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Edgar J. Goodspeed
History of early christian literature

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(Hapax - words occurring once)


000-becal | becam-delig | delin-freed | fremd-leloi | leoni-peter | petra-seleu | self--verce | verdi-zz

     Chapter, Paragraph
1 15,2 | when he said there were 30,000 volumes, but we have no 2 15,3 | phus, Justin, Tatian, The 0philus, Irenaeus, Tertulhan, Julius 3 16 | religions, CXXXI 1946, 85-108.~ [76] J. Scherer, Extraits 4 16 | Theologica, XIV, 1960, 70-113.~ [62] J.B. Lightfoot and 5 6,1 | hymn” the second part (Pss. 115-18) of the Hallel. Paul 6 4,5 | Oxyrhynchus gospel fragment 1224, a badly broken papyrus 7 7,4 | according to Epiphanius, in A.D. 128-29, so that his translation 8 3 | of heaven and hell (A.D. 1300); and Gustave Dore's fearful 9 5,3 | by Nicephorus,[26] about 1320, of a visit to Ephesus, 10 2,2 | already noted. Abu'1 Barakat (1363), in his account of Christian 11 8,1 | two manuscripts dated in 1364 and 1541, the latter being 12 16 | Oxyrhynchus Papyri xi. 1380.~ [65] Cf. H. Jordan, Geschichte 13 5,7 | Oxyrhynchus Papyri xi. 1389) and of the hymn near the 14 16 | 63] Lausiac History 139.~ [64] Oxyrhynchus Papyri 15 12,5 | with Heraclides (see p. 142).~ ~ 16 7,1 | flourished between A.D. 145 and 180. Clement says that 17 2,11| and printed by Caxton in 1483, and in such great collections 18 8,1 | manuscripts dated in 1364 and 1541, the latter being a copy 19 14,9 | as a part of Arnobius, in 1543, but was soon recognized ( 20 14,16| printed editions of them in 1545 and 1550. By 1579 however, 21 14,16| editions of them in 1545 and 1550. By 1579 however, both works 22 13,2 | left of it, was found in 1551, and while the head and 23 5,2 | appeared as a prophet in A.D. 156, in Mysia, in the north-central 24 14,9 | but was soon recognized (1560) by Balduinus as the long-lost 25 2,11| Foxe's Book of Martyrs (1563). Such narratives played 26 5,5 | Sabine deity; indeed in 1574 the base of a statue of 27 14,16| them in 1545 and 1550. By 1579 however, both works were 28 9,1 | Oxyrhynchus Papyri xiii. 1600, a fifth-century leaf, covering 29 4,9 | of Marcus Aurelius (A.D. 161-18o), or (with Epiphanius 30 2,4 | to the King of England in 1628, one of the first acts of 31 2,4 | the Letters of Clement in 1633. The subsequent publication 32 16 | and New York, 1965, pp. 164-69.~ [70] A. Harnack, Geschichte 33 2,11| volumes in both the Antwerp (1643-1910) and the Brussels ( 34 2,4 | possible for Cotelier in 1672 to publish the “Works of 35 14,21| Lambeth and published in 1688 by W. Cave. Although it 36 2,4 | Apostolicis); when Ittig in 1699 carried on that task, he 37 13,2 | to have perished. But in 1701 a Greek work surveying the 38 9,1 | probably between A.D. 169 and 176, certainly by z 80. Three 39 10,3 | century by C. M. Pfaff (d. 1760).[59] It is evident that 40 7,3 | in Oxyrhynchus Papyri xv. 1778. Another fragment, covering 41 2,4 | century (Oxyrhynchus Papyri xv.1782; Didache 1:36-4a, 2:7b-3: 42 14,8 | disappeared, however, when in 1815 Angelo Mai found in a sixth-century 43 12,1 | peak. He was born m (A.D. 184-85. His father was a Christian 44 13,2 | Philosophumena of Origen. In 1842 a Greek named Minas Minoides 45 2,11| 1910) and the Brussels (1845-1926) editions.~ Further 46 13,7 | and published by Tattam in 1848. But, in igoo, Hauer discovered 47 13,2 | books E. Miller published in 1851 as Origen's Philosophurneua 48 16 | Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum, 1868-71. ~ [94] Collection of 49 7,3 | circulated in his day. But in 187 8 an Armenian fragment of 50 8,2 | library during the siege of 1870, there stood a Letter to 51 8,3 | translation by Moesinger in 1876. An Old German version of 52 2,8 | Hilgenfeld's edition of 1877.~The influence of the “Letter 53 2,4 | when O. von Gebhardt, in 1884, printed a copy of a twelfth-century 54 14,13| Cheltenham, England, in 1885 (though composed as early 55 8,3 | published by Ciasca in 1888, and a Latin form of it 56 7,3 | the emperor Hadrian. In 1889, however, J. Rendel Harris 57 16 | McGiffert, Eusebius, New York, 1890, p. 259.~ [68] Address, 58 16 | Romische Quartalschrift, V 1891, 217-65; VI 1892, 339-65.~ [ 59 5,2 | denied in his day.~ But in 1896 a Coptic papyrus of the 60 16 | antike Kunstprosa (Leipzig, 1898), II, 547; cf. Bonner's 61 4,9 | Marcus Aurelius (A.D. 161-18o), or (with Epiphanius and 62 16 | Theological Studies, II (1900-19010, 273-74).~ [4] For instance, 63 4,4 | discovered at Oxyrhynchus in 1903; and since these fragments 64 2,9 | century, came to light in 1908. Meanwhile in 1907 a work 65 6,1 | manuscript on January 4, 1909. A second manuscript of 66 4,5 | the second century (A.D. 191), is the first Christian 67 16 | altchristlichen Literatur, Leipzig 1911, pp. 458-59.~ [66] Edited 68 16 | 101] Eusebiana, Oxford 1912, 136-78.~ [102] See Quintilian, 69 2,9 | Apostles; it was published in 1913 and preserves the work in 70 16 | aeltesten Apologeten, Gottinberg 1914, pp. 310-11.~ [52] Melenges 71 16 | published by J. Schaefer 1917); as revised by Hatnack, 72 2,9 | and Ethiopic, Schmidt in 1919 published the text. But 73 16 | Thomson, Freiburg, 1963), 192-201.~ [50] E. Norden, Die 74 7,3 | Apology of Aristides.~ In 1922 a few lines of chapters 75 16 | fremden Gott (2d ed., Leipzig, 1924), p. 256, and Burkitt, Journal 76 16 | Theological Studies, XXX (1929), 279-80.~ [47] The so-called 77 16 | Rome: American Academy, 1930. Primasius in the sixth 78 1,4 | of Lake and Oulton (1926, 1932).~Again, a convenient break 79 8,3 | Europos on the Euphrates in 1933 and was published by C. 80 16 | neutestamentliche Wissenschaft, XXXVII 1938, 186-87.~ [99] See A. Ehrhardt, “ 81 12,7 | of biblical science.~ In 1941 the British were using caves 82 4,10| literature in modern times. In 1945-46 there was found a jar 83 16 | histoire des religions, CXXXI 1946, 85-108.~ [76] J. Scherer, 84 16 | Vigiliae Christianae I, 1947, 129-36~ [36] Journal of 85 16 | le Fils, et l’ame, Cairo 1949.~ [75] O. Gueraud in Revue 86 16 | Walter Ewing Crum (Boston, 1950), 91-154.~ [23] R. M. Wilson ( 87 16 | Journal of Archeology, LV 1951, 283.~ [74] J. Scherer, 88 16 | Samosate, Paradosis, Freiburg 1952, 15-23.~ [105] Harvard 89 16 | Contre Celse dOrigene, Cairo 1956.~ [77] J. Scherer, Le commentaire 90 16 | Rom. III. 5-V. 7, Cairo 1957.~ [78] H. Chadwick in Journal 91 16 | des Johannes (Wiesbaden, 1962) ; also S. Giversen, Apocryphon 92 14,9 | Christians' possession of them 1s not determined by the measure 93 16 | Thomson, Freiburg, 1963), 192-201.~ [50] E. Norden, Die antike 94 13,3 | four books, written in A.D. 203-4, which is complete in 95 14,6 | belong to this time, 204-5 to 206-7.~ But by 207-8 the tension 96 14,6 | the following five years, 208-13, he wrote also the books 97 14,6 | To Scapula, and in 212 or 213 his Scorpaace, warning against 98 16 | Kirchengeschichte, LXXI 1960, I-23, 193-214.~ [104] Cf. H. de Riedmatten, 99 15,1 | Oxyrhynchus Papyrus xviii. 2192) clearly shows how such 100 8,1 | of Julius Africanus (A.D. 221) and was probably written 101 13,9 | man of letters.~ In A.D. 221r he published his Chronography, 102 14,17| Chronicle for the year ***2343, or A.D. 327, Against the 103 14,9 | written sometime between A.D. 238 and 249, when the empire 104 13,4 | Artemon, written about A.D. 23o-certainly after the Refutation, which 105 13,6 | computus), written in A.D. 242-43 and wrongly ascribed 106 14,13| work composed early in A.D. 243 to correct Hippolytus, faulty 107 14,16| 249 or the beginning of 25o. Letters 30 and 36 (among 108 13,10| return to Alexandria in 261, but a new series of calamities 109 5,4 | did not fall until A.D. 262, when the Goths destroyed 110 16 | Studies, II (1900-19010, 273-74).~ [4] For instance, 111 16 | Latin version~Commentaries; 275 out of 291 lost in Greek; 112 16 | Theological Studies, XXX (1929), 279-80.~ [47] The so-called 113 Pref | in Palestine about A.D. 280 to study with Pamphilus 114 16 | of Archeology, LV 1951, 283.~ [74] J. Scherer, Enretien 115 16 | Evangelium vom fremden Gott (2d ed., Leipzig, 1924), p. 116 3 | Son of God, Saviour” (vss. 2I7-44).[8] Books 11-I4, also show 117 16 | The Apostolic Fathers, 2nd ed., London and New York 118 13,14| Christianity before the year 306.~ ~ 119 16 | Apologeten, Gottinberg 1914, pp. 310-11.~ [52] Melenges Franz 120 15,4 | which he wrote between 312 and 318. In the latter work 121 16 | Cumont, Brussels 1936, pp. 321-63.~ [53] Paris. Graec. 122 14,17| the year ***2343, or A.D. 327, Against the Heathen does 123 16 | Leipzig, 1893-1904, I, 328-29.~ [71] Theodotion’s 124 3 | early third century (2:90-338), from Methodius of Olympus, 125 16 | V 1891, 217-65; VI 1892, 339-65.~ [100] Church History 126 5,5 | Liberius dates from A.D. 354, and its earlier portions, 127 16 | review in Gnomon (1964), 357-59.~ [6] See also the sixteenth 128 3 | names of many of the 360 or 365 angels who made the various 129 8,3 | A.D- 541-46. Efrem (d. 373) wrote a commentary on it 130 4,10| mentioned by Epiphanius about 374 as being in use among Egyptian 131 13,4 | heresy-Epiphanius, Philastrius [A.D. 383], and the author of an anonymous 132 16 | out of 574 lost in Greek; 388 not even in th~Latin version~ 133 12,4 | published in Rome in A.D. 398-99 by the diligent Rufinus, 134 2,4 | Museum, Or. MS, 9271, 10:3b - 12:2a) have been discovered. 135 14,16| Elvira) in Spain (d. after 3g2).~ ~ 136 14,17| progress, probably in A.D- 3o4-io. In fact, it is a defense 137 5,2 | papyrus written about A.D. 3oo, has given us the concluding 138 14,16| the time of Rufinus (d. 410) the work On the Trinity 139 6,3 | Eusebius (326)-Jerome (d. 420), Philip of Side (ca. 430) 140 14,15| historian Socrates (d. after 439) says that he suffered martyrdom 141 10,4 | Jerome and Sozomen (ca. 440) probably knew Hegesippus 142 12,3 | The list reaches at least 444 for the Old Testament (a 143 16 | Justin manuscripts, Paris. 450, was a corpus of twelve 144 16 | 63.~ [53] Paris. Graec. 451.~ [54] The heresy of Hermogenes 145 8,3 | heresy written about A.D. 453 he relates (1:20) that he 146 16 | London and New York 1893, pp. 488-89.~ [63] Lausiac History 147 2,4 | Papyri xv.1782; Didache 1:36-4a, 2:7b-3:2a) and one Coptic 148 13,11| of it (Church History vi. 4o-vii. 28). He wrote an exposition 149 5,8 | Manicheans 38) around A.D- 4oo about Maximilla's efforts 150 5,8 | Gregory of Tours (A.D- 538-94) came across the Greek 151 8,3 | the Codex Fuldensis, A.D- 541-46. Efrem (d. 373) wrote 152 16 | Kunstprosa (Leipzig, 1898), II, 547; cf. Bonner's ed., p. 20.~ ~ [ 153 16 | Septuagit column)~Homilies; 554 out of 574 lost in Greek; 154 5,2 | and gave its length as 3,560 lines, or more than twice 155 13,6 | was the year of the world 5738. One of the book's most 156 16 | column)~Homilies; 554 out of 574 lost in Greek; 388 not even 157 8,1 | Apology, written about i 5o, an appendix to it, and 158 12,2 | in a hand of about A.D. 600, at the end of Esther and 159 12,2 | century (A.D. 638), for in 616-17 Paul of Tella, a Syrian 160 5,8 | perhaps as late as A.D. 620, some Christian, probably 161 15,2 | destroyed by the Arabs in 637.~ ~ 162 12,2 | the seventh century (A.D. 638), for in 616-17 Paul of 163 6,3 | Maximus the Confessor (d. 662), Anastasius of Sinai (d. 164 10,3 | like John of Damascus, A.D. 675-749, but some of the fragments 165 2,4 | of the “Didache,” I:1-2.6a, and J. Schlecht, in 1899, 166 5,7 | the Nicephorus list as r,6oo lines accounts for hardly 167 13,6 | follow the year of the world 6ooo and was careful to prove 168 5,8 | private property (chap. 6r), and by the Origenians 169 6,3 | Anastasius of Sinai (d. ca. 700), Georgius Hamartolus (ca. 170 10,3 | John of Damascus, A.D. 675-749, but some of the fragments 171 5,5 | list gives its length as 2,750 lines, or about that of 172 14,9 | written between A.D. 253 and 758 and preserved under the 173 5,4 | Council of Nicaea, A.D. 787, as it had been appealed 174 2,4 | 1782; Didache 1:36-4a, 2:7b-3:2a) and one Coptic fragment 175 13,6 | Oxyrhynchus Papyri vi. 870) and a considerable portion 176 14,18| Jerome, in On Illustrious Men 8o, gives a list of twelve 177 9,2 | in A.D. 177-80.~ In A.D. 914 Arethas, the learned bishop 178 2,4 | British Museum, Or. MS, 9271, 10:3b - 12:2a) have been 179 16 | Leloir in Biblica XL, 1959, 959-70.~ [46] From a Syriac 180 14,18| written in Nicomedia in A-D- 304, after the persecution 181 16 | vol I, London 1934.~ [67] A.C. McGiffert, Eusebius, New 182 16 | translation of the Hebrew of Ps. aa: i, which is quoted in Matthew ( 183 5,6 | from their husbands and to abolish the marriage relation. It 184 1,1 | of the Mishnah, the Pirke Aboth or “Chapters of the Fathers.”~ ~ 185 5,7 | Although the Acts of Thomas abounds in long speeches, prayers, 186 2,8 | When Genesis declared that Abraham circumcised 318 males of 187 3 | and their salvation by Abrasax, Sablo, and Gamaliel, descending 188 5,3 | travelers.” This apparent abruptness now disappears; it is just 189 5,8 | were vegetarians and total abstainers and renounced marriage and 190 5,7 | it goes beyond it in its abstinence from meat and wine. The 191 2,2 | manuscript already noted. Abu'1 Barakat (1363), in his 192 11,3 | that had appropriated and abused it.~ In the Outlines, Eusebius 193 3 | reached not only to Egypt and Abyssinia but in later centuries, 194 16 | duodecim, Rome: American Academy, 1930. Primasius in the 195 6,1 | Sophia shows that they were acceptable to some groups of Gnostics 196 14,3 | later, A.D. 211, and the accession of Caracalla, persecution 197 9,2 | Resurrection ofthe Dead which accompanies the Apology of Athenagoras 198 13,8 | interpretation. Little that he accomplished can be considered final, 199 2,2 | there. The Roman Church accordingly sent a long letter to the 200 13,9 | literary -the miscellanies accumulated by a traveled and inquiring 201 4,4 | story about a woman who was accused of many sins before the 202 4,6 | that Moses becomes their accuser. They protest that they 203 9,2 | moral than those of their accusers; and appeals again and again 204 14,12| and seeks to soften its acerbities. It was written early in 205 3 | upon Sophia, the mother of Achamoth (cf. Iren. 1. 21. 5). James 206 16 | 1934.~ [85] Hippolytus, Achelis ed. P. 231, I. 10.~ [86] 207 14,9 | chaps. 16-38). Caecilius acknowledges himself defeated by the 208 5,2 | life. Was he convicted or acquitted? The generation for which 209 10,4 | little farm of thirty-nine acres. They showed their toilworn 210 3 | begins with the wellknown acrosticJesus Christ; Son of God, 211 7,4 | Christianity and Judaism was acted upon by a whole series of 212 16 | Cf. H. de Riedmatten, Les actes du proces de Paul de Samosate, 213 1,4 | of Nicaea in 325, for the actions there taken so colored the 214 12,2 | one at Nicopolis, near Actium. He also found three more 215 9,2 | for the possibility and actuality of resurrection but for 216 14,11| situation was made more acute by the Carthaginian presbyter 217 9,3 | Irenaeus but Tertullian, Adamantius, Minucius Felix, Clement, 218 6,3 | said, attended Peter, who adapted his instructions to the 219 2,13| correspondence, the Teaching of Addai, passed into Armenian and 220 9,1 | Tertullian was even more addicted to that sort of thing himself 221 15,3 | martyrs, and (7)-a later addition-martyrdoms in his own time. In addition, 222 9,1 | by the detection of three additional fragments of the same homily, 223 8,3 | what is repeated in the Address-examples taken from natural history 224 5,3 | the brethren at Rome and addresses them. He is tried, apparently 225 14,6 | Tertullian was a strong adherent of the,, Catholic movement, 226 16 | 100-102.~ [30] Against Adimantus xvii. 5.~ [31] According 227 2,5 | must have been striving to adjust himself through these weeks 228 5,2 | only as teaching but as administering baptism unrebuked. Paul 229 5,7 | her companions and then administers the communion to them, marking 230 7,2 | difficult position. Under Roman administration religions had to be recognized — “ 231 13,14| with his martyrdom in 311. Administrative conflicts led to the Melitian 232 14,8 | we may discuss also the admirabl work of another gifted Latin, 233 8,1 | speaks of him as the “most admirable Justin” and refers to his 234 12,4 | his preface to Jerome's admiration for Origen that offended 235 11,2 | another of his pupils and admirers (Church History vi. 14. 236 6,1 | seems Christian, although admittedly they are also present in 237 4,5 | probably to that church, admitting that it contained much that 238 2,2 | among others. After a long admonition to lead a godly life, Clement 239 7,3 | as co-emperor. A century ado all that was known of this 240 16 | conversion of Constantine and the adoption of Christianity by the empire, 241 14,4 | Veiling Virgins, On the Adornment of Women, On Baptism, On 242 4,4 | to the incident about the adulterous woman that, by the sixth 243 11,3 | Cassiodorus, under the name of the Adumbrations of Clement. Smaller fragments 244 11,3 | his translation, as the Adurrzbrations. Whatever the value of Clement' 245 10,3 | Justin Martyr but shows the advance Christian thought was making 246 10,2 | phrase is used). But, as he advanced, the work grew under his 247 14,3 | that persecution simply advances Christianity: “We multiply 248 12,6 | pupils to make full use, in advancing the Christian cause, of 249 14,9 | the measure of wealth or advantages they may enjoy. Reasonable 250 5,1 | edifying narratives of love and adventure. The emphasis put on sex 251 14,15| designing and self-seeking adventurer.~ Novatian was the first 252 3 | the mouth of his heathen adversary. Sozomen, in the fifth century, 253 14,9 | Arnobius Against the Heathen (Adversus nationes) and preserved 254 6,2 | shall always be able to draw advice, as also from the former 255 13,11| schism of Novatian (whom he advised to give up his episcopal 256 1,6 | when in the defense and advocacy of Christianity men like 257 4,9 | opposed animal sacrifice and advocated vegetarianism. One of these 258 14,8 | reform Roman literary style, advocating a return to the earliest 259 8,1 | century, somewhere about the Aegean.~ In the Address (Oratio) 260 5,8 | escape from her husband Aegeas or Aegeates, the proconsul 261 5,8 | from her husband Aegeas or Aegeates, the proconsul of Greece, 262 16 | Melito in Goodspeed. Die aeltesten Apologeten, Gottinberg 1914, 263 14,15| account of the Novatian affair in Church History vi. 43, 264 1,3 | force destined powerfully to affect the life of mankind as a 265 14,9 | latter from the clumsy and affected pieces of Fronto discovered 266 3 | the centuries, strongly affecting Dante, in the Divine Comedy, 267 6,1 | with which they have other affinities. They sometimes recall characteristic 268 2,13| and that you heal those afflicted with lingering diseases, 269 11,3 | vi. 15). Clement is not afraid to describe the true Gnostic, 270 15,3 | Corpus with Papylus and Agathonice (iv. 15- 46-48)-and to it 271 10,4 | of insurrection, and his agent found two grandsons of Jude 272 13,15| Life and Rational Activity, Aglaophon or Treatise on the Resurrection 273 14,3 | Codex Agobardinus, given by Agobard, bishop of Lyons, who died 274 6,1 | discoverer of Aristides, in agog found, among some Syriac 275 4,5 | suffered a humiliating and agonizing death such as the gospels 276 2,7 | was aware of this and was agreeable to it. It is reasonable, 277 10,4 | the vagaries of the sects. Agrippa Castor, about A.D. 135, 278 Pref | catalogue of his library. Ah, Eusebius! Immortal cataloguer, 279 6,3 | traitorous Nadan, in the Story of Ahikar, he swelled to a hideous 280 4,9 | enkris (“oil cake”) for akris (“locust”) (Mark 1:6). It 281 14,13| Against Dice-Throwers (Ad Aleatores). Harnack gave reasons for 282 13,10| Western Christianity found him alert and energetic in dealing 283 13,2 | in 1859. One scholar, d'Ales, has endeavored to show 284 16 | described it.~ [55] Epist. Ad Algasiam 121.~ [56] Texte und Untersuchungen 285 2,10| inquires about the Christian allegiance of all the prisoners. When 286 2,8 | laws of Leviticus are also allegorized. They only mean that we 287 8,1 | s book. Justin naturally allegorizes the Jewish scriptures in 288 2,8 | representing the cross. The allegorizing teacher who offered this 289 4,4 | fourth or fifth century, allies itself by its phraseology (“ 290 5,2 | more sharply: “I do not allow women to teach;.. they must 291 4,5 | to them that sleep” — an allusion to the Descent into Hades, 292 13,15| Platonic quotations and allusions. Methodius' other works, 293 9,1 | regarded as a bulwark and ally of it, not as a hostile 294 2,9 | in “the Father, the Lord Almighty, and in Jesus Christ our 295 13,4 | written a work against the Alogi, or opponents of the Logos 296 14,3 | Their habit of holding aloof from public shows, which 297 2,9 | famous story of Jesus and his alphabet teacher (chap. 4), which 298 16 | Bartholomew, James the son of Alpheus, and Thomas seem to be omitted; 299 9,1 | complete work of Melito can so alter the picture of one phase 300 13,7 | Apostolic Tradition, much altered.~ ~ 301 7,3 | the text, but it has been alternately expanded and condensed for 302 6,1 | Kings 4:32). Certainly their amalgamation with the Psalms of the Pharisees 303 12,1 | dictated to more than seven amanuenses, who relieved each other 304 2,5 | fact, he was probably his amanuensis. Ignatius says that the 305 1,6 | reached proportions that amaze the modern reader. The volume, 306 14,11| whole series gives us an amazingly clear picture of Christian 307 16 | sur le Pere, le Fils, et lame, Cairo 1949.~ [75] O. Gueraud 308 2,11| communion together and parted amicably. After his return to Smyrna, 309 13,10| of the Alexandrians, and amid such scenes Dionysius died, 310 12,7 | near Toura in Egypt for ammunition dumps, and in one of them 311 4,6 | duplications of material, which amounted to at least half their total 312 11,3 | be to jewelry, cosmetics, amusements, and public spectacles. 313 9,3 | idolatry and offers some analogies for the resurrection. The 314 8,2 | relation to the world is analogous to that of soul and body. 315 15,3 | from the paschal canons by Anatolius of Laodicea.~ The Church 316 16 | Casey.~ [43] Justin et lAncien Testament, Paris, 1964, 317 5,7 | that these works were so anciently known in Syriac versions. 318 7,2 | from the sermon in Acts 17 and-perhaps-bits of the Preaching of Peter. 319 5,7 | and takes him to India. At Andrapolis the king's daughter is being 320 5,9 | John, Peter, Thomas, and Andrew-in the early years of the fourth 321 7,2 | now known to exist. Dom Andriessen has propounded the ingenious 322 16 | story is obviously based on Androcles and the lion.~ [28] This 323 14,20| Deaths ofthe Persecutors, ands the Epitome ofthe Institutes — 324 Pref | Goodspeed~Bel-Air, Los Angeles~ ~ ~ 325 3 | describing his own original angelic state, higher than the god 326 14,8 | disappeared, however, when in 1815 Angelo Mai found in a sixth-century 327 5,7 | palace in heaven. The king is angry, but his brother dies and 328 7,3 | Egyptians worship plants and animals-crocodiles, cats, dogs, and snakes. 329 4,10| Jesus' birth all nature, animate and inanimate, stops transfixed. 330 11,3 | sketch of those powerful and animated discourses which it was 331 14,10| himself as bishop.~ Popular animosity against the Christians was 332 14,17| vigorous opponent of Christi anity but was at length converted. 333 7,2 | race, as Tacitus put it (Annals xv. 44), and to charge them 334 1,4 | available in English in the annotated edition of A. C. McGiffert, 335 13,11| to be celebrated and to announce this in a letter sent to 336 6,1 | his record in that field announced in Kings. Such verdicts 337 5,5 | by flying over the city, announces that he will do it again. 338 4,7 | striking dead those who annoyed him, covering his teachers 339 4,10| a widower with sons. The annunciation, conception, journey to 340 13,10| Antioch, Paul of Samosata, had antagonized the churches by his views 341 2,4 | to A.D. 180. A terminus ante quern is provided by a quotation 342 8,3 | Here Tatian takes the anti-ascetic verses of I Con 7:3-6 and 343 10,2 | He was the most important anti-Gnostic writer of antiquity. His 344 5,9 | the other Catholic and anti-Gnostic-the latter probably the Acts 345 10,2 | hand, was later used by the anti-heretical writers Hippolytus and Epiphanius. 346 5,2 | clearly seeking to correct the antifeminism of I Timothy, which he flatly 347 16 | 201.~ [50] E. Norden, Die antike Kunstprosa (Leipzig, 1898), 348 2,9 | from history in A.D. 6; Antipas, of course, is whom he meant. ~ 349 6,1 | movement in the great arias, antiphonies, and choruses of the Revelation.~ 350 9,1 | rhetoric-exclamation, apostrophe, antithesis, rhetorical questions, startling 351 2,11| sixty-nine volumes in both the Antwerp (1643-1910) and the Brussels ( 352 5,2 | generations later hardly anybody knew it. The letters to 353 15,1 | Acts of the Apostles,” “Apa Bal” (?), “Song of Songs,” “ 354 7,1 | worship of cats, dogs, and apes has been taken to suggest 355 7 | Josephus' two volumes Against Apion, all written in the first 356 16 | Henry A. Sanders, Beati in Apocalipsin libri duodecim, Rome: American 357 3 | Magnesia, about A.D. 400 (Apocritica 4:6-7). There is also a 358 16 | Die dref Version,, des Apokryphon des Johannes (Wiesbaden, 359 5,3 | friends up in the temple of Apollo, part of which collapses 360 15,1 | them. I have instructed Apollonides to send me certain books 361 16 | Goodspeed. Die aeltesten Apologeten, Gottinberg 1914, pp. 310- 362 14,8 | Christianity-Renan called it the pearl of apologeti literature-and he wrote 363 9,2 | the Christians. But the Apology-the Greek manuscripts call it 364 3 | his faith and became an apostate, he could never regain it 365 5,9 | the Acts of the individual apostles-Paul, John, Peter, Thomas, and 366 13,7 | rewritten and worked into the Apostoliccrl Constitutions, viii. 4-32. 367 2,4 | Apostolic Times” (temporibus Apostolicis); when Ittig in 1699 carried 368 2,4 | Fathers (Bibliotheca Patrum Apostolicorum). In the principal collections 369 5,7 | by the Encratites and the Apostolics (Heresies 47, 61). Augustine 370 16 | additions and the occasional apostrophes of Constantine seem clearly 371 2,7 | the genuine letters thus appear-Smyrnaeans, Polycarp, Ephesians, Magnesians, 372 1,2 | Jerusalem and his later appearances to the disciples. We might 373 5,4 | its description of Jesus appearing to James as a little child, 374 6,2 | sermon, of no particular applicability, to the church of Corinth, 375 7,4 | prophecies of the Christ apply to Jesus (Against Celsus 376 12,1 | who relieved each other at appointed times. And he employed no 377 1,5 | can best be arranged and approached presents a difficult problem, 378 14,12| Christianity, supported with the appropriate passages of scripture. The 379 11,3 | from the sects that had appropriated and abused it.~ In the Outlines, 380 4,8 | quotes it with apparent approval three or four times in his 381 13,11| in many other respects I approve and love Nepos, for his 382 5,3 | others her new faith. Paul approves her doing this, in contrast 383 4,10| imitations, such as the Aquarian Gospel. Its scenes were 384 5,8 | verges on the Odyssey and the Arabian Nights). On a ship steered 385 15,2 | It was destroyed by the Arabs in 637.~ ~ 386 13,9 | He penetrated to Mount Ararat and spent some years at 387 15,4 | lucky modern discoveries by archaeologists have given us. Among these 388 7,1 | worship, with their angels and archangels and their sacred days and 389 2,11| Jacobus de Voragine, the archbishop of Genoa, translated into 390 16 | Nock in American Journal of Archeology, LV 1951, 283.~ [74] J. 391 2,13| Eusebius found them in the archives of Edessa and translated 392 14,10| work of the church with ardor and soon b came a presbyter. 393 5,3 | thrown to wild beasts in the arena, escapes and lives to teach 394 3 | from the holy Jesseus, [Maz]areus, [Jesse]dekeus... who are 395 5,6 | although James and Bonnet argue for a Greek original, now 396 7,4 | dialogue as a medium for arguing out the rival claims of 397 13,11| wrongfully quoted by the Arians in defense of their views 398 6,1 | same movement in the great arias, antiphonies, and choruses 399 13,3 | sermons of Cluysostom but in Arincnian as a work of Hippolytus. 400 6,3 | Acts 1:18. He speaks of Aristion and the Elder John as disciples 401 15,4 | Polyhistor, Aristeas, and Aristobulus. And he has also come to 402 15,4 | by representatives of the Aristotelian, Cynic, Epicurean, Middle 403 15,4 | treatises by Plato-though not by Aristotle-and by representatives of the 404 13,14| brought Peter to excommunicate Arius. Apart from small fragments, 405 7,4 | take refuge when the Roman armies gathered about Jerusalem 406 7,3 | his find to his friend J. Armitage Robinson, who soon after 407 11,3 | philosophers and poets an armory for its defense. It was 408 2,11| as members of “the noble army of martyrs.” The acts of 409 7 | them and their proceedings aroused suspicion and hostility. 410 5,5 | to leave their husbands arouses leading Romans against him. 411 4,4 | its disregard of temple arrangements and practices, may come 412 14,16| creatures named in Leviticus and arrives at an allegorical explanation 413 5,4 | A.D. 175 (the temple of Artemis in Ephesus, for example [ 414 11,3 | of mine is not a writing artfully constructed for display, 415 14,9 | Tertullian; more than two hundred articles and monographs have been 416 9,1 | He revels in the ornate artificialities of Greek rhetoric-exclamation, 417 9,1 | enduring work of the Great Artist; finds the sufferings of 418 14,18| books), an Epitome of it, To Asclepiades, On Persecution, Letters 419 14,12| authorities, to repent in dust and ashes and give unmistakable evidence 420 5,2 | to a Christian elder in Asia-we do not know his name-perhaps 421 3 | Coptic recast found in the Askew codex, as the Pistis Sophia 422 2,6 | had written to Polycarp, asking him to send their letter 423 Pref | and explain it. This is an aspect of early Christianity too 424 8,3 | favorable attitude toward many aspects of Greek thought. But it 425 6,1 | these hymns of devotion and aspiration ascribed to Solomon? Probably 426 5,7 | apostle assisted by the wild ass completes their cure. The 427 14,9 | twice mentions Fronto as an assailant of Christianity (chaps. 428 14,6 | work On Modesty, bitterly assailing the action of Calixtus, 429 8,4 | his views. Origen, too, assails him now and then, as in 430 5,4 | Titus. It is the views they assert as Paul's that the Acts 431 2,5 | he was quite capable of assessing the situation for himself, 432 14,13| Novatian, Harnack would assign to the Roman bishop Xystus 433 14,13| Rebaptism, which Harnack assigns to a Roman Ursinus, in the 434 2,4 | useful, since it had been assimilated and modernized in later 435 11,3 | Clement probably began to assist Pantaenus about A.D. 190, 436 2,5 | instrumental in getting him this assistance.~While he was at Smyrna, 437 14,7 | had known one of Cyrian's assistants, who said that Cyprian made 438 6,2 | iv. 23. 11). This prompt associating by the bishop of Corinth 439 12,7 | of them was discovered an assortment of works by Origen and Didymus 440 8,4 | unfortunate because it not only assumes that Paul should be understood 441 11,3 | them, except probably the Assyrian, who must have been Tatian. 442 13,10| flight, and seizing the astounded Dionysius carried him off 443 13,4 | mystery and his fourth to astrology and magic, in preparation 444 5,8 | for thirty days and then ate them, tagging each one with 445 8,1 | they bear. They are not atheists, even though they are not 446 8,3 | ridicules Graeco-Roman plays and athletics. He declares, and tries 447 13,11| sonTimothy, refuting the atomistic views of the Epicureans, 448 13,3 | Christ. Yet he was less atornistic and more historical in his 449 12,7 | Testament.~ Especial interest attaches to Origen's New Testament. 450 11,3 | describe the true Gnostic, who attains gnosis (knowledge) through 451 5,4 | even makes some ponderous attempts at humor-in an abandoned 452 13,10| Dionysius had been unable to attend but had sent his written 453 15 | collections is explicitly attested by Eusebius and can be inferred 454 2,5 | opposed to the more restrained Attic. The stylistic influence 455 5,7 | it, to resume his royal attire, and return home.~ 10. The 456 2,2 | noble monument of Christian attitudes in Rome toward the end of 457 5,5 | was a question that would attract a Christian novelist.~ Irenaeus 458 5,4 | says that they were all attributed to Leucius Charinus. Their 459 2,4 | common oral traditions. J: P. Audet, who published a very thorough 460 14,9 | not gods, are behind the auguries and oracles, and they inspire 461 7,3 | Titus Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pius,” which means Antoninus 462 14,20| Domitian, Decius, Valerian and Aurelian are briefly sketched, chapters 463 4,12| The general outlook of the author-compiler is clearly Gnostic, although 464 16 | Scherer, Enretien dOrigene avec Heraclide et les eveques 465 11,3 | devotion, but Clement had avoided martyrdom by leaving Alexandria!~ 466 16 | with a list of problems awaiting solution, for it is reasonable 467 3 | pictures to warn men of the awful personal dangers of sin. 468 14,21| finds his style decidedly awkward.~ Victorious also wrote 469 3 | Heraclitus of Ephesus (500 B.C.). Early writers knew of 470 16 | Cambridge 1916.~ [84] So B.S. Easton, The Apostolic Tradition 471 9,2 | importance. The scribe was Baanes, but Arethas himself revised 472 5,5 | makes a seven-month-old baby speak. Peter tells how in 473 4,4 | and carried from Judea to Babylon with the speed of the wind 474 3 | he was escaping from the “Babylonian captivity.” In the eighth 475 5,4 | unto thee, let the fire go backward, let the darkness be overcome, 476 15,1 | Acts of the Apostles,” “Apa Bal” (?), “Song of Songs,” “ 477 14,9 | soon recognized (1560) by Balduinus as the long-lost Octavius 478 4,6 | written, tells of Jesus on the bank of the Jordan.~ ~ 479 9,1 | On the Soul and Body, On Baptist, On Truth, On the Creation 480 5,3 | the baptized lion [totem baptizati leonis fabulam], which he 481 6,3 | modestly paralleled in 2 Bar. 29:5-outrun current population 482 16 | fragments of this work in Bar-Salibi’s commentary on the Revelation, 483 2,2 | manuscript already noted. Abu'1 Barakat (1363), in his account of 484 3 | evidently a Valentinian or a Barbelo Gnostic, of the Ophitic-Sethian 485 6,1 | the Syriac poet Bardaisan (Bardeisanes), A.D. 154-222. But they 486 8,4 | there was evidently a whole barrage of books against Marcion. 487 6,3 | 21: 9), as saying that Barsabbas, who was called Justus-the 488 2,8 | Enoch, II Esdras, and II Baruch.~The Letter of Barnabas 489 5,5 | deity; indeed in 1574 the base of a statue of him with 490 12,5 | disputations with various persons: Bassus, Beryllus of Bostra, a Valentinian 491 14,12| jewelry, cosmetics, mixed bathing, boisterous wedding parties, 492 14,9 | trip to Ostia for the sea baths. As they go, they pass a 493 14,16| found some years ago by Batiffol (i9oo) and lat ascribed 494 3 | its which deal theological bearings.~ It is characteristic of 495 10,4 | temple and then stoned and beaten to death by the Jews (Church 496 16 | 96] Henry A. Sanders, Beati in Apocalipsin libri duodecim, 497 3 | influenced Dante, whose guides Beatrice and Vergil evidently reflect 498 9,1 | from Egypt by A. Chester Beatty and the University of Michigan 499 14,21| Tyconius. The Spanish presbyter Beatus, late in the eighth century, 500 5,5 | out for Rome. The ship is becalmed, the crew is drunk, and


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