82 Officiiosum mendacium.

83 Gal. ii. 11-14.

84 1 Tim. iv. 3.

85 Cor. vii. 10-16.

86 1 Cor. xv. 14, 15.

87 Aliquaa officiose mentiri.

88 Ps. cxli. 5, translated from the Septuagint.

89 Leontius was Bishop of Hippo in the latter part of the second century. He built a church which was called after him, and in which some of the sermons of Augustin were delivered.

90 Matt. vii. 6.

91 Matt. xxi. 12.

92 Ex. xxxii. 6.

93 2 Cor iii. 3.

94 1 Cor. v. 11.

95 1 Cor. vi. 9-11.

96 1 Cor. xi. 20-22.

97 Matt. vii. 16.

98 Gal. v. 19-21.

99 Gal. v. 22, 23.

100 Imperatâ oratione.

101 Ps. lxxxix. 30-33.

102 Exhedra.

103 1 Pet. iv. 1-3.

104 Phil. iii. 19. 2

105 1 Cor. vi. 13.

106 Psaillente.

107 A magistrate who was also charged with the affairs pertaining to the protection of religion. The title belonged primarily to those who in the province of Asia had charge of the games.-Codex Theodosianus, xv. 9.

108 Charitas.

109 Letter XXX. p. 257.

110 Matt. xi. 30.

111 Paulinus was then at Nola, having gone thither from Barcelona in A.D. 393 or 394. He became Bishop ot Nola in 409.

112 Nobilitate siccitatis.

113 This refers to the voluntary poverty which Paulinus and Therasia, though of high rank and great wealth, embraced, selling all that they had in order to give to the poor.

114 Matt. v. 16.

115 Matt. xix. 27.

116 Luke xviii. 22, 23.

117 Beatissimi papae.

118 These books of Ambrose are lost.

119 Antistes.

120 See Ps. xii. 7.

121 1 John xiv. 27.

122 Ps. cxli. 5.

123 Isa. iii. 12, according to the LXX. version.

124 Crevit caput.

125 John xiv. 6.