its root in the Person of Christ, [51], [121], [181];
the gift of His Spirit, [121], [125], [127];
development of, [168];
in the hall of Pilate, [49];
its first transmission by oral teaching only, [148].
Ueberweg, Grundriss der Geschichte der Philosophie des Alterthums, quoted or referred to, [385], [387], [390], [398], [399], [400], [401], [412], [413], [414], [421], [422], [424], [428], [442], [450], [451], [453], [462], [479], [480].
Varro, divides theology into fabulous, natural, and civil, [19].
Xenophon, [390-5].
Zeller, Philosophie der Griechen, quoted or referred to, [377], [380], [381], [383], [385], [386], [388], [389], [400], [401], [403-6]; [407], [408], [409], [410], [411], [412], [425], [429], [433], [434], [436], [437], [438], [443], [444], [445], [446], [447], [448], [449], [462], [469], [471], [472], [476].
Zeno, the Stoic, his conception of the method of teaching, [424];