Book, Chapter

1  III,   7, p.  159|       disciples of Jesus, not in obscure and unknown places, but
2   IV,   8, p.  177|        amid the stress of things obscure and dark. So all the most
3    V, Int, p.  230|          the Hebrew much that is obscure both in expression and in
4    V,   4, p.  247|        to be meant barbarous and obscure nations, in fact all those
5   VI,  14, p.   19|        Epistle arranges what was obscure in the prophetic writing,
6 VIII,   2, p.  121| explained those that were of old obscure and sealed, tearing away
7 VIII,   2, p.  131|       the ancestral line, but on obscure and unknown men. This the
8   IX,   1, p.  154|       draws not near," which are obscure in the Septuagint, are more
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