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Examples

  • This view is supported by the fact that in it he embodied the prayers, the Benedicite and Gratias, and probably also by the title Enchiridion, which, besides the titles 'Handbooklet' or 'The

    Historical Introductions to the Symbolical Books of the Evangelical Lutheran Church 1894

  • On the other hand, these reprints omit not only the word Enchiridion, but also the question, "How can bodily eating and drinking do such great things?" together with its answer.

    Historical Introductions to the Symbolical Books of the Evangelical Lutheran Church 1894

  • 'Enchiridion' -- which contains in an abbreviated form, adapted to children and simple understandings, the contents of his larger work, set out here in the form of question and answer.

    Life of Luther Julius Koestlin

  • He was born in the late first century A.D. and was educated by the famous Stoic teacher Epictetus and preserved the high moral teachings of his master in a handbook known as the Enchiridion.

    Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011

  • He was born in the late first century A.D. and was educated by the famous Stoic teacher Epictetus and preserved the high moral teachings of his master in a handbook known as the Enchiridion.

    Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011

  • He was born in the late first century A.D. and was educated by the famous Stoic teacher Epictetus and preserved the high moral teachings of his master in a handbook known as the Enchiridion.

    Alexander the Great Philip Freeman 2011

  • In the Enchiridion, which is regularly described as the work where Platonic influence is strongest, he endorses a dualism between a godlike soul and a physical body similar to the body of any animal.

    Desiderius Erasmus Nauert, Charles 2008

  • The Enchiridion is a briefer treatise on the grace of God and represents Augustine's fully matured theological perspective -- after the magnificent achievements of the De Trinitate and the greater part of the De civitate Dei, and after the tremendous turmoil of the Pelagian controversy in which the doctrine of grace was the exact epicenter.

    Confessions and Enchiridion, newly translated and edited by Albert C. Outler 345-430 1955

  • The maxim of Epictetus in the "Enchiridion," "Never preach how others ought to eat, but eat you as becomes you," seemed to be his rule.

    The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 21, July, 1859 Various

  • This alone explains his division of theology in the "Enchiridion," which at first sight seems so strange.

    The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne 1840-1916 1913

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