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Part Fourth

Footnotes

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I. On the Pallium.

[1561] See Gal. iii. 20. But here, again, “Galatas” seems rather like an error; for in speaking to the Corinthians St. Paul uses an expression more like our author’s: see 2 Cor. xi. 2. The Latin, too, is faulty: “Talem se Paulus zelum se scripsit habere,” where, perhaps, for the first “se” we should read “sic.

[1562] Comp. Ex. xx. 5; Deut. v. 9.

[1563] See Isa. i. 10-15; Jer. vi. 20.

[1564] Causa etenim fidei rationis imagine major.

[1565] Comp. 1 Cor. xiii. 12; Heb. x. 1.

[1566] Moses. See Heb. ix. 19-22, and the references there.

[1567] Comp. Heb. ix. 13.

[1568] Alluding probably to our Lord’s bearing of the cross-beam of His cross—the beam being the “yokes,” and the upright stem of the cross the “plough-beam”—on His shoulders.—See John xix. 17.

[1569] Templum. Comp.John ii. 19-22; Col. ii. 9.

[1570] Libro. The reference is to the preceding lines, especially 89, and Heb. ix. 19, αὐτὸ τὸ βιβλίον. The use of “libro” is curious, as it seems to be used partly as if it would be equivalent to pro libro, “in the place of a book,” partly in a more truly datival sense, “to serve the purposes of a book;” and our “for” is capable of the two senses.

[1571] For this comparison of “speaking” to “sprinkling,” comp. Deut. xxxii. 2, “My doctrine shall drop as the rain; my speech shall distil as the dew,” etc.; Job xxix. 22, “My speech dropped upon them;” with Eph. v. 26, and with our Lord’s significant action (recorded in the passage here alluded to, John xx. 22) of “breathing on” (ἐνεφύσησεν) His disciples. Comp., too, for the “witnesses” and “words of presage,” Luke xxiv. 48-49; Acts i. 6-8.

[1572] i.e., the chief of the Levites, the high priest.

[1573] Comp. Heb. xiii. 12-13; John xix. 19-20.

[1574] Comp. the preceding book, 355.

[1575] The passage which follows is almost unintelligible. The sense which I have offered in my text is so offered with great diffidence, as I am far from certain of having hit the meaning; indeed, the state of the text is such, that any meaning must be a matter of some uncertainty.

[1576] i.e., perhaps the Jewish and Christian peoples. Comp. adv. Jud., c. 1.

[1577] i.e., “barren” of faith and good works. The “goats” being but “kids” (see Lev. xvi. 8), would, of course, be barren. “Exiled” seems to mean “excommunicated.” But the comparison of the sacrificed goat to a penitent, and of the scapegoat to an impenitent, excommunicate, is extravagant. Yet I see no other sense.

[1578] See Matt. xxv. 31-33.

[1579] i.e., Lazarus was not allowed to help him. In that sense he may be said to have been “cast away;” but it is Abraham, not Lazarus, who pronounces his doom. See Luke xvi. 19-31.

[1580] i.e., in that the blood of the one was brought within the veil; the other was not.

[1581] Ædem.

 

 

 

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