| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] centers 6 central 3 centuries 23 century 205 century-the 2 cephas 4 cerdo 1 | Frequency [« »] 214 written 213 text 209 books 205 century 194 they 189 its 187 against | Edgar J. Goodspeed History of early christian literature IntraText - Concordances century |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 Pref | books he catalogued!~Half a century or more later, Jerome flourished. 2 Pref | lesser aids from the fourth century onward, we can do much to 3 1,1 | writing until the late second century. The most important example 4 1,3 | far as we know, and for a century Greek seems to have been 5 1,3 | Syriac and, in the third century, in Coptic, although at 6 1,6 | earlier years of the second century swelled to a flood in the 7 1,6 | in the last third of that century and reached proportions 8 1,6 | largely literary, that in a century and a half after its formation 9 2,2 | Toward the end of the first century, perhaps about A.D. 95, 10 2,2 | Alexandrinus of the fifth century, and into a Syriac manuscript 11 2,2 | version written in the twelfth century, in which the Letter of 12 2,2 | toward the end of the first century.~ ~ 13 2,3 | leaf-book of the fourth century.~Clement himself was spoken 14 2,4 | Fathers in the nineteenth century consisted of I-II Clement, 15 2,4 | fragments of the fourth century (Oxyrhynchus Papyri xv.1782; 16 2,4 | Coptic fragment of the fifth century (British Museum, Or. MS, 17 2,4 | composed early in the second century, perhaps at Antioch; this 18 2,4 | last third of the first century, possibly around A.D. 90. 19 2,5 | Antioch.~Early in the second century a Christian prisoner guarded 20 2,7 | latter part of the fourth century, among which Romans appears 21 2,7 | probably late in the fourth century, but each letter was interpolated 22 2,8 | early Church for almost a century and a half. What were Christians 23 2,8 | the middle of the second century took opposite views on them. 24 2,8 | toward the end of the second century, accepted it as scripture 25 2,9 | the middle of the second century a Greek Christian of Asia, 26 2,9 | Apostles, early in the second century, and again toward the end 27 2,9 | single leaf from the fifth century, came to light in 1908. 28 2,10| the middle of the second century we find a few accounts of 29 2,11| Ignatius, early in the second century, and Irenaeus, toward its 30 2,13| Abgar Letters.~ The third century witnessed a marked rivalry 31 2,13| the middle of the third century, when they were probably 32 2,14| place within the second century.”[3]~ ~ ~ 33 3 | Before the end of the first century, one early Christian writer 34 3 | Christians in the second century when the Jewish collection 35 3 | the middle of the third century, it was given a Christian 36 3 | last years of the first century and no doubt had the general 37 3 | last years of the first century, A.D. 95-l00. Hermas was 38 3 | the very end of the first century, or very early in the second. 39 3 | great vogue in the second century. It found its way into more 40 3 | versions (one from the second century), no complete Greek text 41 3 | Sinaitic manuscript (fourth century), but the last three-fourths 42 3 | manuscript of it (fifteenth century), part of which is now at 43 3 | Michigan papyrus (third century) contains almost a fourth 44 3 | beginning of the second century; later on, another author 45 3 | about the end of the second century, where it stands after the 46 3 | 48:1). Early in the third century it is quoted or paraphrased 47 3 | Peter. Early in the fourth century Methodius makes use of it, 48 3 | Magnesia, early in the fifth century, mentions it and puts its 49 3 | adversary. Sozomen, in the fifth century, says the Revelation was 50 3 | not later than the fifth century. The old stichometrical 51 3 | late second or early third century (2:90-338), from Methodius 52 3 | of Olympus, in the third century (Symposium 2:6), and from 53 3 | probably of the fourth century, in the Rainer Collection 54 3 | the middle of the scond century before Christ, no doubt 55 3 | into the fourth Christian century.~ Hermas, about A.D. 100, 56 3 | the middle of the third century some Gnostic in Egypt composed 57 4,3 | known in Egypt in the second century: the Gospel according to 58 4,3 | very beginning of the third century. In his Miscellanies, Clement 59 4,3 | toward the end of the fourth century describes the Sabellians 60 4,4 | about the end of the fourth century, says that he knew it only 61 4,4 | current in Greek in the second century and was probably written 62 4,4 | the middle of the second century. Hebrews was about seven-eighths 63 4,4 | Minor early in the second century, “related another story 64 4,4 | woman that, by the sixth century, had crept into manuscripts 65 4,4 | at the end of the second century, quotes a curious saying 66 4,4 | written in the fourth or fifth century, allies itself by its phraseology (“ 67 4,4 | John 2: 4). In the third century, Christian opinion in Egypt 68 4,4 | disappear early in the fourth century, for Eusebius lists it among 69 4,4 | toward the close of the century, could not find a Greek 70 4,4 | Nazarenes-who in the third century were using the book, and 71 4,4 | first half of the fifth century he derived from earlier 72 4,5 | Christians early in the second century to resort to the view that 73 4,5 | papyrus from the fourth century, refers to this gospel, 74 4,5 | toward the end of the second century (A.D. 191), is the first 75 4,5 | first half of the third century, refers to it, along with 76 4,5 | Eusebius, early in the fourth century (A.D- 326), mentions the 77 4,5 | bishop early in the fifth century, refers to the Gospel according 78 4,5 | not later than the fourth century. It was almost the only 79 4,6 | second quarter of the second century a Greek Christian in Egypt 80 4,6 | developed in the course of the century that had elapsed since Jesus' 81 4,6 | first half of the second century. This is the Rylands papyrus 82 4,8 | but sometime in the second century a work was written, probably 83 4,8 | the middle of the second century.~ The Secret Sayings, which 84 4,8 | Canonical Books (seventh century or earlier) and in the so-called “ 85 4,8 | really a product of the sixth century, although by these times 86 4,9 | that arose in the second century, the most Jewish was the 87 4,9 | from Irenaeus in the second century, from Origen and Hippolytus 88 4,9 | Toward the end of the second century the Ebionites produced a 89 4,9 | Epiphanius, in Cyprus, a century and a half later. Except 90 4,10| the middle of the second century the desire to set forth 91 4,10| chapters I9 and 20. Half a century earlier, Justin in his Dialogue ( 92 4,10| now assigned to the sixth century, repudiates it as heretical 93 4,10| summarized in the thirteenth century (A.D. 1275) in the Golden 94 4,10| the middle of the second century. The second, the Gospel 95 4,10| early as the late second century.~ Among the less well-known 96 4,11| the middle of the second century, but this hypothesis is 97 5,1 | the middle of the second century authentic memories of the 98 5,2 | Rome, early in the third century, shows it was highly regarded 99 5,2 | Testament in the fourth century. A fourth-century papyrus 100 5,3 | the beginning of the third century. So the Acts of Paul was 101 5,4 | of John.~ In the fourth century the Acts of Paul and the 102 5,4 | first half of the fifth century, a Life of John was written 103 5,5 | the sects in the second century led the churches to return 104 5,5 | writer early in the third century (A.D. 200-220) to compose 105 5,5 | first half of the third century, however, and was probably 106 5,6 | Thomas.~ Early in the third century some Christian novelist, 107 5,6 | India early in the third century, and some of the names in 108 5,6 | India in the first Christian century; but there is no reason 109 5,7 | part of India in the first century). The merchant claims Thomas 110 5,7 | Thessalonica in the twelfth century.~ The ascetic ideal of the 111 5,8 | the middle of the third century, perhaps as late as A.D. 112 5,9 | early years of the fourth century probably between 313 and 113 6,1 | be as late as the sixth century, and also in the Stichometry 114 6,1 | hymns, composed in the last century before Christ and extant 115 6,1 | the middle of the second century, before Christian theology 116 6,2 | second quarter of the second century. From another curious book, 117 6,2 | second quarter of the second century is considerable. For the 118 6,3 | Phrygia early in the second century. Papias lost no opportunity 119 6,3 | of Caesarea (late sixth century), Maximus the Confessor ( 120 6,3 | at the end of the ninth century. Of all the early Christian 121 7 | all written in the first century. Christian gropings toward 122 7,1 | beginning of the second century, or very early in it, the 123 7,1 | opening years of the second century, A.D. I00-110. Its primitive 124 7,2 | until early in the fourth century. Christian meetings had 125 7,2 | very early in the second century, in the Preaching of Peter. 126 7,3 | address as co-emperor. A century ado all that was known of 127 7,3 | fragment of it, from the tenth century, was published. This confirmed 128 7,3 | in the seventh or eighth century) is the story of a prince 129 7,3 | papyrus leaf of the fourth century in Oxyrhynchus Papyri xv. 130 7,3 | current in Greek in the fourth century, as Eusebius and the Oxyrhynchus 131 7,3 | in the seventh or eighth century in the romance of Barlaam 132 7,4 | Confessor in the seventh century reports Clement's mention 133 7,4 | Toward the end of the fifth century another man named Celsus 134 7,4 | Greek writer of the seventh century already mentioned, is the 135 7,4 | Outlines.~ In the sixth century another Greek dialogue between 136 8,1 | the middle of the second century, in defense of Christianity. 137 8,1 | the middle of the second century, and it was natural that 138 8,1 | the middle of the second century, when the memoirs of the 139 8,1 | from it in the sixteenth century. Even this is, for the Dialogue 140 8,1 | earliest comes from the tenth century, constitutes the oldest 141 8,1 | latter part of the third century, somewhere about the Aegean.~ 142 8,1 | early years of the third century.~ On Sovereignty makes use 143 8,1 | closing years of the second century. Six other works have come 144 8,1 | are as late as the fifth century.~ It may be that the fragments 145 8,2 | work in the late second century or the early third.~ ~ 146 8,3 | the middle of the second century a rhetorician from the East, 147 8,3 | probably early in the third century, was discovered at Dura- 148 8,4 | Christian history in the second century was Marcion. Although he 149 8,4 | the middle of the second century or soon after. In it he 150 8,4 | remarked that in the second century Marcion was the only man 151 9,1 | before the end of the first century, as the Revelation shows ( 152 9,1 | of Sinai, in the seventh century, credits Melito with a work 153 9,1 | unmentioned until the seventh century and in 1940 should have 154 9,1 | one written in the fourth century and preserving no less than 155 9,1 | one in Coptic (fourth century, now m the British Museum, 156 9,2 | Methodius, early in the fourth century, is the first writer to 157 9,3 | last third of the second century was Theophilus, the sixth 158 10 | Writers of the Late Second Century: Irenaeus and Hegesippus.~ 159 10,1 | hard pressed by nearly a century of schismatic movements, 160 10,1 | toward the end of the second century is to misunderstand the 161 10,2 | down to us from the second century. (We do not possess Justin' 162 10,2 | late second or early third century, so that it is almost contemporary 163 10,3 | middle of the eighteenth century by C. M. Pfaff (d. 1760).[ 164 11,1 | the middle of the second century. For a long time it was 165 12,2 | been made in the second century by Aquila, Theodotion,[71] 166 12,2 | Vatican manuscript, written a century later, must have reached 167 12,2 | toward the end of the fourth century. The library, with the Hexapla 168 12,2 | Caesarea early in the seventh century (A.D. 638), for in 616-17 169 12,7 | manuscript of the fourth century, discovered by Tischendorf 170 12,7 | Pamphilus and Eusebius.” Half a century later, in n.n. 360, Gregory 171 12,7 | Alexandria (late fourth century). The most interesting of 172 13 | Greek Writers of the Third Century.~ 173 13,6 | leaf of a sixth or seventh century papyrus book from Oxyrhynchus ( 174 13,9 | Chronicle early in the seventh century, and Georgius Syncellus, 175 13,9 | the middle of the third century (almost in the lifetime 176 13,11| both works of the following century, and it is quoted at considerable 177 13,11| middle years of the third century. But, of them all, we have 178 13,12| to Photius in the ninth century but survives today only 179 13,13| last decades of the third century and wrote not only theological 180 13,13| to Philip of Side (fifth century) both Pierius and his brother 181 13,15| latter half of the third century and perhaps the beginning 182 14,1 | latter part of the first century the writing of Latin literature 183 14,5 | second and early in the third century and held Monarchian and 184 14,8 | Latin writers of the secon century, M. Cornelius Fronto. For 185 14,9 | Fronto discovered in the past century. The absence of scripture 186 14,9 | manuscript of the ninth century, which is our sole independent 187 14,9 | the middle of the third century. In the third century, moreover, 188 14,9 | third century. In the third century, moreover, the empire was 189 14,11| middle years of the third century they are of the utmost value.~ ~ 190 14,13| latter part of the third century.~ Another famous old Latin 191 14,17| at the close of the third century a teacher of rhetoric and 192 14,17| written early in the ninth century, but many a better work 193 14,17| really a work of the sixth century, Arnobius' work is designated 194 14,21| Toward the close of the third century there lived in Poetovio, 195 14,21| Beatus, late in the eighth century, made use of Jerome's work 196 15,1 | and dating from the second century (Oxyrhynchus Papyrus xviii. 197 15,1 | papyrus of the early fourth century gives a partly legible list 198 15,3 | information about the later second century was derived from extensive 199 15,3 | From the end of the second century and the beginning of the 200 15,3 | last third of the second century (iv. 21). Longevity cannot 201 16 | and discipline. It was a century of great churches, great 202 16 | Theophilus the Christian, a fifth century work, by the monk Evagrius.~ [ 203 16 | manuscripts of the sixteenth century.~ [40] Address to the Greeks 204 16 | written in the twelfth century.~ [81] A Greek fragment 205 16 | Primasius in the sixth century also used it.~ [97] I.e.