Page:Ante-Nicene Christian Library Vol 12.djvu/548

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INDEX OF SUBJECTS.
Instructors among the Persians, i. 150.

Insult, the fruit of drunkenness, i. 225.

Intellect, the, i, 273.

Intemperance, i. 204.

Intercourse, the regulation of, i. 225.

Intoxication, i. 204, 208, 210.

Invective, i. 166.

Inventors, and inventions among the Barbarians, i. 402.

Invitation addressed to the heathen to come to Christ the Word, i. 107, etc.

Involuntary, how a thing may be, ii. 37.

Ionic Muses, the, quoted, ii. 56.

Iophon, the comic poet, quoted, i. 363.

Iota, i. 171.

Ipse dixit, the, of the followers of Pythagoras, ii. 15.

Isaac, the import of the name, i. 128; a type, 129, 369; ii. 12.

Isidore, son of Basilides, quoted, ii. 65, 334.

Isis, i. 424.

Isocrates quoted, ii. 262.

Israel, ii. 12.


Jacob, i. 24, 369.

Jerusalem, i. 367.

Jerusalem, the heavenly, its garniture, i. 266, 267.

Jesting, i. 227.

Jesus Christ, the Instructor and Shepherd, i. 149, 151; as an example in eating and drinking, 208; anointed by the woman who was a sinner, 230, etc.; anointed by the Father, 233.

Jesus, the son of Nave, his vision of Moses ascending to heaven, ii. 382.

Jewels, excessive fondness of, censured, i. 266.

Jewish laws, of higher antiquity than Greek philosophy, i. 421, etc.

Jews, frugality enjoined on, i. 197, 198; antiquity of the philosophy of, 399.

Jibing condemned, i. 226.

John the Baptist, the forerunner of the Word, i. 24; his clothing, 261; his confession, ii. 253, 254.

Joking, i. 227.

Joseph, his chastity, i. 321, 322; envied by his brothers, his coat of many colours, ii. 252, 253.

Josephus, i. 446.

Joshua, i. 425.

Judas, i. 231.

Judges, the, of Israel, i. 425, etc.

Judgment, the, Diphilus the comic poet quoted on, ii. 291.

Judith, ii. 194.

Julius Cassianus, De Continentia vel Castitate, a reply to, ii. 128, etc.

Jupiter, three of the name, i. 36; character of, 43; the image of, stripped by Dionysius, 57.

Just One, the, is also good, i. 155, etc.


Κιναίδες, i. 294.

King, Christ the, typified by Abimelech, i. 129.

Kingly office, the, i. 455.

Kings, the, of Israel, i. 426, etc.; of Persia, 435; of Macedon, 435.

Kiss, the, between husbands and wives, i. 332.

Kiss of charity, the, i. 329.

Knocking, ii. 490.

"Know thyself," the adage, ii. 234, 420.

Knowledge, ii. 343; objections to, answered, 357; the advantage of, 361; different degrees of, 371; and love, 374; true, found in the teaching of Christ alone, 375, 403; human, necessary to the understanding of the Scriptures, i. 379, 380; the primary, 403; of the truth, whence it is, 403; of God, to be attained only through faith, ii. 3; faith the foundation of all, 8, etc.; that which comes through faith, the surest of all, 30–33; of things predicted, 33; various kinds of, 45, 46; of God, to be obtained only through abstraction from material things, 361; an imperfect kind of, conveyed by philosophy, 393.

Knowledge and health, the difference between, i. 114.

Knowledge of God, a divine gift, ii. 270, etc.

Kore, i. 29.

Κραπάλη, i, 204.


Lacedæmonian helots, the, i. 305.

Laertius cited in reference to the celebrated αὐτὸς ἔφα, ii. 15.

Λαγνεία, i. 249.

Lambs, the, of Christ, i. 123, 125.

Lamp, the golden, of the tabernacle, ii. 241.

Language, the proper regulation of, i. 222–224.

Laughter, i. 219; how to to be regu-