Book, Chapter

 1    II,       XI|         if He had accepted their judgment and sought man's witness
 2    II,       XI|      that if, in their erroneous judgment, He is merely man, His witness
 3    II,       XV|        on the words: "Now is the judgment of the world, now shall
 4    II,       XV|         Christ says: "Now is the judgment of the world, now the ruler
 5    II,       XV|        name of God, what is this judgment which then takes place,
 6    II,       XX|        race.~ ~Such was Christ's judgment in dividing men from their
 7    II,       XX| Supposing an earthly king passes judgment on one in authority, his
 8   III,     VIII|           not in accordance with judgment,111 but merely in phantom
 9   III,       IV|          hears this, he passes a judgment at once, forms his opinion
10   III,       IV|       Wherefore, according to my judgment, the record contained in
11   III,     XXIV|   understanding by enslaving the judgment of the reason.~ ~Wherefore,
12   III,      XIX|          readily shaken from his judgment ? What sort of firm reasoning
13   III,      XXI|      himself, in contempt of the judgment and resurrection to come.~ ~
14   III,    XXXIV|        from it, he made void the judgment of his own words by saying, "
15   III,     XLII|          pieces, and makes their judgment void, when he says, "An
16   III,     XLII|          naming of gods; but the judgment of truth does not lay down
17   III,    XLIII|          the Lord, yet I give my judgment as one that hath obtained
18   III,    XLIII|        virgins are angels in his judgment).~ ~When he says that "There
19    IV          |    points had been raised by the judgment of my Greek opponent, and
20    IV          |          in pieces the apostolic judgment, to the accompaniment of
21    IV,       VI|          saying about the Day of Judgment in the Apocalypse of Peter.263~ ~
22    IV,       VI|         men to God in the day of judgment, itself too being about
23    IV,       VI|      that heaven is deserving of judgment, as having allowed the judge
24    IV,      XXX|          that there should be no judgment of the cunning of quackery
25    IV,      XXX|      virtue in this life, and no judgment to that which gave heed
26    IV,      XXX|        escaped the danger of the judgment to come, and sailed without
27    IV,      XXX|         threatening of universal judgment. For as the fire does not
28    IV,      XXX|        be affected by fire or by judgment, which will flee before
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