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Cyprian
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Introductory Notice to Cyprian.
[2095] See p. 265.
The Life and Passion of Cyprian, Bishop and Martyr.
[2096] [Here put for the chief in the sacerdocy. See p. 268, infra.]
[2097] [St.Luke xx. 35. Creature-merit is not implied, but, through grace, the desert of Matt. xxv. 21.]
[2100] [A proselyte, rather, known in legends as Indich. Vol. i. p. 433.]
[2101] [Elucidation I.]
[2102] [See above note 1, this page.]
[2103] [The charismata of a higher ministry.]
[2104] [Nor does it make any one so. But the Fathers seem to have thought it made good men more humble.]
[2105] [This heathen word thus comes into use as applicable to all bishops. It was used derisively by Tertullian, vol. iv. p. 74.]
[2106] [Pontius is said to have followed his beloved bishop, a.d. 258, dying a martyr.]
[2107] [See Origen, “weeks of years,” vol. iv. p. 353.]
[2108] That is, Providence ensured the respite, to fulfil the promise.
[2109] [See note at end of this memoir.]
[2110] [He was the first of the province, that is. See p. 273, supra.]
[2111] The simple attire of Hippolytus, as seen in his statue, was doubtless what is here meant by insignia. But see Hermas, vol. ii. p. 12.]
[2112] In the Oxford edition this epistle is given among the treatises.
[2113] Wearying, scil. “fatigantis.”
[2114] “Fabulis.” [Our “Thanksgiving Day” = the “Vindemia.”]
[2115] [A lover of gardens and of nature. The religion of Christ gave a new and loftier impulse to such tastes universally. Vol. ii. p. 9.]
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