[255] Newman’s Arians, ch. i. p. 16. Hefele, pp. 305, 306.
[256] In Jud. iii. c. 6, iv. c. 4.
[257] According to Theod. iii. 20, the Jews had ceased to offer sacrifices by the reign of Julian, and when he inquired the reason, said, because it was unlawful except on the site of the Temple; and this was one chief reason why Julian commanded the Temple to be restored.
[258] In Jud. v. c. 1.
[259] Ibid. c. 4-7.
[260] He punished the captives by cutting off their ears. It is singular that there is no record of this rebellion in history.
[261] For a full relation of this singular event, see Milman’s Jews, book xx.
[262] Hom. viii. 4, and in fine.
[263] Hom. de Anathemate, delivered soon after the discourses against the Anomœans. See Monitum, vol. i. 944.
[264] The former chiefly in the Hom. de Philog. vol. i. 752; the latter in the Hom. in Nat. Diem Christi, vol. ii. p. 552.