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Minucius Felix
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[1734] Otherwise, “who breathless with horses foaming,” etc.
[1735] Otherwise, “the offence of Jupiter, the renewal of the games,” etc.
[1736] According to the codex, “the Milesian.” [See note in Reeve’s Apologies of Justin Martyr, Tertullian, and Minucius Felix, vol. ii. p. 59. S.]
[1737] Some have corrected this word, reading “without consideration,” scil. “inconsulte;” and the four first editions omit the subsequent words, “concerning the divinity.”
[1738] There are various emendations of this passage, but their meaning is somewhat obscure. One is elaborately ingenious: “Ita illis pavorum fallax spes solatio redivivo blanditur,” which is said to imply, “Thus the hope that deceives their fears, soothes them with the hope of living again.”
[1739] Otherwise read “abominable.”
[1740] This charge, as Oehler thinks, refers apparently to the kneeling posture in which penitents made confession before their bishop.
[1741] This calumny seems to have originated from the sacrament of the Eucharist.
[1742] Scil. Fronto of Cirta, spoken of again in ch. xxxi. [A recent very interesting discovery goes to show that our author was the chief magistrate of Cirta, in Algeria, from a.d. 210 to 217. See Schaff, vol. iii. p. 841.]
[1743] Otherwise, “no consecrated images.”
[1744] Otherwise, “we are contained and bound together.”
[1745] [These very accusations, reduced back to Christian language, show that much of the Creed was, in fact, known to the heathen at this period.]
[1747] “And I have already shown, without any trouble,” is another reading.
[1748] Otherwise, “without a body or with.”
[1749] Otherwise, “too credulous.”
[1750] Otherwise, “while you consider, while you are yet alive, poor wretches, what is threatening after death.”
[1751] Some read, “with shivering.”
[1752] This is otherwise read, “Academic Pyrrhonists.”
[1753] Cicero, de Natura Deorum, i. 22.
[1754] “Plautinæ prosapiæ.” The expression is intended as a reproach against the humble occupations of many of the Christian professors. Plautus is said, when in need, to have laboured at a baker’s hand-mill. Cæcilius tells Octavius that he may be the first among the millers, but he is the last among the philosophers. Stieber proposes “Christianorum” instead of “pistorum”—“Christians” instead of “millers.”
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