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| Edgar J. Goodspeed History of early christian literature IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
Chapter, Paragraph
2502 3 | the Lord sat on a rock (petra) and the Lord predicted 2503 14,21| in Pannonia (the modern Pettau in Styria), a Christian 2504 10,3 | eighteenth century by C. M. Pfaff (d. 1760).[59] It is evident 2505 2,9 | Vestigium umbra non facit” (“A phantom does not make a footprint”). 2506 6,1 | Solomon are the well-known Pharisaic hymns, composed in the last 2507 11,3 | the utmost value for many phases of biblical study.~ ~ ~ 2508 2,5 | write or carry his letters (Philad. II:2; Smyrn. 12:1). Ignatius 2509 2,7 | with Ephesians, Magnesians, Philadelphias, Trallians; these are followed 2510 13,4 | writers on heresy-Epiphanius, Philastrius [A.D. 383], and the author 2511 14,13| the library of Sir Thomas Phillipps in Cheltenham, England, 2512 7,4 | Dialogue of Papiscus and Philo-appeared, and, since it uses the 2513 12,7 | Origen, which was called the Philocalia, and preserves much that 2514 13,5 | medieval writers (Photius, Philoponus) as the work of Josephus 2515 8,3 | had been executed under a philosopher-emperor, and another persecution 2516 13,2 | printed by Gronovius as the Philosophumena of Origen. In 1842 a Greek 2517 13,2 | published in 1851 as Origen's Philosophurneua or Refutation of All Heresies. 2518 11,3 | bold and detailed, almost photographic, picture emerges of ancient 2519 10,2 | Tim. 6:20, where the same phrase is used). But, as he advanced, 2520 5,2 | had long been prominent in Phrygian religion, and for twenty 2521 15,3 | writings by Philo, Jose phus, Justin, Tatian, The 0philus, 2522 4,8 | Traditions taught that the physical nature must be controlled 2523 2,12| Blandina, Alexander, a physician, and a boy named Ponticus 2524 4,4 | iii. 39. 17) says that Pa pias, who flourished in Asia 2525 Pref | these lost writings can be pictured and in part recovered from 2526 5,5 | about the figure of the most picturesque and spirited of the Twelve. 2527 5,3 | Course Of The Narrative.~ As pieced together from these Coptic 2528 12,3 | exegetical work survived piecemeal in the catenas-those collections 2529 5,7 | series of honorific titles piled up in the prayer in chapters 2530 10,4 | who was thrown from the pinnacle of the temple and then stoned 2531 2,11| Corinth, and his again by Piomus, possibly the martyr of 2532 15,4 | as Eusebius was himself a pioneer in trying to combine the 2533 12,3 | Christian literature. Besides pioneering in the textual study of 2534 15,3 | various martyrs — Polycarp, Pionius, Corpus with Papylus and 2535 14,9 | flourished as long as it piously worshiped the gods; it is 2536 1,1 | part of the Mishnah, the Pirke Aboth or “Chapters of the 2537 7,4 | to be laughed at as to be pitied and hated. Origen finds 2538 2,12| drawing to its close. The pitiful and yet heroic story of 2539 6,3 | nominated to take Judas' place-”when challenged by unbelievers 2540 14,13| Christian writer, but Koch has placed it in North Africa about 2541 14,12| especially because of the plague of 252.~ The ninth, On the 2542 6,2 | character as a sermon is plain from some words in 17:3: “ 2543 14,20| to have carried out these plans. Although he was not a great 2544 7,3 | crimes. The Egyptians worship plants and animals-crocodiles, 2545 8,4 | churches to unite upon his platform. He almost succeeded, for 2546 5,5 | Acts of John, chap. 87).~ Platforms are erected in the forum, 2547 15,4 | philosophical treatises by Plato-though not by Aristotle-and by 2548 8,1 | Pythagorean, Peripatetic, and Platonist-but found no complete satisfaction 2549 11,3 | such a work-without much plausibility. In this short work Clement 2550 14,6 | which Hort called a most plausible and most mischievous book,[ 2551 11,3 | of whom he speaks half playfully, but most obscurely, in 2552 2,14| soul, eternal life. And please do not hesitate, if you 2553 14,9 | friend Caecilius go on a pleasure trip to Ostia for the sea 2554 16 | and in his own Life of Plotinus, 72.~ 2555 2,13| murmuring against you and are plotting to injure you. But I have 2556 15,3 | he says, he planned to pluck passages from the meadows 2557 4,2 | churches became familiar with a plurality of gospels, this closing 2558 14,17| cannot be dismissed as mere poetic fancies, for the historians, 2559 14,21| third century there lived in Poetovio, in Pannonia (the modern 2560 3 | revealer of truth from the Poimandres, or Shepherd ofMenwritten 2561 14,10| have favored the stricter policy, but he soon changed and, 2562 14,6 | emphasis, in contrast with the political cast that was coming over 2563 2,6 | they had any.~Not only in polity but in doctrine and in his 2564 15,4 | his readings in Alexander Polyhistor, Aristeas, and Aristobulus. 2565 15,3 | He has no idea where Hip polytus lived. From Tertullian he 2566 5,4 | The author even makes some ponderous attempts at humor-in an 2567 8,4 | characteristically inquires, “What Pontic mouse ever had such gnawing 2568 2,12| physician, and a boy named Ponticus are narrated in some detail-how 2569 14,6 | before, in 198-202:~ ~The Pontifex Maximus, that is the bishop 2570 5,5 | make him head a line of popes. It clearly contributes 2571 5,3 | parents are converted, but the populace becomes incensed and Paul 2572 5,1 | characterized by what we should call pornography, but generally speaking 2573 2,5 | brethren went with him to that port. A little later his party 2574 3 | and shrewd sayings of a portentous character cast in Greek 2575 5,5 | at Simon's door, but the porter pretends Simon is out. Peter 2576 3 | Sophia or Faith Wisdom. It portrays Jesus living with his disciples 2577 4,10| modern discoverer, Guillaume Postel, called it the “Protevangelium,” 2578 13,6 | of the earth among the posterity of Noah (Genesis, chap. 2579 1,3 | became a great tide not only potent in itself but influencing 2580 15,1 | says that they are among Potion's books. But it is likely 2581 16 | i43-q4, I84-90.~ ~ [2] J. E. Powell, The Rendel Harris Papyri ( 2582 3 | intelligence. His concern is practical-with his own sins and weaknesses 2583 15,3 | the Gallican martyrs (v. praef. 2; v. 4. 3).~ Much of his 2584 13,15| for Origen);[88] in the Praeparatio Evangelica he ascribes a 2585 16 | Against Rufinus i. 11.~ [89] Praeparation Evangelica vii 22. On both 2586 14,12| On the Lapsed, Cyprian praises the martyrs and calls upon 2587 16 | Schmidt and Wilhelm Schubart, Praxeir Paulou: Acta Pauli (Hamburg, 2588 3 | his disciples, and when he prayed, the Lord appeared, kissed 2589 12,3 | these, only 16 books are pre, served in Greek. It is 2590 9,1 | first orthodox Christian preachers to make full use of Greek 2591 2,12| ancient world was extremely precarious; they might at any time 2592 3 | about the signs that would precede his coming and the end of 2593 15,4 | later work, and thus both precedent and practical occasion resulted 2594 9,2 | contributing a whole series of precious items to the Greek anthology. 2595 3 | Peter is devoted to the precise punishments to be expected 2596 2,9 | them as they preach. He predicts the conversion, work, and 2597 5,8 | the modern Patras. Gregory prefaced his account of it with a 2598 15,3 | events. Indeed, Eusebius prefatory discussion of his plan shows 2599 1,5 | over again. So it seems preferable to present the work of each 2600 3 | Finally, the earlier work was prefixed to this, and in this longest 2601 5,3 | Hippolytus used it without prejudice. It begins Eusebius' list 2602 Pref | transformation from soldier to prelate. This was a thing Roman 2603 12,4 | Resurrection may be regarded as a prelude to the larger work On First 2604 9,2 | Greek manuscripts call it Presbeia, or Embassy-shows by its 2605 14,16| far to justify it. In the presence of the numerous heresies 2606 4,10| drawn upon in a number of present-day gospel imitations, such 2607 14,12| nature and work of Christ, presenting the passages of scripture 2608 2,10| Polycarp, to which we shall presently turn, sometimes in the form 2609 16 | that so much of either was preserv at all after the highly 2610 2,3 | manuscripts shows its decline in prestige, its translation into Latin, 2611 14,19| implied in 2: 1, 4:1, and 6:3, presupposes the new edict of toleration 2612 5,5 | Simon's door, but the porter pretends Simon is out. Peter sends 2613 8,3 | bitter attack upon Greek pretensions to leadership in arts and 2614 13,11| to give up his episcopal pretentions in the interests of the 2615 5,5 | Terracina.~ Peter's success in prevailing upon wives to leave their 2616 7,1 | attacked, on the one hand, the prevalent idolatry of its timesthe 2617 2,5 | that nothing be done to prevent his martyrdom, to which 2618 14,16| Novatian expressly refers to previous works of his on the true 2619 2,13| apostolic founders: Rome took pride in the names of Peter and 2620 8,1 | are actually his.[42] P. Prigent has argued that one can 2621 5,5 | bishop. The Roman claim of primacy among the bishops for its 2622 4,13| the restoration of the primal unity). The book frequently 2623 16 | American Academy, 1930. Primasius in the sixth century also 2624 13,14| Melitius, self-appointed primate of Egypt, and fourteen “ 2625 8,3 | with a kind of cultural primitivism not uncommon among rhetoricians 2626 2,7 | for him for the use of his principals, Polycarp and Onesimus, 2627 12,4 | On First Principles (De principiis). The latter is perhaps 2628 2,7 | compressed, on no particular principle, to a little more than half 2629 1,6 | has already been said in print about New Testament origins.~ ~ ~ 2630 15,4 | he wanted to prove the priority and superiority of “oriental” 2631 5,2 | two women, Maximilla and Priscilla, were soon exercising the 2632 5,7 | Manicheans, and Turribius, by the Priscillianists. It entered into the Manichean 2633 2,10| Christian allegiance of all the prisoners. When they insist that they 2634 16 | great theologians; but the pristine radiance of the movement 2635 4,8 | Matthias had taught them privately (Refutation vii. 20), may 2636 11,3 | discourses which it was my privilege to hear, and of blessed 2637 3 | of the books Christians prized most; but he would hear 2638 14,10| Thascius) Cyprianus was born, proably at Carthage, about A.D. 2639 10,4 | and spent some time there, proceeding thence to Rome, perhaps 2640 7,2 | ways of describing their proceedings-eating Christ's flesh and drinking 2641 16 | Riedmatten, Les actes du proces de Paul de Samosate, Paradosis, 2642 5,4 | of his supposed disciple Prochorus that made much use of the 2643 2,9 | the writer in chapter 3 proclaims his doctrine of God the 2644 1,1 | Christianity began as a proclamation and a response. Its founder 2645 14,8 | A.D. 143 but declined the proconsulship`' of Asia. He undertook 2646 12,3 | must have been a man of prodigious energy, for he worked with 2647 2,2 | bad effects discord always produces. He urges them to follow 2648 14,9 | to know the things they profess to know. As a matter of 2649 5,5 | Stephen (A.D. 254-57), who professed to occupy the “chair of 2650 Pref | T. B. Goodspeed, of the profession of Tertullian and Minucius 2651 14,19| the very time that his old professor Arnobius back in North Africa 2652 16 | reached a high degree of proficiency, the necessity of writing 2653 5,5 | explicit under Victor (d. 198), progressed under Calixtus, who claimed 2654 5,9 | Simon Magus who also appears prominently, especially in the Recognitions. 2655 8,4 | 12. Eusebius quotes this promise, Church History v. 8. 9, 2656 8,3 | pupil Rhodo; in it Tatian promised to explain the obscure and 2657 2,9 | answers their questions, promising them resurrection, and declaring 2658 Pref | clerical ordinations and promotions to achieve in a single week 2659 6,2 | History iv. 23. 11). This prompt associating by the bishop 2660 3 | description of the operations of Pronoia (Wisdom).~ The contents 2661 1,2 | if it ever will be — to pronounce exactly which portions of 2662 Pref | generously assisted me with the proofs of this book.~This book 2663 11,3 | his literary efforts to propagate the gospel.~ For Clement 2664 5,1 | only was fiction useful in propagating their views of truth but 2665 6,2 | and Modat as those “who prophesied to the people in the wilderness” ( 2666 3 | including the priests, propose to stone him and to cast 2667 14,6 | discussion of Marcion's proposed scripture, Luke and Paul. 2668 7,2 | exist. Dom Andriessen has propounded the ingenious theory that 2669 12,1 | removed to Caesarea, where he prosecuted his studies and his work 2670 2,5 | we remember the terrible prospect of a cruel death to which 2671 4,2 | novelty, since few of the prospective readers of the combined 2672 11,3 | of Greek mythology, the prostitution of Greek art, and the vagaries 2673 5,5 | admirer; Peter prays God to protect her, and she is paralyzed. 2674 13,10| the Great Elector, for his protection.~ We owe this story to the 2675 14,3 | two books) he vigorously protested against the laws condemning 2676 14,6 | 18 his book On Monogamy, protesting against second marriages, 2677 14,3 | behavior and manner of life. He protests also against the calumnies 2678 4,10| Guillaume Postel, called it the “Protevangelium,” or “Proto-Gospel.”~ Although 2679 4,2 | can see that a Gnostic or proto-Gnostic axe is being ground.~ ~ 2680 4,10| the “Protevangelium,” or “Proto-Gospel.”~ Although often frowned 2681 2,8 | interpretation was very proud of it. “No one has learned 2682 13,8 | letter to the Twelve Tribes proves.”[85]~ With Hippolytus the 2683 5,4 | thanks God that he has been providentially kept from any union with 2684 14,3 | to the Roman governors of provinces and presents a similar argument, 2685 14,1 | passing into the hands of provincials, men from North Africa and 2686 8,4 | controversial literature he provoked.~ Marcion's book and his 2687 16 | lost in Greek; very little pry served in Latin~On First 2688 16 | translation of the Hebrew of Ps. aa: i, which is quoted 2689 13,11| scriptures, and for his extensive psalmody, with which many of the 2690 6,1 | Solomon. The closing of the Psalter turned new song writers 2691 4,10| discovery of Christian or pseudo-Christian literature in modern times. 2692 4,10| Carpenter, of the Gospel ofthe Pseudo-Matthew, of the Nativity of Mary, 2693 4,5 | apocryphal gospel written pseudonymously in the first person in the 2694 14,5 | first book on Christian psychology.~ ~ 2695 1,6 | It was an age of writers, publishers, books, and readers to a 2696 14,9 | back to life, and reward or punish him, as he deserves. What 2697 3 | described. The wicked will be punished in ways corresponding to 2698 14,9 | Christians now suffer is not a punishment but a discipline, heroically 2699 4,4 | spiritual as against ceremonial purification.~ The Gospel of the Hebrews, 2700 14,15| to be called Cathari, or Puritans. It must be noted that the 2701 1,2 | transmission, and it clearly purports to be a record of this kind 2702 11,3 | widely about the world, pursuing his studies under a series 2703 6,3 | and as time went on he was pushed further and further back 2704 5,5 | sea. They finally land at Puteoh and proceed to Rome. Peter 2705 11,3 | Socrates and Cleanthes and Pythagoras. In the Greek poets, too, 2706 2,10| between 163 and 167, when Q. Junius Rusticus was prefect 2707 14,17| Whatever may be thought of this quaint story, from Jerom's Chronicle 2708 2,13| the name of Mark. But the quaintest and boldest of such claims 2709 12,6 | achieved.~ The enormous quantity of Origen's writing makes 2710 16 | von Jerusalem,” Romische Quartalschrift, V 1891, 217-65; VI 1892, 2711 14,12| The work was called To Quarznus: Three Books of Testimonies, 2712 13,10| viceroy of Zenobia, the famous queen of Palmyra, who for a time 2713 2,4 | A.D. 180. A terminus ante quern is provided by a quotation 2714 5,6 | anything directly to him is questionable, but poems of Syriac origin 2715 14,11| without rebaptism was now questioned and on this matter Cyprian 2716 14,2 | Christianity was Tertullian, or Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus, 2717 4,4 | withered hand, the rich in quirer, the parable of the talents, 2718 14,13| That Idols Are Not Gods (Quod idols dii non sint), a blast 2719 10,4 | immediately by Irenaeus, A.D. 18 r-89, in his great work against 2720 16 | Patristic Studies in Memory of R.P. Casey.~ [43] Justin et 2721 9,1 | History iv. 26. 3), in A.D. r67-68. Polycrates of Ephesus, 2722 9,1 | controversy was resumed about A.D. r9o, speaks of Melito as no 2723 8,1 | suggested by a well-known Jewish rabbi named Tarphon. Justin makes 2724 1,1 | Testament books.~Among the rabbis and their disciples, traditions 2725 2,12| Any offense given to the rabble of a city by the Christians 2726 16 | theologians; but the pristine radiance of the movement and the 2727 6,1 | redolent of antiquity and radiant with spiritual light.” It 2728 3 | the fourth century, in the Rainer Collection in Vienna. The 2729 2,13| lingering diseases, and raise the dead. After having heard 2730 5,4 | philosopher, condemns wealth, raises a widow's son, drinks a 2731 7,2 | When their unreal cures and raisings have been unmasked because 2732 5,5 | and proceed to Rome. Peter rallies the believers. He knocks 2733 2,5 | especially as he could not rally them himself. He was being 2734 12,3 | and New Testaments. This ranged all the way from his scholia, 2735 11,3 | his sequence did extend, rankly regards its readers as children 2736 2,12| and Phrygia.” This letter ranks next to the Martyrdom of 2737 4,10| Joachim from the Temple”), Raphael (“Betrothal of the Virgin”), 2738 11,2 | blessed presbyter”; he very rarely mentions his name. Alexander 2739 13,15| On Free Will, On Life and Rational Activity, Aglaophon or Treatise 2740 14,12| deals with the pestilence ravageing the country, and indeed 2741 3 | could never regain it and re-enter the church. Hermas records 2742 14,7 | Cyprian made it a rule to rea something of Tertullian' 2743 14,11| them is perhaps the most readily comprehensible.[93]~ Letters 2744 14,15| to it. Cornelius favored readmitting them, but Novatian held 2745 5,5 | laughs and says that in reality the money was a debt owed 2746 14,6 | Montanism, too, and strives to realize them both and to unite them.~ 2747 1,6 | this literature must be realized if we are to understand 2748 3 | infant and picked up and reared for the slave market. It 2749 14,6 | 90] he argues that, after reasoning is exhausted with such people, 2750 14,12| controversy with Stephen over rebaptizing heretics and seeks to soften 2751 7,4 | subject of the Bar-Cochba rebellion against Rome (A.D. 132-35), 2752 2,8 | This points to the heathen rebuilding of the temple of Jupiter 2753 5,5 | again. Peter accepts the rebuke and turns back into the 2754 3 | Parable io as a kind of recapitulation.[5] Although the evidence 2755 1,2 | blessed to give than to receive.”' Similar formulas occur 2756 5,4 | arrest by a soldier and receives a letter, probably a summons, 2757 5,5 | widows are to come and pray, receiving a piece of gold for the 2758 2,4 | Chapters 11-15 deal with the reception of various kinds of ministers — 2759 2,4 | of Jesus, which was to be recited before baptism. Chapters 2760 14,20| Christians and others Lactantius recites unsparingly and related 2761 5,3 | of the baptized lion we reckon among the apocryphal writings.” 2762 13,7 | Gifts. These have long been reckoned among his lost writings. 2763 3 | and Eusebius (A.D. 303) reckons it among the rejected writings ( 2764 7,2 | obtain the necessary state recognition until early in the fourth 2765 3 | from the New Testament but recommended it for private reading by 2766 6,1 | 18) of the Hallel. Paul recommends the use of psalms, hymns, 2767 11,3 | 67] Clement is a great reconciler of the intellectual with 2768 2,2 | forgiveness, humility, and reconciliation. After a prayer (59:3 - 2769 13,2 | works of Hippolytus can be reconstructed, covering the fields of 2770 14,11| dated to be fitted into this reconstruction of his correspondence. The 2771 6,3 | those given by Irenaeus, but recovering them is a task unlikely 2772 5,1 | the Hellenistic romance recur in the Christian apocryphal 2773 13,15| On Jewish Foods and the Red Heifer, To Sistellius on 2774 5,5 | s martyrdom goes far to redeem the trivial and even pagan 2775 3 | blessed fruits, where the redeemed will be found.~ Short as 2776 2,9 | and in Jesus Christ our Redeemer, in the Holy Spirit the 2777 9,1 | 5:7), as symbolic of the redemptive death of Christ. Melito 2778 6,1 | them in a letter as being “redolent of antiquity and radiant 2779 5,5 | left without a leader, is reduced to seven members. Peter, 2780 13,2 | however, these discoveries and reesarches have given us one of the 2781 14,8 | of Asia. He undertook to reform Roman literary style, advocating 2782 7,4 | descendant of those Jerusalem refugees. At any rate, his writings, 2783 14,15| church, on the issue of refusing readmission to the church 2784 13,11| letter to his “son” Timothy, refuting the atomistic views of the 2785 5,7 | Gundafor, and gives him a regular deed of sale. (A king of 2786 14,20| Pentadius. It is a free and bold rehandling of the material of the seven 2787 5,7 | Greek, is known to have reigned over part of India in the 2788 4,4 | will reign; and when he reigns he will rest.” Exactly this 2789 5,5 | might, after due penance, be reinstated under these powers of the 2790 2,14| so that when I hear I may rejoice. Do not neglect to send 2791 2,9 | burial, and resurrection. He rejoins the apostles, apparently 2792 11,3 | frivolity, luxury, matrimonial relations, dress, and personal habits 2793 2,2 | not primarily to literary relationships.~Clement cannot be said 2794 14,9 | more hotly debated than the relative dates of the Octavius and 2795 4,10| and H.-C. Puech,[22] but relatively few of them have been published 2796 16 | gave the names of Jesus’ relatives called before Domitian as 2797 14,11| the time the persecution relaxed and Cyprian returned to 2798 5,7 | king Misdai (or Mrsdaeus) releases him with orders to reconcile 2799 3 | represents the material most relevant to the present discussion.[ 2800 4,14| likely that the documents reliably reflect the originals, which 2801 15,2 | his own works, however, in reliance on the church libraries 2802 12,1 | than seven amanuenses, who relieved each other at appointed 2803 5,3 | woman's place in teaching religion-appear most clearly in this romantic 2804 2,2 | time in its meetings. So religiously useful did the letter prove 2805 14,15| Novatian, urging him to relinquish his claims and return to 2806 3 | be compared to those who relish the prophecies of Mother 2807 14,20| not altogether Christian relsh the dreadful ends which 2808 8,4 | no farther. Harnack once remarked that in the second century 2809 14,6 | Prayer, To His Wife (against remarriage of women), On Idolatry, 2810 14,17| Christianity gives some hope of remedying such things, for war, at 2811 7,4 | Commentary on Galatians (3:13) remembers that he has read in the 2812 6,1 | Hebrew Psalms. They also remind one of the meditative psalms 2813 2,2 | churches of Asia needed to be reminded to love their enemies and 2814 4,8 | decidedly philosophical color, reminding Clement of Plato: “The beginning [ 2815 16 | credited with at least seventy reminiscences of Daniel alone. On the 2816 14,6 | bishops, issues an edict: I remit, to such as have discharged 2817 4,6 | them some new units, either remnants of Palestinian tradition 2818 14,10| controversy was interrupted by the renewal of the persecution under 2819 15,2 | of Caesarea about 367, “renewed” some of the works of Philo 2820 5,7 | persuades the bride and groom to renounce marriage (chaps. 1-16).~ 2821 2,3 | Yet for all its ancient renown — it was one of the best-known 2822 1,6 | circumstances without undertaking to repeat what has already been said 2823 14,9 | influenced by the other. Jerome repeatedly speaks as though Tertullian 2824 3 | general, they explain how the repentant Christian should live. They 2825 5,3 | smitten with blindness but repents and is cured.~ 4. Paul proceeds 2826 4,2 | existence, ridding them of their repetitions and confusions, and at the 2827 11,3 | not mentioned in Origen's reply-or indeed in any of his works. 2828 6,2 | about A.D. 165-75. He is replying to a letter from Soter recently 2829 12,3 | is safe to say that they represent no more than five per cent 2830 12,7 | The document is a unique representative of this kind of reporting 2831 7,4 | that he who is hanged is a reproach of God. This was Aquila' 2832 14,9 | is not unlikely that it reproduces some of his attack in the 2833 13,9 | said a good deal by way of reproof, was not able to meet it.~ 2834 4,10| assigned to the sixth century, repudiates it as heretical or schismatic 2835 4,10| nothing could have been more repugnant to Judaism. The idea of 2836 14,16| the basis for Novatian's reputation as a theologian and went 2837 2,6 | Antioch, for Ignatius had requested them to write to the Christians 2838 14,6 | such as have discharged the requirements of repentance (or penitence), 2839 2,5 | to be within the church requires obedience to the bishop 2840 15,3 | include works by Dionysius, a rescript of the emperor Gallienus, 2841 13,10| permitted himself to be rescued from the soldiers who had 2842 5,8 | himself, Andrew comes and rescues Matthias and the other victims. 2843 13,7 | series of discoveries and researches has now resulted in the 2844 2,11| editor, impressed by the resemblance of Polycarp's sufferings 2845 2,2 | as A.D. 85, or later.~The resemblances of the Letter of Clement 2846 4,4 | Christians, used a gospel resembling Matthew, which they call “ 2847 8,4 | Christian movement and to reshape its scripture, organization, 2848 14,21| come down to us. Jerome reshaped this work, omitting the 2849 4,5 | in the second century to resort to the view that he only 2850 12,5 | showed. Origen sometimes resorted to what now seem artificial 2851 4,8 | Traditions Clement speaks of so respectfully, and they are perhaps to 2852 13,11| confess that in many other respects I approve and love Nepos, 2853 6,3 | a time when nature would respond freely and richly to man' 2854 14,17| of his sincerity, and he responded by writing a work Against 2855 9,1 | condemns the Jews for their responsibility for his death.~ Like most 2856 5,7 | Hebrews (“they do rest, and resting do reign,” chap. 136) and 2857 4,13| redemption through Jesus (the restoration of the primal unity). The 2858 2,11| the most part with much restraint, of the arrest, examination, 2859 7,1 | years ministry in Rome also rests upon it.~ In his work On 2860 9,1 | when the controversy was resumed about A.D. r9o, speaks of 2861 5,5 | the boy to life, and other resurrections follow.~ The rest of the 2862 12,2 | column of it into Syriac, retaining Origen's critical marks; 2863 5,3 | visits Paul at Myra and later retires to Seleucia, where she dies. 2864 3 | idea of a shepherd as a revealer of truth from the Poimandres, 2865 11,3 | mysteries-Purification, Instruction, Revelation-may be doubted. Certainly such 2866 16 | line reminiscent of the Revelation-Vis. iv. 2. 1-whereas the Revelation, 2867 9,1 | now go to Melito.[50] He revels in the ornate artificialities 2868 3 | Ethiopic has them in the reverse order. A comparison of the 2869 5,4 | Constantinople, who read and reviewed this collection about A.D. 2870 Pref | book club. And these book reviews by Photius, made, it would 2871 14,9 | wrong for the Christians to revile them. They themselves worship 2872 9,2 | bishop of Caesarea, the reviser of the commentary of Andreas 2873 13,7 | back of these versions or revisions was none other than the 2874 12,1 | History vi. 21. 3, 4). He also revisited Athens and Arabia in these 2875 2,2 | A.D. 95, something like a revolt broke out among the Christians 2876 13,10| in. The prefect of Egypt revolted against Gallienus and set 2877 16 | 1949.~ [75] O. Gueraud in Revue de l’histoire des religions, 2878 3 | something to say of the rewards of the faithful, but he 2879 12,7 | except for what is almost a rewriting of it in Latin by Rufinus. 2880 13,7 | Apostolic Tradition was later rewritten and worked into the Apostoliccrl 2881 9,1 | artificialities of Greek rhetoric-exclamation, apostrophe, antithesis, 2882 16 | mathematically the same are rhetorically opposites. On the whole, 2883 8,3 | of the second century a rhetorician from the East, Syria or 2884 3 | Vergil evidently reflect Rhoda and the Shepherd.~ Although 2885 4,5 | currency in the church at Rhossus, nearby, and took occasion 2886 14,7 | Minucius Felix an upon Cy rian, his great literary successor 2887 4,6 | the fourfold one and also richer. The possibility of this 2888 8,4 | the Gospel: “O wealth of riches! Folly, power and ecstasy! — 2889 4,2 | gospels already in existence, ridding them of their repetitions 2890 7 | Their views, too, were ridiculed, especially their worship 2891 16 | 193-214.~ [104] Cf. H. de Riedmatten, Les actes du proces de 2892 5,3 | in no long time, for the righteous blood he has shed. At this 2893 16 | a period of increasingly rigorous definition of both doctrine 2894 2,13| century witnessed a marked rivalry among leading Christian 2895 14,3 | Septimius Severus, over his rivals, and precipitated a fresh 2896 5,5 | Justin describes-”in the river Tiber [on the island] between 2897 3 | on fiery wheels, and in rivers of fire. Then follows a 2898 16 | except for 2~Miscellanies, ro books; no text~Julius Africanus, 2899 2,12| beasts, hung from stakes, and roasted on an iron chair.~ The little 2900 5,5 | in Judea a woman had been robbed by Simon and his confederates, 2901 5,4 | story of St. John and the Robber Captain, whom he seeks out 2902 16 | tragic poets.~ [98] C.H. Roberts in Zeitschrift fur die neutestamentliche 2903 7,3 | to his friend J. Armitage Robinson, who soon after came across 2904 5,2 | these Jewish views of the role of women in religion some 2905 16 | Patriachal-Bibliothek von Jerusalem,” Romische Quartalschrift, V 1891, 2906 13,9 | Yet it has been called the root of Christian chronography 2907 5,5 | converted. Peter goes down by a rope and baptizes him in the 2908 2,5 | these letters sometimes rose to the stature of permanent 2909 11,3 | image without art, and a rough sketch of those powerful 2910 3 | Hermas the Roman church rounded out its literary contribution 2911 14,10| against the Christians was roused again by the spread of the 2912 5,7 | letter from his own country rouses him to obtain it, to resume 2913 14,3 | emperor God, they respect and rover him and are good Romans. 2914 5,7 | reported to the king, “he rubbed his face with his hands 2915 2,7 | Ignatius and Zosimus and Rufus... but in Paul himself and 2916 2,6 | style, however, lacks the rugged vigor and the very unconventional 2917 13,7 | that he was ignorant of the rules of the church (Refutation 2918 14,11| had refused to accept his ruling on the matter.~ A fourth 2919 8,3 | their style. Perhaps this rumor should be connected with 2920 14,12| some of Cyprian's letters run to considerable length his 2921 13,10| they arose from the table, rushed to the bishop's house, put 2922 9,1 | Church History iv. 26- S-m). Another small fragment-a 2923 11,3 | at the monastery of Mar Saba near Jerusalem. Written 2924 13,11| addressed four letters on Sabellianism to correspondents of his 2925 4,3 | fourth century describes the Sabellians as claiming its authority 2926 5,5 | honor of Semo Sancus, an old Sabine deity; indeed in 1574 the 2927 3 | their salvation by Abrasax, Sablo, and Gamaliel, descending 2928 8,1 | Justin in the eighth-century Sacra Parallela are actually his.[ 2929 4,13| mentions the five Gnostic sacraments: unction, baptism, eucharist, “ 2930 8,2 | pagan idolatry and Jewish sacrifices, but develops more original 2931 13,10| hustled upon the back of a saddleless animal and hurried off to 2932 3 | would suffer but would pass safely by the customs collectors 2933 13,10| hurried off to a place of safety, where he remained with 2934 4,10| papyrus in Coptic-partly Sahidic, partly sub-Akhmimic-during 2935 14,13| ones, and, for their own sake as well as for their connection 2936 3 | the aeons is designated as Sakla. Finally the luminary of 2937 5,7 | and eats only bread, with salt, and drinks water, and wears 2938 16 | actes du proces de Paul de Samosate, Paradosis, Freiburg 1952, 2939 5,5 | Peter describe (“Semoni Sanco deo fidio,” etc). was found 2940 5,5 | inscription “Simoni deo Sancto” (chap. 10) probably comes 2941 2,11| collections as the Acta Sanctorum, which contains sixty-nine 2942 2,12| final sufferings of Maturus, Sanctus, Attalus, Blandina, Alexander, 2943 5,5 | doubtless one in honor of Semo Sancus, an old Sabine deity; indeed 2944 16 | himself.~ [96] Henry A. Sanders, Beati in Apocalipsin libri 2945 6,1 | Jesus and the disciples “sang the hymn” the second part ( 2946 12,2 | to have existed until the Saracens took Caesarea early in the 2947 16 | Bodmer XIII: Meliton de Sardes: Homelie sur la Paque (Geneva, 2948 13,1 | together to the mines of Sardinia, where Pontianus seems to 2949 2,11| you for the firstborn of Satan,” was Polycarp's sharp reply. 2950 8,3 | his idea that Adam was not sated-a view that he was said to 2951 8,3 | rhetorical vigor and shows a keen satirical delight in exposing what 2952 15,4 | would not provide a very satisfactory picture of the apostolic 2953 8,4 | also by the massive and satisfying way in which Tertullian 2954 3 | inferior creator and of James' saving work; then he departed. 2955 8,4 | Few fragments of Marcion'sbook have been identified, but 2956 11,3 | books, and books on a grand scale. Whether he planned a great 2957 15,3 | Alexandria that he has to scatter quotations through-out the 2958 16 | Parables, published by J. Schaefer 1917); as revised by Hatnack, 2959 13,11| Xystus, and Dionysius.~ The schisms of Nepos and of Sabellius 2960 2,4 | Didache,” I:1-2.6a, and J. Schlecht, in 1899, published a Latin 2961 13,2 | Hippolytus by Duncker and Schneidewin in 1859. One scholar, d' 2962 4,4 | theology; to which H. J. Schoeps and J. Danielou have drawn 2963 12,3 | ranged all the way from his scholia, or brief notes on difficult 2964 8,1 | visited various philosophical schools-Stoic, Pythagorean, Peripatetic, 2965 16 | Carl Schmidt and Wilhelm Schubart, Praxeir Paulou: Acta Pauli ( 2966 13,7 | all. The investigations of Schwartz (1910), and others mdependently 2967 14,2 | the neighboring town of Scilli suffered martyrdom in Carthage. 2968 3 | about the middle of the scond century before Christ, no 2969 12,4 | the book, of which only a score or so of fragments survive. 2970 14,7 | repudiated that book with great scorn, foj what he considered 2971 14,6 | Scapula, and in 212 or 213 his Scorpaace, warning against the scorpion 2972 14,6 | Scorpaace, warning against the scorpion sting of heresy and encouraging 2973 11,3 | this in its very title: “Scrap books of Gnostic Notes after 2974 11,3 | book.~ The Miscellanies, or Scrapbooks (Stromateis) disclaims any 2975 15,2 | there, partly by employing scribes to copy extracts for him. 2976 14,7 | and he was well versed in scrip ture, probably both Greek 2977 16 | of Latin fathers, Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum, 1868-71. ~ [ 2978 8,4 | the Pauline epistles as scripture-such a notion would neglect the 2979 12,1 | doubtless meaning rolls, or scrolls, of ordinary length, about 2980 5,4 | Christian art; painters and sculptors have shown John holding 2981 8,3 | immoralities celebrated in Greek sculpture. With all this polemic he 2982 4,8 | beginning [of truth, or of the search for it] is to wonder at 2983 7,1 | and their sacred days and seasons, which were governed by 2984 9,1 | Sardis, in Asia, was the seat of a Christian church before 2985 9,1 | words quoted by Anastasius (sec. 96): “God has been murdered! 2986 14,8 | pagan Latin writers of the secon century, M. Cornelius Fronto. 2987 2,5 | exact date is uncertain.~Second-century Christianity was clouded 2988 14,14| told by one of Cyprian's secretaries that Cyprian did not let 2989 14,9 | really a wretched lot of secretive, ignorant, miserable people, 2990 7,2 | sometimes to be covertly, almost secretly, held, and this occasioned 2991 4,5 | were produced to present sectarian views in gospel form.~ ~ 2992 5,5 | Christianity against the sects-Marcionite, Gnostic, and Montanist-about 2993 4,4 | of the Jewish Christian sectsperhaps the Ebionites, more probably 2994 14,3 | the blood of Christians is seed”-the most famous of all 2995 4,6 | fragment the rulers try to seize him, but he slips from their 2996 4,4 | Spirit-recalls Ezekiel, seized by a lock of his hair and 2997 13,10| soldiers to flight, and seizing the astounded Dionysius 2998 13,10| 251. It reminds one of the seizure of Luther and his removal 2999 15,4 | be acquainted with a wide selection of philosophical treatises 3000 5,3 | Myra and later retires to Seleucia, where she dies. The leading 3001 15,1 | hear of, in good time, from Seleucus himself. If you find any,