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Alphabetical    [«  »]
reliance 2
relieved 1
relieving 1
religion 47
religions 2
religiosi 1
religiosus 2
Frequency    [«  »]
49 therefore
49 worship
48 whose
47 religion
46 every
46 human
46 truth
Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus
The Apology

IntraText - Concordances

religion

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1 Int | nature of the Christian religion, led to the formulation 2 Int | and fabric of the Roman religion of the time. This attack 3 Int(4) | Lightfoot, Supernatural Religion, p. 275, where for 'New 4 Ana | to condemn the Christian religion unheard and unknown (ch. 5 I | condemning the Christian Religion unheard and unknown. ~IF 6 I | possible good latent in our religion; they do not allow themselves 7 VII | are. ~The origin of this religion dates, as I have already 8 XIII | prostituted into a source of gain. Religion goes the round of the taverns 9 XV | the whole system of our religion. 10 XVI | origin and the name and the religion of the Jewish nation, he 11 XVI | nearly allied to the Jewish religion, were devotees of the same 12 XVI | mysteries of the Jewish religion, found there no image. Yet 13 XVI | these. The whole camp - religion of the Romans consists in 14 XVI(40) | discipline by the sanction of religion.'—Gibbon, i. 269. ~ 15 XVI | declaration of what our religion is. ~ 16 XIX | is almost a part of your religion to base the trustworthiness 17 XIX | particulars of the Jewish religion, and thence of ours also. ~ 18 XXI | at any rate a legalized, religion; or because, besides the 19 XXI(62) | no respect to the Jewish religion, yet you assert your right 20 XXI(62) | Judaism, as a preparatory religion, had done its work.' ~ 21 XXI | impossible to lie about one's religion. For when one dissimulates 22 XXIV | against us of injury to religion, and especially to the Roman 23 XXIV | especially to the Roman religion. For if it be certain that 24 XXIV | certain that there can be no religion belonging to them; and if 25 XXIV | them; and if there is no religion, in consequence of there 26 XXIV | guilty of injury to that religion. But on the contrary, the 27 XXIV | you take away liberty of religion and forbid a choice of deity, 28 XXIV | right of possession in a religion of our own. We offend the 29 XXV | religious zeal, when your religion was elaborated after the 30 XXV | Numa, yet the materials of religion amongst the Romans did not 31 XXV | consist in images or temples. Religion was frugal and its rites 32 XXV | great on account of their religion, when their greatness has 33 XXV | grown in power by insulting religion, or have insulted religion 34 XXV | religion, or have insulted religion in the very process of their 35 XXVII | accusation of injury to your religion and divinity, since we cannot 36 XXIX(77)| loyal,' i.e. dutiful in the religion (not of God but) of the 37 XXX | honour Him Alone, who for His religion am put to death, who offer 38 XXXV | and because as men of true religion they celebrate their solemn 39 XXXV | licence for immorality, shall religion be regarded as the occasion 40 XXXV | But with respect to this religion of a second majesty, concerning 41 XXXVII | more in accordance with our religion to be slain than to slay? 42 XXXIX | united in the knowledge of religion, the divine character of 43 XXXIX | if they were the price of religion; but each one places there 44 XXXIX | is for the cause of God's religion, who thus become pensioners 45 XL | members of the Christian religion taken up their abode there, 46 XLII | in the streets than your religion is in the temples. But your 47 XLIII | interests may suffer from our religion, it is certainly counterbalanced


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