Read City of God (Penguin Classics) Online
Authors: Saint Augustine
110
. Ps.42, 3; 6, 6; 38, 9; 39, 2.
111
. cf.
2
Cor.5, 2ff.
112
. Rom.8, 13.
113
. Rom 9, 2ff.
114
. 1 Cor.15, 55f.(St Augustine’s text must have read
neikos
, ‘strife’, for
nîkos
, ‘victory’).
115
. 1 John 1,8.
116
. 2 Pet. 3, 3–13.
117
. cf. Dan. 3, 13–27.
118
. Gk, ‘the apostasy’.
119
. 2 Thess. 2, 1–12.
120
. Tacitus mentions this belief as prevalent in the East in A.D. 69 (Hist, z, 8); and Suetonius says that a conviction of Nero’s imminent return to take vengeance persisted for a long time (
Nero
, 57).
121
. John 2, 18f.
122
. cf. Job 1, 16–19.
123
. 1 Thess. 4, 13–17.
124
. 1 Cor. 15, 22; 36.
125
. Gen. 3, 19.
126
. 1 Cor. 15, 51. There are several variant readings in this verse: but the better
MSS
read, ‘We shall not all sleep.’
127
. 1 Cor. 15, 22.
128
. cf. ch. 4.
129
. Is. 26,19 (Lxx).
130
. Is. 66, 12–16.
131
. cf. Gal. 4,26.
132
. Matt. 5,8.
133
. Is. 65. 17ff
134
. Phil. 3, 19; Rom. 8, 6; Gen. 6, 3.
135
. Luke 12, 49; Acts 2, 3; Matt. 10, 34; Hebr. 4, 12; S. of S. 2, 5.
136
. cf. Is. 66, 17.
137
. Is. 66, 19; Rom. 3, 23.
138
. Is. 66. 19f.
139
. Is. 66, 21.
140
. Ps. 110, 4.
141
. Is. 66. 22ff.
142
. The reading of the Vulgate.
143
. Is. 26,19, (LXX).
144
. cf. ch. 10.
145
. Matt. 25, 30; 21; 23.
146
. 1 Cor. 15, 28.
147
. 1 john 3,9: Is. 56, 5.
148
. Dan. 7, 15f.
149
. Dan. 7,23–8.
150
. Dan. 12, 11.
151
. It is true.
152
. cf. ch. 5; ch. 7; and Bk XI, 31f.; xv, 20; XVII, 4.
153
. Dan. 12, 1–3.
154
. John 5, 28f: cf. ch. 6.
155
. Gen. 17, 5: 22,18.
156
. Dan. 12, 13.
157
. Ps. 102, 25ff.
158
. cf. Bk XIX, 23.
159
. 1 Cor. 7, 31; 1 John 2, 17; Matt. 24,35.
160
. 2 Pet. 3, 6f.
161
. 2 Pet. 3, 10f.
162
. Matt. 24, 29.
163
. Aen., 2, 694; 696.
164
. Ps. 50 (49 in LXX), 3ff.
165
. cf. Is. 53,7; Matt. 26, 62f.; 27, 12, 14; John 19,9.
166
. 1 Thess. 4, 17; cf. ch. 20.
167
. Hos. 6, 6.
168
. cf. Bk X, 6.
169
. Matt. 25, 34.
170
. Hier.,
Praef. in Mai.
The ‘other works’ are Ezra and Nehemiah.
171
. Ezra and Nehemiah.
172
. Mal. 3, 1–6.
173
. Is. 4, 4.
174
. 1 John 1, 8.
175
. Job 14, 4.
176
. Rom. 1, 17.
177
. Is. 65, 22.
178
. Prov. 3, 18.
179
. Wisd. 1,9; Rom. 2, 15f.
180
. Bk XVIII, 35.
181
. Mal. 3, 17–4, 3. (For ‘I shall turn’, Hebrew,
LXX
and Vulgate have ‘Turn yourselves’. So has St Augustine in XVIII, 35).
182
. Mal. 4.4.
183
. John 5,46.
184
. mal. 3, 14f
185
. mal. 2,17.
186
. Ps. 73 (72 in LXX) 3; 11; 13; 16f.
187
. mal. 4, 5f.
188
. 2 Kings 2, 11
189
. cf. Bk XVIII, 43.
190
. cf. Phil. 2,7.
191
. mal. 2,17; 3,14; cf. ch. 28.
192
. Is. 48, 12–16.
193
. Is. Ï3, 7.
LXX
has the past tense.
194
. Zech. 2, 8f.
195
. Matt. 15, 24.
196
. John 7, 39.
197
. Ps. 18, 43.
198
. Matt 4,19; Luke 5,10.
199
. Matt, 12, 29; cf. ch. 7.
200
. Zech. 12, 9f.
201
. John 5, 22.
202
. Is. 42, 1–4 (LXX).
203
. Phil. 2, 7.
204
. Matt 3, 16.
205
. Matt. 17, if.
206
. Ps. 41, 5.
207
. PS. 112, 10.
1
. John 5,29; Matt. 13,41.
2
. Matt 25,46.
3
. Luke 16, 24.
4
. Aen., 6, 733.
5
.
cf. Bk XII, 4. In antiquity the salamander was reputed a fire-extinguisher (Plin. 10,67). The belief that it lived in fire is later than Pliny. Aristotle believed that some creatures could live in fire (Hist. An., 5,19).
6
.
This is obscure. Diogenes Laertius (2,103) says that charcoal was put under the foundations of the temple of Artemis at Ephesus to give stability; cf. Plin., 36, 14.
7
. Plin.f 20,1; 28,9.
8
. The magnet is described in Plin., 20, 1; the neutralizing power of the diamond in Plin. 28,9.
9
. These wonders are related in Plin., 31, 7; 5, 5; 2, 103; 37, 10: 13, 7.
10
. Tac. Hist., 3, 7; Joseph., Bell,
lud.
, 4, 8, 4. Pliny, strangely enough, does not mention the legendary, and proverbial, ‘Dead Sea fruit’.
11
. On the first three phenomena cf. Plin., 37,11; 37,10; 8,42. Pliny mentions Tylon as well wooded, without describing the trees as all evergreen.
12
. Pliny has a story of a shrine of Venus at Paphos ‘on whose
altar
the rain never falls’ (z, 96).
13
. Bk XVII, 18.
14
. cf. 2 Cor. 11,14.
15
. Plin., 34, 14.
16
. Aen., 4, 487ff., describing a Libyan priestess.
17
. A grammarian and chronicle of the first century
B.C.
often cited by Eusebius.
18
. Plaut,
Amph.
, 1, 1, 119; Hom., Od., 22, 318.
19
. cf. Bk XVIII. 8.
20
. cf. Josh. 10, 13.
21
. cf. Is. 38, 8.
22
. Aen., 4, 489.
23
. Josh. 3,16; 2 Kings 2, 8; 14.
24
. cf. Gen. 13, 10.
25
. cf. Tac., Hist., 5, 7.
26
. Is. 66, 24.
27
. Mark 9, 42ff.
28
. 2 Cor. 11, 29.
29
. Prov. 25, 20.
30
. Ecclus. 7, 17.
31
. Rom. 8, 13.
32
. cf. 1 Cor. 13, 9.
33
. Matt. 25, 41.
34
. Luke 16, 24.
35
. Rev. 20, 9.
36
. Not in
De Legibus
, or in any extant work.
37
. Exod. 21, 24.
38
. Luke 6, 38.
39
. e.g. Plot., Enn. 3, 2, 41.
40
. Aen. 6, 733ft.
41
. cf. ch. 26.
42
. Job, 7, 1 (LXX)
SC
; cf. Bk XIX, 8n.
43
. cf. Plin., 7, 15.
44
. Plin. 30, 2.
45
. Euseb-Hier.,
Chron
., 1, 20, 13. Modern scholars suggest a sixth-century date for Zoroaster (Zarathustra) whose teaching became the dominant religion of Persia under the Sassanids (
A.D
. 211–640).
46
. Ecclus. 40, 1.
47
. Rom. 8, 13; 2 Tim. 2, 19; Rom. 8, 14.
48
. cf. Rom. 5, 12.
49
. Gal. 5, 17.
50
. Rom. 9, 23.
51
. Col. 1, 13.
52
. 1 Tim. 2, 5.
53
. cf. Orig.
De Princ
. 1, 6, 3; 3, 6, 5. Gregory of Nyssa held a similar view; cf.
Oratio Catechetica
26.
54
. At a council at Alexandria,
A.D
. 400, whose condemnation of Origen was accepted by Pope Anastasius I. cf. Bk XI, 23n.
55
. Ps. 77, 9.
56
. cf. Jon. 3, 4.
57
. Ps. 31, 20.
58
. Rom. 11, 32.
59
. John 6, 50f.
60
. 1 Cor. 10. 17.
61
. Matt. 24, 13.
62
. 1 Cor. 3, 1 11ff.
63
. Jas. 2, 13.
64
. cf. Matt. 25, 34ft.
65
. Matt. 6, 14ft.
66
. Matt. 25, 41.
67
. Rev. 20, 10f.
68
. cf. 2 Pet. 2, 4.
69
. Matt. 25, 46.
70
. 2 Tim. 2, 25f.
71
. Matt. 12, 32.
72
. Matt. 25, 34; 41; 46.
73
. Ps. 77, 9; 10 (LXX).