SIMEON THE STUDITE: Monk in the monastery of Studion at Constantinople, and teacher of Simeon the New Theologian (q.v.); flourished about 975. Exact knowledge of his life is lacking, what is known coming from Nicetas Stethatos, a
417 RELIGIOUS ENCYCLOPEDIA $~meon Netaphrastes
simler
monk of the same monastery in the middle of the
eleventh century. According to Nicetas Simeon
wrote Biblon holen dpheleias ousan pneumatik8s
agrammatos on (MPG, clii. 266 sqq.), perhaps the
same as " Thirty two Ascetic Sermons " attributed
to " Simeon the Monastic."
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Leo Allatius, De Symeonum scriptis, Paris,
1664; Krumbaeher, Geschichte, pp. 140 _152 154.
SIMEON STYLITES. See STYLITEB.
SIMEON OF THESSALONICA: Archbishop of
that city in the early fifteenth century; d. prob
ably in the latter part of 1428. Of his life almost
nothing is known, except that he had become arch
bishop of Thessalonica before 1423, when the city
was purchased from the Despot Andronikos Palai
ologos by the Venetians, to whom Simeon remained
loyal, despite the efforts of Murad II. to induce the
Greeks to surrender Thessalonica to the Turks. As
a theological writer Simeon exercised a wide influ
ence, being used, and even copied, by many later
authors. His works were first edited by Dositheos
of Jerusalem (q.v.; Jassy, 1683), and were then re
printed in MPG, clv., which also gives the pagina
tion of Dositheos. One of the chief mystagogic
theologians of the later Greek Church, he lays far
less stress on doctrine than on participation in the
divine mysteries, which alone give salvation; and
as a polemist his critique of the Bogomiles and his
defense of the Hesychasts have the value of orig
inal sources. His chief work was the dialogue
" Against all Heresies, and on the One Faith of our
Lord and God and Savior Jesus Christ, the Holy
Rites, and all Mysteries of the Church." The first
part, which is much the briefer, is doctrinal, its
special themes being the Trinity and Christology,
but it also includes polemics against the Jews, Bogo
miles, and Mohammedans, and declares that, while
it is impossible to convert all men, the Christian
should ever be ready to profess his faith. The sec
ond part of the dialogue, a mystagogic introduction
to the liturgy, begins with the doctrine of baptism
and chrism; while the Eucharist affords an oppor
tunity for a most minute discussion of the entire
ritual connected with it, the vestmeL IS, the sanc
tuary, etc. Ordination and the various orders of
the clergy are then discussed, as well as confession,
marriage, and extreme unction, with an appendix
on prayer, the daily services, the hymns, the Tris
hagion (q.v.), and the benedictions.
The dialogue just analyzed (ed. Dositheos, pp.
1 270) is followed by a number of briefer writings.
First among these is the treatise " On the Holy
Temple " (pp. 271 291), mystagogic like the dia
logue. This is followed by three expositions of the
Nicene Creed: the " Synoptic Interpretation " (pp.
292 312) ; the " Most Necessary Exposition " (pp.
313 319; repeated almost word for word in the
Chronicon, iv. 22, of Georgios Phrantzea, who may
indeed have been, as he claimed to be, the author
of the treatise, rather than Simeon); and the " Di
rect Interpretation " (pp. 319 322; incorporated
in the first reply of the Patriarch Jerrmias II., q.v.,
to the Wittenberg theologians, and likewise of du
bious authorship). Unlike these last two treatises,
there is no reason to doubt the authenticity of the
X. 27
" Answers to the Bishop " (pp. 323 370), the prelate in question perhaps being the Metropolitan Gabriel of Pentapolis. This contains information on liturgy and such problems as the origin of evil, life after death, and the angels. The last treatise in the edition of Dositheos imparts the theory of the priesthood to a monk intending to become a priest, a strong tendency toward symbolism being a marked characteristic of the treatise. A number of works as yet unedited are also ascribed to Simeon of Thessalonica, among them a treatise on the exit of the soul from the body and on " The Similar Triodia of Passion Week " (both preserved in manuscript at Jerusalem), as well as.a number of letters contained in an Athos manuscript. (PHILIPP MEYER.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Leo Allatius, De Symeonum scriplis, pp. 185 194, Paris, 1664; C. Oudin, Commentarius de scriptorsbu8 ecclesim, iii. 2242 sqq., Leipsic, 1722; M. Le Quien, Oriens Christianus, ii. 58 59, ib. 1740; W. Cave, Scraptorum ecclesiasticorum hist. literaria, ii., appendix, pp. 113114, Oxford, 1743; Fabricius Harles, Bibliotheca Greco, xi. 328 334, Hamburg, 1808; Ersch and Gruber, Encyklopadie, I., ixxxvi. 87 eqq.; Krumbaeher, Geschichte, pp. 112 113; KL, mi. 1073 74.
SIMEON, CHARLES: Church of England; b. at Reading Sept. 24, 1759; d. there Nov. 13, 1836. He was educated at King's College, Cambridge, became fellow in 1782, and in 1783 incumbent of Holy Trinity Church in the same city. He may be considered the founder of the Low church party. His " evangelical " preaching at first encountered opposition; but eventually he made many converts, and exerted a wide influence. He became interested in missions, and Henry Martyn's work is traceable to him in part. He established a society for purchasing advowsons, and thereby was able to put his sympathizers at strategic points. He published a translation of Claude's Essay an the Composition of a Sermon (London, 1801), to which he added notes and a hundred sermon skeletons, and subsequently published such outlines (2,536 in number) upon the entire Bible (Horse Homileticm,, 17 vols., London, 1819 28; new ed., with addition of remaining works, 21 vols., 1840) ; Memorial Sketches of Rev. David Brown, with a Selection of his Sermons Preached at Calcutta (1831); and a large number of occasional sermons.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: W. Carus, Memoirs or flee Life of Charles Simeon . . . with a Selection from his Writings and Correspondence, London, 1847; F. Close, Brief Sketch of the Character and Last Days of C. Simeon, ib. 1836; J. Williamson, Brief Memoir of the Rev. C. Simeon, ib. 1848; H. C. G. Moule, Charles Simeon, ib. 1895.
SIMLER, JOSIAS: Swiss Protestant; b. at Cappel (15 m. s. of Zurich) Nov. 6, 1530; d. at Zurich July 2, 1576. He was educated at Basel and Strasburg, and, after completing his studies at Zurich in 1549, was for a few years a teacher and a, ministerial supply. In 1552, however, he was made professor of New Testament exegesis at Zurich, being also minister of the village of Zollikon, near Zurich, until 1557, and deacon of St. Peter's, Zurich, from 1557 to 1560. At Zurich he came into contact with such refugees from the Roman Catholic reaction under Queen Mary of England as John Jewel (q.v.) and John Parkhurst (later bishop of Norwich). In 1560 Simler succeeded Theodor Bibliander (q.v.), and,
Simler
Simon Magna
THE NEW SCHAFF HERZOG
retiring entirely from ministerial work, divided the lectures on theology with Peter Martyr (q.v.), at whose death, in 1562, he took charge of the entire New Testament department, which he controlled until he died.
Simler was a most prolific author. He began by
translating into Latin a number of the works of
Bullinger and other Protestant theologians, and by
editing a portion of Peter Martyr's writings, although
his projected edition of the collected works of the
latter was never realized. He was himself deeply
interested in problems of dogmatic theology, par
ticularly in view of the attacks of Italian antitrini
tarians upon Reformed tenets. First assailing the
teaching of Francesco Stancaro (q.v.), that Christ
was a mediator only in virtue of his human nature,
in his Responsio ad maledictum Franciaei Staneari
Mantuani librum adversus Tigurinae eeclesim mint
tros de Trinitate et mediatore nostro Jesu Christo
(Zurich, 1563), he likewise wrote, in defense of or
thodox Christology, his De ceterno Dei f lio Domino
et Sermtore nostro Jesu Christo et de Spiritu sancto,
adversus veteres et novos antitrwnitarios, id est Arianos,
Tretheistas, Samosatenianos et Pneumatomachos libri
quatuor (Zurich, 1568); Assertio orthodoxx doctrinee
de duabus naturis Christi opposita blasphemiis et
sophismatibus Simonis Budnwi (1575); Scripts vet
erum Latina de una persona et duabus naturis Christi
adversus Nestorium, Eutychen et Acephalos olim
edita (1571); De very Christi secundum humanam
naturam in his terris preesentia orthodoxy exposttio
(1574); and the anonymous Ministrorum ewlesice
Tigurince ad confutationem Jacobi Andrece apologia
(1575). His Commentarii in Ezodum were pub
lished posthumously in 1584; and he was the author
of Oratio de vita et obatu . . . Petri Martyris Ver
milii (Zurich, 1563; Eng. tranal. in A. Marten's
version of the " Common Places " of peter Martyr,
London, 1583) and De ortu, vita et obitu . . . Hein
rici Bullingeri (1575). Besides the works already
enumerated, Simler wrote on astronomy, the his
tory of literature, geography, and history, the latter
category including his De republ~,ca Helvetiorum
(Zurich, 1576), which went through repeated edi
tions until the middle of the eighteenth century,
and was translated into German, French, and Dutch.
His manuscript historical material, collected by his
grandson, is preserved in the municipal library of
Zurich. (G. MEYER VON KNONAU.)
BIBIaoaRAPHY: J. G. Stuki, Vita Joei(c Simleri, Zurich, 1577; W. A. B. Coolidge, J08lae Simler et lea originm de rAlyiniame jusqu'en 1800, Grenoble, 1904; G. Meyer van Knonau, in Jahrbuch des Schweizer Alpenklub, say. 217 235; ADB, sxciv. 355 358.
SIMON, sai'mon (SIMEON), BEN YOHAI: Rabbi of the second Christian century, to whom the authorship of the Zohar (see CABALA, § 17) is attributed. He was a favorite pupil of Akiba (q.v.), and was of the party opposed to the Romans. Tradition reports that he was compelled to remain in hiding in a cave for twelve years, until the death of the emperor (Hadrian), the cause being an outspoken condemnation of the Romans and their laws. An event which is better placed late in his life was his mission to Rome to obtain for his coreligionists greater freedom in worship and teaching, and in this
mission he succeeded. During his hermit life is placed the composition of the Zohar, the basis of the tradition probably being that he combined a certain mysticism in his teaching. Yet his teaching,
prevailingly halachic in type, was rationalistic in so far as he sought always the underlying reason for a Biblical injunction.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: L. Lewin, Rabbi Simon ban Jochai, Frankfort, 1893; JE, xi. 359 363 (gives further literature, mostly in Hebrew).
SIMON THE MACCABEE. See HASMONEANa, 2.
SIMON MAGUS.
In the Book of Acts (§ 1). In the Apocrypha end Justin Martyr (§ 2). His System According to Later Heresiologists (§ 3). Untenable Theories Concerning Simon Magus (§ 4). A Sorcerer Syncretised with the Sun (§ 5). The Twofold Simonian System (§ 6).
One of the most difficult and interesting prob
lems of apostolic and post apostolic history is pre
sented by Simon Magus, a Samaritan, who is de
scribed at once as a Christian, a Jew, and a pagan,
a magician and a sorcerer, a Christian religious
philosopher and an archheretic, a pseudo apostle
and a pseudo Messiah, the founder of a religion and
an incarnation of God. The earliest source con
cerning him is Acts viii. 5 24, where he appears as
a sorcerer who had " bewitched the people of Sa
maria, giving out that himself was
:. In the some great one," yet becoming an ad
Book of herent of the Apostle Philip and mar
Acts. veling at " the miracles and signs
which were done " (verses :r13). In
verses 14 19, on the other hand, he seeks from Peter
and John, not (as one would expect in the case of a
sorcerer) the power of working miracles like Philip's,
but the gift of conferring the Holy Ghost by the
laying on of hands, only to have his request re
fused because of the unworthy motives which had
prompted it. It is held by some critics that this
entire account was based by a redactor of Acts on
some " Acts of Peter," this redactor substituting
Philip for Peter in verses 5, 6, 12, 13; adding allu
sions to John in verses 18b, 19a, 24, interpolating
verse 10, and adding verses 14 18afnd 19b. It
should also be noted, in this connection, that neither
the extant Acts of Peter nor the Church Fathers
mention Philip and John in their accounts of Simon
Magus.
The record of Acts is continued by the various
recensions of the apocryphal Acts of Peter and kin
dred literature (cf. Clement of Alexandria, Strom.,
vii. 17; Hippolytus, Philosophumena, vi. 20; Euse
bius, Hist. ecd., ii. 14 15; Arnobius, Adv. genies,
ii. 12; Philostorgius, Hcer., xxix.; Epiphanius,
Haar., xxi. 4; etc.), all of which deal with the con
flict between Simon Peter and Simon 2. In the Magus. The scene is Samaria in the Apocrypha Acta Vercellenses only, the other sources and Justin substituting Judea (or Jerusalem and Martyr. Cwsarea) and, most frequently, Rome.
The time is the reign of Nero or (in the Acta Vercellenses) Claudius, but the only new trait ascribed to the characters is the pseudo Messiahship of Simon Magus, which is shown, for instance,
419 RELIGIOUS ENCYCLOPEDIA Simler
Simon Xsgns
in his attempted ascension (frustrated by the prayer
of Peter) and in the epithet: " He that hath
stood." An entirely different picture is given by
the heresiologists of the early Church. The frag
ments of Justin Martyr's lost work on heresies state
that Simon Magus was born in the Samaritan village
of Gitta, and went to Rome in the reign of Claudius.
There he is described as honored by a statue on an
island in the Tiber, this statue bearing the inscrip
tion Simoni sancto deo (" To Simon, the holy god ").
This latter statement seems, however, to be due to
confusion with a statue actually set up on the
island in question in honor of the Sabine deity Semo
Sancus, with an inscription including the words
Semoni Sanco deo. At the same time, the tradition
of Simon's residence at Rome in the reign of Clau
dius was evidently wide spread, and Justin also
states that nearly all the Samaritans honored Simon
Magus " as the first god, above all power, authority,
and might," and as accompanied by a certain ex
courtezan Helena, designated " the first under
standing from himself " (Apol., i. 26; Tnypho, cxx.).
A valuable supplement to this information is
given by a Roman heresiology written before 175
and incorporated by Ifeneeus in his Hwr., i. 23, also
being used, in all probability, by Celsus, Tertullian,
Hippolytus, and the pseudo Tertullian.
3. His Sys Here Simon Magus appears in an essen
tem Accord tially Gnostic garb, being, on the one
ing to Later hand, the " highest God " (or " Fa
Heresiolo ther "), and, on the other, " the most
gists. sublime power of God "; while Helena
(here brought into connection with
Tyre) is represented as " the first conception of his
[Simon's] mind," " the mother of all," " wisdom,"
" the Holy Spirit," etc. Emanating from the Fa
ther, she descended to the realms beneath, where,
in conformity to his will, she created the angelic
powers which, without knowing the Father, created
the world and man. Unwilling to be considered
creatures, the angels imprisoned her in a female
body, and she is the lost sheep for whose salvation
the Father (Simon) appeared, to rescue both her
and mankind from the slavery of the cosmic angelic
powers. To deceive these powers, he was mani
fested to mankind as man, as the Father to the
Samaritans and the Son to the Jews, suffering do
cetic passion. To this Irenaeus erroneously adds
that Simon was supposed to have appeared as the
Holy Ghost to the gentiles; and both he and Epi
phanius give a number of further details which,
while not impossible, can not definitely be ascribed
to the system. An entirely different presentation
of Simon's teaching is implied by Clement and
Origen, and is further developed in the Philoso
phumena (vi. 7 18, x. 12; ANF, v. 74,81, 143).
Here Helena (" Mind ") is unknown, and Simon is
given his self designation " He that hath stood";
but Clement adds practically no new material, and
Origen little beyond the statement that Simon re
garded idolatry as a matter of no concern (Contra
Celaum, vi. 11). A similar ignorance of Helena and
a like emphasis on Simon as " He that hath stood "
are shown by the Philosophumend. Here the center
of all being is " boundless power," which is both
supramundane (inconceivable holy Silence) and in
tramundane (the " Father," " He that hath stood, that standeth, and is to stand," an androgynous power with neither beginning nor end, and essentially unitary). While remaining distinct as a seventh power, the Father causes to emanate three syzygies of cosmic powers, which in their spiritual aspect are " Mind," " Intelligence, " Voice," " Name," " Ratiocination," and " Reflection," and in their physical aspect are " Heaven," " Earth," " Sun," " Moon," " Air," and " Water." The Father is, moreover, " He that hath stood " in relation to premundane existence; " He that standeth " in relation to present being; and " He that shall stand " in relation to the final consummation. Man is simply the realization of " boundless power," the ultimate end of the cosmic process in which the godhead attains self consciousness. All this material is recapitulated, with some additional data, by the pseudo Clementine Homilies and Recognitions. Simon Magus is here described as a necromancer driven by Peter from Caesarea to Antioch, and finally to Rome, everywhere shown to be an impostor, though declaring himself to be Christ, and overcpme by divine miracles. Helena again appears, this time as "Wisdom," " the All Mother," and " Lady," sending forth two angels (who seize power over her), one to create the world, and the other to give the Law. The pseudo Clementine sources also add that Simon Magus was the son of Antonius and Rachel, that he was educated in Greek learning at Alexandria, and that, after being received among the thirty disciples of John the Baptist, he became head of the sect after the death of his teacher. He is likewise described, though without plausibility, as the representative of Samaritan worship on Mount Gerizim who expounded the Law allegorically and denied the resurrection of the dead, as the representative of pagan philosophy (especially of astrological fatalism), and even as the defender of Marcion's antithesis of the good and righteous God.
In some passages in these writings Simon Magus wears the mask of Paul, and attacks are made on Pauline teachings under the guise of polemics in favor of the Petrine theology against the tenets of
Simon Magus. There is, however, no
4. Unten basis for the theory that the picture of able Theo Simon Magus in the Clementine literaries Con ture is deliberately designed to be a cerning caricature of Paul inspired by the Simon hatred of the Judaizing school, or for Magus. seeing in the struggle between Peter and Simon the victory of Petrine over Pauline Christianity. All the traits of Simon in this literature reveal him as only a magician or pseudo Messiah, later given not merely Pauline, but also pagan and Marcionistib, characteristics; so that both in the apocryphal Acts and in the pseudoClementine literature Simon Magus was primarily not a pseudo Paul, but a pseudo Christ, and therefore the antithesis of Peter. Equally improbable is the hypothesis which identifies Simon Magus with the beast of Rev. xiii. 11 17, although it is not impossible that the Beliar which the Sibylline Books, iii. 63 sqq., describe as destined to come " from the Sebastenes " (Samaritans) represented Simon. It
Simon Xsgne Simon
THE NEW SCHAFF HERZOG
has likewise been maintained that Simon Magus is
to be identified with the heresiarch Simon of Gitta,
who should, on this hypothesis, be dated in the early
part of the second century, but for this theory there
is not the slightest ground, especially in view of the
testimony of Acts, Clement of Alexandria, and Jus
tin. It is, on the other hand, not improbable that
Simon Magus is to be identified with a Jewish ma,
gician named Simon who acted as a go between for
the procurator Felix of Judea. This Simon is de
scribed by Josephus (ant., XX., vii. 2) as a Cypriot,
but this statement probably rests upon a confusion of
the Cyprian capital, Cittium (Hebr. Kittim), with the
obscure Samaritan village of Gitta (Hebr. Gittim).
All evidence goes to prove that Simon was what
his epithet Magus implies a sorcerer. This was the
motive for his association with the apostles in Sa
maria, but while it would seem that he pretended to
be, in the pagan sense, a god in human form (cf.
Justin, Apol., i. 26), there is no indication that either
Acts or Justin regarded him as a
g. ASorcer pseudo Messiah; and even the apoa
er Syncre ryphal Acts and the pseudo Clementine
tized with literature characterize him as a false
the Sun. Christ merely on the ground that he
was the first born of Satan (cf. Tgna
tius, Epist. ad Trallenses, longer version, xi.). It is
true that the heresiologists describe him as the su
preme God and even as the Redeemer, but a careful
study of the sources, particularly of the extant
fragments of his " Great Announcement " (pre
served by Hippolytus, Philosophumena, vi. 6 sqq.),
shows that imon himself made no claim to Mes
siahship,_this velug, at n u ed 16'hilnhy fiis disc
les. With this falls the them "thatlmon NTagzus
was the, _folulder of_& nnivgraal_religionintended to
rival Christianity~ fQUde~
and he was noteven Ale fasectinhe sensethat such heresiarchs as Mar
cion_ were. The very fact that Simon himself be
,c~Te the subject of Gnostic speculation shows_that
he was t_ e founder of .Gnosticism, nor do the
earlier sources so represent him; it was onl his
f_o_llq3vers who made this claim for him. Hi~y,
then, Simon was but A,, ~s~,p,,r.~c.~e?'er who asserted, that
fie was a, go. on, aided by the high
famTwiiich he enjoyed throughout Samaria (cf.
Acts viii.), beached its culmination in his i_dentific
'LL with the ,mta sa ,fig ~,Jostrttr
was united with that of ,thg_.,.92>3 g~iltlcALAawte"
This is confirmed by Simon'_s._o9mpanion,. Helena,
wtio is unknown to Acts, the apocryphal Acts, the
Alexandrine heresiologists, or the " Great Announce
ment," but whose name (" Moon "), combined with
the immoral past ascribed her and her Tyrian home,
obviously points to the Tyrian moon goddess with
her licentious rites. How long this cult of Simon
Magus, which had evidently arisen long before the
time of Justin, persisted in Samaria and other re
gions is unknown, but ;U the days of _Origen the
" Simonians " we re__exceedingly _few~ in uuhilier_.m
Palestine and the neighboring countries (Contra Celsum, i. 57), and by the time of Epiphanius (Hwr., xxii. 2) they had become extinct, On the other hand, they had spread widely 4p the West before 200, and there In ' W
,tshe,c,'Cvg~cf. Hippolytus, Philosophumend, vi. 15). They seem to
420
have developed a sect essentially occult and libertine in character, worshiping Simon (cf. Irenaeus, Hcer., T. xxiii. 4), and finally giving rise to two systems, that of the " Great Announcement " and that described by the heresiologists who based their writings upon Justin.
The authenticity of the " Great Announcement " has been assailed both because of its similarity to other Gnostic systems recorded by Hippolytus and
on account of its divergence from 6. The Simon's teachings as described by other Twofold heresiologigts. Neither of these arguSimoniaa menu, however, is sufficient to prove System. the document spurious, especially in
view of the confirmation of Hippolytus by other heresiologista; and the true explanation of the divergencies between the Philosophumena. and Justin lies in the fact that there were two Simonian systems, one influenced by Alexandria and the other by Syria. The former influence is especially evident in the doctrine of the Godhead as " He that hath stood," which finds a close parallelism in the Philonian system, and is also perceptible in the purely allegorical method of Biblical exegesis adopted by the " Great Announcement " (cf. also the account in the pseudo Clementine Homilies, ii. 22 sqq.). It is uncertain whether the " Great Announcement " was written in Alexandria, but at all events its citation of non Samaritan prophets and of Proverbs shows that it was composed neither by Simon nor by any of his Samaritan followers. The account given by Justin and those who drew upon him, on the other hand, indicates that the second Simonian system was evolved in Syria, its elements being a syncretism of Babylonian mythology and Hellenistic allegory (for the latter cf. Irenaeus, Halr., L, xxiii. 4; Epiphanius, Ht>'r., xxi.). Both the Alexandrine and the Syrian form of Simonianism are unique in the history of Gnosticism in that they make a historic personage the supreme God, and, although destitute of any real Christian spirit, both show Christian influence, the Alexandrian " Great Announcement " using written Gospels and the Petrine and Pauline epistles, and the Syrian system comparing Helena with the lost sheep of Matt. xviii. 12 and Luke xv. 6. (Hells WAITZ.)
In St. Peter's in Rome in the west division of the left aisle is an oil painting on slate by Francesco Vanni, " The punishment of Simon Magus," representing Simon Magus's fall from the skies at the prayer of St. Peter.
BIHLIOURAPHY: As an indirect source may be taken into account the excerpts from the Apophasis in Hippolytus, Hcar., VI., vii. xviii (Eng, transl. in ANF, v. 78 81), on which cf. H. Stahelin, in T U, vi (1891). The most of the sources are named in the text, but the principal ones may be summarized here for convenience: Acts viii. 5 24; Justin Martyr, I Apol., xxvi., Ivi., and Tr,;pho, cxx., both in ANF, vol. i.; Hegeaippus, in Eusebius, Hist. eccl., IV., xxii. 5, in NPNF, 2 ser., Vol. i.; Irenaus, Han, L, xxiii. l 4, in A NF, vol. i.; Clement of Alexandria. Strom., IL, xi. 52, VIL, xvii. 107 108, in ANF, vol. ii.; Origen, Contr. Celaum, i. 57, vi. 11, in ANF, vol: iv.; the Clementina; Eusebius, Hiat. eccl., IL, i. 12 15, in NPNF, 2 aer., vol. i.; Gregory Nazianzen. Oratio. xxiii. 18. xliv. Consult: F. C. Baur, in Tiibirger Zeitachrift fur Theologie, 1831, pp. 114 138; •idem, Paulus, pp. 85 sqq.. 218 sqq., Tubingen, 1845; H. Simson, in ZHT, xi (1841), 15 79; A. Sehliemann, Die CZenaentinen, Hamburg, 1844; A. Hil
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