Part 4 (2/2)
[Footnote 28: [Greek: logos].]
[Footnote 29: Cf. _Isaiah_, ii. 4.]
[Footnote 30: Cf. _Luke_, iii. 9.]
[Footnote 31: Or adorning.]
[Footnote 32: _Genesis_, iii. 24.]
[Footnote 33: [Greek: logos]; also reason.]
[Footnote 34: [Greek: antistoichountes]; used in Xenophon (_Ana._ v. 4, 12) of two bands of dancers facing each other in rows or pairs.]
[Footnote 35: He who has stood, stands and will stand.]
[Footnote 36: Thought.]
[Footnote 37: The Middle Distance.]
[Footnote 38: There is a lacuna in the text here.]
[Footnote 39: [Greek: dia taes idias epignoseos.]]
[Footnote 40: Undergo the pa.s.sion.]
[Footnote 41: [Greek: paredrous] C.W. King calls these ”a.s.sessors.”
(_The Gnostics and their Remains_, p. 70.)]
[Footnote 42: This is presumably meant for a grim patristic joke.]
[Footnote 43: A medicinal drug used by the ancients, especially as a specific against madness.]
[Footnote 44: The conducting of souls to or from the invisible world.]
[Footnote 45: [Greek: prounikos: prouneikos] is one who bears burdens, a carrier; in a bad sense it means lewd.]
[Footnote 46: Or the conception (of the mind).]
[Footnote 47: Cf. 1 _Thess_., v. 8.]
[Footnote 48: A famous actor and mime writer who flourished in the time of Augustus (circa A.D. 7); there are extant some doubtful fragments of Philistion containing moral sentiments from the comic poets.]
[Footnote 49: [Greek: plaeroma]]
[Footnote 50: Scripture.]
[Footnote 51: _Matth._, v. 17.]
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