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| The Elegant Works of Irenæus which have come down to us. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXVI.—The Elegant Works
of Irenæus which have come down to us.
Besides the works and letters of Irenæus which we have mentioned,1722
1722 For a general summary of the works of Irenæus mentioned by
Eusebius, see Bk. IV. chap. 21, note 9. | a certain book of his On Knowledge,
written against the Greeks,1723
1723 πρὸς
῞Ελληνας
λόγος…περὶ
ἐπιστήμης. Jerome (de vir. ill. 35) makes two works out of
this: one Against the Gentiles, and another On Knowledge (et
contra Gentes volumen breve, et de disciplina aliud). Harvey (I. p.
clxvi.) states that one of the Syriac fragments of Irenæus’
works mentions the work of Eusebius On Knowledge, and specifies
that it was directed against the Valentinians. In that case it would be
necessary to make two separate works, as Jerome does, and so Harvey
thinks that the text of Eusebius must be amended by the insertion of
an ἄλλος τε. Unfortunately, Harvey did not name the Syriac fragment which
contains the statement referred to, and it is not to be found among
those collected in his edition (Venables, in Smith and Wace, states
that he could find no such fragment, and I have also searched in vain
for it). Evidently some blunder has been committed, and it looks as if
Harvey’s statement were unverifiable. Meanwhile, Jerome’s
testimony alone is certainly not enough to warrant an emendation of the
text in opposition to all the mss. and
versions. We must therefore conclude, with our present light, that the
treatise περὶ
ἐπιστήμης was directed against the Greeks, as Eusebius says. The work
has entirely perished, with the possible exception of a single brief
fragment (the first of the Pfaffian fragments; Gr. Frag. XXXV.
in Harvey’s edition), which Harvey refers to it. | very concise
and remarkably forcible, is extant; and another, which he dedicated to
a brother Marcian, In Demonstration of the Apostolic Preaching;1724
1724 εἰς
ἐπίδειξιν
τοῦ
ἀποστολικοῦ
κηρύγματος. This work, too, has perished, though possibly a few of
the fragments published by Harvey are to be referred to it (see Harvey,
I. p. clxvii.). Harvey conjectures that the work discussed the articles
of the early Rule of faith, which is quite possible. Of the
“brother Marcian” to whom it was addressed, we know
nothing. | and a volume containing various
Dissertations,1725
1725 βίβλιον τι
διαλέξεων
διαφόρων. This work (no longer extant) was probably, as Harvey remarks,
“a collection of sermons and expositions of various texts and
passages of Scripture.” To it are undoubtedly to be referred a
great many of the fragments in which passages of Scripture are
discussed (see Harvey, I. p. clxvii.). | in which he
mentions the Epistle to the Hebrews and the so-called Wisdom of
Solomon, making quotations from them. These are the works of Irenæus which
have come to our knowledge.
Commodus having ended his reign
after thirteen years, Severus became emperor in less than six months
after his death, Pertinax having reigned during the intervening time.1726
1726 Commodus was strangled on the 31st of December, 192, and Pertinax,
who immediately succeeded him, was murdered, on March 28, 193, by the
Prætorian guard, which then sold the imperial power to Didius
Julianus, who, at the approach of Septimius Severus, who had been
proclaimed emperor by the Pannonian legions, was declared a public
enemy by the Senate, and beheaded after a reign of only sixty-six
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