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Methodius
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Introductory Notice to Methodius.
[2816] [Contrast the shameful close of Plato’s Symposium.]
[2818] [Recur to what is said of Origen and his epoch on p. 224, vol. iv. of this series.]
[2819] [Recur to what is said of Origen and his epoch on p. 224, vol. iv. of this series.]
[2820] [Here is our author’s conclusive condemnation of Origen, whose great mistake, I have supposed, gave occasion to this extraordinary work. Possibly the epoch of Anthony had revived such discussions when this was written.]
I. (We here behold only shadows, etc., p. 335.)
[2821] Introduction to the Dialogues, etc., Dobson’s translation, Cambridge, 1836.
II. (Christ Himself is the one who is born, p. 337.)
[2822] See his work On the Apocalypse, Lecture IX. p. 198, ed. Philadelphia, 1852.
[2823] Speaker’s Com., ad loc.
[2824] Vol. v. p. 217, this series.
[2825] Works, vol. i. p. 447, ed. Paris, 1845.
[2826] Dec. 8, 1854.
[2827] See The Eirenicon of Dr. Pusey, ed. New York, 1866.
[2828] [This debate between Orthodoxus and a Valentinian reminds us of the Octavius of Minucius Felix, vol. iv.]
[2833] Iliad, ix. 4, H. (Cowper’s Tr.).
[2835] [See the essay of Archbishop King On the Origin of Evil, ed. Cambridge, 1739. Law’s annotations in this edition are valuable. See also Dr. Bledsoe, Theodicy, and Elucidation VIII. p. 522, vol. ii, this series. Of Leibnitz (refuting Bayle), no need to speak here. Comp. Addison, Spectator, Nos. 237 and 519; also Parnell’s Hermit; also Jer. xii. 1.]
[2836] The reader will here naturally think of the great and long-continued Manichæan controversy.—Tr.
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