Ante-Nicene Fathers/Volume V/Hippolytus/The Extant Works and Fragments of Hippolytus/Dogmatical and Historical/Fragments from Other Writings of Hippolytus/Section I

Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. V, Hippolytus, The Extant Works and Fragments of Hippolytus, Dogmatical and Historical, Fragments from Other Writings of Hippolytus
by Hippolytus, translated by Stewart Dingwall Fordyce Salmond
Section I
157657Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. V, Hippolytus, The Extant Works and Fragments of Hippolytus, Dogmatical and Historical, Fragments from Other Writings of Hippolytus — Section IStewart Dingwall Fordyce SalmondHippolytus

Fragments from Other Writings of Hippolytus.[1]

I.

Now Hippolytus, a martyr for piety, who was bishop of the place called Portus, near Rome, in his book Against all Heresies, wrote in these terms:—

I perceive, then, that the matter is one of contention. For he[2] speaks thus: Christ kept the supper, then, on that day, and then suffered; whence it is needful that I, too, should keep it in the same manner as the Lord did. But he has fallen into error by not perceiving that at the time when Christ suffered He did not eat the passover of the law.[3] For He was the passover that had been of old proclaimed, and that was fulfilled on that determinate day.


Footnotes edit

  1. Preserved by the author of the Chronicon Paschale, ex ed. Cangii, p. 6.
  2. i.e., the opponent of Hippolytus, one of the forerunners of the Quartodecimans.
  3. [For pro & con see Speaker’s Com., note to Matt. xxvi.]