII | had afterwards fallen away shamefully and admitted them to communion.
1995 I, XL | such. doings, reproved him sharply, and made known to him as
1996 I, XXXIV | father, and acting as a shepherd, while he was accustomed
1997 I, XLIX | occupying the throne, was shin by a certain Sella, who
1998 I, XLVIII | and he embarked on board a ship which was bound for Tharsus,
1999 I, XIX | him the tables, his face shone with so great brightness,
2000 I, IX | breadth19 of Jacob's thigh shrank. ~
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