Book, Chapter

1  III,   5, p.  137|        scot-free, though he be convicted of many crimes.63 But why
2  III,   5, p.  140|        a laughing-stock, being convicted as friends of envy and malice,
3  III,   6, p.  147|       own people has ever been convicted of sorcery, nor any of those
4    V, Int, p.  223| Preparation for the Gospel has convicted them of worthlessness, from
5    V, Int, p.  223|        in which they have been convicted, sometimes directly, sometimes
6    V, Int, p.  223|       stories, which they were convicted of having stamped as the
7    V, Int, p.  224|     wild beasts, and, could be convicted of being neither more nor
8 VIII,   2, p.  138| persuade of this, they must be convicted not only of a shameless
9    X,   4, p.  209|    fire of divine teaching, or convicted of impurity, as if they
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