The third is in the last lines, wherein the man begins to speak to the work itself, as if to comfort it, as it were, and all these three parts are in due order to be demonstrated, as has been said above.
For as has been said above, the heart cannot trust in Christ and at the same time in the doctrines or the works of men.
If hope would rely upon works, then, indeed, it would be uncertain, because works cannot pacify the conscience, as has been said above frequently.
For this opinion is a manifest insult to the Gospel, which teaches that the remission of sins is freely granted us for Christ's sake, as has been said above at some length.
Giovanni were then being given their finish, he was put to labour on those figures, in company with many others, as it has been said above.
The four galleys under Diego de Medrado proved, as has been said above, useless from the first, and never took any share in the fighting in the Channel.
The guns were, as has been said above, often heavy, but the artillery practice of the crews was very rough.
Now, whereas the Spanish sailor was, as has been said above, subordinate and despised, the English seaman had conquered his due place of superiority in the fleet.
Anger is said to be composed of sorrow and desire, not as though they were its parts, but because they are its causes: and it has been said above (Q.
He says also in the same passage that "lovers of wine are more daring, on account of the heat of the wine": hence ithas been said above (Q.
This makes clear the nature of the Lord's presence in the heavens, that He is every where and with everyone in the good and truth that go forth from Him; consequently He is with angels in what is His own, as has been said above (n.
For, as has been said above, the faces of angels are the forms of their interiors, thus of the affections that belong to their love and faith.
It has been said above that in the heavens there are larger and smaller societies.
For heaven and the church are a marriage of good and truth, from which is marriage love, as has been said above.
Jacopo d'Arezzo was appointed general of the congregation of Monte Oliveto, nineteen years after he had employed Spinello to do a number of things at Florence and at Arezzo, as has been said above.
At length, as has been said above, he was driven out by the fury of the people.
And although there were some few portraits made in this manner, as has been said above, yet they had not been very successful, nor were they nearly so well executed as those of Giotto.
And because it has been said above, that in their actions men must take into account the character of the times in which they live, and guide themselves accordingly, I shall treat this point more fully in the following Chapter.
The Romans were not only, as has been said above, less ungrateful than other republics, but were also more lenient and more considerate than others in punishing the captains of their armies.
The same thing is imaged in the lungs, whose arteries and veins correspond to the affections of love, and whose respirations correspond to the perceptions and thoughts of the understanding, as has been said above.
Further, God knows things that neither are, nor will be, nor have been, as has been said above (A.
Although God's willing a thing is not by absolute necessity, yet it is necessary by supposition, on account of the unchangeableness of the divine will, as has been said above (A.
Secondary causes cannot escape the order of the first universal cause, as has been said above (Q.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "has been said above" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.