Chapter

 1    III|   any other respect, as He certainly is not in the changeful
 2     IV|     us unworthy of Him who certainly would not have redeemed
 3     IV|    innocence? These things certainly are not "foolish." Inquire
 4     VI|  also enjoy. The fact will certainly recoil on them as a witness
 5    VII|    strange, then, would it certainly have been, if, while he
 6     IX|    into Gentile fables; it certainly testifies its own origin
 7     IX| stars), it would have been certainly well known. As the case
 8      X|   its secret nature, it is certainly not one of flesh. However,
 9     XI|   to make it visible would certainly have done His work better
10    XII|  exhibited corporeally. We certainly were ignorant that it was
11 XXVIII|    Now this description is certainly even more applicable to
12    XXI| seed of man, and in order, certainly, to bring forth a son. "
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