Ante-Nicene Fathers/Volume V/Hippolytus/The Extant Works and Fragments of Hippolytus/Dogmatical and Historical/Fragments of Discourses or Homilies/Part 3

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Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. V, Hippolytus, The Extant Works and Fragments of Hippolytus, Dogmatical and Historical, Fragments of Discourses or Homilies
by Hippolytus, translated by Stewart Dingwall Fordyce Salmond
Part 3
157647Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. V, Hippolytus, The Extant Works and Fragments of Hippolytus, Dogmatical and Historical, Fragments of Discourses or Homilies — Part 3Stewart Dingwall Fordyce SalmondHippolytus

III.[1]

St. Hippolytus, Bishop and Martyr, in his Homily on the Paschal Supper.

He was altogether[2] in all, and everywhere; and though He filleth the universe up to all the principalities of the air, He stripped Himself again. And for a brief space He cries that the cup might pass from Him, with a view to show truly that He was also man.[3] But remembering, too, the purpose for which He was sent, He fulfils the dispensation (economy) for which He was sent, and exclaims, “Father, not my will,”[4] and, “The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.”[5]


Footnotes

[edit]
  1. From a Homily on the Lord’s Paschal Supper, ibid., p. 293.
  2. ὅλος.
  3. καὶ ἄνθρωπος, also man. See Grabe, Bull’s Defens. Fid. Nic., p. 103.
  4. Luke xxii. 42.
  5. Matt. xxvi. 41.