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Anti-Marcion

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Introduction, by the American Editor.

[3248] Habitus.

[3249] Carneus.

[3250] Ex nativitate.

Chapter XII.—Isaiah’s Prophecy of Emmanuel. Christ Entitled to that Name.

[3251] Isa. vii. 14.

[3252] Isa. viii. 4. Compare adv. Judæos, 9.

[3253] Cohærentia.

[3254] Agitetur in Christo.

[3255] Gal. iii. 27.

Chapter XIII.—Isaiah’s Prophecies Considered. The Virginity of Christ’s Mother a Sign. Other Prophecies Also Signs. Metaphorical Sense of Proper Names in Sundry Passages of the Prophets.

[3256] Compare with this chapter, T.’s adv. Judæos, 9.

[3257] Isa. viii. 4.

[3258] Jam hominem, jam virum in Adv. Judæos, “at man’s estate.”

[3259] Lanceare ante quam lancinare. This play on words points to the very early training of the barbarian boys to war. Lancinare perhaps means, “to nibble the nipple with the gum.”

[3260] He alludes to the suppling of their young joints with oil, and then drying them in the sun.

[3261] Pannis.

[3262] Butyro.

[3263] Isa. vii. 14.

[3264] The tam dignum of this place is “jam signum” in adv. Judæos.

[3265] Contineat.

[3266] This opinion of Jews and Judaizing heretics is mentioned by Irenæus, Adv. Hæret. iii. 21 (Stieren’s ed. i. 532); Eusebius, Hist. Eccles. v. 8; Jerome, Adv. Helvid. (ed. Benedict), p. 132. Nor has the cavil ceased to be held, as is well known, to the present day. The הָעַלְֹמָה of Isa. vii. 4 is supposed by the Jewish Fuerst to be Isaiah’s wife, and he quotes Kimchi’s authority; while the neologian Gesenius interprets the word, a bride, and rejects the Catholic notion of an unspotted virgin. To make way, however, for their view, both Fuerst and Gesenius have to reject the LXX. rendering, παρθένος.

[3267] Disposita.

[3268] Et hic.

 

 

 

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