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

 1 Pre,     0,  8|        The term a0sw/maton, i.e., incorporeal, is disused and unknown,
 2 Pre,     0,  8|           disciples, "I am not an incorporeal demon," I have to reply,
 3 Pre,     0,  8|          and Gentile authors when incorporeal nature is discussed by philosophers.
 4 Pre,     0,  8|   referred to he used the phrase "incorporeal demon" to denote that that
 5 Pre,     0,  8|      considered or called by many incorporeal), but that He had a solid
 6 Pre,     0,  8|         by the simple or ignorant incorporeal; as if one were to say that
 7 Pre,     0,  8|          air which we breathe was incorporeal, because it is not a body
 8 Pre,     0,  9| philosophers call a0sw/maton, or "incorporeal," is found in holy Scripture
 9   I,     I,  5|     efforts to examine and behold incorporeal things, scarcely holds the
10   I,     I,  5|         all intelligent, that is, incorporeal beings, what is so superior
11   I,     I,  7|          faculty of understanding incorporeal existences? How does a bodily
12   I,     I,  7|      truths, which are manifestly incorporeal? Unless, indeed, some should
13   I,     I,  8|         be properly applied to an incorporeal and invisible nature, neither
14   I,    II,  6|         such a thing regarding an incorporeal being is not only the height
15   I,    II,  6|          physical division of any incorporeal nature. Rather, therefore,
16   I,   VII    |                   Chapter VII.-On Incorporeal and Corporeal Beings.~
17   I,   VII,  1|          their proper nature, are incorporeal; but although incorporeal,
18   I,   VII,  1|         incorporeal; but although incorporeal, they were nevertheless
19   I,   VII,  1|         regard as none other than incorporeal and spiritual powers. But
20   I,   VII,  1|     termed generally corporeal or incorporeal, he seems to me, in the
21  II,    II,  1|      natures to remain altogether incorporeal after they have reached
22  II,    II,  2|           live without it; for an incorporeal life will rightly be considered
23  II,   III,  3|         at some future time to be incorporeal; and if this is admitted,
24  II,   III,  6|           writers) to speak of an incorporeal world existing in the imagination
25  II,   III,  6|      Greeks call a0sw/mata, i.e., incorporeal; whereas those of which
26  II,   III,  7|       must suppose either that an incorporeal existence is possible, after
27  II,    IV,  3|           But to a nature that is incorporeal and for the most part intellectual,
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