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Cyprian

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Introductory Notice to Cyprian.

[2473] Luke vi. 36.

[2474] Matt. ix. 12.

[2475] [Compare Cyprian, in all this, with his less reasonable “master” Tertullian.]

[2476] Apud inferos. See Ps. vi. 5.

[2477] Prov. xviii. 19 (old version).

[2478] Gal. vi. 1, 2.

[2479] 1 Cor. x. 12.

[2480] Rom. xiv. 4.

[2481] 1 John ii. 1, 2.

[2482] Rom. v. 8, 9.

[2483] [I bespeak admiration for this loving spirit of one often upbraided for his strong expressions and firm convictions.]

[2484] These words are variously read, “to be purged divinely,” or “to be purged for a long while,” scil. “purgari divine,” or “purgari diutine.” [Candid Romish writers concede that this does not refer to their purgatory; but, the idea once accepted, we can read it into this place as into 1 Cor. iii. 13. See Oxford trans., p. 128.]

[2485] [The unity of the Catholic Church, in his view, consists in this unity of co-bishops in one episcopate, with which every Christian should be in communion through his own bishop.]

[2486] [The independence of bishops, and their intercommunion as one episcopate, is his theory of the undivided sacrament of Catholicity.]

[2487] Rev. 2.5.

[2488] Tob. iv. 10.

[2489] Rev. 2.20-22.

[2490] Luke xv. 7.

[2491] Wisd. i. 13.

[2492] Joel ii. 12, 13.

[2493] Ps. lxxxix. 32, 33.

 

 

 

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