Chapter

 1      I|         His nativity; because, of course, he was afraid that His
 2      I| child-bearing, and then the whole course of her infant too, would
 3    III|        assumed to exist. It is of course of the greatest importance
 4    III|           before; whose equal, of course, He is not in any other
 5     IV|        mystery of) nature. [2] Of course you are horrified also at
 6     IV|        the womb; you likewise, of course, loathe it even after it
 7     IV|      nurse's fawns. This reverend course of nature, you, O Marcion, (
 8     IV|        love anybody? Yourself, of course, you had no love of, when
 9     IV|          the cross." He loved, of course, the being whom He redeemed
10     IV|         one thus judges. It is of course foolish, if we are to judge
11      V|           phantom, too, it was of course after the resurrection,
12     VI|        the womb. [4] We admit, of course, that such facts have been
13    VII|          about His birth, this of course was not the proper way of
14   VIII|  celestial ---- by the Spirit, of course ---- even in this "earthy
15    XII|         it. We could not know, of course, that the soul, although
16   XIII|           one name indicative, of course, of that one body; [4] nor
17   XIII|         by itself, conformably of course, to the distinction which
18    XXI|          ask. The Word of God, of course, and not the seed of man,
19   XXIV|        darkness for light," he of course sets his mark upon those
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