Book, Chapter

 1   III,     VIII|      before, whether on land or sea, whether in town or country,
 2   III,       IX|     dragon who is hidden in the sea of life, and is the source
 3   III,       IX|       and then held fast in the sea of mortal life, provoked
 4   III,       IV|         down the steep into the sea, about two thousand, and
 5   III,       IV|     thousand swine ran into the sea, and were choked and perished!~ ~
 6   III,       IV|      They wanted to stir up the sea, and fill the world's whole
 7   III,       IV|       was a lake and not a deep sea ? It may be left to babes
 8   III,       XI|         the swine choked in the sea, and the swineherds who
 9   III,       XI|    guide us as strangers to the sea, in order that all may learn
10   III,       XI|       and through them into the sea. He was doing good in each
11   III,       XI|         abode and went into the sea. Take this as a sufficient
12   III,       VI|   cometh to them walking on the sea " (Matt. xiv. 25; Mark vi.
13   III,       VI|      the disciples to cross the sea after a feast, Himself came
14   III,       VI|         say that there is not a sea there, but a small lake
15   III,       VI|        pond. Then he calls it a sea, and not merely that, but
16   III,       VI|       merely that, but a stormy sea, and a terribly angry one,
17   III,       VI|     from the deep, and from the sea. From such childish records
18   III,     XIII|   cometh to them walking on the sea " (Matt. xiv. 25 ; Mark
19   III,     XIII|         to the use of the word "sea," note three things: First,
20   III,     XIII|       was certainly very like a sea if there were fishing-boats
21   III,     XIII|    receive the generic name of "sea." Thirdly, apart from grammatical
22   III,     XIII|     dominion over water and the sea. The very elements join
23   III,     XIII|       Him who "walketh upon the sea as upon a foundation."~ ~
24   III,     XIII|        been able to walk on the sea it would have falsified
25   III,     XIII|     moonless night, and roaring sea.~ ~But there is a yet deeper
26   III,     XIII|       underlying the story. The sea denotes the brine and bitterness
27   III,     XVII|       and be thou cast into the sea, and it shall not be impossible
28   III,      XXV|         such mountains into the sea from their human habitations,
29   III,      XXX| themselves as afloat on another sea. Even thus are you seeking
30   III,     XLII|        deadly spells 217 earth, sea, air, and the things beneath
31   III,     XLII|        to be sent down into the sea, since the sea is black
32   III,     XLII|         into the sea, since the sea is black and in constant
33   III,     XLII|       If a man was crossing the sea, he let slip a sacrifice ;
34   III,     XLII|        air nor land, island nor sea were inopportune for their
35    IV,       XI|      things change, even as the sea never maintains a perpetual
36    IV,       II|    cross the wide air like some sea, using the cloud as a chariot.
37    IV,       II|     have its proper sphere, the sea for the water creatures,
38    IV,       II|      nor again does He make the sea to be ploughed or tilled;
39    IV,      XII|        Just as the water in the sea is heavy, and yet is drawn
40    IV,     XXIV|      have often perished in the sea, and their bodies have been
41    IV,      XXX|     from pollutions,313 nor the sea have rest from navigation ;314
42    IV,      XXX|        have perished by land or sea, in rivers or in lakes,
43    IV,      XXX|   swimming in the depths of the sea, showing no fulfilment of
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