Christology;
of the Synoptists and Fourth Gospel, 15 sq;
of Cerinthus, 118;
of Ignatius, 42, 86 sq, 108, 231;
of Polycarp, 106, 108;
of Justin Martyr, 235;
of Melito, 230, 231, 234 sq
Christ's ministry, the duration of, 16 sq, 48, 131, 245 sq
Chronicon Paschale; see Paschal Chronicle
Chrysostom, the panegyric on Ignatius of, 80
[Ciasca, 288]
Claudius Apollinaris; see Apollinaris
Clemens, Flavius, cousin of Domitian, 94 n
Clement of Alexandria; coincidence in the name, 94 n; a pupil of Pantænus, 274; perhaps of Melito, 218, 224; perhaps also of Tatian, 274; quotes from Tatian, 273 n; his wide learning, 269; compared with his heathen contemporaries, 269; his travels, 270; his testimony to the Four Gospels, 270; to St Mark, 167; to the Fourth Gospel, 52; to the labours of St John, 218; accepts the identity of authorship of the Fourth Gospel and Apocalypse, 216; employs the Epistle of Clement of Rome, 47; the Epistle of Barnabas, 47; the Apocalypse of Peter, 47; the Gospel according to the Hebrews, 152; quotes Basilides, 161; his treatise on the Paschal Festival, 243 sq; date of his Stromateis, 274; his use of the word 'oracles,' 174
Clement of Rome;
his name, 94 n;
probably a Hellenist Jew, 94;
and a freedman, 94;
his position compared with that of Polycarp, 89;
scriptural quotations in his Epistle, 40, 105, 110;
Eusebius' method tested on it, 40, 47, 179;
its testimony to the Epistle of the Hebrews, 40, 47, 49;
employed by Clement of Alexandria, 47;
its date and that of the book of Judith, 25 n;
his use of the Canon and that of Polycarp, 94, 105;
his use of the word 'oracles,' 174;
the story of the phoenix in, 268;
his place in modern German theories, 24
Clementines;
as a romance, 15;
Gnostic fragments preserved in the, 40 n;
quote and employ the narrative of the Fourth Gospel, 50, 52