[160] The pædagogus.
[161] Num. vi. 9.
[162] Num. vi. 2.
[163] Ps. lxxxvi. 2, 3.
[164] Mark ii. 11.
[165] John xi. 23.
[166] Bishop Kaye (Some Account of the Writings and Opinions of Clement of Alexandria, p. 48) translates, “receiving from man that which made man (that on account of which man was made).” But it seems more likely that Clement refers to the ideal man in the divine mind, whom he identifies elsewhere with the Logos, the ἅνθρωπος ὰπαθής, of whom man was the image. The reader will notice that Clement speaks of man as existing in the divine mind before his creation, and creation is represented by God’s seeing what He had previously within Him merely as a hidden power.
[167] John xvi. 27.
[168] John xvii. 23.
[169] Matt. xv. 14.