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   Book, Chapter        grey = Comment text

 1   Int,        4     |      before us are mostly to the human side of the faith, and are
 2   Int,       10     |          seemed to be subject to human affections" (iii. 8, p.
 3    II,      VII     |       thoughts and giving up all human dear ones. After the victory
 4    II,     XVII     |     speech," and yet another as "human being," he will mention
 5    II,     XVII     |          one says " mortal," or "human being," or "endowed with
 6    II,      XIX     |     might not seem to be need of human support and co-operation
 7    II,      XIX     |      proclamation might not be a human thing, but a divine.~ ~
 8    II,       XX     |         of the weak and wavering human race.~ ~Such was Christ'
 9    II,       XX     |          in v. 32. For He took a human body as the cord with which
10    II,      XVI     |         the Slanderer subject to human affections or not? If he
11   III,     VIII     |          and deed were more than human? But if the cross had not
12   III,     VIII     |       One who was not subject to human affections,115 and He did
13   III,     VIII     |          seemed to be subject to human affections,117 it was undoubtedly
14   III,       XI     |           indicating that it was human nature that was oppressed,
15   III          (132)|                           2 Viz "human nature," as he explains
16   III,       XI     |       that the demons left their human abode and went into the
17   III,     XIII     |          existence; the night is human life; the boat is the world;
18   III,     XIII     |         sailed all night are the human race; the contrary wind
19   III,     XIII     |   literal night, so there are in human life. In the first watch
20   III,     XIII     |     prophets contended for those human sailors; and in the fourth,
21   III,      XIV     |         Him as Divine or as only human? Such division is impossible,
22   III,       XV     |          that a man should taste human flesh, and drink the blood
23   III,       XV     |          refrain altogether from human flesh.~ ~What then does
24   III,      XXV     |          into the sea from their human habitations, when He drove
25   III,     XLII     |   spirits ruthlessly mangled the human race in various ways, as
26    IV,       XI     |          deceitfulness of things human, be they honours or kingdoms
27    IV,       XI     |         an end. And if you think human things do not "pass away,"
28    IV,     XIII     | alteration of His will. Even the human mind can now make a triangle
29    IV,     XVII     |          way the kingdom affects human society. The woman who took
30    IV,      XXV     |       only what we see in things human. The law may decide that
31    IV,    XXVII     |       have sometimes appeared in human form, yet they were not
32    IV,    XXVII     |   Abraham were not really of the human form and behaviour they
33    IV,   XXVIII     |          any unique kind, but in human flesh, and moreover in that
34    IV,     XXIV     |        from the beginning of the human race. And if any one is
35    IV,      XXX     |              but simply allowing human nature to be tossed about
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