Book, Chapter

 1   III,        V|        body-snatching, and the wickedness of sacrilege, of what use
 2   III,      XII|     the sight of God. Marks of wickedness exist, and a man must cast
 3   III,    XXVII|        from the tyranny of his wickedness, and so he was desirous
 4   III,      XLI|       There was naturally much wickedness in life, and this could
 5   III,     XLII|       motion. Seeing then that wickedness thus destroys the things
 6    IV,       II|    power in making virtue into wickedness nor wickedness into virtue,
 7    IV,       II|     virtue into wickedness nor wickedness into virtue, nor does He
 8    IV,     XIII|   knowledge. And so the end of wickedness is godliness. This is exactly
 9    IV,     XVII|   those who were babes only in wickedness, and not in knowledge |136
10    IV,   XXVIII| receives no corruption through wickedness. Therefore the Word is made
11    IV,      XXX|     stained with the poison of wickedness, and to consider the things
12    IV,      XXX|        that which gave heed to wickedness during the course of existence;
13    IV,      XXX|     virtue nor laying bare the wickedness, . . . but simply allowing
14    IV,      XXX|    investigation of either the wickedness in it or the virtue. Such
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