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Cyprian
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Introductory Notice to Cyprian.
[4850] [To me, these dramatic narrations of what was going on among the crowds that gazed upon the tortures of Christ’s witnesses, are very suggestive of the whole scene. Compare pp. 295–296, supra.]
[4851] Ecclesiasticus 2.4.
[4852] Or, “earth.”
[4853] Wisd. iii. 4.
[4857] [The adoption of “the sign of the cross,” after the immersion of baptism, is referable to this martyr-age. It was meant to impress the idea of soldiership.]
[4858] Matt. iii. 10. [Elucidation II.]
[4861] Col. ii. 20; “decernitis.”
[4862] Gal. vi. 14. [Compare Ep. xxv. p. 303, supra.]
[4866] Or, “Manes.”
[4867] [Rev. vi. 9; also vol. i. p. 486, note 10, this series.]
[4868] [“Si tamen qui Christi compares estis aliquando peccastis;” not very happily translated, but extravagant at best.]
[4869] [Think, I say again, of three hundred years of such “fiery trial,” so marvellously sustained, and we shall gain new views of Christ’s power to perfect His own strength in human weakness. The life of these Christians was a conscious daily warfare against “the world, the flesh, and the devil;” and we must recognise this in all judgments of their discipline and their modes of thought.]
Of the Discipline and Advantage of Chastity.
[4870] [Not reckoned by Erasmus as worthy of Cyprian. Pamelius thinks otherwise.]
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