Book, Chapter

 1   Int,        6|      refers to those of his own day in a way that seems to indicate
 2     I          |       in story till the present day in Mesopotamia, or rather
 3    II,      XIX|       and returned on the third day after His Passion from the
 4   III          |       spent a great deal of the day in discussion. He began
 5   III,    XXVII|         hast borne witness this day to the fact that the blessed
 6   III,     XXII|  escaped during the night, when day came there was a stir among
 7   III,       XL|        sabbath, upon the eighth day after its birth ?208 Here
 8    IV,       XI| kingdoms or what you will. In a day a man may pass from a palace
 9    IV,       XI|     rejoicing soon passes. Even day and night are uncertain;
10    IV,       XI|        night are uncertain; the day may be bright or stormy,
11    IV,      XII|         night is far spent, the day is at hand."~ ~At the end
12    IV,      XII|       did not take place in his day, for he is very fond of
13    IV,     XIII|         total of time, make one day to be a thousand years,
14    IV,     XIII|        thousand years to be one day.253 So we must find no |
15    IV,       XV|        the East, and up to this day pollutes the world by creeping
16    IV,       VI|         on the saying about the Day of Judgment in the Apocalypse
17    IV,       VI|   present all men to God in the day of judgment, itself too
18    IV,       VI|        be judged ? Will it some day be shown to have committed
19    IV,      XXX|       poverty, suffering ill by day and sleeping by night, eating
20    IV,      XXX|        is reckoned as one brief day (cf. 2 Peter iii. 8),315
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