230 Tertullian supposed that even the soul was in a certain sense of a corporeal essence. [Compare the speculations of Crusius in Auberlen, Divine Revelation, (Translation of A.B. Paton, Edinburgh, Clarks, 1867).]
236 Matt. viii. 12, xiii. 42, xxii. 13, xxv. 30.
237 Compare Tertullian's De Proescript. Hoeret. c. xxxiii.
238 Matt. xxii. 23-32; Mark xii. 18-27; Luke xx. 27-38.
248 The divine nature of the Son. See our Anti-Marcion, pp. 129, 247, note 7, Edin.
252 Tertullian always refers to this book by a plural phrase.
273 Compendio mortis. Compare our Anti-Marcion for the same thoughts and words, v. 12. [p. 455, supra.]
276 Comp. Matt. v. 26, and see Tertullian's De Anima, xxxv. [and see cap. xliii., infra, p. 576.]
280 2 Cor. v. 4. [Against Marcion, p. 455, note 24.]
281 Exuti. He must have read e0kdusa/menoi, instead of the reading of nearly all the ms. authorities, e0ndusa/menoi.
285 Comp. his De Anima, c. lv. [Elucidation III.]
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