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A Treatise on the Anger of God Addressed to Donatus
Works (Divine Institutes, On the Death of the Persecutors, etc.) · Lactantius
- Chap. I.—Of divine and human wisdom
- Chap. II.—Of the truth and its steps, and of God
- Chap. III.—Of the good and evil things in human affairs, and of their author
- Chap. IV.—Of God and his affections, and the censure of Epicurus
- Chap. V.—The opinion of the Stoics concerning God; of His anger and kindness
- Chap. VI.—That God is angry
- Chap. VII.—Of man, and the brute animals, and religion
- Chap. VIII.—Of Religion
- Chap. IX.—Of the providence of God, and of opinions opposed to it
- Chap. X.—Of the origin of the world, and the nature of affairs, and the providence of God
- Chap. XI.—Of God, and that the one God, and by whose providence the world is governed and exists
- Chap. XII.—Of religion and the fear of God
- Chap. XIII.—Of the advantage and use of the world and of the seasons
- Chap. XIV.—Why God made man
- Chap. XV.—Whence sins extended to man
- Chap. XVI.—Of God, and his anger and affections
- Chap. XVII.—Of God, His care and anger
- Chap. XVIII.—Of the punishment of faults, that it cannot take place without anger
- Chap. XIX.—Of the soul and body, and of providence
- Chap. XX.—Of offences, and the mercy of God
- Chap. XXI.—Of the anger of God and man
- Chap. XXII.—Of sins, and the verses of the Sibyls respecting them recited
- Chap. XXIII.—Of the anger of God and the punishment of sins, and a recital of the verses of the Sibyls respecting it; and, moreover, a reproof and exhortation