Book, Chapter, Paragraph

  1 Pre,     0,  4|           He was; that He assumed a body like to our own, differing
  2 Pre,     0,  5|            from the dead, when this body, which now "is sown in corruption,
  3 Pre,     0,  5|            seminal particles of the body themselves, or whether it
  4 Pre,     0,  5|           whether bestowed upon the body from without or no, is not
  5 Pre,     0,  8|            or outline of demoniacal body, whatever it is, does not
  6 Pre,     0,  8|     resemble this gross and visible body of ours; but, agreeably
  7 Pre,     0,  8|         mean that He had not such a body as demons have, which is
  8 Pre,     0,  8|            had a solid and palpable body. Now, according to human
  9 Pre,     0,  8|    incorporeal, because it is not a body of such a nature as can
 10 Pre,     0, 10|         form a connected series and body of truths agreeably to the
 11 Pre,     0, 10|          form, as we have said, one body of doctrine, by means of
 12   I,     I,  1|            own Scriptures, God is a body, because in the writings
 13   I,     I,  1|     regarded as nothing else than a body. Now, I should like to ask
 14   I,     I,  2|        cannot be understood to be a body in the sense that light
 15   I,     I,  2|         Spirit," think that He is a body, are to be answered, I think,
 16   I,     I,  2|             to this gross and solid body, to call it spirit, as in
 17   I,     I,  3|     therefore be understood to be a body, which being divided into
 18   I,     I,  3|    themselves the particles of some body called medicine, which is
 19   I,     I,  3|      necessarily to be considered a body, a share in which is possessed
 20   I,     I,  6|          source of the light of the body. So, in like manner. the
 21   I,     I,  6|        thought of as being either a body or as existing in a body,
 22   I,     I,  6|            body or as existing in a body, but as an uncompounded
 23   I,     I,  6|         which are the properties of body or matter. Wherefore that
 24   I,     I,  6|     commotion or disturbance of the body to which the mind is joined
 25   I,     I,  6|             as it were, for a human body to live at sea; and for
 26   I,     I,  6|         bodily malady, by which the body, being disturbed and disordered,
 27   I,     I,  6|      animals composed of a union of body and soul, and in this way (
 28   I,     I,  6|          not after the fashion of a body, but after that of intelligence.
 29   I,     I,  6|         enlarged, together with the body, by means of corporal additions,
 30   I,     I,  7|            itself and the soul is a body, I wish they Would tell
 31   I,     I,  7|      invisible things? How does the body possess the faculty of understanding
 32   I,     I,  7|     according to their view He is a body, and that which may be understood
 33   I,     I,  7|             perceived by means of a body; and they are unwilling
 34   I,    II,  8|       insignificant form of a human body, in consequence of the resemblance
 35   I,   VII,  2|            acquire for themselves a body of greater brightness, or
 36   I,   VII,  3|            can the movement of that body take place without a soul,
 37   I,   VII,  4|           not formed along with his body, but is proved to have been
 38   I,   VII,  4|            be formed along with his body? Or how could his soul,
 39   I,   VII,  4|            be formed along with his body, who, while lying in his
 40   I,   VII,  4|            be formed along with his body, who, before he was created
 41   I,   VII,  5|            is nothing else than the body; for although the body of
 42   I,   VII,  5|          the body; for although the body of the stars is ethereal,
 43   I,   VII,  5|            this bright and heavenly body is more necessary, on account
 44   I,  VIII,  4|            be fastened to the gross body of irrational beasts of
 45  II,     I,  3|        discordances; but as our one body is provided with many members,
 46  II,     I,  4|           into the substance of our body. But how water is changed
 47  II,    II,  2|           Spirit can live without a body, the necessity of logical
 48  II,    II,  2|           more solid condition of a body, so as to distinguish those
 49  II,    II,  2|             clothing of a spiritual body, out of all which will be
 50  II,   III,  2|           any one to live without a body. For if one person can live
 51  II,   III,  2|           person can live without a body, all things also may dispense
 52  II,   III,  2|          matter? This matter of the body, then, which is now corruptible
 53  II,   III,  2|         soul as the clothing of the body (which, on account of the
 54  II,   III,  2|           to be the clothing of the body, seeing it is an ornament
 55  II,   III,  2|           corruptible nature of the body must receive the clothing
 56  II,   III,  2|          Word of God. But when this body, which at some future period
 57  II,   III,  2|             also mortal. But as the body partakes of life, then because
 58  II,   III,  2|            the special cause of the body, he says, "This mortal must
 59  II,   III,  2|             training of ours in the body is protracted doubtless
 60  II,   III,  3|             an existence out of the body, may here raise such questions
 61  II,   III,  3|             of those who are in the body seems to be blunted by the
 62  II,   III,  3|        however, they are out of the body, then they will altogether
 63  II,    IV,  3|             God is declared to be a body, then He will also be found
 64  II,    IV,  3|            be material, since every body is composed of matter. But
 65  II,    IV,  3|             to those who are in the body, i.e., to all other creatures,
 66  II,    VI,  1|          which He manifested in the body, sent the prophets as His
 67  II,    VI,  3|           God to intermingle with a body without an intermediate
 68  II,    VI,  3|            not contrary to assume a body. But neither, on the other
 69  II,    VI,  7|       inasmuch as the shadow of our body is inseparable from the
 70  II,    VI,  7|             is inseparable from the body, and unavoidably performs
 71  II,  VIII,  2|           says it is sown an animal body, and arises a spiritual
 72  II,  VIII,  2|              and arises a spiritual body, pointing out that in the
 73  II,  VIII,  5|             names of members of the body; so also we are to suppose
 74  II,  VIII,  5|         soul, when implanted in the body, moves all things in it,
 75  II,  VIII,  5|         described in Scripture as a body. We must, indeed, take into
 76  II,  VIII,  5|         better than the rest of His body. For as the multitude of
 77  II,  VIII,  5|             believers is called His body, they say that the apostles,
 78  II,  VIII,  5|         better than the rest of the body, ought to be understood
 79  II,    IX,  1| appropriately applied to a material body; and this measure, we are
 80  II,     X,  1|         that we may know what that (body) is which shall come either
 81  II,     X,  1|            which died? Was it not a body? It is of the body, then,
 82  II,     X,  1|            not a body? It is of the body, then, that there will be
 83  II,     X,  1|          that "it is sown a natural body, it will arise a spiritual
 84  II,     X,  1|           it will arise a spiritual body," they cannot deny that
 85  II,     X,  1|            cannot deny that it is a body which arises, or that in
 86  II,     X,  1|          the qualities of an animal body, which, when sown into the
 87  II,     X,  1|            qualities of a spiritual body. For it is out of the animal
 88  II,     X,  1|             it is out of the animal body that the very power and
 89  II,     X,  1|    resurrection educe the spiritual body, when it transmutes it from
 90  II,     X,  2|             shall ask them if every body has a form of some kind,
 91  II,     X,  2|            if they shall say that a body is that which is fashioned
 92  II,     X,  2|         course, they say that every body is certainly fashioned according
 93  II,     X,  2|            the shape of a spiritual body; a thing which they can
 94  II,     X,  3|             the resurrection of the body. We ask these persons in
 95  II,     X,  3|           understand that an animal body is to be changed by the
 96  II,     X,  3|         believe the apostle, that a body which arises in glory, and
 97  II,     X,  3|               to which "God gives a body as it pleases Him," as soon
 98  II,     X,  3|             in the substance of the body, raises them from the earth,
 99  II,     X,  3|           restores the grain into a body having stalk and ear. And
100  II,     X,  3|            heaven, that germ of the body's restoration, which we
101  II,     X,  3|           of the earthly and animal body a spiritual one, capable
102  II,     X,  3|              a glory and dignity of body,-nevertheless in such a
103  II,     X,  3|           such a way, that even the body which rises again of those
104  II,     X,  3|            be the qualities of that body which will arise from the
105  II,     X,  4|         amount, breed fevers in the body, and fevers, too, of different
106  II,     X,  5|          that when the limbs of the body are loosened and torn away
107  II,     X,  6|     necessary for the health of the body to make use of some unpleasant
108  II,     X,  8|            external covering of the body. Similar is the view to
109  II,    XI,  1|            to serve the uses of the body, and in all his movements
110  II,    XI,  2|         resurrection of a spiritual body. And consequently they say,
111  II,    XI,  4|           light and vision, and our body naturally desires food and
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