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Hippolytus

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Introductory Notice to Hippolytus.

[1852] From the same Discourse. From Theodoret’s Second Dialogue, bearing the title “Unmixed,” ἀσύγχυτος; Works, vol. iv. p. 88.

[1853] 1 Cor. v. 7.

[1854] [Man’s nature was never before in heaven. John iii. 13; Acts ii. 34.]

VI.

[1855] From an Oration on “The Lord is my Shepherd.” In Theodoret, Dial. I. p. 36.

[1856] Ps. xxxviii. 5.

VII.

[1857] From a Discourse on the “Great Song” [i.e., Ps. xc. See Bunsen, i. p. 285. Some suppose it Ps. cxix.] In Theodoret, Dial. II. pp. 88, 89.

[1858] τὸν κάτω εἰς τὰ ἄνω. [See p. 238, note 17, supra.]

VIII.

[1859] From a Discourse on the beginning of Isaiah. In Theodoret, Dial. I. p. 36.

IX.

[1860] From a second Oration on Daniel. In the tractate of Eustratius, a presbyter of the Church of Constantinople, “Against those who allege that souls, as soon as they are released from the body, cease to act,” ch. xix., as edited by Allatius in his work on the Continuous Harmony of the Western and the Eastern Church on the Dogma of Purgatory, p. 492. [Conf. Macaire, Theol. Orthod., ii. p. 725.]

[1861] [Nothing of this in the hymn: hence my brackets.]

X.

[1862] From an Oration on the Distribution of Talents. In Theodoret, Dial. II. p. 88.

XI.

[1863] From a Discourse on “The two Robbers.” In Theodoret’s Third Dialogue, bearing the title “Impassible” (ἀπαθὴς), p. 156.

Fragments from Other Writings of Hippolytus.

[1864] Preserved by the author of the Chronicon Paschale, ex ed. Cangii, p. 6.

I.

[1865] i.e., the opponent of Hippolytus, one of the forerunners of the Quartodecimans.

[1866] [For pro &amp; con see Speaker’s Com., note to Matt. xxvi.]

II. From the same.

[1867] Luke xxii. 16.

III. Hippolytus, Bishop and Martyr, in a letter to a certain queen.

[1868] From a Letter of Hippolytus to a certain queen. In Theodoret’s Dial. II., bearing the title “Unmixed” (ἀσύγχυτος), and Dial. III., entitled “Impassible” (ἀπαθης) [pp. 238–239 supra].

[1869] On the question as to who this queen was, see Stephen le Moyne, in notes to the Varia Sacra, pp. 1103, 1112. In the marble monument mention is made of a letter of Hippolytus to Severina. [Bunsen decides that she was only a princess, a daughter of Alexander Severus. See his Hippolytus, i. p. 276.]

[1870] 1 Cor. xv. 20.

[1871] Col. i. 18.

[1872] John xx. 27; Luke xxiv. 39.

The story of a maiden of Corinth, and a certain Magistrianus.

 

 

 

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