Book, Chapter

 1    I,   1, p.    6|     followers like irrational animals to shut their eyes and staunchly
 2    I,   2, p.   10|        and the deification of animals, idols of lifeless wood,
 3    I,   6, p.   38|    flesh, poisonous reptiles, animals of every kind, repulsive
 4    I,  10, p.   54|       why we do not sacrifice animals to Almighty God, as the
 5    I,  10, p.   54|    men did not ever sacrifice animals, nor burn incense to the
 6    I,  10, p.   54|  altars with the sacrifice of animals, and that this was a sacrifice
 7    I,  10, p.   54|     said that those who offer animals are open to the charge of
 8    I,  10, p.   55|      men of God were those of animals. ~And this thought, I hold,
 9    I,  10, p.   57|       them by the offering of animals to pay a ransom for their
10  III,   2, p.  111|    clear that the unreasoning animals, (d) and the wild beasts
11    V, Int, p.  223| dearest, as if they were mere animals, actually (d) thirsting
12    V,   1, p.  232|      that in the way in which animals are produced on earth, as
13    V,   3, p.  241|       and blood of irrational animals. But he that is named Melchizedek,
14   VI,  15, p.   21|     to irrational or rational animals. And so following the rendering
15  VII,   3, p.   91|     And the references to the animals and wild beasts becoming
16  VII,   3, p.   91|    passages that refer to the animals necessarily in a figurative
17 VIII,   1, p.  115|     Moses in the slaughter of animals of various kinds, and was
18 VIII,   5, p.  148|       their gods, nor on wild animals and unreasoning brutes as
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License