Chapter

 1    Pre|        of the human body after death.~
 2     II|       saddened at the point of death. Let that old woman also
 3     IV|      humbled Himself even unto death ---- the death of the cross."
 4     IV|       even unto death ---- the death of the cross." He loved,
 5     IV|      Our birth He reforms from death by a second birth from heaven;
 6     VI|       and in Christ's Case His Death Proves His Birth.~[1] But
 7     VI|    being crucified, of tasting death, and of rising again from
 8     VI|    that He might be capable of death; for nothing is in the habit
 9     VI|      condition which undergoes death, but that undergoes death
10     VI|      death, but that undergoes death which is also born, the
11     VI|     begins with birth, ends in death. It was not fitting for
12     VI|      be truly a man, even unto death, it was necessary that He
13     VI|       with that flesh to which death belongs. Now that flesh
14     VI|        Now that flesh to which death belongs is preceded by birth.~
15     IX|        Lazarus; He trembles at death (for "the flesh," as He
16     XI|     when undergoing birth, and death, and (what is more) resurrection. [
17    XII|    that there is no hope after death; and yet what imprecations
18   XIII| exceeding sorrowful, even unto death; " and "the bread that I
19   XIII|       was sorrowful, even unto death," and that flesh which was
20     XV|       were something else than death! But our flesh, too, ought
21  XXVII|      and from its suffering of death. [2] Now, it will first
22  XXVII|        to build the edifice of death. Into a virgin's soul, in
23   XXIV|       lastly, one as suffering death, the other as risen again,
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