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Clement of Alexandria

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Introductory Note to Clement of Alexandria

[908] [The Trent Creed makes the saints and their images objects of worship. It is evident that Clement never imagined the existence of an image among Christians. See p. 188, infra.]

[909] [The Trent Creed makes the saints and their images objects of worship. It is evident that Clement never imagined the existence of an image among Christians. See p. 188, infra.]

[910] Pantarkes is said to have been the name of a boy loved by Phidias: but as the word signifies “all-assisting,” “all-powerful,” it might also be made to apply to Zeus.

[911] Iliad, xvi. 433.

[912] Iliad, i. 221; μετὰ δαίμονας αλλους.

[913] Odyss., viii. 266.

[914] [Is not this a rebuke to many of the figures and pictures which vulgarize abodes of wealth in America?]

[915] Sibyl. Justin Martyr, Cohort. ad Græcos, p. 81. See p. 280, vol. i of this series.

[916] Ex. xx. 4. [Clement even regards the art of painters and sculptors as unlawful for Christians.]

[917] Ps. xcvi. 5.

[918] Ps. xxxiii. 6.

[919] Ps. viii. 3.

Chapter V.—The Opinions of the Philosophers Respecting God.

[920] Gal. iv. 9.

Chapter VI.—By Divine Inspiration Philosophers Sometimes Hit on the Truth.

[921] Timæus.

[922] Deut. xxv. 13, 15.

[923] [This great truth comes forcibly from an Attic scholar. Let me refer to a very fine passage in another Christian scholar, William Cowper (Task, book ii.): “All truth is from the sempiternal source,” etc.]

[924] The Sibyl.

[925] Or Asseus, native of Asso.

Chapter VII.—The Poets Also Bear Testimony to the Truth.

[926] Il., iii. 406.

[927] Il., vi. 132.

[928] Orestes, 590.

 

 

 

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