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Hippolytus
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Introductory Notice to Hippolytus.
[1373] See Fuller, Misc. Sacr., i. 4; and Bochart, Phaleg., p. 22.
[1374] [See p. 149, note 10, supra.]
Section X. On Deut. xxxiii. II
[1375] That is the name the Mohammedans give to their Traditions.
[1376] Simon de Magistris, Acta Martyrum Ostiensium, Append., p. 439.
I. The Argument of the Exposition of the Psalms by Hippolytus, (Bishop) of Rome.
[1377] That is an attempt to express in Greek letters the Hebrew title, viz., סֵפֶר תְּהִלָּס = Book of Praises
[1378] [See vol. iii. pp. 94, 103.]
[1379] Luke vii. 41. [Dan. viii. 13, (Margin.) “Palmoni,” etc.]
[1381] i.e., in our version the 101st.
[1382] [See learned remarks of Pusey, p. 27 of his Lectures on Daniel.]
[1383] Isa. liii. 9. [Vol. i. cap. iv. p. 50.]
[1385] The Greek is: ὄντων ψαλμῶν, καὶ οὐσῶν ᾠδῶν, καὶ ψαλμῶν ᾠδῆς, καὶ ᾠδῶν ψαλμοῦ.
[1386] Ecclesiasticus 1.26.
[1387] [Our author throws no great light on this vexed word, but the article Selah in Smith’s Dict. of the Bible is truly valuable.]
Other Fragments on the Psalms. II. On Psalm xxxi. 22. Of the Triumph of the Christian Faith.
[1388] De Magistris, Acta Martyrum Ostien., p. 256.
[1389] The allusion probably is to the seat of imperial power itself.
[1390] He is addressing his amanuensis, a man not without learning, as it seems. Hippolytus dictates these words.
XI. On the Words in Psalm cxxvii. 7: “On the Wrath of Mine Enemies.” Etc.
[1391] To his amanuensis.
Treatise on Christ and Antichrist.
[1393] Gallandi, Bibl. vet. Patr., ii. p. 417, Venice, 1765.
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