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Clement of Alexandria

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Introductory Note to Clement of Alexandria

[3162] Isa. x. 14.

[3163] Jer. x. 12.

[3164] Isa. xl. 13.

[3165] Iliad, viii. 69.

[3166] These lines of Æschylus are also quoted by Justyn Martyr (De Monarchia, vol. i. p. 290). Dread force, ἄπλατος ὁρμή: Eusebius reads ὁρμῇ, dative. J. Langus has suggested (ἄπλαστος) uncreated; ἄπληστος (insatiate) has also been suggested. The epithet of the text, which means primarily unapproachable, then dread or terrible, is applied by Pindar to fire.

[3167] Ps. lxviii. 8. [Comp. Coleridge’s Hymn in Chamounix.]

[3168] This Pythian oracle is given by Herodotus, and is quoted also by Eusebius and Theodoret.

[3169] γνωμικώτατα. Eusebius reads γενιικώτατον, agreeing with πατἐρα.

[3170] A game in which a potsherd with a black and white side was cast on a line; and as the black or white turned up, one of the players fled and the other pursued.

[3171] Eusebius has κρίνει, which we have adopted, for κρίνειν of the text.

[3172] Plato, Rep., book vii.

[3173] [Pearson, On the Creed, p. 47.]

[3174] According to the reading in Eusebius, πᾶν ἔθνος ἑῷον πᾶν δὲ ἑσπερίων ᾐόνων, βόρειόν τε καὶ τό, κ.τ.λ.

[3175] Instead of πρόνοιαν, Eusebius has προνομίαν (privilege).

[3176] Clement seems to mean that they knew God only in a roundabout and inaccurate way. The text has περίφασιν; but περίφρασιν, which is in Eusebius, is preferable.

[3177] [See p. 379, Elucidation I., supra.]

[3178] Isa xxxvi. 7-8, 10.

[3179] Jonah i. 6, 9, 14.

[3180] Mal. i. 10-11, 14. [The prophetic present-future.]

[3181] Perhaps Bacchylides.

[3182] ἀρχαίαν.

 

 

 

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