5 [This is not Patripassianism. Nor does the "one God" of the next chapter involve this heresy.]

6 [Here ends the apologetic portion.]

7 Scil. "capite," conjectural for "cavete."

8 [Or, "shadows forth Himself."]

9 "Eusebius tells of another Enoch, who was not translated without seeing death." - Rig. [See Gen. iv. 17, 18. S.]

10 Et inde secunda terribilem legem primo cum pace revincit. - Davis, conjecturally.

11 [See Elucidation at end.]

12 [The translator here inserts a mark of interrogation. The meaning is: lick up them (the wicked) who have persecuted them. Dan. iii. 22.]

13 [Rev. iii. 14.]

14 [Catechumens falling away before baptism must not despair, but persevere and remain under discipline.]

15 Or, "If one prophet only had cried out to the world."

16 Sponte profectos.

17 Deperdunt.


CCEL
This document is from the Christian Classics Ethereal Library
at Calvin College. Last updated on May 27, 1999.
Contacting the CCEL.
Calvin College