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Lactantius

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Introductory Notice To Lactantius.

[272] The title ὁ δημιουργος, the Architect, or Creator, is used by Plato and Hermes.

[273] Georg., ii. 341. [Terrea progenies duris caput extulit arvis.]

[274] Terrea. Another reading is ferrea, “the race of iron.”

[275] The origin.

[276] The fable of the three Parcæ—Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos—is derived from Hesiod.

[277] Frailty.

Chap. XII.—That Animals Were Not Produced Spontaneously, But by a Divine Arrangement, of Which God Would Have Given Us the Knowledge, If It Were Advantageous for Us to Know It.

[278] Ripeness, or suitableness.

[279] Little bags, or follicles.

[280] Book v. 806. [Uteri terram radicibus apti.]

[281] A perpetual temperature and an equable spring.

[282] The seasons were varied.

[283] Be rough.

[284] Inextricabilis, that cannot be disentangled.

[285] [De Legibus, book i. cap. 7.]

[286] That is, according to the notions of the heathen.

[287] Made fast, established.

Chap. XIII.—Why Man is of Two Sexes; What is His First Death, and What the Second and of the Fault and Punishment of Our First Parents.

[288] i.e., man.

[289] It was necessary to remove ambiguity from the heathen, to whom the word death conveys no such meaning. In the sacred writings the departure of the soul from the body is often spoken of as sleep, or rest. Thus Lazarus is said to sleep. 1 Thess. iv. 14, “Them that sleep in Jesus will God bring with Him,”—an expression of great beauty and propriety as applied to Christians. On the other hand, the prophets speak of “the shadow of death.”

[290] Extinguishes. Compare the words of Christ Himself, John v. 29; Acts xxiv. 15.

[291] [Must not be overlooked. See vol. iv. p. 495, and elucidation (after book. iv.) on p. 542.]

[292] [Eccles. iii. 18-21. Answered, Eccles. xii. 7.]

 

 

 

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