Book, Chapter, Paragraph

 1 Pre,     0,  5|        free of a burden of that kind. From which it follows,
 2   I,     I,  2|     consuming materials of that kind? But let us reflect that
 3   I,     I,  6|      Himself no addition of any kind; so that He cannot be believed
 4   I,     I,  6|    magnitude of an intellectual kind, because it grows, not after
 5   I,    II,  9|         of Wisdom that "it is a kind of breath of the power of
 6   I,    II,  9|        properties of its own,-a kind of breath, as Scripture
 7   I,    II, 10|         should afterwards, by a kind of progress, come into the
 8   I,    II, 13|        imagined that there is a kind of blasphemy, as it were,
 9   I,     V,  2|       spoken of as possessing a kind of wisdom which will come
10   I,     V,  3|   element at all of an opposite kind, and certain others so that
11   I,     V,  3|  holding offices of an opposite kind must be regarded in the
12   I,     V,  4|         is manifestly of such a kind as cannot be at all understood
13   I,    VI,  1| experience in questions of this kind, they may appear to him
14   I,    VI,  3|         travelled through, by a kind of training, every single
15   I,    VI,  4|      shown to take place, but a kind of change of quality and
16   I,   VII,  3|  planets" move in orbits of one kind, and those which are termed
17   I,   VII,  5|        of corporeal nature as a kind of burden which enfeebles
18  II,     I,  4|       or greater, or of another kind, than that which He did
19  II,    II,  1|         them; so also a similar kind of union or relationship
20  II,   III,  2|  clothing of the soul, so for a kind of reason sufficiently intelligible
21  II,   III,  3|      from a disturbance of that kind. But as they will not be
22  II,   III,  3|  subjected to movements of some kind, through the special act
23  II,   III,  4|       changes of no unimportant kind, so that the state of another
24  II,    IV,  4|     from all affections of that kind, we have to show them that
25  II,     V,  1|         they have established a kind of division, according to
26  II,     V,  1|         but to be animated by a kind of hatred against them.
27  II,    VI,  6|         an odour of an opposite kind, while they who are His "
28  II,   VII,  1|   indicate a distinction of any kind whatever.~
29  II,   VII,  3|         whom is contained every kind of gifts, For on some is
30  II,  VIII,  1|       brought forth after their kind." It is confirmed also from
31  II,  VIII,  1|       living creature after its kind, four-footed beasts, and
32  II,  VIII,  1|        of the earth after their kind." And now with respect to
33  II,  VIII,  1|         as those of an opposite kind. We nowhere, indeed, find
34  II,  VIII,  2|       intimates that there is a kind of animal-man who, he says,
35  II,    IX,  3|         a more common or severe kind; while some, again, possess
36  II,     X,  2|         body has a form of some kind, i.e., is fashioned according
37  II,     X,  4|        provisions of a contrary kind and amount, breed fevers
38  II,     X,  4|   moment of sinning, will see a kind of history, as it were,
39  II,     X,  5|   perpetually torture of such a kind. You will ask indeed whether,
40  II,     X,  5|     pain of a most excruciating kind, so, when the soul shall
41  II,     X,  7|      undoubtedly indicates some kind of punishment on those whose
42  II,    XI,  1|     delights in motion of every kind, and in perpetual activity
43  II,    XI,  1|        towards pursuits of that kind, that he may, by inquiring
44  II,    XI,  4|      who possess in this life a kind of outline of truth and
45  II,    XI,  5|         which are of a contrary kind, and what the affection
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