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Irenæus

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Introductory Note to Irenæus Against Heresies

[4633] The Latin of this obscure sentence is: Quæ ergo fuit in Paradiso repletio hominis per duplicem gustationem, dissoluta est per eam, quæ fuit in hoc mundo, indigentiam. Harvey thinks that repletio is an error of the translation reading ἀναπλήρωσις for ἀναπήρωσις. This conjecture is adopted above.

[4634] Ps. lxxxix. 11.

[4635] Deut. vi. 16.

[4636] This sentence is one of great obscurity.

[4637] Luke iv. 6, 7.

[4638] Matt. iv. 10.

[4639] Matt. xii. 29 and Mark iii. 27.

Chapter XXII.—The true Lord and the one God is declared by the law, and manifested by Christ His Son in the Gospel; whom alone we should adore, and from Him we must look for all good things, not from Satan.

[4640] Rom. iii. 30.

[4641] Deut. vi. 4-5, 13.

[4642] Matt. iv. 7.

[4643] Deut. vi. 16.

[4644] Rom. xii. 16.

[4645] Matt. x. 29.

[4646] John viii. 44.

[4647] Luke iv. 6.

Chapter XXIII.—The devil is well practised in falsehood, by which Adam having been led astray, sinned on the sixth day of the creation, in which day also he has been renewed by Christ.

[4648] Gen. ii. 16, 17.

[4649] Gen. iii. 1.

[4650] Gen. iii. 2, 3.

[4651] Gen. iii. 4.

[4652] 2 Pet. iii. 8.

[4653] John viii. 44.

Chapter XXIV.—Of the constant falsehood of the devil, and of the powers and governments of the world, which we ought to obey, inasmuch as they are appointed of God, not of the devil.

 

 

 

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