Book, Chapter, Paragraph

 1 Pre,     0,  5|             that the soul, having a substance and life of its own, shall,
 2 Pre,     0,  5| traducianism, so that the reason or substance of it may be considered
 3   I,     I,  2|         thought to consume material substance, as wood, or hay, or stubble?
 4   I,     I,  6|            itself-that is, upon the substance of the sun; but when we
 5   I,     I,  6|            comparison with His real substance and being. As, therefore,
 6   I,     I,  7|           certain peculiar sensible substance, on which the bodily sense
 7   I,     I,  7|           at all of the nature of a substance should be placed, but that
 8   I,     I,  7|        disparagement of that better substance which is within them; nay,
 9   I,    II,  4|       only-begotten Son, and in the substance of the same, to any man
10   I,    II,  6|         sculptured on some material substance, such as wood or stone;
11   I,    II,  6|             the unity of nature and substance belonging to Father and
12   I,    VI,  4|       destruction of their material substance that is shown to take place,
13   I,    VI,  4|          exist without any material substance, and without partaking in
14   I,    VI,  4|             in the end every bodily substance will be so pure and refined
15   I,   VII,  2|         splendour of their physical substance, as if one were to say,
16   I,   VII,  2|           splendour of their bodily substance would imply an injurious
17  II,     I,  4|         food, is converted into the substance of our body. But how water
18  II,     I,  5|             appear to show that the substance of those things which exist
19  II,     I,  5|          the qualities by which the substance itself has been moulded.~
20  II,    II,  2|        beginning, but that material substance was separated from them
21  II,    II,  2|            therefore, that material substance of this world, possessing
22  II,   III,  2|            undoubtedly be no bodily substance, seeing there will be no
23  II,   III,  7|           natures), then the bodily substance itself also being united
24  II,    VI,  2|           that divine and ineffable substance nor yet those things which
25  II,    VI,  3|           Lord is one spirit." This substance of a soul, then, being intermediate
26  II,    VI,  3|         born, as we have said, that substance being the intermediary to
27  II,    VI,  6|            partakers. As, then, the substance of an ointment is one thing
28  II,    VI,  6|          itself, which contains the substance of the ointment, can by
29  II,    VI,  6|            itself, in which was the substance of the ointment, should
30  II,  VIII,  1|            is defined as follows: a substance fantastikh/ and o9rmhtikh/,
31  II,  VIII,  1|            importance, provided the substance be endowed with life. That
32  II,  VIII,  2|        which a soul is said to be a substance rationally "sensible and
33  II,  VIII,  2|           have undoubtedly the same substance. Paul indeed intimates that
34  II,  VIII,  2|      whether there happen to be any substance which, in respect of its
35  II,  VIII,  3|     consuming fire." Respecting the substance of the angels also it speaks
36  II,    IX,  2|         whatever power was in their substance was not in it by nature,
37  II,     X,  3|           which contains the bodily substance) although the bodies die,
38  II,     X,  3|         which is always safe in the substance of the body, raises them
39  II,     X,  4|          understood that around the substance of the soul certain tortures
40  II,     X,  7|         which remains, that is, the substance of the soul, will be assigned
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