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Ethical

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I. On Repentance.

[9006] John xvi. 24.

[9007] Ita revocatæ discinguntur. Dean Milmam prefers reading this, “Thus recalled, they are clad in loose robes.”

[9008] [Routh, Reliq. Vol. I. p. 360.]

[9009] A cry in mockery of what was known as the effect of Christian baptism.

[9010] [Routh, Reliquiæ, Vol. I. p. 358.]

Elucidations.

[9011] Republished, Oxford, 1838.

[9012] See Opp. Tom. xi. p. 657. Ed. Migne.

VI. Of Patience.

[9013] [Written possibly as late as a.d. 202; and is credited by Neander and Kaye, with Catholic Orthodoxy.]

Chapter I.—Of Patience Generally; And Tertullian’s Own Unworthiness to Treat of It.

[9014] “Nullius boni;” compare Rom. vii. 18.

[9015] [Elucidation I.]

[9016] i.e. who are strangers to it.

[9017] Or, “striving after.”

[9018] Or, “heathendom”—sæculi.

[9019] Sæculo.

Chapter II.—God Himself an Example of Patience.

[9020] i.e. us Christians.

[9021] i.e. cynical = κυνικός = doglike. But Tertullian appears to use “caninæ” purposely, and I have therefore retained it rather than substitute (as Mr. Dodgson does) “cynical.”

[9022] i.e. the affectation is modelled by insensibility.

[9023] See Ps. lxxiv. 23 in A.V. It is Ps. lxxiii. in the LXX.

[9024] Because they see no visible proof of it.

[9025] Sæculo.

Chapter III.—Jesus Christ in His Incarnation and Work a More Imitable Example Thereof.

[9026] So Mr. Dodgson; and La Cerda, as quoted by Oehler. See Ps. cxxxi. 1 in LXX., where it is Ps. cxxx.

 

 

 

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