Chapter

 1    XII|   nothing; there is not even the name of a human being, only that
 2    XII|          about God, it names the name of God. Before it acquires
 3   XIII|      understand the soul when we name the flesh, and when we indicate
 4   XIII|          if they are called by a name which differs from their
 5   XIII|       for instance, receives the name of brick. It retains not
 6   XIII|        brick. It retains not the name which designated its former
 7   XIII|         is one body, and has one name indicative, of course, of
 8  XXVII| character of His flesh, from its name and description as that
 9  XXVII|  supporting my argument from the name of Adam, why is Christ called
10    XIX|   mentioned as "believing in His name," in order to point out
11    XIX|      when all who believe in the name of the Lord are, by reason
12    XXI|         womb He had been. Such a name as this a strange flesh
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