31 "Hath shown me good things."-Ps. xiii. 6. For the passage of the Red Sea, vide Ex. xiv.
32 Ex. xvii. 6: Num. xx. 8, Num. xx. 11.
34 Ex. xvi. 12 ff.; Deut. viii. 3, Deut. viii. 4; Deut. xxix. 5; Ps. lxxviii. 24, Ps. lxxviii. 25; Ps. cv. 40; S. John vi. 31; 1 Cor. x. 3.
35 Cf. S. Matt. xiii. 43; Dan. xii. 3. The radiance of these heavenly choirs is the reflection of Him Who is the Light of the World, the True Light.-S. John i. 9; John viii. 12; John xii. 46; Rev. xxi. 23; Rev. xxii. 5.
36 S. John x. 11, John x. 17, John x. 18.
37 S. Matt. xx. 15 (the rendering in the Bible is slightly different).
38 1 Cor. ii. 9; Isa. lxiv. 4.
40 Ps. cxviii. 1; Ps. cxxxvi. 1; Ps. cvi. 1; Ps. cvii. 1.
41 St. Ambrose's syllogism appears to be: The Judge is the righteous God, the Son of God is the Judge; therefore, the Son of God is the righteous God.
44 The reff. in §§30 and 31 are to S. John vii. 12 and i. 29.
48 S. John xvii. 22, John xvii. 23.
50 No doubts, because (1) the meaning of the passage is plain; (2) it is taken from an inspired Book.
52 The quotation is from Zech. ii. 8-"after His glory." Lat.-"Post honorem." LXX.-opisw dochj. Vulg.-"Post gloriam." A.V.-" After the glory."
53 Isa. lii. 6. The Vulg. agrees with St. Ambrose. The A. V. has-"They shall know in that day that I am He that doth speak: behold, it is I." R.V. margin-"here I am."
57 Job xxxviii. 4-6; Isa. xl. 12-17.
58 Cf. the Collect for the Feast of St. Michael and all Angels.
60 S. Matt. xxvi. 39 ff.; S. Matt. xiv. 35 ff.; S. Luke xxii. 41 ff.
61 i.e. human nature. Cf. "Athanasian" Creed, clause 31.
62 S. Matt. xxvi. 39; S. Mark xiv. 35.
66 The principle common to these and other like heretics (who ignored or misconstrued many passages of Scripture which plainly declare the completeness and truth of our Lord's humanity) was that matter is inherently and by its very nature evil. Mani, there fore, and the rest were easily led to think shame of attributing to Christ a real, tangible, visible body. For the doctrines of Mani, see note on I. 57. Valentinus was a Gnostic, who lived at Rome (whither he came from Alexandria) between 140 and 160 a.d. Marcion became known as a heresiarch in the papacy of Eleuthe rius (177-190 a.d.). For the doctrines of Valentinus and Marcion, see Robertson's Church History, Bk. I. ch. iv.
69 S. John iii. 8. The same word in Greek at least, serves to denote "wind" and "spirit"-the invisible and yet sensible and real air, wind, or breath being taken as the best emblem of the spirit, which is known and its presence realized only by its effects Spiritus, "spirit," primarily means "breath."