[Coleridge’s Literary Remains, Volume 4. by Samuel Taylor Coleridge]@TWC D-Link book
Coleridge’s Literary Remains, Volume 4.

PART III
110/191

Hunc ex Deo prolatum didicimus, et prolatione generatum, et idcirco Filium Dei et Deum dictum ex unitate substantiae' .-- Tertull.
Apol.c.

21.
How strange and crude the realism of the Christian Faith appears in Tertullian's rugged Latin! Ib.p.

414.
He represents Tertullian as making the Son, in his highest capacity, ignorant of the day of judgment.
Of the true sense of the text, Mark xiii.32., I still remain in doubt; but, though as zealous and stedfast a Homouesian as Bull and Waterland themselves, I am inclined to understand it of the Son in his highest capacity; but I would avoid the inferiorizing consequences by a stricter rendering of the [Greek: ei mae ho Pataer].

The [Greek: monon] of St.
Matthew xxiv.36.is here omitted.

I think Waterland's a very unsatisfying solution of this text.
Ib.p.


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