[{1.8}] I. Thess. iv. 12, et seq.; I. Cor. xv., entire; Revelation xx.-xxii.
[{1.9}] Matt. xvi. 21, et seq.; Mark viii. 31, et seq.
[{1.10}] Josephus, Ant. XVIII., iii. 3.
[{1.11}] Carefully reperuse the four stories of the Gospels, and the passage I. Cor. xv. 4, 8.
[{1.12}] Matt. xxviii. 1; Mark xvi. 1; Luke xxiv. 1; John xx. 1.
[{1.13}] John xx. 2, seems to suppose even that Mary was not always alone.
[{1.14}] John xx. 1, et seq.; and Mark xvi. 9, et seq. It must be observed that the Gospel of Mark has, in our printed versions of the New Testament, two conclusions: Mark xvi. 1–8; Mark xvi. 9–20, to say nothing of two other conclusions, one of which has been handed down to us in the manuscript L. of Paris, and the margin of the Philoxenian version (Nov. Test., edit. Griesbach, Schultz, 1, page 291 note); the other by St. Jerome, Adv. Pelag. l. ii. (vol. iv., 2d part, col. 250, edit. Martianay.) The conclusion in the sixteenth chapter, 9th and following verses, are wanting in the Codex Sinaïticus and in the most important Greek manuscripts. But, in any case, it is of great antiquity, and its harmony with the fourth Gospel is a striking coincidence.
[{1.15}] Matt. xxvii. 60; Mark xv. 46; Luke xxiii. 53.
[{1.16}] John xix. 41, 42.
[{1.17}] See “Life of Jesus,” p. 38.