<p><SPAN name="link212HCH0002" id="link212HCH0002"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XXI: Persecution Of Heresy, State Of The Church.—Part II. </h2>
<p>The eloquence of Plato, the name of Solomon, the authority of the school
of Alexandria, and the consent of the Jews and Greeks, were insufficient
to establish the truth of a mysterious doctrine, which might please, but
could not satisfy, a rational mind. A prophet, or apostle, inspired by the
Deity, can alone exercise a lawful dominion over the faith of mankind: and
the theology of Plato might have been forever confounded with the
philosophical visions of the Academy, the Porch, and the Lycaeum, if the
name and divine attributes of the Logos had not been confirmed by the
celestial pen of the last and most sublime of the Evangelists. <SPAN href="#link21note-20" name="link21noteref-20" id="link21noteref-20">20</SPAN>
The Christian Revelation, which was consummated under the reign of Nerva,
disclosed to the world the amazing secret, that the Logos, who was with
God from the beginning, and was God, who had made all things, and for whom
all things had been made, was incarnate in the person of Jesus of
Nazareth; who had been born of a virgin, and suffered death on the cross.
Besides the genera design of fixing on a perpetual basis the divine honors
of Christ, the most ancient and respectable of the ecclesiastical writers
have ascribed to the evangelic theologian a particular intention to
confute two opposite heresies, which disturbed the peace of the primitive
church. <SPAN href="#link21note-21" name="link21noteref-21" id="link21noteref-21">21</SPAN> I. The faith of the Ebionites, <SPAN href="#link21note-22" name="link21noteref-22" id="link21noteref-22">22</SPAN>
perhaps of the Nazarenes, <SPAN href="#link21note-23" name="link21noteref-23" id="link21noteref-23">23</SPAN> was gross and imperfect. They revered Jesus
as the greatest of the prophets, endowed with supernatural virtue and
power. They ascribed to his person and to his future reign all the
predictions of the Hebrew oracles which relate to the spiritual and
everlasting kingdom of the promised Messiah. <SPAN href="#link21note-24"
name="link21noteref-24" id="link21noteref-24">24</SPAN> Some of them might
confess that he was born of a virgin; but they obstinately rejected the
preceding existence and divine perfections of the Logos, or Son of God,
which are so clearly defined in the Gospel of St. John. About fifty years
afterwards, the Ebionites, whose errors are mentioned by Justin Martyr
with less severity than they seem to deserve, <SPAN href="#link21note-25"
name="link21noteref-25" id="link21noteref-25">25</SPAN> formed a very
inconsiderable portion of the Christian name. II. The Gnostics, who were
distinguished by the epithet of Docetes, deviated into the contrary
extreme; and betrayed the human, while they asserted the divine, nature of
Christ. Educated in the school of Plato, accustomed to the sublime idea of
the Logos, they readily conceived that the brightest Aeon, or Emanation of
the Deity, might assume the outward shape and visible appearances of a
mortal; <SPAN href="#link21note-26" name="link21noteref-26" id="link21noteref-26">26</SPAN> but they vainly pretended, that the
imperfections of matter are incompatible with the purity of a celestial
substance.</p>
<p>While the blood of Christ yet smoked on Mount Calvary, the Docetes
invented the impious and extravagant hypothesis, that, instead of issuing
from the womb of the Virgin, <SPAN href="#link21note-27"
name="link21noteref-27" id="link21noteref-27">27</SPAN> he had descended on
the banks of the Jordan in the form of perfect manhood; that he had
imposed on the senses of his enemies, and of his disciples; and that the
ministers of Pilate had wasted their impotent rage on an ury phantom, who
seemed to expire on the cross, and, after three days, to rise from the
dead. <SPAN href="#link21note-28" name="link21noteref-28" id="link21noteref-28">28</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-20" id="link21note-20">
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<p class="foot">
20 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-20">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The Platonists admired
the beginning of the Gospel of St. John as containing an exact transcript
of their own principles. Augustin de Civitat. Dei, x. 29. Amelius apud
Cyril. advers. Julian. l. viii. p. 283. But in the third and fourth
centuries, the Platonists of Alexandria might improve their Trinity by the
secret study of the Christian theology. Note: A short discussion on the
sense in which St. John has used the word Logos, will prove that he has
not borrowed it from the philosophy of Plato. The evangelist adopts this
word without previous explanation, as a term with which his contemporaries
were already familiar, and which they could at once comprehend. To know
the sense which he gave to it, we must inquire that which it generally
bore in his time. We find two: the one attached to the word logos by the
Jews of Palestine, the other by the school of Alexandria, particularly by
Philo. The Jews had feared at all times to pronounce the name of Jehovah;
they had formed a habit of designating God by one of his attributes; they
called him sometimes Wisdom, sometimes the Word. By the word of the Lord
were the heavens made. (Psalm xxxiii. 6.) Accustomed to allegories, they
often addressed themselves to this attribute of the Deity as a real being.
Solomon makes Wisdom say "The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his
way, before his works of old. I was set up from everlasting, from the
beginning, or ever the earth was." (Prov. viii. 22, 23.) Their residence
in Persia only increased this inclination to sustained allegories. In the
Ecclesiasticus of the son of Sirach, and the Book of Wisdom, we find
allegorical descriptions of Wisdom like the following: "I came out of the
mouth of the Most High; I covered the earth as a cloud;... I alone
compassed the circuit of heaven, and walked in the bottom of the deep...
The Creator created me from the beginning, before the world, and I shall
never fail." (Eccles. xxiv. 35- 39.) See also the Wisdom of Solomon, c.
vii. v. 9. [The latter book is clearly Alexandrian.—M.] We see from
this that the Jews understood from the Hebrew and Chaldaic words which
signify Wisdom, the Word, and which were translated into Greek, a simple
attribute of the Deity, allegorically personified, but of which they did
not make a real particular being separate from the Deity. The school of
Alexandria, on the contrary, and Philo among the rest, mingling Greek with
Jewish and Oriental notions, and abandoning himself to his inclination to
mysticism, personified the logos, and represented it a distinct being,
created by God, and intermediate between God and man. This is the second
logos of Philo, that which acts from the beginning of the world, alone in
its kind, creator of the sensible world, formed by God according to the
ideal world which he had in himself, and which was the first logos, the
first- born of the Deity. The logos taken in this sense, then, was a
created being, but, anterior to the creation of the world, near to God,
and charged with his revelations to mankind.——Which of these
two senses is that which St. John intended to assign to the word logos in
the first chapter of his Gospel, and in all his writings? St. John was a
Jew, born and educated in Palestine; he had no knowledge, at least very
little, of the philosophy of the Greeks, and that of the Grecizing Jews:
he would naturally, then, attach to the word logos the sense attached to
it by the Jews of Palestine. If, in fact, we compare the attributes which
he assigns to the logos with those which are assigned to it in Proverbs,
in the Wisdom of Solomon, in Ecclesiasticus, we shall see that they are
the same. The Word was in the world, and the world was made by him; in him
was life, and the life was the light of men, (c. i. v. 10-14.) It is
impossible not to trace in this chapter the ideas which the Jews had
formed of the allegorized logos. The evangelist afterwards really
personifies that which his predecessors have personified only poetically;
for he affirms "that the Word became flesh," (v. 14.) It was to prove this
that he wrote. Closely examined, the ideas which he gives of the logos
cannot agree with those of Philo and the school of Alexandria; they
correspond, on the contrary, with those of the Jews of Palestine. Perhaps
St. John, employing a well-known term to explain a doctrine which was yet
unknown, has slightly altered the sense; it is this alteration which we
appear to discover on comparing different passages of his writings.——It
is worthy of remark, that the Jews of Palestine, who did not perceive this
alteration, could find nothing extraordinary in what St. John said of the
Logos; at least they comprehended it without difficulty, while the Greeks
and Grecizing Jews, on their part, brought to it prejudices and
preconceptions easily reconciled with those of the evangelist, who did not
expressly contradict them. This circumstance must have much favored the
progress of Christianity. Thus the fathers of the church in the two first
centuries and later, formed almost all in the school of Alexandria, gave
to the Logos of St. John a sense nearly similar to that which it received
from Philo. Their doctrine approached very near to that which in the
fourth century the council of Nice condemned in the person of Arius.—G.——M.
Guizot has forgotten the long residence of St. John at Ephesus, the centre
of the mingling opinions of the East and West, which were gradually
growing up into Gnosticism. (See Matter. Hist. du Gnosticisme, vol. i. p.
154.) St. John's sense of the Logos seems as far removed from the simple
allegory ascribed to the Palestinian Jews as from the Oriental
impersonation of the Alexandrian. The simple truth may be that St. John
took the familiar term, and, as it were infused into it the peculiar and
Christian sense in which it is used in his writings. —M.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-21" id="link21note-21">
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<p class="foot">
21 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-21">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ See Beausobre, Hist.
Critique du Manicheisme, tom. i. p. 377. The Gospel according to St. John
is supposed to have been published about seventy years after the death of
Christ.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-22" id="link21note-22">
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<p class="foot">
22 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-22">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The sentiments of the
Ebionites are fairly stated by Mosheim (p. 331) and Le Clerc, (Hist.
Eccles. p. 535.) The Clementines, published among the apostolical fathers,
are attributed by the critics to one of these sectaries.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-23" id="link21note-23">
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<p class="foot">
23 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-23">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Stanch polemics, like a
Bull, (Judicium Eccles. Cathol. c. 2,) insist on the orthodoxy of the
Nazarenes; which appears less pure and certain in the eyes of Mosheim, (p.
330.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-24" id="link21note-24">
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<p class="foot">
24 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-24">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The humble condition
and sufferings of Jesus have always been a stumbling-block to the Jews.
"Deus... contrariis coloribus Messiam depinxerat: futurus erat Rex, Judex,
Pastor," &c. See Limborch et Orobio Amica Collat. p. 8, 19, 53-76,
192-234. But this objection has obliged the believing Christians to lift
up their eyes to a spiritual and everlasting kingdom.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-25" id="link21note-25">
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<p class="foot">
25 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-25">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Justin Martyr, Dialog.
cum Tryphonte, p. 143, 144. See Le Clerc, Hist. Eccles. p. 615. Bull and
his editor Grabe (Judicium Eccles. Cathol. c. 7, and Appendix) attempt to
distort either the sentiments or the words of Justin; but their violent
correction of the text is rejected even by the Benedictine editors.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-26" id="link21note-26">
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<p class="foot">
26 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-26">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The Arians reproached
the orthodox party with borrowing their Trinity from the Valentinians and
Marcionites. See Beausobre, Hist. de Manicheisme, l. iii. c. 5, 7.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-27" id="link21note-27">
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<p class="foot">
27 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-27">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Non dignum est ex utero
credere Deum, et Deum Christum.... non dignum est ut tanta majestas per
sordes et squalores muli eris transire credatur. The Gnostics asserted the
impurity of matter, and of marriage; and they were scandalized by the
gross interpretations of the fathers, and even of Augustin himself. See
Beausobre, tom. ii. p. 523, * Note: The greater part of the Docetae
rejected the true divinity of Jesus Christ, as well as his human nature.
They belonged to the Gnostics, whom some philosophers, in whose party
Gibbon has enlisted, make to derive their opinions from those of Plato.
These philosophers did not consider that Platonism had undergone continual
alterations, and that those who gave it some analogy with the notions of
the Gnostics were later in their origin than most of the sects
comprehended under this name Mosheim has proved (in his Instit. Histor.
Eccles. Major. s. i. p. 136, sqq and p. 339, sqq.) that the Oriental
philosophy, combined with the cabalistical philosophy of the Jews, had
given birth to Gnosticism. The relations which exist between this doctrine
and the records which remain to us of that of the Orientals, the Chaldean
and Persian, have been the source of the errors of the Gnostic Christians,
who wished to reconcile their ancient notions with their new belief. It is
on this account that, denying the human nature of Christ, they also denied
his intimate union with God, and took him for one of the substances
(aeons) created by God. As they believed in the eternity of matter, and
considered it to be the principle of evil, in opposition to the Deity, the
first cause and principle of good, they were unwilling to admit that one
of the pure substances, one of the aeons which came forth from God, had,
by partaking in the material nature, allied himself to the principle of
evil; and this was their motive for rejecting the real humanity of Jesus
Christ. See Ch. G. F. Walch, Hist. of Heresies in Germ. t. i. p. 217, sqq.
Brucker, Hist. Crit. Phil. ii. p 639.—G.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-28" id="link21note-28">
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<p class="foot">
28 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-28">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Apostolis adhuc in
saeculo superstitibus apud Judaeam Christi sanguine recente, et phanlasma
corpus Domini asserebatur. Cotelerius thinks (Patres Apostol. tom. ii. p.
24) that those who will not allow the Docetes to have arisen in the time
of the Apostles, may with equal reason deny that the sun shines at
noonday. These Docetes, who formed the most considerable party among the
Gnostics, were so called, because they granted only a seeming body to
Christ. * Note: The name of Docetae was given to these sectaries only in
the course of the second century: this name did not designate a sect,
properly so called; it applied to all the sects who taught the non-
reality of the material body of Christ; of this number were the
Valentinians, the Basilidians, the Ophites, the Marcionites, (against whom
Tertullian wrote his book, De Carne Christi,) and other Gnostics. In
truth, Clement of Alexandria (l. iii. Strom. c. 13, p. 552) makes express
mention of a sect of Docetae, and even names as one of its heads a certain
Cassianus; but every thing leads us to believe that it was not a distinct
sect. Philastrius (de Haeres, c. 31) reproaches Saturninus with being a
Docete. Irenaeus (adv. Haer. c. 23) makes the same reproach against
Basilides. Epiphanius and Philastrius, who have treated in detail on each
particular heresy, do not specially name that of the Docetae. Serapion,
bishop of Antioch, (Euseb. Hist. Eccles. l. vi. c. 12,) and Clement of
Alexandria, (l. vii. Strom. p. 900,) appear to be the first who have used
the generic name. It is not found in any earlier record, though the error
which it points out existed even in the time of the Apostles. See Ch. G.
F. Walch, Hist. of Her. v. i. p. 283. Tillemont, Mempour servir a la Hist
Eccles. ii. p. 50. Buddaeus de Eccles. Apost. c. 5 & 7—G.]</p>
<p>The divine sanction, which the Apostle had bestowed on the fundamental
principle of the theology of Plato, encouraged the learned proselytes of
the second and third centuries to admire and study the writings of the
Athenian sage, who had thus marvellously anticipated one of the most
surprising discoveries of the Christian revelation. The respectable name
of Plato was used by the orthodox, <SPAN href="#link21note-29"
name="link21noteref-29" id="link21noteref-29">29</SPAN> and abused by the
heretics, <SPAN href="#link21note-30" name="link21noteref-30" id="link21noteref-30">30</SPAN> as the common support of truth and error: the
authority of his skilful commentators, and the science of dialectics, were
employed to justify the remote consequences of his opinions and to supply
the discreet silence of the inspired writers. The same subtle and profound
questions concerning the nature, the generation, the distinction, and the
equality of the three divine persons of the mysterious Triad, or Trinity,
<SPAN href="#link21note-31" name="link21noteref-31" id="link21noteref-31">31</SPAN>
were agitated in the philosophical and in the Christian schools of
Alexandria. An eager spirit of curiosity urged them to explore the secrets
of the abyss; and the pride of the professors, and of their disciples, was
satisfied with the sciences of words. But the most sagacious of the
Christian theologians, the great Athanasius himself, has candidly
confessed, <SPAN href="#link21note-32" name="link21noteref-32" id="link21noteref-32">32</SPAN> that whenever he forced his understanding to
meditate on the divinity of the Logos, his toilsome and unavailing efforts
recoiled on themselves; that the more he thought, the less he
comprehended; and the more he wrote, the less capable was he of expressing
his thoughts. In every step of the inquiry, we are compelled to feel and
acknowledge the immeasurable disproportion between the size of the object
and the capacity of the human mind. We may strive to abstract the notions
of time, of space, and of matter, which so closely adhere to all the
perceptions of our experimental knowledge. But as soon as we presume to
reason of infinite substance, of spiritual generation; as often as we
deduce any positive conclusions from a negative idea, we are involved in
darkness, perplexity, and inevitable contradiction. As these difficulties
arise from the nature of the subject, they oppress, with the same
insuperable weight, the philosophic and the theological disputant; but we
may observe two essential and peculiar circumstances, which discriminated
the doctrines of the Catholic church from the opinions of the Platonic
school.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-29" id="link21note-29">
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<p class="foot">
29 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-29">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Some proofs of the
respect which the Christians entertained for the person and doctrine of
Plato may be found in De la Mothe le Vayer, tom. v. p. 135, &c., edit.
1757; and Basnage, Hist. des Juifs tom. iv. p. 29, 79, &c.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-30" id="link21note-30">
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<p class="foot">
30 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-30">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Doleo bona fide,
Platonem omnium heraeticorum condimentarium factum. Tertullian. de Anima,
c. 23. Petavius (Dogm. Theolog. tom. iii. proleg. 2) shows that this was a
general complaint. Beausobre (tom. i. l. iii. c. 9, 10) has deduced the
Gnostic errors from Platonic principles; and as, in the school of
Alexandria, those principles were blended with the Oriental philosophy,
(Brucker, tom. i. p. 1356,) the sentiment of Beausobre may be reconciled
with the opinion of Mosheim, (General History of the Church, vol. i. p.
37.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-31" id="link21note-31">
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<p class="foot">
31 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-31">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ If Theophilus, bishop
of Antioch, (see Dupin, Bibliotheque Ecclesiastique, tom. i. p. 66,) was
the first who employed the word Triad, Trinity, that abstract term, which
was already familiar to the schools of philosophy, must have been
introduced into the theology of the Christians after the middle of the
second century.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-32" id="link21note-32">
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<p class="foot">
32 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-32">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Athanasius, tom. i. p.
808. His expressions have an uncommon energy; and as he was writing to
monks, there could not be any occasion for him to affect a rational
language.]</p>
<p>I. A chosen society of philosophers, men of a liberal education and
curious disposition, might silently meditate, and temperately discuss in
the gardens of Athens or the library of Alexandria, the abstruse questions
of metaphysical science. The lofty speculations, which neither convinced
the understanding, nor agitated the passions, of the Platonists
themselves, were carelessly overlooked by the idle, the busy, and even the
studious part of mankind. <SPAN href="#link21note-33" name="link21noteref-33" id="link21noteref-33">33</SPAN> But after the Logos had been revealed as the
sacred object of the faith, the hope, and the religious worship of the
Christians, the mysterious system was embraced by a numerous and
increasing multitude in every province of the Roman world. Those persons
who, from their age, or sex, or occupations, were the least qualified to
judge, who were the least exercised in the habits of abstract reasoning,
aspired to contemplate the economy of the Divine Nature: and it is the
boast of Tertullian, <SPAN href="#link21note-34" name="link21noteref-34" id="link21noteref-34">34</SPAN> that a Christian mechanic could readily
answer such questions as had perplexed the wisest of the Grecian sages.
Where the subject lies so far beyond our reach, the difference between the
highest and the lowest of human understandings may indeed be calculated as
infinitely small; yet the degree of weakness may perhaps be measured by
the degree of obstinacy and dogmatic confidence. These speculations,
instead of being treated as the amusement of a vacant hour, became the
most serious business of the present, and the most useful preparation for
a future, life. A theology, which it was incumbent to believe, which it
was impious to doubt, and which it might be dangerous, and even fatal, to
mistake, became the familiar topic of private meditation and popular
discourse. The cold indifference of philosophy was inflamed by the fervent
spirit of devotion; and even the metaphors of common language suggested
the fallacious prejudices of sense and experience. The Christians, who
abhorred the gross and impure generation of the Greek mythology, <SPAN href="#link21note-35" name="link21noteref-35" id="link21noteref-35">35</SPAN>
were tempted to argue from the familiar analogy of the filial and paternal
relations. The character of Son seemed to imply a perpetual subordination
to the voluntary author of his existence; <SPAN href="#link21note-36"
name="link21noteref-36" id="link21noteref-36">36</SPAN> but as the act of
generation, in the most spiritual and abstracted sense, must be supposed
to transmit the properties of a common nature, <SPAN href="#link21note-37"
name="link21noteref-37" id="link21noteref-37">37</SPAN> they durst not
presume to circumscribe the powers or the duration of the Son of an
eternal and omnipotent Father. Fourscore years after the death of Christ,
the Christians of Bithynia, declared before the tribunal of Pliny, that
they invoked him as a god: and his divine honors have been perpetuated in
every age and country, by the various sects who assume the name of his
disciples. <SPAN href="#link21note-38" name="link21noteref-38" id="link21noteref-38">38</SPAN> Their tender reverence for the memory of
Christ, and their horror for the profane worship of any created being,
would have engaged them to assert the equal and absolute divinity of the
Logos, if their rapid ascent towards the throne of heaven had not been
imperceptibly checked by the apprehension of violating the unity and sole
supremacy of the great Father of Christ and of the Universe. The suspense
and fluctuation produced in the minds of the Christians by these opposite
tendencies, may be observed in the writings of the theologians who
flourished after the end of the apostolic age, and before the origin of
the Arian controversy. Their suffrage is claimed, with equal confidence,
by the orthodox and by the heretical parties; and the most inquisitive
critics have fairly allowed, that if they had the good fortune of
possessing the Catholic verity, they have delivered their conceptions in
loose, inaccurate, and sometimes contradictory language. <SPAN href="#link21note-39" name="link21noteref-39" id="link21noteref-39">39</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-33" id="link21note-33">
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<p class="foot">
33 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-33">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ In a treatise, which
professed to explain the opinions of the ancient philosophers concerning
the nature of the gods we might expect to discover the theological Trinity
of Plato. But Cicero very honestly confessed, that although he had
translated the Timaeus, he could never understand that mysterious
dialogue. See Hieronym. praef. ad l. xii. in Isaiam, tom. v. p. 154.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-34" id="link21note-34">
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<p class="foot">
34 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-34">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Tertullian. in Apolog.
c. 46. See Bayle, Dictionnaire, au mot Simonide. His remarks on the
presumption of Tertullian are profound and interesting.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-35" id="link21note-35">
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<p class="foot">
35 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-35">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Lactantius, iv. 8. Yet
the Probole, or Prolatio, which the most orthodox divines borrowed without
scruple from the Valentinians, and illustrated by the comparisons of a
fountain and stream, the sun and its rays, &c., either meant nothing,
or favored a material idea of the divine generation. See Beausobre, tom.
i. l. iii. c. 7, p. 548.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-36" id="link21note-36">
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<p class="foot">
36 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-36">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Many of the primitive
writers have frankly confessed, that the Son owed his being to the will of
the Father.——See Clarke's Scripture Trinity, p. 280-287. On
the other hand, Athanasius and his followers seem unwilling to grant what
they are afraid to deny. The schoolmen extricate themselves from this
difficulty by the distinction of a preceding and a concomitant will.
Petav. Dogm. Theolog. tom. ii. l. vi. c. 8, p. 587-603.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-37" id="link21note-37">
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<p class="foot">
37 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-37">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ See Petav. Dogm.
Theolog. tom. ii. l. ii. c. 10, p. 159.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-38" id="link21note-38">
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<p class="foot">
38 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-38">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Carmenque Christo quasi
Deo dicere secum invicem. Plin. Epist. x. 97. The sense of Deus, Elohim,
in the ancient languages, is critically examined by Le Clerc, (Ars
Critica, p. 150-156,) and the propriety of worshipping a very excellent
creature is ably defended by the Socinian Emlyn, (Tracts, p. 29-36,
51-145.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link21note-39" id="link21note-39">
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<p class="foot">
39 (<SPAN href="#link21noteref-39">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ See Daille de Usu
Patrum, and Le Clerc, Bibliotheque Universelle, tom. x. p. 409. To arraign
the faith of the Ante-Nicene fathers, was the object, or at least has been
the effect, of the stupendous work of Petavius on the Trinity, (Dogm.
Theolog. tom. ii.;) nor has the deep impression been erased by the learned
defence of Bishop Bull. Note: Dr. Burton's work on the doctrine of the
Ante-Nicene fathers must be consulted by those who wish to obtain clear
notions on this subject.—M.]</p>
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