Chapter

 1      I|         substance, for about His spiritual nature all are agreed. It
 2      V|     respect fleshly in the other spiritual; in one sense weak in the
 3     VI|          their nature being of a spiritual substance, although in some
 4     XV|        Christ's Flesh Being of a Spiritual Nature, Examined and Refuted
 5     XV|      might consistently devise a spiritual flesh for Christ. Any one
 6     XV|        derived from man, and not spiritual, and that His flesh was
 7  XXVII|          new seed, that is, in a spiritual manner, and cleanse it by
 8    XIX| mysterious seed of the elect and spiritual which they appropriate to
 9    XIX|         For He could have become spiritual flesh without such a process, ----
10    XIX|          womb, that is to say, a spiritual one. ~
11   XXII|          those (ancestors) had a spiritual flesh, that so there might
12   XXII|        flesh of Christ was not a spiritual one, since it is not traced
13   XXII|      traced from the origin of a spiritual stock. ~
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