Appearance      Marker   

 

<<  Contents  >>

Clement of Alexandria

Footnotes

Show All Footnotes

Show All Footnotes & Jump to 3253

Introductory Note to Clement of Alexandria

[3243] Deut. x. 16, 17.

[3244] Isa. xl. 26.

[3245] 1 Tim. vi. 16.

[3246] [Of this Aristobulus, see 2 Maccab. i. 10, and Euseb., Hist., book vii. cap. 32. Elucidation II.]

[3247] [See the unsatisfactory note in ed. Migne, ad locum.]

[3248] [See interesting remarks of Professor Cook, Religion and Chemistry (first edition), p. 44. This whole passage of our author, on the sounds of Sinai and the angelic trumpets, touches a curious matter, which must be referred, as here, to the unlimited power of God.]

[3249] Deut. iv. 12.

Chapter IV.—The Greeks Drew Many of Their Philosophical Tenets from the Egyptian and Indian Gymnosophists.

[3250] Ὠροσκόοπος. [Elucidation III.]

[3251] [Elucidation IV.]

[3252] [Instructive remarks on the confusions, etc., in Greek authors, may be seen in Schliemann, Mycenœ, p. 36, ed. New York, 1878.]

Chapter V.—The Greeks Had Some Knowledge of the True God.

[3253] We have the same statement made, Stromata, i. 19, p. 322, ante, Potter p. 372; also v. 14, p. 465, ante, Potter p. 730,—in all of which Lowth adopts περίφρασιν as the true reading, instead of περίφασιν. In the first of these passages, Clement instances as one of the circumlocutions or roundabout expressions by which God was known to the Greek poets and philosophers, “The Unknown God.” Joannes Clericus proposes to read παράφασιν (palpitatio), touching, feeling after. [See Strom., p. 321, and p. 464, note 1.]

[3254] i.e., “The Word of God’s power is His Son.”

[3255] Instead of ἡνἐξουσίας, as in the text, we read ὦν εξουσίαν .

[3256] None of the attempts to amend this passage are entirely successful. The translation adopts the best suggestions made.

[3257] [A strange passage; but its “darkness visible” seems to lend some help to the understanding of the puzzle about the second-first Sabbath of Luke vi. 1.]

[3258] i.e., of atonement.

[3259] Jer. xxxi. 31, 32; Heb. viii. 8-10.

[3260] Most likely taken from some apocryphal book bearing the name of Paul.

Chapter VI.—The Gospel Was Preached to Jews and Gentiles in Hades.

[3261] [The ideas on which our author bases his views of Christ’s descent into the invisible world, are well expounded by Kaye, p. 189.]

[3262] Matt. xxiii. 4; Luke xi. 46.

[3263] Matt. ix. 22, etc.

 

 

 

10 per page

 

 

 Search Comments 

 

This page has been visited 0451 times.

 

<<  Contents  >>