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Hippolytus

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Introductory Notice to Hippolytus.

[1407] In the text it is προκείμενα (= things before us or proposed to us), for which Combefisius proposes, as in our rendering, προειρημένα.

[1408] The original is ἀκινδυνον.

[1409] Isa. xlii. 1; Matt. xii. 18. The text is αὐτὸς πάλιν ὁ τοῦ θεοῦ παῖς. See Macarius, Divinitas D. N. S. C., book iv. ch. xiii. p. 460, and Grabe on Bull’s Defens. Fid. Nic., p. 101.

[1410] Reading αὐτούς for αὐτόν.

[1411] [Isa. lvi. 3, 4.]

[1412] Eph. iv. 13.

[1413] The text has ὤν = being, for which read ἦν = was.

[1414] μίξας. Thomassin, De Incarnatione Verbi, iii. 5, cites the most distinguished of the Greek and Latin Fathers, who taught that a mingling (commistio), without confusion indeed, but yet most thorough, of the two natures, is the bond and nexus of the personal unity.

[1415] [This analogy of weaving is powerfully employed by Gray (“Weave the warp, and weave the woof,” etc.). See his Pindaric ode, The Bard.]

[1416] Rev. v. 5; [also Gen. xlix. 8. See below, 7, 8].

[1417] John xviii. 37.

[1418] John i. 29.

[1419] John xi. 52.

[1420] John ii. 19.

[1421] Gen. xlix. 8-12.

[1422] The text has τούτουπροερχομένου, for which we read, with Combefisius, προερχόμενον.

[1423] Isa. xi. 1.

[1424] Isa. i. 21.

[1425] Ps. iii. 5.

[1426] Gal. i. 1.

[1427] John xv. 1.

 

 

 

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