INDEX,
CONTAINING THE CHIEF TOPICS, PROPER NAMES, AND TECHNICAL
TERMS, REFERRED TO IN THE LECTURES.
Italicized subdivisions of a title are elsewhere treated in
more detail as separate titles
- Abstract ideas, Greek tendency to, 116-118.
- Æon, common Gnostic idea, 190;
- two ways of viewing the Æons, 258 fin., 259.
- Africanus, Julius, as an exegete, 81.
- Alexandrine School, its philosophy, 81;
- on moral probation, 232;
- on God’s transcendence, 255.
- See also Philo and Origen.
- Allegorism, 58 ff.;
- connection with the “mysteries,” 59, cf. 66;
- ethical, 60;
- physical, 61;
- the Stoics, 61-63;
- later exponents, 64;
- The temper widespread in religion, 65;
- Hellenistic Jews, 65 ff., e.g. Aristobulus and Philo, 66-69, 72, 128;
- early Christian exegesis, especially Gnostic, 69 ff.;
- compared with Philo’s, 72;
- prophecy its main subject, 72-74;
- an O. T. Apologetic, 77-79;
- Reactions, 79-82;
- dogmatic complication, 82;
- irony of its history, ib.;
- use and abuse, 83;
- its place in modern life, 83-85.
- Alogi, 252, n. ².
- Ambrose of Milan, his ethics Stoic, 169.
- Antiochene School, its exegesis, 81, 82.
- Apologists mark transition, e.g. 126-131;
- idea of creation, 196;
- free-will, 231;
- transcendence of God, 252, 253;
- Logos doctrine, 261-263, 267, 268.
- Apostolic doctrine, idea of, 316, 317;
- “Apostles’ Creed,” 317-319.
- Apostolical Constitutions, Bk. i., its ethical type of teaching, 161, cf. 132, 336;
- Bk. ii., on place of discipline, 162, 163;
- Bks. ii. and viii., on Lord’s Supper, 301.
- Aristobulus, his allegorism, 66 fin.
- Aristotle, his use of ousia, 269, 270;
- of pistis, 311.
- Askesis (ἄσκησις), Greek, 148 ff.;
- in Philo, 148;
- reduced to system, e.g. “retreats,” 148-150, Christian, 164 ff.;
- its germ, 164, 165;
- ran parallel to Greek, 166, 167;
- Monachism, 167, 168.
- Association at first voluntary, 334, 335.
- Associations, Greek religious, 290 ff.
- Syncretistic, akin to “mysteries,” 290, 291;
- purity of life required, 141;
- mixed elements, 291, 292;
- effects on Christianity, 292-295, cf. 141.
- Athenagoras on absolute creation, 196;
- transcendence of God, 253;
- his Monism, 265.
- Baptism and dualism, 19.
- Primitive simplicity, 294, 295;
- its formula, 315;
- its ethical character among the Elchasaites, 337;
- later change in name, 295, 296;
- in time, 296, 297;
- minor features—“symbolum,” lights, &c., 298, 299;
- late ritual, 299, 300;
- Gnostic realism, 306;
- and unction, 307.
- Its importance, 341, 342.
- Basilides characterized, 9, n. ²;
- his view of creation, 195, 196;
- of transcendence, 254, 255;
- genesis of the Logos, 263.
- Bishops, and the “rule of faith,” 317, 318;
- speculative interpretation by consensus, 326, 327;
- results, 327 ff.
- Canon of N. T., development of the idea, 319-321.
- Catholic Church, its genesis, 11, 132;
- put an end to “prophesying,” 107;
- a fusion of Christianity and Greek philosophy, 125;
- unconsciously Hellenized, 132-135;
- as a “corpus permixtum,” 164.
- Celsus, his and Porphyry’s polemic against Christian allegorism, 80;
- on relation of Christianity and philosophy, 127, 128, cf. 11 init.
- Christianity, primitive:
- the New Law, 158-162;
- its ethical idea of God, 224, 225;
- its theological basis, 238, 239, 251, 252.
- Church, its early character, 335;
- holiness, 335-337;
- hope, 337, 338.
- Clement of Alexandria, his allegorism, 70;
- appeal to hieroglyphics, 71;
- and N. T. allegories, 76;
- on Christianity and philosophy, 127;
- on the Conservatives, 130, 131.
- Clementines, the: their Old Testament criticism, 71;
- God just and good, 229, 230.
- Consecration of the elements: the formula secret, 302, n. ⁶.
- Conservatism: Clement and Tertullian on it, 130, 131;
- in Ebionites and Elchasaites, 252, 337;
- often not recognized as such (cf. Ebionites), e.g. in Origen, 323;
- the simpler sort, 324;
- Paul of Samosata, 327, cf. 345, 346;
- in Puritanism, 347, 348;
- Monachism, 348, 349.
- Creed, the, 313 ff.;
- its germs, 313, 314;
- the baptismal formula, 314, 315;
- becomes a test, 315;
- expanded, 315, 316;
- by “Apostolic teaching,” 316, 317;
- the “Apostles’ Creed” of the Bishops (παράδοσις ἐκκλησιαστική), 317-319.
- Cyprian characterized, 8.
- Dæmons, 246, especially n. ³.
- Definition among the Greeks, 118;
- influence on Catholic Church, 135, 330, 331.
- Development not arrested, 332, 351, 352.
- Dialectic, Greek, 118 fin.
- Didaché, the: the “Two Ways” emphasizes conduct, 160, 161, 335, 336;
- and the idea of wages, 225;
- its simple theology, 251, 252;
- Baptism, 294, 295, cf. 315;
- the Lord’s Supper, 300, 301;
- intercommunion based on moral test, 343, 344.
- Dio Chrysostom characterized, 6;
- on “askesis,” 150.
- Dionysius Areopagites sums up the influence of the “mysteries,” 303, 304.
- Discipline, early Christian, 162 ff.;
- in Apost. Const. Bk. ii., 162, 163;
- its Puritan ideal, 163;
- later “corpus permixtum” idea, 164.
- Dogma (δόγμα), its original sense, 119, 120;
- later Dogmatism, 121-123;
- the age of Dogmatism, 280.
- Dualism and Baptism, 19;
- and Stoicism, ib.;
- its basis, 175;
- Platonic, 177;
- variously expressed, 178-180;
- later modified, 181;
- in Christian theories of creation, 194, 195;
- transition in Tatian, 195.
- Ebionites become “heretics,” 132;
- as Conservatives, 252, n. ².
- Education, Greek, 26 ff.;
- its forms literary, 27;
- mainly Grammar and Rhetoric, 28 ff.;
- the poets its main study, 30;
- also a littérateur philosophy, 32 ff.;
- spite of protest, 34;
- its extent, 35 ff.
- Epictetus characterized, 6;
- as moral reformer, 142 ff.;
- his attitude, 143, 144;
- quoted, 144-147;
- on “askesis,” 149;
- his two planes of ethics, 152:
- “follow Nature,” 152-155;
- “follow God,” 155-158.
- Essentia: its bad Latinity a source of disuse, 277, especially n. ³.
- Ethics, Greek, 139 ff.
- Average morality, 139;
- philosophic ethics, 140;
- moral reformation in first centuries A.D., 140, 141;
- in religious guilds and philosophy, 141;
- its relation to Logic and Literature, 142, 143;
- in Epictetus, 143 ff.;
- moral gymnastic, 147;
- askesis, 148 ff.;
- the “philosopher,” 150 ff.;
- contents of ethical teaching, e.g. in Epictetus, 152 ff.
- Ethics, Christian, 158-170.
- Compared with Greek, 158;
- its basis and characteristic idea (sin), 158, 159;
- agreement upon value of conduct, 159;
- the “Two Ways,” 160, 161;
- Apost. Const. Bk. i., 161;
- discipline, earlier and later, 162-164;
- Christian askesis, 164-168;
- deterioration of average ethics, 168, 169;
- victory of Greek ethics in Roman Law of Rights, 169, 170.
- Evolutionary ideas among the Gnostics, as regards creation, 177, 190-193;
- revelation, 257 ff.;
- genesis of the Logos, 263 ff.
- Exorcism in relation to Monism, 20, especially n.;
- in Baptism, 307, 308, n. ¹.
- Faith (πίστις), history of its usage, 310 ff.;
- in Old Testament, 310, 331;
- Greek philosophy, 311;
- Philo, 311, 312.
- Christian form issuing in the Creed, 313 ff.;
- relation to New Testament Canon, 319 ff.
- Further speculative development, 321, 322;
- “gnosis” by the side of “pistis,” 323 ff. and 339-341;
- check found in consensus of Bishops, 326;
- expansion of Creed, 327;
- contrasted uses of term “belief,” 328;
- majority and minority views, 229;
- recapitulation, 330.
- Fitting, the, as a Stoic category, 153, 154;
- root of “officium” and “debitum,” 154, 155.
- “Generation, eternal,” 267;
- essential, 268;
- Origen’s contributions, ib.
- Gnosis (γνῶσις) as a tendency, 129, 130;
- side by side with “pistis” in Catholicism, 130-134, cf. 323 ff. and 339-341;
- as well as in Neo-Platonism, 133.
- Gnosticism between two fires, 9;
- allegorizes the Old Testament, 70;
- also the Gospel, 75.
- Its cosmogonies, 190;
- evolutional types, 190-198;
- hypothesis of a lapse, 198;
- opposition from without and within, 193 fin.;
- Basilides on matter and God, 195, 196.
- Idea of transcendence, 251:
- e.g. Basilides and Marcus, 254.
- Modalism, 257 ff.
- Connecting link with the Mysteries, 305 ff.;
- e.g. unction and sacramental realism, 306, 308, 309.
- Attitude to tradition and the Scriptures, 325.
- Grammar in Greek education, 28 ff.
- γραμματική, and γραμματιστική, 28 fin.;
- its elements, 29, 30.
- Guilds: see Associations.
- Hellenism characterized, 13, 14.
- Heresy, original use of term, 340, n. ³.
- Hippolytus, 6;
- his theory of creation, 203.
- History, its difficulties and rewards, 22-24.
- Homer in Greek thought, 51 ff.;
- in Christian theology, 69, 70.
- Homily, the, 109-113.
- Homoousios (ὁμοούσιος) shared senses of “ousia,” 272;
- first used of God by the Gnostics, 274;
- its ambiguity, 274-276.
- Hyparxis (ὕπαρξις) = “hypostasis,” 275, especially n. ².
- Hypostasis (ὑπόστασις), relation to “ousia,” 275;
- gradually specialized = πρώτη οὐσία, 276 f.;
- further defined by aid of “prosôpon” (πρόσωπον) through use of “persona,” 277, 278;
- usage often doubtful, 278.
- ἱεράρχης and cognate terms for ministrants, 303, n. ¹.
- Immortality in the Mysteries, 289, 290.
- Initiation (τελετή): its stages, 284, n. ³;
- its idea, 285.
- Proclamation, 285, 286;
- confession and baptism (κάθαρσις, λουτρόν), 287;
- sacrifice, procession, &c., 287, 288;
- mystic drama, its nature, 288-290.
- Inspiration in Greece, connected with rhythm, 51.
- Irenæus, 8:
- his theory of creation, 202, 203;
- on Justice and Goodness in God, 228;
- on free-will, 231;
- his Logos doctrine, 262, 263, cf. 266, n. ¹, 267, n. ⁴;
- view of the Eucharistic elements, 302, n. ¹.
- Judaism as basis of Christian theology, 238, 239.
- Justin Martyr, 8;
- on Christianity and philosophy, 126;
- on free-will, 231;
- on God’s transcendence, 253;
- Logos doctrine, 261, 262;
- genesis of the Logos, 266;
- nature of the Logos, 267, 268.
- Logoi (λόγοι), Stoical (= laws), 180;
- compared with Platonic “ideas,” 181, 182, cf. 180;
- appear in Philo’s “forces,” 185;
- their sum the Logos, 176, 180, 182.
- Logos, the, in Philo, 247 ff.;
- relation to God, 249, 250;
- and “logoi,” 259-261;
- growth of Logos doctrine, 261-263;
- genesis of the Logos, 263, 264;
- προφορικὸς and ἐνδιάθετος, 265, n. ¹;
- nature of the Logos, 267, 268.
- Lucian and the Antiochene exegesis, 81, 82.
- Marcion, his ditheistic tendency, 227, 230;
- his idea of a Canon, 321;
- his literal method, 325.
- Marcus: syncretistic grouping of metaphors under term “logoi,” 190;
- God’s transcendence, 255.
- Maximus of Tyre, 6;
- quoted for God’s transcendence, 242.
- Mediation of God’s transcendence: see Logos.
- Metaphysics and revelation, 137, 138.
- Modalism, its two types, 257 ff.
- Monachism: parallel of Greek and Christian, 167, 168;
- a reaction, 348, 349.
- Monarchianism a witness to older “Monarchia,” 206, 207.
- Monism, in baptism and exorcism, 20;
- its basis, 175;
- Stoic, 175-177;
- self-evolution of God, 177.
- Montanism: a survival of “prophecy,” 107;
- a reaction, 339.
- Mysteries: their connection with allegory, 66;
- Greek, 283;
- initiation at Eleusis, 284 ff.;
- together with religious guilds affect Christianity, 292 ff.;
- generally, 293;
- specially as to Baptism, 294 ff.;
- and Lord’s Supper, 300 ff.;
- culmination of influence, 303-305;
- Gnostics a bridge, 305 ff.
- General result, 309.
- μύησις, μυσταγωγός, 296, 297.
- Natura: see φύσις.
- νόμος καινός, 158, cf. 159-162 (especially note).
- Novatianism a Puritan reaction, 347, 348.
- Ocellus Lucanus on idea of transcendence (supra-cosmic), 242, n. ¹.
- Origen, 8:
- his apologetic use of allegorism, 77, 78;
- defence of it, 80;
- his cosmogony a theodicy, 204-206;
- its grand scale, 233-237;
- shapes Logos doctrine, 267 (especially n. ⁴), 268;
- his De principiis the first dogmatic system, 323.
- Ousia (οὐσία), three Aristotelian senses [(i.) = hylê; (ii.) = substantia concreta; (iii.) = subst. abstracta], 269, 270.
- Its later history in Platonic realism, 271, 272.
- Difficulties in its application to God, 273 f.;
- not popularly understood, 279.
- Paul of Samosata, his case, 345, 346, cf. 326.
- Persona appropriated for hypostasis, 277, 278.
- Philo and Philonian writings a valuable bridge, 7, 128, 182;
- his allegorism, 67-69;
- his “literal” v. “deeper” sense compared with Christian exegesis, 72;
- God the ultimate cause, 182, 183;
- monistic elements, 183, 184;
- dualistic, 184, 185;
- his “forces,” in plurality, 185, 186;
- and unity, 186, 187;
- but God is Creator or Father, 187, 188;
- God’s transcendence, 244 ff.;
- intermediaries, 247;
- distinctions in God’s nature, 247 ff.
- Philosophy in Greek education, 32 ff.;
- as a profession, 40 ff.;
- its “damnosa hereditas,” 138;
- its decay amid dogma, and legacy to Christendom, 280, 281.
- Philosopher, the, as moral reformer, 150;
- outward marks, 151.
- Platonism and Christianity, 81, 129;
- its theological affinity, 238;
- Plato author of transcendence proper, 240, 241, and n. ¹;
- God’s transcendence, 241-243;
- dæmons, 246.
- Plotinus on transcendence, 243;
- genesis of Logos, 266, n. ⁵.
- Plutarch, 6;
- quoted for transcendence, 242;
- immortality through “initiation,” 289.
- Poetry, its place in the Greek mind, 51 ff.
- Political analogies in the Church, 331.
- Preaching and “prophesying,” 105 ff.;
- of composite origin, 107-109;
- the “homily,” 109-113.
- Prophecy and divination, 72, 73;
- and apologetic, 74;
- died with formation of Catholic Church, 107.
- πρόσωπον, how used, 278, especially n. ¹;
- see hypostasis.
- Ptolemæus, on God’s transcendence, 251;
- his idea of “Æons,” 258 fin., 259.
- Puritanism in early Church, 347, 348.
- Pythagoreanism and Christianity, 81, 129.
- Religion, its political aspect to the Roman, 21;
- connected with usage (νόμος), 21, n.
- Revelation and metaphysics, 137, 138.
- Rhetoric, Greek, 87, 88.
- “Rule of Faith:” see Faith.
- σοφός, its later usage, 26.
- Sophistic, its genesis, 87, 88;
- mainly on lines of the older Rhetoric, 88-90;
- popularized in διαλέξεις, 91;
- and itinerant, 92-94;
- manner of discourse, 94-97;
- its rewards, 97, 98;
- and airs, 99.
- Objections, 99-101;
- reaction led by Stoics like Epictetus, 101-105.
- Speculation, its true place in Christianity, 332, 333.
- State, its interference with doctrine, 279 f., 345-347.
- Stoicism: its view of substance, 19, n.;
- and the moral reformation, 141 ff.;
- its ethics in Ambrose, 169;
- ethical affinities with Christianity, 238;
- dæmons, 246.
- Substantia at first = hypostasis, then ousia, 277, cf. 278.
- Supper, the Lord’s:
- extra-biblical developments, 300 ff.;
- in Didaché, 300, 301;
- Apost. Const. Bks. ii. and viii, 301;
- the “altar,” its “mysteries,” the sacred formula, 302 and n. ⁶;
- “priest,” 303;
- culmination in Dionysius, 303, 304;
- realism first among Gnostics, 308, 309.
- Symboli traditio, 298:
- cf. contesseratio, 344.
- σφραγίς, of baptism, 295.
- Tatian:
- his view of creation, 196;
- free-will, 231;
- on genesis of Logos, 266, n. ¹ and n. ⁵, 267, n. ³.
- Teaching profession, 37 ff.;
- endowed, 38;
- excused public burdens, 39.
- τελετή, τελεῖσθαι: see initiation, cf. 296.
- Tertullian, 8;
- his Stoic view of substance, 19, n., 20, n., cf. 254;
- on Christianity and philosophy, 126, 127;
- the Conservatives, 131, 257, n. ¹;
- on creation, 197;
- on God as just and good, 229;
- on free-will, 232;
- transcendence in him supra-cosmic, 254;
- genesis of the Logos, 265, n. ¹;
- nature of the Logos, 268;
- on ecclesiastical tradition and speculation, 322.
- Theodore of Mopsuestia as exegete, 82.
- Theophilus on creation, 196;
- God’s transcendence, 253;
- on genesis of Logos, 265, n. ¹, cf. 268.
- Transcendence, as of absolute Unity, Being, Mind, 240;
- in Plutarch and Maximus, 242;
- Plotinus, 243;
- its two forms, 244;
- Philo, 244, 245.
- Absent from earliest Christian teaching, 251 f.;
- appears in Apologists, 252, 253;
- Gnostics, 254 f.;
- Alexandrines, 255 f.;
- mediation of, 256 ff., especially 257, n. ².
- Unction of (1) exorcism, (2) thanksgiving, 307, 308, especially n. ¹.
- φύσις (= natura), later use = ousia, 278;
- sometimes = hypostasis, ib.
- φωτισμός, of baptism, 295.
- Writing as mysterious, 50.