bold = Main text
   Book, Chapter, Paragraphgrey = Comment text

 1 Pre,     0,  4|          of the Father before all creatures; that, after He had been
 2   I,     I,  6|         and the comeliness of His creatures. God, therefore, is not
 3   I,    II,  2|          on account of these very creatures which had been described,
 4   I,    II,  3|     species and beginnings of all creatures, must we understand her
 5   I,    II, 10|        discuss the subject of the creatures. But even now I think it
 6   I,    VI,  1|        Christ, may recall all His creatures to one end, even His enemies
 7   I,  VIII,  3|           his mind, so also other creatures, as having a capacity for
 8   I,  VIII,  4|   distinguished order of rational creatures among celestial existences
 9   I,  VIII,  4|          second order of rational creatures, who have devoted themselves
10   I,  VIII,  4|           third order of rational creatures is that of those who are
11   I,  VIII,  4|           when souls and rational creatures shall have been sent forth
12  II,     I,  2|           all, recalls those very creatures which differed so much from
13  II,     I,  2|          the salvation of all His creatures through the ineffable plan
14  II,   III,  3|           who think that rational creatures can at any time lead an
15  II,   III,  5|        exceed and surpass visible creatures, (ages still greater) (which
16  II,    IV,  3|          body, i.e., to all other creatures, the property of vision
17  II,    VI,  3|       Himself to all His rational creatures, so that each one obtained
18  II,  VIII,  1|         the waters; and of winged creatures too, this same definition
19  II,  VIII,  5|         of animals and other dumb creatures, let that suffice which
20  II,    IX    |         the Movements of Rational Creatures, Whether Good or Bad; And
21  II,    IX,  1|          rational or intellectual creatures (or by whatever name they
22  II,    IX,  1|          some would have it, that creatures have not a limit, because
23  II,    IX,  1|     correctly applied to rational creatures or understandings, that
24  II,    IX,  2| understandings, i.e., of rational creatures, which diversity they must
25  II,    IX,  3|     animals, and birds, and those creatures which live in the waters,
26  II,    IX,  4|          believe to be in all His creatures, although we are in the
27  II,    IX,  5|          to assign to some of His creatures an abode in the heavens,
28  II,    IX,  6|          But since those rational creatures themselves, as we have frequently
29  II,    IX,  6|          diversity among rational creatures, deriving its origin not
30  II,    IX,  6|     deemed it just to arrange His creatures according to their merit,
31  II,    IX,  7|         celestial and terrestrial creatures, and even those of the lower
32  II,    IX,  7|           with regard to heavenly creatures, if we notice that diversity
33  II,    IX,  7|          the discharge of duty to creatures of a lower grade, in order
34  II,    IX,  7|          to the case of all other creatures, because, as we formerly
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