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| Chapter LIX.—The Corinthians are exhorted speedily to send back word that peace has been restored. The benediction. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter LIX.—The Corinthians are
exhorted speedily to send back word that peace has been restored. The
benediction.
Send back speedily to us in peace and with joy these
our messengers to you: Claudius Ephebus and Valerius Bito, with
Fortunatus: that they may the sooner announce to us the peace and harmony
we so earnestly desire and long for [among you], and that we may the more
quickly rejoice over the good order re-established among you. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be
with you, and with all everywhere that are the called of God through Him,
by whom be to Him glory, honour, power, majesty, and eternal
dominion,260 from everlasting to
everlasting.261
261 Literally,
“From the ages to the ages of ages.” | Amen.262
262 [Note St. Clement’s
frequent doxologies.] [N.B.—The language of Clement concerning
the Western progress of St. Paul (cap. v.) is our earliest postscript to
his Scripture biography. It is sufficient to refer the reader to the
great works of Conybeare and Howson, and of Mr. Lewin, on the Life and
Epistles of St. Paul. See more especially the valuable note of Lewin
(vol. ii. p. 294) which takes notice of the opinion of some learned men,
that the great Apostle of the Gentiles preached the Gospel in Britain.
The whole subject of St. Paul’s relations with British Christians
is treated by Williams, in his Antiquities of the Cymry, with
learning and in an attractive manner. But the reader will find more ready
to his hand, perhaps, the interesting note of Mr. Lewin, on Claudia and
Pudens (2 Tim. iv. 21), in his Life and Epistles
of St. Paul, vol. ii. p. 392. See also Paley’s Horæ
Paulinæ, p. 40. London, 1820.] | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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