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ANF Pseudo-Clementine The Clementine Homilies
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Introductory Notice to The Clementine Homilies.
[1117] [With chaps. 19–21 compare Recognitions, iv. 32, 35, which closely resemble them.—R.]
Chapter XXI.—The Demons Subject to the Believer.
[1118] I prefer here the common text to any of the proposed emendations, and suppose that the author represents Cæsar, though but one man, as the image or personification of the whole empire.
Chapter XXIII.—The Sick Healed.
[1119] [Comp. Recognitions, iv. 7.—R.]
Chapter I.—The Third Day in Tripolis.
[1120] [Book v. of the Recognitions, assigned to the second day at Tripolis, contains most of the matter in this Homily, but has many passages without a parallel here.—R.]
[1121] Matt. 4.10; Luke 4.8; Deut. 6.13.—R.].
Chapter VII.—Unprofitableness of Idols.
[1122] [Recognitions, v. 14, is parallel to this chapter, and the resemblance is close throughout some of the succeeding chapters.—R.]
Chapter VIII.—No Gods Which are Made with Hands.
[1123] [This, with the corresponding passage in Recognitions, v. 15, points to an early origin of the literature, under the heathen emperors.—R.]
Chapter X.—Idolatry a Delusion of the Serpent.
[1124] [Comp. Recognitions, ii. 45, and especially the full discussion about the serpent in Recognitions, v. 17–26.—R.]
Chapter XVI.—Gods of the Egyptians.
[1125] γαστρῶν πνεύματα.
Chapter II.—“Giving All Diligence.”
[1126] [With chaps. 2, 3, the corresponding chapters in Recognitions, vi., agree. The parallel is resumed in chap. 19.—R.]
[1127] [Most of the matter in chaps. 4–18 is found in Recognitions, v. 23–36.—R.]
Chapter VIII.—Liberty and Necessity.
[1128] [Comp. Recognitions, iii. 21, etc. In that work the freedom of the will, as necessary to goodness, is more frequently affirmed.—R.]
Chapter IX.—God a Jealous God.
[1129] We have adopted the reading of Codex O. The reading in the others is corrupt.
Chapter XVI.—All Things Work for Good to Them that Love God.
Chapter XVIII.—Charming of the Serpent.
[1131] [At this point the first discourse in the Recognitions (v. 36) ends; the following chapters (19–33) agrees with the discourse in Recognitions, vi. 4–14.—R.]
Chapter XIX.—Not Peace, But a Sword.
Chapter XX.—What If It Be Already Kindled?
[1134] Altered from John iii. 5.
[1135] [Comp. Recognitions, ix. 7.—R.]
Chapter XXXIII.—The Queen of the South and the Men of Nineveh.
[1136] Matt. 12.42; Luke 11.31.—R.]
[1137] [Matt. 12.41; Luke 11.32. [The order of the two citations suggests that they were taken from Luke.—R.]
Chapter XXXIV.—Peter’s Daily Work.
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