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1 Int | the world which it was the divine office of the Christian
2 Ana | who falsely claim to be divine (ch. 22). These daemons
3 Ana | are; for we recognize the Divine will in the appointment
4 V | to him the truth of that Divine Power there manifested,
5 VII | punishment and for which Divine wrath would be reserved?
6 X | the appearance, as though divine, of any strange man; since,
7 XI | in the discharge of his divine duties. ~But in the first
8 XVIII | men overflowing with the Divine Spirit, and worthy by reason
9 XVIII | trustworthiness of their divine mission, remain in the storehouses
10 XX | age; we prove them to be divine, even if the question of
11 XX | the proper proof of its divine origin. Hence, therefore,
12 XXI | gold :—for such are the divine appearances of your Jupiter.
13 XXI | constructed all things; in which Divine Nature, when authoritatively
14 XXI | Flesh informed with the Divine Nature is nourished, groweth
15 XXII | who falsely claim to be divine. ~AND we thus affirm the
16 XXIII | become the recipients of the divine influence from the fumes,
17 XXXIII | are; for we recognize the Divine will in the appointment
18 XXXVII | perish the thought that our divine sect 98 should be avenged
19 XXXIX | knowledge of religion, the divine character of our doctrine,
20 XXXIX | call to remembrance the divine writings, if the aspect
21 XXXIX | chastisements, and the divine censures of excommunication.
22 XXXIX | but by testimony; for no divine privilege is obtainable
23 XLI | in the recognition of the divine prophecies, which confirm
24 XLV | borrowed their form from our divine law as the more ancient.
25 XLVI | trustworthiness and antiquity of our divine writings, and also by the
26 XLVI | to regard it as at all a divine question, and looks upon
27 XLVI(120)| perfect and sanctioned by divine penalties, philosophers
28 XLVII | FOR the antiquity of the divine writings already established
29 XLVII | sufficiently crediting their divine origin, so as to refrain
30 XLVII | some contend that it is divine and eternal, others that
31 XLVIII | its very nature, which is divine, the supply of incorruptibility.
32 L | is an antagonism between divine and human things, when we
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