Chapter
1 II | wish us to perish, whom you believe to be the worst of men!
2 II | Consequently they both believe things of us which are unproven,
3 II | than they prefer men to believe them to be; their object
4 VII | elicit the facts if you believe them, or forego belief if
5 VII | would any but a rash man believe Rumour? A wise man trusts
6 VIII | Life is promised in return. Believe it for the time being, for
7 VIII | this; whether, although you believe it, you think it worth while
8 VIII | to be so. Even if you did believe it, I say that you would
9 VIII | incestuous lust! You who can believe these things of a human
10 VIII | cannot do it ought not to believe it. For even a Christian
11 XVI | with greater likelihood, believe the Sun to be our god. If
12 XVIII| Him, and having found, to believe, in Him, and having believed,
13 XVIII| will also be compelled to believe.
14 XX | we have already learnt to believe in them through the verifications
15 XXI | this, because they do not believe that He has already come.
16 XXI | great point if, to make you believe the Christians, I can employ
17 XXIII| shame in your presence. Believe them when they speak the
18 XXIII| about themselves, you who believe them when they lie. No one
19 XXIII| believing them most fully we believe in Christ our Lord. They
20 XXIV | Princes. I have named, I believe, Roman provinces, and yet
21 XXV | those very beings whom you believe to be gods; so that nothing
22 XXIX | images and temples, which I believe the Caesars' soldiers preserve
23 XXXIV| emperor. Cease to worship or believe in another god, and so to
24 XXXIX| according to the teaching, I believe, of those ancient sages,
25 XL | additional falsehood, that they believe the Christians are the cause
26 XLIII| because perhaps you do not believe Him to be such; but—from
27 XLIX | useful; since those who believe them are compelled to become
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