<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:np="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/ns/nonTEI" xml:id="THEM00359" type="transcription" subtype="child">
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title>Passage on early Christian sects</title>
<author xml:id="in"><persName key="nameid_1" sort="Newton, Isaac" ref="nameid_1" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/catalogue/xml/persNames.xml">Isaac Newton</persName></author>

</titleStmt>
<extent><hi rend="italic">c.</hi> <num n="word_count" value="2260">2,260</num> words</extent>
    
<publicationStmt>
<authority>Newton Project</authority>
<pubPlace>Brighton</pubPlace>
<date>2012</date>
<publisher>Newton Project, Sussex University</publisher>
<availability n="lic-text" status="restricted"><licence target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/"><p>This text is licensed under a <ref target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License</ref>.</p></licence></availability>
</publicationStmt>
<notesStmt>
<note type="metadataLine"><hi rend="italic">c.</hi> 1710s-1720s, in English, Latin and Greek, <hi rend="italic">c.</hi> 2,274 words, 4 pp. on 2 ff.</note>
<note n="scopecontent">A passage (beginning missing) on the true faith of early Christians.</note>
<note n="pages">4 pp. on 2 ff.</note>
<note n="language"><p>in English, Latin and Greek</p></note>
<note n="related_texts">
<linkGrp n="document_relations" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/view/normalized/"><ptr type="next_part" target="THEM00360">Fragment on early Church government [SL255.10]</ptr><ptr type="parent" target="THEM00127">SL255</ptr><ptr type="previous_part" target="THEM00358">Passage on the faith Christ taught the disciples [SL255.8]</ptr></linkGrp>
</note>
</notesStmt>
<sourceDesc><bibl type="simple" n="custodian_37" sortKey="sl255.09" subtype="Manuscript">SL255.9, Location Unknown</bibl>
<msDesc>
<msIdentifier>
<repository n="custodian_37">Location Unknown</repository>
<idno n="SL255.09">SL255.9</idno>
</msIdentifier>
<history>
<provenance>SL255.9</provenance>
</history>
<additional>
<adminInfo>
<custodialHist>
<p>The whole of SL255 was bought at the 1936 Sotheby sale by Emmanuel Fabius for £13.10s. This portion was offered as section 6 of Lot 511 at the 2004 New York Sotheby sale but not sold. It had been acquired by the booksellers Estates of Mind by early April 2010.</p>
</custodialHist>
</adminInfo>
</additional>
</msDesc>
</sourceDesc>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<creation>
<origDate when="1710-01-01"><hi rend="italic">c.</hi> 1710s-1720s</origDate>
<origPlace>England</origPlace>
</creation>
<langUsage>
<language ident="eng">English</language>
<language ident="lat">Latin</language>
<language ident="gre">Greek</language>
</langUsage>
<handNotes>
<handNote sameAs="#in" scribe="in">Isaac Newton</handNote>
</handNotes>
</profileDesc>
<encodingDesc><classDecl><taxonomy><category><catDesc n="Religion">Religion</catDesc><category><catDesc n="Doctrine">Doctrine</catDesc></category></category></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc>
<revisionDesc>
<change when="2011-06-15">Tagged transcription begun by <name xml:id="sh">Shannon Higgins</name></change>
<change when="2011-06-18">Transcription completed by <name>Shannon Higgins</name></change>
<change when="2011-07-12">Revised by <name>Shannon Higgins</name></change>
<change when="2011-11-30">Checked by <name xml:id="jy">John Young</name>.</change>
<change when="2012-04-16" type="metadata">Catalogue information compiled by <name sameAs="#jy">John Young</name></change>
<change when="2012-04-16">Code audited by <name xml:id="mjh">Michael Hawkins</name></change>
<change when="2012-04-19">Proofed by <name>Robert Iliffe</name></change>
<change when="2012-04-20" status="released">Final-checked by <name sameAs="#jy">John Young</name></change>
</revisionDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<pb xml:id="p001r" n="1r"/>
<div>
<p xml:id="par1"><del type="strikethrough">––– natural branches again into their own olive tree</del></p>
<p xml:id="par2">––– with God &amp; at length was made flesh.</p>
<p xml:id="par3">The Christians of <choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">e</hi></abbr><expan>the</expan></choice> uncircumcision during the three first <lb xml:id="l1"/>centuries &amp; part of the fourth generally held that Christ was in <lb xml:id="l2"/>the <choice><sic>beginnng</sic><corr>beginning</corr></choice> before all things &amp; <del type="cancelled">all thing</del> <choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">t</hi></abbr><expan>that</expan></choice> God created <choice><sic>alli</sic><corr>all</corr></choice> things <lb xml:id="l3"/>by him &amp; said unto him Let us make man &amp; that he had do<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l4"/>minion over all things &amp; appeared to Adam in paradise &amp; <lb xml:id="l5"/>to [Cain &amp; Noah &amp;] the Patriarchs &amp; Moses &amp; Ioshuah &amp; at <lb xml:id="l6"/>length <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">came down from heaven,</add> was incarnate &amp; born of the Virgin Mary without <lb xml:id="l7"/>the help of a man <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">&amp; became <del type="cancelled">&amp; <gap reason="illgblDel" unit="chars" extent="3"/></del> a true man</add> &amp; suffered &amp; rose again from the dead <lb xml:id="l8"/>&amp; reascended into heaven where he was before. And the Christi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l9"/>ans of the circumcision were also of the very same opinion <lb xml:id="l10"/>excepting some disputes about the incarnation. For Epipha<lb xml:id="l11"/>nius<anchor xml:id="n001r-01"/><note place="marginRight" target="#n001r-01">Hæres. 30. sect. 3</note> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">reciting the several opinions of the Ebionites</add> tells us that some of the<add place="inline" indicator="no">m</add> <del type="cancelled">Ebionites</del> said that <hi rend="underline">Christ <lb xml:id="l12"/>was Adam, even that Adam who was first formed by God <lb xml:id="l13"/>&amp; animated by the divine breath, &amp; that others of them <lb xml:id="l14"/>said that Christ was from above &amp; that he was a spirit <lb xml:id="l15"/><choice><abbr>w<hi rend="superscript">ch</hi></abbr><expan>which</expan></choice> was  created</hi> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes"><del type="strikethrough">[not generated out of ✝<addSpan spanTo="#addend001r-01" place="marginLeft" startDescription="the left margin" endDescription="f 1r" resp="#mjh"/> nothing or out of his fathers substance but formed with a spiritual body]<anchor xml:id="addend001r-01"/> or formed with a spiritual body]</del></add> <hi rend="underline">before all things &amp; was above the Angels <lb xml:id="l16"/>&amp; had dominion over <del type="strikethrough">man</del> all things &amp; was called Christ, <lb xml:id="l17"/>&amp; that his habitation or residence was there perpetually; <lb xml:id="l18"/>but as often as he pleased, he descended to these lower regi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l19"/>ons, as when he came in Adam &amp; appeared to the patriarchs <lb xml:id="l20"/>cloathed with a body, coming to Abraham &amp; to Isaac &amp; to <lb xml:id="l21"/>Iacob; that this same Christ <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">came</add> in these last times &amp; cloathed <lb xml:id="l22"/>himself with the body of Adam</hi> [that is with flesh &amp; <lb xml:id="l23"/>bones of the race of Adam] <hi rend="underline">&amp; appeared a man &amp; was cru<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l24"/>cified &amp; rose again &amp; ascended. But these Ebionites again <lb xml:id="l25"/>when they please say it was not thus, but that a spirit <lb xml:id="l26"/>who is the Christ came into Iesus &amp; cloathed himself <choice><abbr>w<hi rend="superscript">th</hi></abbr><expan>with</expan></choice> <lb xml:id="l27"/>him who is called Iesus.</hi> Thus far Epiphanius. And a little <lb xml:id="l28"/>after describing <del type="cancelled">the</del> more at large the third opinion of these <lb xml:id="l29"/>Ebionites he represents that they said that <anchor xml:id="n001r-02"/><note place="marginRight" target="#n001r-02">ib. sect. 14 &amp; 16</note><hi rend="underline">Iesus was born of <choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">e</hi></abbr><expan>the</expan></choice> <lb xml:id="l30"/>seed of man</hi> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">[viz<hi rend="superscript">t</hi> of Ioseph &amp; Mary]</add> <hi rend="underline">&amp; was chosen, &amp; by election was called the son <lb xml:id="l31"/>of God from the Christ who came upon him from above in <lb xml:id="l32"/>the form of a dove &amp; that they said not that this Christ was <lb xml:id="l33"/>generated of God <choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">e</hi></abbr><expan>the</expan></choice> father</hi> <add place="supralinear marginRight" indicator="yes">[viz<hi rend="superscript">t</hi> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">in the naturall sense of the word that is</add> by emission of <del type="strikethrough">substance as a man is</del> his fathers substance as a man is generated or as the heathens suppose <lb xml:id="l34"/>their gods to be <lb xml:id="l35"/>generated</add> <hi rend="underline">but that he was created as one</hi> <lb xml:id="l36"/><add place="supralinear" indicator="no"><del type="cancelled">or <gap reason="illgblDel" unit="chars" extent="6"/></del></add> <hi rend="superscript">of the Archangels</hi> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">[viz<hi rend="superscript">t</hi> in respect of his spiritual body]</add> <hi rend="underline">&amp; was greater then they &amp; reigns over <lb xml:id="l37"/>both the Angels &amp; all things <choice><abbr>w<hi rend="superscript">ch</hi></abbr><expan>which</expan></choice> were made by the omni<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l38"/>potent &amp; came &amp; taught what was in their Gospel</hi>, that is, <lb xml:id="l39"/>in the Gospel according to Matthew. What the Ebionites meant by the first of these three opinions I do not well <lb xml:id="l40"/>understand, unless perhaps they meant that Christ was the <lb xml:id="l41"/>Adam Cadmon or first Man of the Cabbalists, that is, their <lb xml:id="l42"/>first Sephiroth or Æon called by them <del type="strikethrough">Cochmah</del> <add place="supralinear" indicator="no">Kether</add>, the Crown <lb xml:id="l43"/>or <del type="strikethrough">chief Sephiroth</del> supreme Sephiroth &amp; by the Gnosticks <foreign xml:lang="gre">Ἀρχή</foreign> <lb xml:id="l44"/>the Beginning. <del type="cancelled">or first P</del> <del type="strikethrough">But be that as it w</del> But whatever <lb xml:id="l45"/>they meant, it is manifest that the Ebionites according to <lb xml:id="l46"/>all <add place="inline" indicator="no"><choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">e</hi></abbr><expan>the</expan></choice></add> three opinions here ascribed to them taught that Christ <lb xml:id="l47"/>was as old as the creation of the world, &amp; according to the <lb xml:id="l48"/>second &amp; third opinion (&amp; perhaps also the first) that he was <lb xml:id="l49"/>above the Angels &amp; Archangels &amp; reigned over them &amp; <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">over</add> all <fw type="catch" place="bottomRight">things</fw><pb xml:id="p002r" n="2r"/> things else from the beginning &amp; came down from heaven &amp; was <lb xml:id="l50"/>either incarnate of the Virgin or descended upon Iesus. <add place="inline" indicator="no">//</add> And <lb xml:id="l51"/>if the Ebionites made Christ as old as the creation &amp; took him <lb xml:id="l52"/>to be the supreme being next under the father &amp; Lord of the <lb xml:id="l53"/>Vniverse, much more did the Nazarenes. For the Naza<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l54"/>renes generally called Christ the son of God, <choice><abbr>w<hi rend="superscript">ch</hi></abbr><expan>which</expan></choice> those Ebionites <lb xml:id="l55"/>who said that Iesus was the son of Ioseph, did not. Those Ebi<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l56"/>onites said <del type="strikethrough">that</del> only that Iesus was the son of God by election <lb xml:id="l57"/>&amp; by the descent of Christ upon him, but they allowed not <lb xml:id="l58"/>a generation of Christ as the Nazarenes did, nor did they <lb xml:id="l59"/>say that Christ <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">was born of a Virgin</add> suffered on the cross &amp; rose again from <choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">e</hi></abbr><expan>the</expan></choice> <lb xml:id="l60"/>dead. These things they attributed only to Iesus the son of <lb xml:id="l61"/>Ioseph &amp; Mary, &amp; therefore the Nazarenes who said <lb xml:id="l62"/><anchor xml:id="n002r-01"/><note place="marginRight" target="#n002r-01">Hieron. supra</note>that Christ <gap reason="blot" unit="chars" extent="1"/> was the son of God <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">&amp; <del type="cancelled"><unclear reason="del" cert="high">&amp; was</unclear></del> born of <del type="strikethrough">the</del> <add place="supralinear" indicator="no">a</add> Virgin <del type="strikethrough">Mary</del></add> &amp; suffered &amp; rose again &amp; <lb xml:id="l63"/>ascended, were of the opinion that Christ came down from <lb xml:id="l64"/>heaven &amp; took flesh of the Virgin by the power of God <lb xml:id="l65"/>&amp; was born of her &amp; suffered &amp; rose again &amp; ascended where <lb xml:id="l66"/>he was before, &amp; by reason of his supernatural incarnati<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l67"/>on was called <choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">e</hi></abbr><expan>the</expan></choice> son of God. And whereas <del type="strikethrough">the <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">Ebionites</add></del> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">those Ebionites who were of this opinion</add> said that he was ‡<addSpan spanTo="#addend001v-01" place="p001v" startDescription="f 1v" endDescription="f 2r" resp="#mjh"/>‡ created before all things, they meant not that he was produced out of <lb xml:id="l68"/>nothing (for that was a later sense of the word:) but that he was <lb xml:id="l69"/>formed <choice><abbr>w<hi rend="superscript">th</hi></abbr><expan>with</expan></choice> a spiritual body without the emission of his fathers <lb xml:id="l70"/>substance. For God the father has not a bodily substance <lb xml:id="l71"/>to emit, &amp; therefore in the litteral sense of the word, gene<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l72"/>rates nothing with a body. Had they been asked whether Christ <lb xml:id="l73"/>was <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">the beginning of the creation of God &amp;</add> <hi rend="underline">the first begotten of every creature</hi>, that is, the first begotten <lb xml:id="l74"/>of every thing produced without the emission of <del type="cancelled"><gap reason="illgblDel" unit="chars" extent="1"/></del> the fathers sub<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l75"/>stance, I question not but that they would have granted it: [&amp; therefore <lb xml:id="l76"/>in calling him a creature intended not to deny him to be the [son of <lb xml:id="l77"/>God in the sense of the Apostle] but neither they nor the Nazarenes <lb xml:id="l78"/>had been taught to call him the son of God <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">by a generation in a litteral sense</add> before the world began. <lb xml:id="l79"/><del type="blockStrikethrough">The Nazarenes <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">or first Christians</add> called <del type="strikethrough">him</del> <add place="supralinear" indicator="no">Christ</add> the son of God by a supernatural genera<lb xml:id="l80"/>tion of <choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">e</hi></abbr><expan>the</expan></choice> Virgin &amp; by his resurrection from the dead: The Ebionites <lb xml:id="l81"/><del type="strikethrough">allowed that Iesus called Iesus the son of God for his vertue <del type="cancelled">b</del></del> denyed <lb xml:id="l82"/>that Christ was either born or died &amp; rose again, &amp; therefore did not call <lb xml:id="l83"/>him the son of God, it being no part of the Christian religion to know <lb xml:id="l84"/>what God did before the world began.</del></p><anchor xml:id="addend001v-01"/>
<p xml:id="par4">Vpon the commencing of the Iewish war, the Christian <lb xml:id="l85"/>Iews <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">or Nazarenes</add> fled from Ierusalem into other countries &amp; chiefly <lb xml:id="l86"/>into Peræa on the eastern side of Iordan <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes"><del type="strikethrough">&amp; then <del type="cancelled"><gap reason="illgblDel" unit="chars" extent="1"/></del> to the city Pella</del></add>, &amp; there they <lb xml:id="l87"/>began first to be called Ebionites. They were called <choice><sic>Na<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l88"/>zanes</sic><corr>Nazarenes</corr></choice> <del type="cancelled">by their</del> before by their enemies the unbeleiving <lb xml:id="l89"/>Iews, &amp; in Peræa <del type="cancelled">&amp; the city Pella</del> <add place="supralinear" indicator="no">they</add> were <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">first</add> called Ebionites <lb xml:id="l90"/>by their friends &amp; themselves: for they gloried in the <lb xml:id="l91"/>name of Ebionites &amp; said that they knew of no such <lb xml:id="l92"/>man as Ebion, but from the days of the Apostles had <lb xml:id="l93"/>distributed their goods to <choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">e</hi></abbr><expan>the</expan></choice> poor &amp; by that means <lb xml:id="l94"/>being generally impoverished were called Ebionites <lb xml:id="l95"/>from the word Ebion <choice><abbr>w<hi rend="superscript">ch</hi></abbr><expan>which</expan></choice> in their language signifies <lb xml:id="l96"/>a poor man. <del type="strikethrough">And divers</del> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">This is the account <choice><abbr>w<hi rend="superscript">ch</hi></abbr><expan>which</expan></choice> they gave of <del type="strikethrough">many</del> themselves. <seg rend="ns" rendition="ns"></seg></add><addSpan spanTo="#addend001v-02" place="p001v" startDescription="f 1v" endDescription="f 2r" resp="#mjh"/> <seg rend="ns" rendition="ns"></seg> And <del type="strikethrough">hence it is that Epiphanius recites three</del> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">according to this account the Ebionites were the Nazarenes of Peræa &amp; these Nazarenes were of</add> several opinions<add place="inline" indicator="no">.</add> <del type="strikethrough">of the Ebionites.</del> Some said <lb xml:id="l97"/>that Christ was Adam, but in what sense I do not find. Some that he was a spirit created <lb xml:id="l98"/>before all things <add place="supralinear" indicator="no"><del type="strikethrough">in the sense that</del></add> &amp; had dominion over all things &amp; dwelt in heaven &amp; descended whenever <lb xml:id="l99"/>he pleased &amp; conversed <choice><abbr>w<hi rend="superscript">th</hi></abbr><expan>with</expan></choice> <choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">e</hi></abbr><expan>the</expan></choice> Patriarchs &amp; in <choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">e</hi></abbr><expan>the</expan></choice> last days came down &amp; was incarnate <lb xml:id="l100"/>&amp; appeared as a man &amp; was crucified &amp; rose again &amp; ascended. And this I take to be the <lb xml:id="l101"/><choice><sic>be the</sic><corr type="noText"/></choice> <del type="strikethrough">opinion common to the Ebionites &amp;</del> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">original &amp; most general opinion of the</add> Nazarenes. And some said that this Christ <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">who was before the <del type="strikethrough"><gap reason="illgblDel" unit="chars" extent="10"/></del> <add place="supralinear" indicator="no">creation &amp;</add> had dominion over all things</add> only <lb xml:id="l102"/>descended upon Iesus in the form of a dove <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">&amp; dwelt in him</add> &amp; did the supernatural works but was not <lb xml:id="l103"/><add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">really</add> incarnate nor born nor died, but when Iesus was led to Pilate departed from him. And <lb xml:id="l104"/>many of these Nazarenes being so zealous of the law as not only to observe it them<lb type="hyphenated" xml:id="l105"/>selves but also to impose it upon the converted Gentiles as requisite to salvation <lb xml:id="l106"/>they were at length distinguished from the rest of the Nazarenes by the name of <lb xml:id="l107"/>Ebionites. This sect was therefore as old as the first Council of Ierusalem, tho the <lb xml:id="l108"/>name was of a later date. And from all this . . .<anchor xml:id="addend001v-02"/> <add indicator="yes" place="supralinear">But many</add> among them being so zealous of the <lb xml:id="l109"/>law as not only to observe it themselves but also to impose it <lb xml:id="l110"/>on the converted Gentiles <del type="strikethrough">&amp; the zealots <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">or most of them</add> also falling into the <lb xml:id="l111"/>opinion that Christ descended upon Iesus the son of Ioseph <lb xml:id="l112"/>&amp; Mary, the name of Ebionites at length degenerated <lb xml:id="l113"/>&amp; became the name of the sect of <choice><abbr>y<hi rend="superscript">e</hi></abbr><expan>the</expan></choice> circumcision denoting those <lb xml:id="l114"/>who are for imposing the law upon the gentiles &amp; take Iesus <lb xml:id="l115"/>to be the son of Ioseph &amp; Mary.</del> <add place="interlinear marginRight" indicator="no">as requisite to salvation, these were <del type="strikethrough">at length distinguished from the <lb xml:id="l116"/>rest of the Nazarenes by the name of Ebionites.</del> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes"><del type="strikethrough"><gap reason="illgblDel" unit="words" extent="6"/></del></add> censured for it <del type="cancelled">by</del> &amp; at length the name of Ebionites appropriated to them <lb xml:id="l117"/>to distinguish them from the rest of the Nazarenes. This sect was therefore as <lb xml:id="l118"/>old as the first Council of Ierusalem <del type="strikethrough">&amp; the <gap reason="illgblDel" unit="words" extent="3"/></del> tho the name was of a later date [&amp; the Nazarenes were <del type="strikethrough">as old as</del> the first Christians.].</add> And from <del type="strikethrough">from</del> all this it is <lb xml:id="l119"/>manifest that the Christians of the Church of Ierusalem <add place="supralinear" indicator="no"><del type="strikethrough"><gap reason="illgblDel" unit="chars" extent="4"/></del></add> beleived <lb xml:id="l120"/>from the beginning that Christ was <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes"><del type="strikethrough">in being</del></add> <del type="cancelled">from</del> <add place="interlinear" indicator="yes"><del type="strikethrough">from</del> before the creation <lb xml:id="l121"/>&amp; had dominion over</add> <del type="strikethrough">the time of the cre<lb xml:id="l122"/>ation &amp; was superior to</del> the Angels &amp; Archangels &amp; <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes"><del type="cancelled">to</del></add> all things, <lb xml:id="l123"/>&amp; at length came down from heaven &amp; either was incarnate <lb xml:id="l124"/>or descended upon Iesus. And this faith spread from Ierusalem <lb xml:id="l125"/>into all the earth, <del type="strikethrough">the generality beleiving that Christ was <lb xml:id="l126"/>was incarnate of the Virgin &amp; became man, &amp; some <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes"><gap reason="illgblDel" unit="chars" extent="4"/></add> that Ie Christ</del> <add place="interlinear" indicator="yes">&amp; continued to be the faith of all the Churches till the days of <del type="strikethrough">the first ages</del> Hegesippus Irenaeus &amp; Pope <lb xml:id="l127"/>Eleutherus, the Christians generally beleiving that Christ was incarnate of the Virgin &amp; became <lb xml:id="l128"/>man, &amp; some few that Christ</add> <lb xml:id="l129"/>descended upon Iesus, or in our language, that the divine nature <lb xml:id="l130"/>descended upon the humane, <del type="cancelled">&amp; <gap reason="illgblDel" unit="chars" extent="5"/></del> or God the Word upon the man Christ Iesus. <del type="strikethrough">&amp; some that Iesus Christ took his beginning <lb xml:id="l131"/>of the Virgin</del></p>
<pb xml:id="p002v" n="2v"/>
<p xml:id="par5">And this state of the primitive Church explains to us the true <lb xml:id="l132"/>meaning of the beginning of the gospel of Iohn. <hi rend="underline">In the beginning was <lb xml:id="l133"/>the Word <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">&amp; the word</add> was with God</hi>. <del type="strikethrough">&amp; the Word was God.</del> <hi rend="underline">All things were made by <lb xml:id="l134"/>him &amp; without him was nothing made that was made</hi>. By these words <lb xml:id="l135"/>Iohn confirms the opinion of the Nazarenes &amp; those Ebionites who <lb xml:id="l136"/>said that Christ was in the beginning of the creation of the world, &amp; <lb xml:id="l137"/>was then with God the father &amp; that God created all things by him. <lb xml:id="l138"/><hi rend="underline">And the Word was God</hi>, <del type="strikethrough">that is</del> not a mere power or vertue <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">of the father</add> emitted <lb xml:id="l139"/>without a proper life will &amp; understanding <del type="cancelled">but a person, &amp;</del> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">&amp; actuated by the fathers will</add> as was <lb xml:id="l140"/>the opinion of some <add place="supralinear" indicator="no"><del type="strikethrough">of those</del></add> who said that Christ descended upon Iesus, but <lb xml:id="l141"/>a person with a proper life understanding &amp; will, &amp; not any person <lb xml:id="l142"/>but a divine person, a person with dominion, a person who had <lb xml:id="l143"/>dominion over the Archangels &amp; Angels &amp; all things created. For <lb xml:id="l144"/>this is the signification of <foreign xml:lang="gre">Θεὸς. Ο῾ Θεὸς</foreign> is an individual &amp; signifies <lb xml:id="l145"/>the supreme God when limited to no other sense: <foreign xml:lang="gre">Θεὸς</foreign> is a species <lb xml:id="l146"/>(as Origen &amp; Epiphanius tell us) &amp; <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">may</add> signif<del type="over">i</del><add place="over" indicator="no">y</add><del type="cancelled">es</del> any divine Being <choice><abbr>w<hi rend="superscript">th</hi></abbr><expan>with</expan></choice> <lb xml:id="l147"/>dominion. For <hi rend="underline">Elohim</hi>, <foreign xml:lang="gre">Θεὸς</foreign>, <foreign xml:lang="lat"><hi rend="underline">Deus</hi></foreign>, <hi rend="underline">God</hi> are words of <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">dominion &amp; have</add> the same significa<lb xml:id="l148"/>tion <choice><abbr>w<hi rend="superscript">th</hi></abbr><expan>with</expan></choice> <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">the word</add> Lord but in a higher degree. <del type="strikethrough">[&amp; have been anciently attribu<lb xml:id="l149"/>ted to Angels <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">Ghosts</add> Kings &amp; Magistrates <del type="cancelled">in respect</del> as well as to Christ, &amp; that <lb xml:id="l150"/>not abusively but in the proper sense of the word, as the word Lord <lb xml:id="l151"/>is still used in the proper sens</del><del type="cancelled">e] T</del> <hi rend="underline">And the word was made flesh</hi>. <lb xml:id="l152"/><del type="cancelled">He did</del> This <add place="supralinear" indicator="yes">is</add> said in opposition to those who taught that Christ descended <lb xml:id="l153"/>upon Iesus in the form of a Dove &amp; dwelt in him &amp; did the works <lb xml:id="l154"/>&amp; for confirming the opinion of those who said that he overshadowed <lb xml:id="l155"/>the virgin &amp; was incarnate in the proper sense of the word &amp; <lb xml:id="l156"/>became a true passible man. And for establishing the same opini<lb xml:id="l157"/>on Iohn saith in his first Epistle, <hi rend="underline">Who is a lyar but he that <lb xml:id="l158"/>denyeth that Iesus is the Christ</hi>?</p>
</div>
</body>
</text>
</TEI>