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Anti-Marcion

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Introduction, by the American Editor.

[2347] Interdum. [Can it be that when all this was written (speaking of ourselves) our author had fully lapsed from Communion with the Catholic Church?]

Chapter II.—Marcion, Aided by Cerdon, Teaches a Duality of Gods; How He Constructed This Heresy of an Evil and a Good God.

[2348] Passus.

[2349] Instinctum.

[2350] St. Luke vi. 43 sq.

[2351] Languens.

[2352] Isa. xlv. 7.

[2353] Mala.

[2354] [This purely good or goodish divinity is an idea of the Stoics. De Præscript. chap. 7.]

[2355] Hospitam.

[2356] Quendam. [See Irenæus, Vol. I. p. 352, this Series.]

[2357] Integre.

[2358] Præstruendo.

[2359] Or sections.

Chapter III.—The Unity of God. He is the Supreme Being, and There Cannot Be a Second Supreme.

[2360] Et exinde.

[2361] Si Forte.

[2362] Jam.

[2363] Of eternity.

[2364] We subjoin the original of this difficult passage: Hunc enim statum æternitati censendum, quæ summum magnum deum efficiat, dum hoc est in deo ipsa, atque ita et cetera, ut sit deus summum magnum et forma et ratione et vi et potestate.

[2365] Quid.

[2366] Unicus. [Alone of his kind.]

[2367] As its first principle.

 

 

 

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