Book, Chapter

 1   Int,        6|      the Romans as "a barbarian race."51 Whether all this accords
 2    II,     XVII|        both of them a barbarian race,93 which does not lay claim
 3    II,      XIV|       High-priest of the Jewish race, or to many men at the same
 4    II,      XIX|    murdering the Saviour of the race, and felt most acutely of
 5    II,       XX|         weak and wavering human race.~ ~Such was Christ's judgment
 6    II,       XX|        heavenly abodes (for the race is bound to that body of
 7   III,     XIII|         all night are the human race; the contrary wind is the
 8   III,       XV|        among those who run in a race, and proclaim their victory
 9   III,       XV|   members of the same tribe and race, and that by doing this
10   III,  XXXVIII|     Just as one of the Galatian race is called an Asian by living
11   III,     XLII|    ruthlessly mangled the human race in various ways, as a flock
12   III,    XLIII|     Dositheus,231 a Cilician by race, who confirms their teaching
13    IV,      XII| humanity with that of the whole race.~ ~
14    IV,    XVIII|       and the "sinners" are the race of, men, whose glory was
15    IV,       XX|         over men who shared his race and possessed the same nature.
16    IV,     XXIV|      the beginning of the human race. And if any one is prepared
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