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  1  Int,   1, p.    x    |         our Lord's Humanity in His Life and Work; and while reserving
  2  Int,   1, p.   xi    |         agreement of its Founder's life and death with the prophecies.
  3  Int,   1, p.   xi    |       probability was later in his life.4 In this book it is quite
  4  Int,   3, p.   xi    |          with our Lord's Incarnate life as the fulfilment of prophecy.
  5  Int,   4, p.   xv    |         Christ, and the developing life of His Church. But this
  6  Int,   4, p.   xv    |           moving i energy in human life. The exact fulfilment of
  7  Int,   4, p.   xv    |            spontaneous freedom and life. There can be no doubt that
  8  Int,   5, p.   xv    |            the beauty of His human life, and the perfection of His
  9  Int,   5, p.   xi    |         punishment, and an eternal life with God. He recognized
 10  Int,   5, p.   xi    |      heaven. The miraculous in the life of Christ is in line with
 11  Int,   5, p.   xx    |         His teaching and manner of life. He was unworldly, pure,
 12  Int,   5, p.   xx    |    skeleton. It is void of all the life and vividness, the subtle
 13  Int,   5, p.   xx    |            say, he finds in actual life around him something of
 14  Int,   5, p.   xx    |            in Christ from Whom the life of men around receives it.
 15  Int,   5, p.   xx    |           of faith on conduct. The life of the Christian is the
 16  Int,   6, p.   xx    |       greater God." In His earthly life Christ now revealed the
 17  Int,   6, p.   xx    |         the perfection of Christ's life and teaching as merely human. ~
 18  Int,   6, p.   xx    |        from God, Light from Light, Life from Life, Only-begotten
 19  Int,   6, p.   xx    |        Light from Light, Life from Life, Only-begotten Son, First-born
 20  Int,   6, p.   xx    |   incarnate for our salvation, His Life among men, His Passion,
 21  Int,   6, p.   xx    |            interest in the earthly life of our Lord that effectually
 22  Int,   9, p.   xx    |            reject the Jews' Way of Life, though we accept their
 23  Int,   9, p.   xx    |           xv ~6. The Nature of the Life according to the New Covenant
 24  Int,   9, p.   xx    |      System.~8. That the Christian Life is of Two Distinct Characters.~
 25  Int,   9, p.   xx    |         That He passed through the Life of Men.~12. That the Laws
 26    I             2    |             and in their corporate life, now nationally in the course
 27    I,   1, p.    7    |            embrace their manner of life, though we make use of their
 28    I,   2, p.    9    |           that intermediate law of life preached by the godly and
 29    I,   2, p.   11    |    savagery, and embraced a way of life similar to the piety of
 30    I,   2, p.   11    |           said to have changed his life, to have cast away his ancestral
 31    I,   2, p.   11    |         customs, and the manner of life in which he was born and
 32    I,   3, p.   19    |           to follow Moses' rule of life for those who lived round
 33    I,   4, p.   22    |            reject the Jews' Way of Life, though we accept their
 34    I,   4, p.   23    |           embraced the manners and life of the Egyptians, and had
 35    I,   5, p.   25    |    covenant must be helpful to the life of all nations: the members
 36    I,   5, p.   25    |            way at all. The law and life of our Saviour Jesus Christ
 37    I,   5, p.   25    |           you cared to compare the life of Christians and the worship
 38    I,   6, p.   28    |       CHAPTER 6 ~The Nature of the Life according to the New Covenant
 39    I,   6, p.   28    |          Men by Christ. ~JUST as a life of virtue and a system of
 40    I,   6, p.   29    |     Christian rather than a Jewish life. ~And Abraham himself, coming
 41    I,   6, p.   29    |          God, yea, by his virtuous life alone is shown to be one
 42    I,   6, p.   30    | generations. And if you regard his life, you will see it was untouched
 43    I,   6, p.   30    |     Saviour. Thus in reviewing his life in his apology to his friends
 44    I,   6, p.   31    |            good a Christian in his life that he restrained even
 45    I,   6, p.   33    |          of one we may imagine the life of all), waged their renowned
 46    I,   6, p.   33    |           between, and now come to life again by the Saviour's teaching. ~
 47    I,   6, p.   33    |            and less perfect way of life to the children of Abraham,
 48    I,   6, p.   34    |         from their wild and savage life, and gave them a polity
 49    I,   6, p.   35    |           Christ sojourned in this life, and the teaching of the
 50    I,   6, p.   35    |            better and more perfect life. Yes, the religion of those
 51    I,   6, p.   41    |         pure mind, in purity and a life of virtue, and by true and
 52    I,   6, p.   42    |          all to the holy and godly life of the holy men of the earlier
 53    I,   6, p.   42    |   contrived their plot against His life as a transgressor and breaker
 54    I,   8, p.   48    |     CHAPTER 8  ~That the Christian Life is of Two Distinct Characters. ~
 55    I,   8, p.   48    |      observed by them. Two ways of life were thus given by the law
 56    I,   8, p.   48    |          from the common customary life of mankind, it devotes itself
 57    I,   8, p.   48    |       course, appear to die to the life of mortals, to bear with
 58    I,   8, p.   48    |        beings they gaze upon human life, performing the duty of
 59    I,   8, p.   49    |      perfect form of the Christian life. And the other more humble,
 60    I,   9, p.   50    |            having lived when human life was first beginning and
 61    I,   9, p.   51    |           the  ./. consummation of life, while a new creation and
 62    I,   9, p.   51    |        lived an easier and a freer life, and their care of home
 63    I,   9, p.   52    |        inhuman, and savage mode of life, they had given themselves
 64    I,   9, p.   52    |       divorced themselves from the life of the many, and from common
 65    I,   9, p.   52    |       polity; they were evolving a life of true wisdom and religion,
 66    I,   9, p.   52    |    holiness, free from all ties of life and anxious thoughts. And
 67    I,   9, p.   53    |   godliness, and to care for their life generally. On the top of
 68    I,   9, p.   53    |         they had children in early life, but later on abstained
 69    I,  10, p.   55    |         the very creation of their life. For they say:  ~"And it
 70    I,  10, p.   55    |           was due to the source of life and soul in return for their
 71    I,  10, p.   55    |            valuable than their own life to sacrifice, in place of
 72    I,  10, p.   55    |    unreasoning beasts, providing a life instead of their own life.
 73    I,  10, p.   55    |          life instead of their own life. They did not consider this
 74    I,  10, p.   55    |          blood is the principle of life, which they offered themselves,
 75    I,  10, p.   55    |  sacrificing as it were to God one life instead of another. Moses
 76    I,  10, p.   56    |            when he says: ~"For the life of all flesh is the blood,
 77    I,  10, p.   56    | propitiation in the place of human life. And the law about sacrifices
 78    I,  10, p.   56    |       blood of the brutes is their life, it in no way implies that
 79    I,  10, p.   57    |         pay a ransom for their own life, and this was fitly a life
 80    I,  10, p.   57    |         life, and this was fitly a life that represented their own
 81    I,  10, p.   57    |           for the whole world, the life given for the life of all
 82    I,  10, p.   57    |             the life given for the life of all men, the pure offering
 83    I,  10, p.   58    |        world could not effect, the Life given for the life of sinners,
 84    I,  10, p.   58    |             the Life given for the life of sinners, Who was led
 85    I,  10, p.   61    |        High Priest all through our life the celebration of our sacrifices,
 86   II, Pre, p.   62    |         Gospel teaching and of the Life in Christ in the previous
 87   II,   3, p.   76    |          am left, and they seek my life to take it awny.17 4. But
 88   II,   3, p.   79    |       washing of salvation and the life preached in accordance with
 89   II,   3, p.   79    |           written in (the book of) life. For in the begin- (b) ning
 90   II,   3, p.   82    |            all who are written for life in Jerusalem (69) shall
 91   II,   3, p.   83    |         are written in the book of life? Instead of the reading
 92   II,   3, p.   87    |           written in [the book of] life." As therefore among them
 93   II,   3, p.   87    |           written in [the book of] life, so also here "the remnant
 94   II,   3, p.   89    |            mild, and social way of life. And this is what it (b)
 95   II,   3, p.   90    |            and enslaving them to a life like that of the other nations.
 96   II,   3, p.   93    |           lamented the evil of the life of men. ~"4 b. The lofty
 97   II,   3, p.   99    |           possible, what kind of a life the Christian life is which
 98   II,   3, p.   99    |            of a life the Christian life is which is preached to
 99  III           100    |            we reject their rule of life. And I have also made it
100  III,   2, p.  104    |      hearers a scheme of religious life, and is acknowledged to
101  III,   2, p.  105    |       Author and Lawgiver of a new life and of a system adapted
102  III,   2, p.  105    |    promised a holy land and a holy life therein under a blessing
103  III,   2, p.  105    |           those who follow out the life proclaimed by Him. And that
104  III,   2, p.  113    |     appeared. But as He was in His life, so they prophesied that
105  III,   2, p.  113    |          Virgin, and His manner of life, it was impossible for them
106  III,   2, p.  113    |            his generation? for his life is taken from the earth." [[
107  III,   2, p.  114    |            days, be it His eternal life after death, or the word
108  III,   2, p.  114    |         the Lord wills to take his life away from its (100) trouble,
109  III,   2, p.  116    |           Hades, Thou hast kept my life from them that go down into
110  III,   3, p.  118    |           He has shed forth (b) on life, from which all lovers of (
111  III,   3, p.  118    |         the only one to revive the life of the old Hebrew saints,
112  III,   3, p.  119    |           of their godly manner of life from Barbarians as well
113  III           120(34)|           and earlier in Eusebius' life lived in Sicily. He died
114  III           121(36)|                    2 Philostratus' Life of Apollonius. See Praep.
115  III           121(36)|           summary of Suidas of the life of this notorious philosopher
116  III           121(36)|      Testament, Oracles, Epistles, Life of Pythagoras. The life
117  III           121(36)|            Life of Pythagoras. The life by Philostratus, written
118  III,   3, p.  123    |          God's promises of eternal life to the good, the kingdom
119  III,   3, p.  123    |           of heaven, and a blessed life with God, whom did He deceive?—
120  III,   4, p.  125    |          of violence which destroy life. But as if He were only
121  III,   4, p.  125    |          were only handing His (d) life over willingly to those
122  III,   5, p.  127    |           those of a philosopher's life, which He outlined when
123  III,   5, p.  127    |           to contrive to exhibit a life more faithful than any oath,
124  III,   5, p.  128    |          embraced a holy and godly life, regarded their own affairs
125  III,   5, p.  128    |           all their familychose a life of poverty, and carried
126  III,   5, p.  129    |            in their Master, in His life, or His teaching, or His
127  III,   5, p.  129    |          untroubled, and to pass a life of safety by their own hearths
128  III,   5, p.  129    |        pleasure, pursuing only the life of the moment and the satisfactions
129  III,   5, p.  130    |             raised the dead (b) to life, caused the blind to see,
130  III,   5, p.  135    |  appearance and disguise of a holy life for a pretence. In this
131  III,   5, p.  135    |      philosophers, their strenuous life and sayings, with the calumny
132  III,   5, p.  135    |            disposition and mode of life was contrary to their writings,
133  III,   5, p.  135    |          choice of a philosopher's life was but a hypocritical pretence.
134  III,   5, p.  136    |          strenuous and a laborious life, with fasting and abstinence
135  III,   5, p.  137    |           the choice of His way of life. These were (b) the prophecies
136  III,   5, p.  137    |            you consider his former life, did not leave a holy occupation,
137  III,   5, p.  137    |      himself,64 who brands his own life, and becomes his own accuser.
138  III,   5, p.  138    |          the nature of his own old life, and calls himself a publican,
139  III,   5, p.  138    |         conceal his former mode of life, and in addition to this
140  III,   6, p.  144    |          noble and virtuous way of life, and of sane and reasonable
141  III,   6, p.  146    |         others of a noble and pure life and of the highest holiness,
142  III,   6, p.  146    |            inherited their mode of life afterwards, are to such
143  III,   6, p.  148    |          And not men only live the life of wisdom in this wise for
144  III,   6, p.  151    |          the period of His earthly life, and did the extraordinary
145  III,   6, p.  152    |       those even now imitating His life. It must be clear even to
146  III,   6, p.  153    |           would sooner depart from life than remain alive under
147  III,   6, p.  153    |          when He sojourned in this life: they could not bear His
148  III,   7, p.  159    |           after His death risen to life from the dead, One Who was
149  III,   7, p.  162    |        true disciples by purity of life and prayer to God and by
150   IV,   5, p.  169    |          was made. For if there is life in things that exist, that
151   IV,   5, p.  169    |            things that exist, that life was what was begotten in
152   IV,   5, p.  171    |        goodness supports and gives life to all things at the same
153   IV,   5, p.  172    |         reason, at once (153) with life, and light, and wisdom,
154   IV,   6, p.  175    |      dissolute actions, living the life of the irrational beasts.
155   IV,   9, p.  179    |            thus the whole of human life was enslaved by earthly
156   IV,  10, p.  182    |         truths at the entry of the life of holiness, by means of
157   IV,  10, p.  182    |         power to cure the evils of life owing to excess of wickedness,
158   IV,  10, p.  183    |           from a low and dissolute life. He converted and changed
159   IV,  10, p.  184    |         open the gates of heavenly life and of His holy teaching
160   IV,  10, p.  185    |            Saviour. And He led the life which we lead, in no way
161   IV,  11, p.  185    |         That He passed through the Life of Men. (d) ~AND He lived
162   IV,  11, p.  185    |             AND He lived His whole life through in the same manner,
163   IV,  11, p.  186    |         and He made the end of His life, when He departed from men,
164   IV,  12, p.  186    |            of return back again to life for the dead there bound
165   IV,  12, p.  187    |           that shewing the hope of life with God after death to
166   IV,  13, p.  188    |       wisdom upon them, impressing life on the lifeless, form on
167   IV,  13, p.  189    |         Himself as an example of a life wholly wise, virtuous, and
168   IV,  13, p.  189    |      Universe, while He passed His life where His earthly vessel
169   IV,  13, p.  190    |            Word of God, having His life and reason and everything
170   IV,  13, p.  190    |         the Word, was raised up to life, and death fled from life,
171   IV,  13, p.  190    |          life, and death fled from life, and darkness was dissolved
172   IV,  14, p.  191    |          manhood worthy of eternal life with Him, and of fellowship
173   IV,  15, p.  191    |            with the joy of His own life, and to show that the humanity
174   IV,  15, p.  193    |            noble, the cause of all life, and the gift bestowed on
175   IV,  15, p.  200    |          changed from their former life and conversation, to be
176   IV,  16, p.  207    |             the True Light and the Life, and then realize that He
177   IV,  17, p.  219    |            it were in this present life from Babylon, that is from
178    V, Int, p.  224    |            general rules for human life, any philosophical doctrines
179    V, Int, p.  224    |    advantage ever accrued to human life from the famous oracles. (
180    V, Int, p.  226    |           good he brought to human life. First he produced a sacred
181    V, Int, p.  226    |            relating to their daily life; but their prophecy in its
182    V, Int, p.  226    |             nor about this present life so open to accidents and
183    V, Int, p.  227    |     revealed as Saviour (b) of the life of men, through Whom they
184    V,   1, p.  231    |            Him Word of God, Light, Life, Truth, and, to crown all, "
185    V,   3, p.  241    |     beginning of years, nor end of life," had no characteristics
186    V,   4, p.  246    |            delineator and maker of life conceivable, the holy Scriptures
187    V,  18, p.  262    |           God face to face, and my life is preserved." I showed
188    V,  22, p.  266    |           in the common and vulgar life of men, from which also
189   VI,  14, p.   20    |            he just, shall live the life according to God, as on
190   VI,  15, p.   21    |            the singular noun zwh& (life). It is not zw&wn accented
191   VI,  15, p.   21    |       known between two lives. One life is that according to God,
192   VI,  17, p.   25    |           of our Lord's living our life on earth, the prophecy before
193   VI,  18, p.   31    |            declensions in everyday life that have taken place in
194   VI,  18, p.   31    |      second, those who live a good life but pass their time in ways
195   VI,  18, p.   36    |      springing up into everlasting life." And again: "If any thirst,
196   VI,  21, p.   43    |           and palsied in all their life, are even now being released
197   VI,  24, p.   45    |            sojourn some day in our life, saying, "I am he that speak;
198   VI,  24, p.   46    |            it is lifted above this life, having its city in heaven,
199   VI,  25, p.   47    |            of His entry into human life.~[Note to the online text:
200  VII,   1, p.   52    |            shewn to be the body of life, and the reign of sin that
201  VII,   1, p.   68    |            of the pure and healthy life in the king of Samaria,
202  VII,   2, p.   81    |            also, all our Saviour's life was literally passed with
203  VII,   3, p.   89    |          until the consummation of life, which is called the removal
204 VIII, Int, p.   97    |           ruled (d) over all human life, so that men were like wild
205 VIII, Int, p.   98    |         with the result that human life in those days admitted no
206 VIII, Int, p.   98    |           and their wild and cruel life were transferred to something
207 VIII, Int, p.   98    |     kingdom of Heaven, and eternal life to all. ~Such, then, is
208 VIII,   1, p.  103    |            about to shine on human life, there were no longer any
209 VIII,   1, p.  111    |       place of His enemies, having life in Himself, to loose death,
210 VIII,   2, p.  129    | high-priest should hold office for life; but Herod preferred to
211 VIII,   2, p.  129    |      position not even to them for life, but only for a short and
212 VIII,   2, p.  133    |         should hold office all his life and be succeeded by his
213 VIII,   4, p.  146    |           Jerusalem," that is, the life of holiness having been
214 VIII,   5, p.  148    |          not yet visited our human life. ~But if, on the other hand,
215   IX,   3, p.  157    |          the narrow way of eternal life. (425) ~And moreover He
216   IX,   4, p.  159    |          His Divinity, Whose whole life is known to have been gentle
217   IX,   5, p.  162    |        Surely it was his manner of life so strange and different
218   IX,   6, p.  164    |          which is the (b) name for life according to God. This river
219   IX,   8, p.  170    |            did He pass most of His life in Galilee of the Gentiles?
220   IX,  12, p.  177    |            on the sea in our human life, and rebuked the winds and
221   IX,  13, p.  178    |          to the paralysed, to give life to the dead, to supply health
222   IX,  13, p.  178    |  observance, He awaked them to the life of the Gospel, and said, "
223   IX,  13, p.  179    |          and to a healthy and pure life, as befits those who promise
224   IX,  14, p.  182    |             d) in their individual life have little need to trouble
225   IX,  15, p.  183    |        quietly sojourning in human life, and setting judgment on
226   IX,  16, p.  185    |          eyes the words of eternal life, and listened to the voice
227   IX,  17, p.  187    |         with nations, nor is human life as of old in a state of
228    X, Int, p.  189    |            His departure from this life, and to study what the prophets
229    X, Int, p.  191    |          men unto justification of life." Hence, also, He taught
230    X, Int, p.  191    |          His disciples that He was life and light and truth, and
231    X,   1, p.  193    |           the Word of God, Wisdom, Life, and the True Light, and
232    X,   1, p.  198    |         the enemy of His return to life was made ashamed, and they
233    X,   1, p.  199    |      stability and sureness of His life and His preservation after
234    X,   2, p.  201    |          death by His assurance of life, for He is the Life. And
235    X,   2, p.  201    |   assurance of life, for He is the Life. And so He drove far off
236    X,   8, p.  219    |      evidently means His Return to life after death, which came
237    X,   8, p.  220    |            the purification of the life of them that believe in
238    X,   8, p.  221    |          no one had power over His life, but He gave it willingly
239    X,   8, p.  221    |           words, "No one taketh my life from me: I have power to
240    X,   8, p.  232    |           threatened our Saviour's life, or which one like a dog
241    X,   8, p.  234    |             when He prayed for His life to be delivered from the
242    X,   8, p.  235    |            gravity and nobility of life, and majesty of belief,
243    X,   8, p.  235    |       poverty of its teaching, and life, and thought, and conceptions
244    X,   8, p.  235    |          soul, and affords eternal life. So the Psalm says: "The
245    X,   8, p.  236    |           ye think to have eternal life, and those are they that
246   XV           237    |         the outward appearances of life, and admiring the beauty
247   XV           237    |            a picture, to liken the life of all men to a great image,
248   XV           237    |           vast and mighty surge of life to a great sea. So the King,
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