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1 Corr | found guilty of which is a man's pride, ~Page 23, line
2 Ana | necessarily well-disposed to every man whether Caesar or neighbour (
3 II | And so you condemn the man brought before you, though
4 II | him to be sought out; a man, I take it, who did not
5 II | however, not of justice. ~A man exclaims, 'I am a Christian.'
6 II | regard a Christian as a man guilty of every crime, hostile
7 III | reproach of the name: 'A good man, Caius Seius, only he is
8 III | I wonder at a sensible man like Lucius suddenly becoming
9 III | its Founder to be a bad man, he will also prove the
10 IV | matter for wonder either that man should err in framing a
11 V | a god shall have pleased man, he shall not be a god;
12 V | he shall not be a god; man must now be propitious to
13 VII | For would any but a rash man believe Rumour? A wise man
14 VII | man believe Rumour? A wise man trusts not to the uncertain.
15 VIII | do them. You, too, are a man yourself, and so is also
16 VIII | For even a Christian is a man; and whatever else you are
17 IX | moment than the blood of a man! Is it not rather worse,
18 IX | worse, because that of a bad man? At all events the blood
19 IX | Flesh which has fed on man is immediately rejected
20 IX | immediately rejected by man's stomach. You that eat
21 X | proclaimed to be anything but a man : and so far as the evidence
22 X | treasury. Yet if Saturn was a man, surely he sprang from a
23 X | surely he sprang from a man; and since he came into
24 X | he came into being by a man, he certainly cannot be
25 X | though divine, of any strange man; since, cultured as they
26 X | Jupiter himself was both a man and sprung from a man; and
27 X | a man and sprung from a man; and that thereafter the
28 XI | and especially of a dead man; since he, who was fated
29 XI | feel the want of a dead man, might more worthily have
30 XI | the time of the very first man; for nothing that was devised
31 XI | preservation and support of man could be introduced after
32 XI | could be introduced after man himself. ~Lastly, the gods
33 XI | unless you deny that he was a man. And yet, though you cannot
34 XIII | was no god at all whom a man, when consulted upon the
35 XIII | statues. Just as the dead man has his age, his craft,
36 XIII | funeral feast for an old man and a feast of Jupiter?
37 XVI | really a most loquacious man in falsehoods, relates in
38 XVI(39) | it as the great symbol of man's redemption, finds a fitting
39 XVII(47) | the innate voice of every man's conscience, is characteristic
40 XVIII | the universe, and formed man from the ground (for He
41 XVIII | name Philadelphus 49, a man deeply read in all literature,
42 XXI | regarding Him indeed as a man, such as the Jews judged
43 XXI | as the worshippers of a man. But neither are we ashamed
44 XXI | the world without either man or God for their king, nor
45 XXI | Flesh in her womb, is born Man united with God. His Flesh
46 XXI | therefore He was merely man, it followed that they regarded
47 XXI | Christ.' Regard Him as a man: through Him and in Him
48 XXI | world,—Numa Pompilius was a man, who burdened the Romans
49 XXII | business is the ruin of man; thus spiritual wickedness
50 XXII | first for the destruction of man. Consequently they inflict
51 XXII | access to both parts of man. Spiritual agencies possess
52 XXIII | divinity which is subject to man and (if it adds at all to
53 XXIII | this story of His? Is He a man of ordinary lot? is He a
54 XXIV | not. No one, not even a man, desires to be worshipped
55 XXVI | world which is ruled and man himself who rules; whether
56 XXIX | upon the emperor or any man at all, and then by this
57 XXX | emperor whence he is also a man before being emperor: thence
58 XXX | wishes would be both as man and as Caesar. These things
59 XXXII(81)| hindered the revelation of the 'Man of Sin' and 'lawlessness;'
60 XXXIII | called a god. If he is a man, it is man's interest to
61 XXXIII | god. If he is a man, it is man's interest to yield to God;
62 XXXIII | emperor. Unless he be a man he is not an emperor. That
63 XXXIII | an emperor. That he is a man, he is admonished even when
64 XXXIII | remember that thou art a man 83.' And surely he rejoices
65 XXXIV | regards him, I am a free man 84; for One Is my Lord,
66 XXXIV | the falsehood of calling a man a god, let it at least fear
67 XXXVI | praise or reward, not from man, but from God Who requires
68 XXXVI | unlawful in the case of any man; and what is unlawful in
69 XXXVI | unlawful in the case of any man, is of course still more
70 XXXVI | appointment, is so great a man. ~
71 XLII | on that day I am still a man. I do not bathe on the eve
72 XLV | awe-inspiring as ours. How far is man's insight capable of pointing
73 XLV | when it can happen to a man to evade them, and generally
74 XLV | fear Him Whom even the very man, who judges those that fear,
75 XLVI | to the wisdom of the very man who denied the existence
76 XLVI | excites hatred, so does that man offend who truly sets it
77 XLVI | proud even towards a poor man. ~If I contend on the point
78 XLVIII | opinion of Pythagoras, that a man is made out of a mule, or
79 XLVIII | out the assurance that a man will be re-formed out of
80 XLVIII | will be re-formed out of a man, and Caius himself from
81 XLVIII | worthy of belief, that a man will be restored from a
82 XLVIII | will be restored from a man, any given person from any
83 XLVIII | given person, but still a man; so that the same kind of
84 XLVIII | dissolution?' Consider thyself, O man: and thou will find that
85 XLVIII | throughout with types of man's resurrection as a witness
86 XLVIII | from death. Shalt thou, a man—a name so noble, didst thou
87 L | many enemies: what a brave man, and a victor even in captivity!
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