theophilus in A Sentence

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    Who Was Theophilus of Antioch?

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    Theophilus boldly refuted arguments of Autolycus.

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    possibly Nicias or Theophilus.

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    In this case, Agathokleia was the widow of another king, possibly Nicias or Theophilus.

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    In this case, Agathokleia was likely the widow of another king, possibly Nicias or Theophilus.

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    The first book I wrote, Theophilus, concerned all that Jesus began both to do and to teach.

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    By the time of his death, about 182 C. E., Theophilus had apparently become a tireless apologist,

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    The former treatise have I made, O Theophilus, of all that Jesus began both to do and teach.

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    Nevertheless, a fifth- century church patriarch named Theophilus once cautioned:“ The works of Origen are like a meadow of every kind of flower.

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    However, like Arius, Theophilus taught that the Son was actually begotten in heaven before his birth in Bethlehem to create“all that he determined.”.

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    Meanwhile, the Peshwa managed to escape beyond Smith's pursuit, but his southward advance was constrained by the advance of a Company force led by General Theophilus Pritzler.

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    By the time of his death, about 182 C. E., Theophilus had apparently become a tireless apologist, whose writings are of interest to genuine Christians of our modern age.

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    A further sampling of Theophilus' attack on the false gods of his day is observable in the following words to Autolycus:“ The names of those whom you say you worship, are the names of dead men.

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    No one knows exactly who Theophilus was, but we know that Luke's purpose in writing the two companion books was so that Theophilus would know with certainty about the person and work of Jesus Christ(Luke 1:4).

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    Pertinent to the topic at hand, Theophilus once invented a particularly useful alarm clock(presented at the Great Exhibition in Hyde Park in 1851) that, at the appropriate time, would tip the bed over, unceremoniously dumping the sleeping occupant on the floor.

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    It has also been speculated(with no hard evidence to back this notion up, so take this with a very large grain of salt) that Carroll based the character on Theophilus Carter, a noteworthy furniture dealer who lived at 48 High Street, Oxford while Carroll was an Oxford don.

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