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Anti-Marcion
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Introduction, by the American Editor.
[7007] Excusas.
[7008] The humiliation which God endured, so indispensable a part of the Christian faith.
[7009] Matt. 10.33; Mark 8.38; Luke 9.26.
[7010] Ineptum.
[7011] That is, imaginary and unreal.
[7012] Census: “the origin.”
[7013] Dispuncta est.
[7014] This term is almost a technical designation of the divine nature of Christ in Tertullian. (See our translation of the Anti-Marcion, p. 247, note 7, Edin.)
[7015] This term is almost a technical designation of the divine nature of Christ in Tertullian. (See our translation of the Anti-Marcion, p. 247, note 7, Edin.)
[7016] This term is almost a technical designation of the divine nature of Christ in Tertullian. (See our translation of the Anti-Marcion, p. 247, note 7, Edin.)
[7017] Dimidias.
[7018] See his Adv. Valentin, chap. 25.
[7020] Avocatorem.
[7021] He has Appelles mainly in view.
[7022] Sine præjudicio tamen. “Without prejudice to their denial, etc.”
[7023] The Roman version of the proverb is “out of the lime-kiln into the coal-furnace.”
[7024] See Tertullian, de Præscr. Hæret. c. xxx.
[7025] Ab eo: or, “from that event of the carnal contact.” A good reading, found in most of the old books, is ab ea, that is, Philumene.
[7027] Ex ea qualitate in qua.
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