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Ante-Nicene Fathers/Volume VI/Methodius/Other Fragments/Fragment IV

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Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. VI, Other Fragments
by Methodius, translated by William R. Clark
Fragment IV
158649Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. VI, Other Fragments — Fragment IVWilliam R. ClarkMethodius

IV.[1]

Seest thou how, at the end of the contest, with a loud proclamation he declares the praises of the combatant, and discovers that which was in his afflictions hidden, in the words: “Thinkest thou that I had else answered thee, but that thou shouldest appear just?”[2] This is the salve of his wounds, this the reward of his patience. For as to what followed, although he received double his former possessions, these may seem to have been given him by divine providence as small indeed, and for trifling causes, even though to some they may appear great.

Fragment, Uncertain.

Thou contendest with Me, and settest thyself against Me, and opposest those who combat for Me. But where wert thou when I made the world? What wert thou then? Hadst thou yet, says He, fallen from thy mother? for there was darkness, in the beginning of the world’s creation, He says, upon the face of the deep. Now this darkness was no created darkness, but one which of set purpose had place, by reason of the absence of light.


Footnotes

[edit]
  1. Ex Nicetæ Catena on Job, cap. xxviii. p. 570.
  2. Job xl. 3 (LXX.).