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Lactantius

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Introductory Notice To Lactantius.

[714] The scene of the giving of the law is sometimes spoken of as Horeb, as Ex. iii., and sometimes as Sinai, as Ex. xix. The difficulty of discriminating the two is very great. See Stanley’s Sinai and Palestine [pp. 29, 32, 36–37, 40–42, etc. Robinson, vol. i. 177, 551.]

[715] Deut. xviii. 17-19.

[716] Ego vindicabo in eum.

[717] Vivam præsentemque legem.

[718] Another reading is, “per Moysen,” by Moses.

[719] The quotation is not from Isaiah, but from Jer. iv. 3, 4.

[720] Deut. xxx. 6.

[721] i.e., Joshua See Josh. v. 2.

[722]Figuram gerebat,” typified, or set forth as in a figure.

[723] i.e., Osee, Oshea, or Hoshea, as Joshua was first called. See Num. xiii. 8. [But note Num. xiii. 16. The change was significant. See Pearson On the Creed, art. ii. 125–128. Thus, “Jehovah-Saviour” = Jesus, and the change was prophetic of “the Name which is above every name.” Compare Gen. xxxii. 29 and Phil. ii. 9, 10.]

[724] Per figuram nominis. The name Jesus or Joshua signifies a deliverer or saviour. [Nay, more, Jehovah-Salvator, thus: Hoshea + Jah = Jehoshua = Joshua = Jesus.]

[725] Involutum. Thus Seneca: “Non est tibi frons ficta, nec in alienam voluptatem sermo compositus, nec cor involutum.

[726] 1 Sam. xvi. 7: “The Lord seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart.”

[727] Lutulentum (besmeared with mud) “et immundum.” See 2 Pet. ii. 22.

[728] [“The swine gorges his acorns, and never looks up to the tree from which they fall,” as a parable of nature for swinish men.]

[729] Sedendi vehiculum.Sedeor” is sometimes used in this sense for riding.

[730] Exuviis, used in the same sense as “pellibus.

[731] Ingurgitat cœno, “plunges into the mire.” [“Sus lota in volutabro luti.” 2 Pet. ii. 22, Vulgate.]

[732] Per figuram. [This Typology has never yet been fully or satisfactorily treated. Yet the volumes of Dr. Fairbairn (Typology of Scripture, Clarks, Edin.) ought to be known to every Bible student.]

Chap. XVIII.—Of the Lord’s Passion, and that It Was Foretold.

[733] Subinde, “from time to time.”

[734] Legatus. This title was given, in the time of the Roman emperors, to the governors sent by them into the provinces. Pontius Pilate was procurator of Judæa, which was not a separate province, but a dependency of the province of Syria, which was at this time governed by Silanus.

 

 

 

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