Chapter
1 I | quake when detected, they deny when accused, not even when
2 II | Christians alone, to make them deny; whereas if there were criminality,
3 II | criminality, we should indeed deny, and you as surely would
4 II | we may of course equally deny also the crimes of which
5 II | to speak to a murderer : 'Deny it;' to order one who is
6 II | in the case of others who deny; to us, upon our denial,
7 II | compulsion is put upon any one to deny. You regard a Christian
8 II | and yet you compel him to deny that you may be able to
9 II | the laws. You wish him to deny that he is guilty, so that
10 II | accused is compelled to deny, he may deny untruly, and
11 II | compelled to deny, he may deny untruly, and when acquitted,
12 II | and are acquitted if we deny, because the contention
13 VII | they do, but to make them deny what they are. ~The origin
14 X | that condemn us, if it can deny that all those gods of yours
15 XI | AND since, as you dare not deny that these deities were
16 XI | and at the same time to deny them a maker. Certainly
17 XI | crime or vice, unless you deny that he was a man. And yet,
18 XI | And yet, though you cannot deny them to have been men, there
19 XVI | between. Yet you will not deny that all kinds of beasts
20 XXII | too, Plato also does not deny; and to the names of both
21 XXIII| ridicule; see whether they will deny that Christ will judge every
22 XXIII| and condemnation; let them deny that they are unclean spirits, —
23 XXIII| very prophets; let them deny that they are foredoomed
24 XXIII| those who to their own gain deny. These testimonies of your
25 XXIV | of theirs, by which they deny their own divinity and assert
26 App | that any one, who shall deny that he is a Christian,
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