84 Di/kaioj w9j foi/nic a0nqh/sei, Sept. Ps. xcii. 12.-"like a palm tree" (A.V.). We have here a characteristic way of Tertullian's quoting a scripture which has even the least bearing on his subject. [See Vol. I. (this series) p. 12, and same volume, p. viii.]
85 Matt. x. 33.
86 He refers to Marcion.
87 He here refers his reader to what he has written against Marcion, especially in his books i. and ii.
88 Matt. ix. 4.
89 Matt. v. 28.
90 The leading power.
91 "Frictricis" is Oehler's reading.
92 1 Thess. iv. 4.
93 2 Cor. iv. 16.
94 Rom. viii. 3.
95 1 Cor. vi. 20.
96 Simplicior.
97 Interim.
98 As stated in ch. v.-ix.
99 See ch. xi.
100 As stated in ch. xii. and xiii.
101 See ch. xiv.-xvii.
102 Divinitus.
103 Proscripta.
104 Resurrectio Mortuorum.
105 Gen. iii. 19.
106 John ii. 19.
107 Matt. xxvi. 38.
108 John ii. 21.
109 "Corpse from falling." This, of course, does not show the connection of the words, like the Latin. [Elucidation I.]
110 Gen. xxiii. 4.
111 Matt. xxiii. 27.
112 Isa. vii. 14; Matt. i. 23.
113 Isa. viii. 4.
114 Isa. iii. 13.
115 Ps. ii. 1, 2.
116 Isa. liii. 7.
117 Isa. l. 6, Sept.
118 Isa. liii. 12.
119 Ps. xxii. 17.
120 Ver. 18.
121 Ps. lxix. 22. Tertullian only briefly gives the sense in two words: et potus amaros.
122 Ps. xxii. 8.
123 Zech. xi. 12.
124 Isa. xxxv. 5.
125 Ver. 3.
126 Ver. 6.
127 Resurrectio Mortuorum, of which we have been speaking.
128 See ch. xix.
129 For the opinions of those Valentinians who held that Christ's flesh was composed of soul or of spirit-a refined, ethereal substance-see Tertullian's De Carne Christi, cc. x.-xv.
130 Suspirant in.
131 Luke xxi. 24.
132 Joel iii. 9-15; Dan. vii. 13, 14.
133 Luke xxi. 25, 26.
134 Vers. 26-28.
135 Luke xxi. 29, 30; Matt. xiv. 32.
136 Luke xxi. 31; Matt. xxiv. 33.
137 Luke xxi. 36.
138 Isa. ii. 19.
139 Ps. cx. 1.
140 Compare The Apology, xl.; De Spect. xxvii.; De Exhort. Cast. xii.
141 Acts i. 11.
142 Zech. xii. 1. comp. John xix. 37.
143 Mal. iv. 5.
144 1 John iv. 3.
145 Rev. xviii. 2.
146 Matt. xxii. 21.
147 Col. i. 21.
148 Col. ii. 12.
149 Ver. 13.
150 Ver. 20. The last clause in Tertullian is, "Quomodo sententiam fertis?"
151 Denique.
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