Chapter

 1    VII|      done against Him by way of temptation. "Behold," it says, "a certain
 2    VII| suggested some occasion for the temptation. What could they have thought
 3    VII|        be in Him which required temptation? The question, to be sure,
 4    VII|        on the announcement of a temptation. And yet no temptation,
 5    VII|        a temptation. And yet no temptation, when aiming at the discovery
 6    VII|         point which prompts the temptation by its doubtfulness, falls
 7    VII|      question which compels the temptation whilst raising the doubt. [
 8    VII|        that they meant by their temptation to inquire about a point
 9    VII|      than brothers. Thus is the temptation about His birth unsuitable,
10    VII|  present. But the artifice of a temptation might have been thwarted
11    VII|        to bear the shame of the temptation. [8] There being, then,
12    VII|         suitable occasion for a temptation, the announcement that His
13     IX|      hungered under the devil's temptation; He thirsted with the woman
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