Book, Chapter, Paragraph

 1   I,     I,  7| adaptation, even from the very quality of their form, to the end
 2   I,    II, 10|     alteration, and every good quality in Him being essential,
 3   I,   III,  4|     that adjunct which denotes quality, the Holy Spirit is to be
 4   I,     V,  5|   Spirit, but is an accidental quality in every created thing;
 5   I,    VI,  2|      accidental and perishable quality, and only then enjoy blessedness,
 6   I,    VI,  4|        but a kind of change of quality and transformation of appearance.
 7   I,  VIII,  3|   nature, but as an accidental quality, for which reason it may
 8  II,     I,  4|       found to exist without a quality. And I cannot understand
 9  II,   III,  6|       be superior in glory and quality, but confined within the
10  II,   III,  7| condition in proportion to the quality or merits of those who assume
11  II,     V,  1|        hand, they view as that quality which rewards every one
12  II,   VII,  3|        Himself made to be that quality, or understood to be that
13  II,     X,  4|      and fuel for disease (the quality of this material, gathered
14  II,    XI,  4|     the bread of life, and the quality of that wine, and the peculiar
15  II,    XI,  4|      or why it is of a special quality, or for a special purpose,
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