Searchearlychristianwritings.online Volume 2 - 6.4.1.0.0

Previous Vol 2 - 6.4.1.0.0 Next

Clement of Alexandria

Stromata - Book I

Chapter I.—Preface—The Author’s Object—The Utility of Written Compositions.

Chapter II.—Objection to the Number of Extracts from Philosophical Writings in These Books Anticipated and Answered.

Chapter III.—Against the Sophists.

Chapter IV.—Human Arts as Well as Divine Knowledge Proceed from God.

Chapter V.—Philosophy the Handmaid of Theology.

Chapter VI.—The Benefit of Culture.

Chapter VII.—The Eclectic Philosophy Paves the Way for Divine Virtue.

Chapter VIII.—The Sophistical Arts Useless.

Chapter IX.—Human Knowledge Necessary for the Understanding of the Scriptures.

Chapter X.—To Act Well of Greater Consequence Than to Speak Well.

Chapter XI.—What is the Philosophy Which the Apostle Bids Us Shun?

Chapter XII.—The Mysteries of the Faith Not to Be Divulged to All.

Chapter XIII.—All Sects of Philosophy Contain a Germ of Truth.

Chapter XIV.—Succession of Philosophers in Greece.

Chapter XV.—The Greek Philosophy in Great Part Derived from the Barbarians.

Chapter XVI.—That the Inventors of Other Arts Were Mostly Barbarians.

Chapter XVII.—On the Saying of the Saviour, “All that Came Before Me Were Thieves and Robbers.”

Chapter XVIII.—He Illustrates the Apostle’s Saying, “I Will Destroy the Wisdom of the Wise.”

Chapter XIX.—That the Philosophers Have Attained to Some Portion of Truth.

Chapter XX.—In What Respect Philosophy Contributes to the Comprehension of Divine Truth.

Chapter XXI.—The Jewish Institutions and Laws of Far Higher Antiquity Than the Philosophy of the Greeks.

Chapter XXII.—On the Greek Translation of the Old Testament.

Chapter XXIII.—The Age, Birth, and Life of Moses.

Chapter XXIV.—How Moses Discharged the Part of a Military Leader.

Chapter XXV.—Plato an Imitator of Moses in Framing Laws.

Chapter XXVI.—Moses Rightly Called a Divine Legislator, And, Though Inferior to Christ, Far Superior to the Great Legislators of the Greeks, Minos and Lycurgus.

Chapter XXVII.—The Law, Even in Correcting and Punishing, Aims at the Good of Men.

Chapter XXVIII.—The Fourfold Division of the Mosaic Law.

Chapter XXIX.—The Greeks But Children Compared with the Hebrews.

Elucidations