Book, Chapter

 1    II,       IX|       and dost bear unreasoning witness to the good that is relative,86
 2    II,       XI|         Christ said, "If I bear witness to myself, my witness is
 3    II,       XI|      bear witness to myself, my witness is not true," and yet He
 4    II,       XI|      true," and yet He did bear witness to Himself, as He was accused
 5    II,       XI|     John viii. 12, 13).~ ~[Such witness is not true in man's case,
 6    II,       XI|       judgment and sought man's witness for His divine acts.~ ~So
 7    II,       XI|       man when He does not bear witness to Himself, but seeks it
 8    II,       XI|         Truth, etc., disdaining witness from his inferiors. He therefore
 9    II,       XI| judgment, He is merely man, His witness is not true. Thus He contradicts,
10    II,     XIII|       he is desirous of bearing witness to himself when he says: "
11    II,     XIII|       he that saw it hath borne witness, and his witness is true" (
12    II,     XIII|     hath borne witness, and his witness is true" (v. 35). This is
13    II,     XIII|       simpleton. For how is the witness true when its object has
14    II,     XIII|     something real; but how can witness be spoken of concerning
15    II,    XVIII|   painlessness.~ ~John, the one witness of this, which is itself
16   III,    XXVII|         in that thou hast borne witness this day to the fact that
17   III,    XXVII|    hearing these words, and the witness which Peter gave to the
18   III,    XXVII|     merit, and to overthrow the witness of Christ by the trickery
19   III,    XXXIX|         supported them with the witness of the law, so that they
20   III,   XXXIII|      with the cry, "I Paul bear witness that if any man do one thing
21   III,       XL|    Again, when he brings in the witness of the law and quotes from
22    IV,     XIII|        must " be preached for a witness unto all (nations)" before
23    IV,      XIV|         and sometimes lets them witness by their death that they
24    IV,      VII|     such importance |131 in the witness borne to it, shall pass
25    IV,      XXI|       their divine nature bears witness to them, as when Matthew
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2010. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License