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Athenagoras

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Introductory Note to the Writings of Athenagoras

[739] Hom., Il., ix. 499 sq., Lord Derby’s translation, which version the translator has for the most part used.

[740] Comp. Rom. xii. 1. [Mal. i.. “A pure Mincha” (Lev. ii. 1) was the unbloody sacrifice of the Jews. This was to be the Christian oblation: hence to offering of Christ’s natural blood, as the Latins now teach, was unknown to Athenagoras.]

Chapter XV.—The Christians Distinguish God from Matter.

[741] [Kaye, p. 172.]

Chapter XVI.—The Christians Do Not Worship the Universe.

[742] Thus Otto; others render “comprising.”

[743] [The Ptolemaic universe is conceived of as a sort of hollow ball, or bubble, within which are the spheres moving about the earth. Milton adopts from Homer the idea of such a globe, or bubble, hanging by a chain from heaven (Paradise Lost, ii. 10, 51). The oblique circle is the zodiac. The Septentriones are referred to also. See Paradise Lost, viii. 65–168.]

[744] Some refer this to the human spirit.

[745] Polit., p. 269, D.

Chapter XVII.—The Names of the Gods and Their Images are But of Recent Date.

[746] We here follow the text of Otto; others place the clause in the following sentence.

[747] ii. 53.

[748] Or, Koré. It is doubtful whether or not this should be regarded as a proper name.

[749] Or, Koré. It is doubtful whether or not this should be regarded as a proper name.

[750] The reading is here doubtful.

[751] [There were no images or pictures, therefore, in the earliest Christian places of prayer.]

Chapter XVIII.—The Gods Themselves Have Been Created, as the Poets Confess.

[752] [This was a heathen justification of image-worship, and entirely foreign to the Christian mind. Leighton, Works, vol. v. p. 323.]

[753] Hom., Il., xx. 131.

[754] [See Kaye’s very important note, refuting Gibbon’s cavil, and illustrating the purpose of Bishop Bull, in his quotation. On the περιχώρησις, see Bull, Fid. Nicænæ, iv. cap. 4.]

[755] Prov. xxi. 1.

[756] Hom., Il., xiv. 201, 302.

[757] Hom., Il., xiv. 246.

[758] τισάσθην.

[759] Orpheus, Fragments.

Chapter XIX.—The Philosophers Agree with the Poets Respecting the Gods.

 

 

 

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