Book, Chapter

 1   III,     VIII|         did He appear in humble fashion, with utterance restrained
 2   III,     VIII|         not have kept to such a fashion, but would have become man
 3   III,       XV|        more beast-like than any fashion of a beast, that a man should
 4   III,     XXXI|     them all captive in inhuman fashion. So if Paul is in pretence
 5    IV,        I|         Paul's saying that "the fashion of this world passeth away" (
 6    IV,        I|         mean by saying that the fashion of the world237 passes away?
 7    IV,        I|    rejoiced not? Or how can the fashion of this world pass away ?
 8    IV,        I|        if He were to change the fashion into something better, in
 9    IV,        I| creation a fitting and suitable fashion for the world, but having
10    IV,        I|        of the earth in grievous fashion, and in violation of the
11    IV,        I|     having the world, makes the fashion of it pass away, as though
12    IV,       XI|        Paul's saying that " the fashion of this world passeth away " (
13    IV,       XI|  imagination as well as for the fashion of the world ! "The fashion
14    IV,       XI|     fashion of the world ! "The fashion of the world" may be understood
15    IV,       XI|     ages of men. Or, again, as "fashion" means "appearance," it
16    IV,       XI|        goes in. Even so is "the fashion of the world" a passing
17    IV,       XI|      passing appearance.~ ~"The fashion of the world" also refers
18    IV,       XI|  departed.~ ~The change in "the fashion of the world" is clearly
19    IV,      XXI|       the statues should be the fashion of a man, since man is reckoned
20    IV,   XXVIII|        is much more shameful to fashion parts and conceal them with
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