Ante-Nicene Fathers/Volume V/Hippolytus/The Extant Works and Fragments of Hippolytus/Dogmatical and Historical/Fragments of Discourses or Homilies/Part 6

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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 6
157650Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. V, Hippolytus, The Extant Works and Fragments of Hippolytus, Dogmatical and Historical, Fragments of Discourses or Homilies — Part 6Stewart Dingwall Fordyce SalmondHippolytus

VI.[1]

And an ark of imperishable wood was the Saviour Himself. For by this was signified the imperishable and incorruptible tabernacle (of His body), which engendered no corruption of sin. For the man who has sinned also has this confession to make: “My wounds stank, and were corrupt, because of my foolishness.”[2] But the Lord was without sin, being of imperishable wood in respect of His humanity,—that is to say, being of the Virgin and the Holy Spirit, covered, as it were, within and without with the purest gold of the Word of God.


Footnotes

[edit]
  1. From an Oration on “The Lord is my Shepherd.” In Theodoret, Dial. I. p. 36.
  2. Ps. xxxviii. 5.