Chapter

 1      I|    possessed a nature altogether different from human flesh. For they
 2      I|       have interpreted them in a different sense, as did Valentinus,
 3     II|         to the said act was of a different character. What you believed
 4     II|          you believed to be of a different character, had been handed
 5    III|          with God; His nature is different from the condition of all
 6     IV|        if you were born in a way different from other people. [3Christ,
 7     VI|         a faith which holds to a different rule borrows materials for
 8     VI|        Moses? Since the God is a different one, everything belonging
 9     VI|         belonging to him must be different also. But let the heretics
10     VI|          s flesh, because of His different destination. [13] For One
11     IX|        some other thing, however different it may be from that from
12     IX|       which it is derived, is so different as not to suggest the source
13     IX| something else is in development different), yet, after all, what is
14     XI|        forth the soul as being a different thing from what it really
15     XI|        in some new sort of body, different from that which we all have
16     XI|     which we should have quite a different notion, (being spared the
17    XII|         manifest in Himself in a different way than in some Lazarus,
18   XIII|        of being taken in a sense different from their own proper sense,
19   XIII|        and, whilst taken in that different sense, of losing their proper
20    XVI|       one which should possess a different, even a sinless, nature!
21    XXV|      which have been raised from different quarters. We have, however,
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