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Apologetic
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[1337] What the sense of this is it is not easy to see. It appears to have puzzled Pam. and Rig. so effectually that they both, conjecturally and without authority, adopted the reading found in adv. Marc. l. iii. c. xviii. (from which book, as usual, the present passage is borrowed), only altering illis to ipsis.
[1338] See Ex. xvii. 8-16; and comp. Col. ii. 14, 15.
[1340] Their sin was “speaking against God and against Moses” (Num. xxi. 4-9).
[1341] Comp. Col. ii. 14, 15, as before; also Gen. iii. 1, etc.; 2 Cor. xi. 3; Rev. xii. 9.
[1342] Comp. 2 Cor. xi. 14-15; Matt. xxv. 41; Rev. xii. 9.
[1343] Comp. de Idol. c. v.; adv. Marc. l. iii. c. xviii.
[1344] A ligno. Oehler refers us to Ps. xcvi. 10 (xcv. 10 in LXX.); but the special words “a ligno” are wanting there, though the text is often quoted by the Fathers.
[1345] Lignarium aliquem regem. It is remarkable, in connection herewith, that our Lord is not only called by the Jews “the carpenter’s son” (Matt. xiii. 55; Luke iv. 22), but “the carpenter” (Mark vi. 3).
[1346] See Isa. ix. 6.
[1347] Lignum.
[1348] See Jer. xi. 19 (in LXX.).
[1349] i.e., when they laid on Him the crossbeam to carry. See John xix. 17.
[1350] See John vi. passim, and the various accounts of the institution of the Holy Supper.
[1351] It is Ps. xxii. in our Bibles, xxi. in LXX.
[1352] Psa. 22.16 (17 in LXX.).
[1353] Ps. xxii. 21 (xxi. 22 in LXX., who render it as Tertullian does).
[1354] i.e., perhaps, because of the extreme ignominy attaching to that death, which prevented its being expressly named.
[1355] Isa. liii. 8, 9, 10, (in LXX.).
[1356] Isa. lvii. 2 (in LXX.).
[1357] Isa. liii. 12 (in LXX.). Comp., too, Bp. Lowth. Oehler’s pointing again appears to be faulty.
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