Book, Chapter

1   III,     VIII|      and fr.r from the deeds of godliness, and so it would have been
2   III,     VIII|        his phantoms the name of godliness. If He had done this He
3   III,        V| belongings under the pretext of godliness, and to covet those of others
4   III,    XXIII|            When the doctrine of godliness had thus been battered,
5   III,      XIX|   failed of the very essence of godliness, He was inconsistent, as
6   III,    XLIII|        using a branding-iron of godliness for their own deceitful
7   III,    XLIII|       they raise the citadel of godliness. At the head of their chorus
8    IV,     XIII|        the end of wickedness is godliness. This is exactly the end
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