Book, Chapter, Paragraph

 1   I,   III,  4|      walks upon the earth (i.e., earthly and corporeal beings) is
 2   I,     V,  5|          this world, i.e., of an earthly habitation: for he exercised
 3  II,   III,  6|   celestial and super-celestial, earthly and infernal, is generally
 4  II,   III,  6|          For we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle
 5  II,    IX,  3|        Certain beings are called earthly, and among them, i.e., among
 6  II,    IX,  3|        invisible powers to which earthly things have been entrusted
 7  II,    IX,  7|      heavenly, some on the other earthly, and others, again, beneath
 8  II,     X,  2|  resurrection by a comparison of earthly bodies. Our understanding
 9  II,     X,  2|    borrowed an illustration from earthly things, saying, "There is
10  II,     X,  2|      compared to the saints, and earthly things to sinners. These
11  II,     X,  3|      command restores out of the earthly and animal body a spiritual
12  II,    XI,  2| imagining to themselves that the earthly city of Jerusalem is to
13  II,    XI,  2|          and princes, like those earthly monarchs who now exist;
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