197 Luke xxiv. 36, 45-47.

198 Matt. xxii. 39.

199 Eph. v. 29.

200 Gal. v. 17.

201 2 Tim. iv. 2.

202 Eph. iv. 1-3.

203 Jer. viii. 11.

204 Ps. xlvi. 9.

205 Dan. ii. 35.

206 Eph. ii. 14.

207 Matt. v. 10.

208 Matt. xxiii. 13, 15, 23, 24, 27, 28.

209 Matt. x. 16.

210 John x. 27.

211 Luke xxiv. 39, 46, 47.

212 Matt. vii. 15, 16.

213 1 Cor. xi. 19.

214 John xiii. 34, 35.

215 2 Cor. xi. 26.

216 1 Cor. xi. 1.

217 Phil. ii. 20, 21.

218 2 Cor. vii. 5.

219 1 Cor. xiii. 1-8.

220 Eph. iv. 2, 3.

221 Matt. xiii. 38, 39, 30.

222 Gal. i. 8.

223 Ps. ci. 5.

224 Luke ix. 49, 50.

225 Phil. i. 15-18.

226 1 Cor. xiii. 6.

227 See below, 95, 217, and c. Gaudentium, I. 25, 28 sqq..

228 Rom. xiii. 4.

229 Augustine speaks of the Moor Rogatus, bishop of Cartenna in ecclesiastical province of Mauritania Caesariensis in his ninety-third epistle, to Vincentius, c. iii. 11. We learn from the eighty-seventh epistle, to Emeritus, sec. 10, that the followers of Rogatus called the other Donatists Firmiani, because they had been subjected to much cruelty at their hands under the authority of Firmus.

230 Cp. note 3, p. 556.

231 Optatus of Thaumugade (Thamogade), the friend of Gildo.

232 Augustine mentions again in his thirty-fifth epistle, to Eusebius, sec. 3, that Hippo had received the Roman citizenship. His argument is that, even if not a native of the place, the deacon should have been safe from molestation wherever Roman laws prevailed.

233 Emphyteuticam. The land, therefore, was held under the emperors, and less absolutely in the power of the owner than if it had been freehold.

234 Augustine remonstrates with Crispinus on the point, Epist. lxvi.



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