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Clement and Alexandria
* Clement of Alexandria ( 150-215 AD )
Isaac de Beausobre properly calls attention to the significant silence of Clement in the two passages in which he instructs the Christians of Alexandria on the right use of rings and gems, and the figures which may legitimately be engraved on them ( Paed.
This episode is also found in Clement of Alexandria, in Stephen of Byzantium ( Kopai and Argunnos ), and in Propertius, III with minor variations.
Its famous catechetical school, while sacrificing none of its famous passion for orthodoxy since the days of Pantaenus, Clement of Alexandria, and Origen of Alexandria, had begun to take on an almost secular character in the comprehensiveness of its interests, and had counted influential pagans among its serious auditors.
Clement of Alexandria ( end of the 2nd century ) writes about the ordination of a certain Zachæus as bishop by the imposition of Simon Peter Bar-Jonah's hands.
The words bishop and ordination are used in their technical meaning by the same Clement of Alexandria.
At the beginning of the 3rd century, it is adopted by Clement of Alexandria and by Origen of Alexandria, later by Methodius, Cyprian, Lactantius, Dionysius of Alexandria, and in the 5th century by Quodvultdeus.
Clement of Alexandria ascribed the Epistle of Barnabas to him, but that is highly improbable.
Clement of Alexandria ( Stromata, ii, 20 ) also makes Barnabas one of the Seventy Disciples that are mentioned in the Gospel of Luke 10: 1ff.
* Smith, Morton " Clement of Alexandria and Secret Mark: The Score at the End of the First Decade.
Titus Flavius Clemens ( c. 150 – c. 215 ), known as Clement of Alexandria, was a Christian theologian who taught at the Catechetical School of Alexandria.
In around 180, Clement reached Alexandria, where he met Pantaenus, who taught at the Catechetical School of Alexandria.
During the Severian persecutions of 202 – 203, Clement left Alexandria.
*" Clement of Alexandria " by Francis P. Havey, in the Catholic Encyclopedia, 1908.
* The role and view of Scripture in Clement of Alexandria
Around 190 AD under the leadership of the scholar Pantanaeus, the school of Alexandria became an important institution of religious learning, where students were taught by scholars such as Athenagoras, Clement, Didymus, and the native Egyptian Origen, who was considered the father of theology and who was also active in the field of commentary and comparative Biblical studies.
In his critique of the theology of Clement of Alexandria, Photius in his Myriobiblon held that Clement ’ s views reflected a quasi-docetic view of the nature of Christ, writing that Clement " He hallucinates that the Word was not incarnate but only seems to be.
** Clement of Alexandria ( Episcopal Church in the United States of America )

Clement and Stromata
Clement describes the Stromata as a work on various subjects, which spring up in the text like flowers in a meadow.
According to Clement of Alexandria, in his book Stromata, Zacchaeus was surnamed Matthias by the apostles, and took the place of Judas Iscariot after Jesus's ascension.
According to Clement of Alexandria in his Stromata, "... in the time of Crotopus occurred the burning of Phaethon, and the deluges of Deucalion.
Referring to Clement of Alexandria, Stromata III, 2, Philip Schaff commented: " The early disappearance of the Christian agapæ may probably be attributed to the terrible abuse of the word here referred to, by the licentious Carpocratians.
* Clement of Alexandria, Stromata 1. 131. 6.
") According to Clement of Alexandria ( Stromata, III, vi, ed.
Clement of Alexandria ( c. 150-c. 215 ) incidentally mentions Cainites and Ophites, ( Stromata 7: 17 ) but gives no explanation of their tenets.
The church father Clement of Alexandria, in the sixth book of his work Stromata, mentions forty-two books used by Egyptian priests that he says contain " the whole philosophy of the Egyptians ".
According to Clement of Alexandria in his Stromata, "... in the time of Crotopus occurred the burning of Phaethon, and the deluges of Deucalion.
* Fragments of the Exegetica are available from St. Clement of Alexandria in his Stromata, Book IV, Chapter 12, and from Archelaus in his Acts of the Disputation with Manes, Chapter 55, and probably also from Origen in his Commentary on Romans V, Book I.
* St. Clement of Alexandria's Stromata, Book iv
** Clement of Alexandria, " Stromata " in Ante-Nicene Fathers: Fathers of the Second Century, Vol.
2: Clement of Alexandria: Stromata: Book I: Chapter XXI.
" Clement of Alexandria " The Stromata, or Miscellanies " Book I, Chapter XV.
* Clement of Alexandria, Stromata, I, 24, 158: " For ask, he says for the great things, and the small shall be added to you.
* Clement of Alexandria, Stromata, I, 28, 177: " Rightly therefore the Scripture also in its desire to make us such dialecticians, exhorts us: Be approved moneychangers, disapproving some things, but holding fast that which is good.
* Clement of Alexandria, Stromata, V, 10, 64: " For not grudgingly, he saith, did the Lord declare in a certain gospel: My mystery is for me and for the sons of my house.
** Clement of Alexandria, Stromata, iv.
Clement of Alexandria ( 2nd century, philosopher and commentator on pagan and Christian information ) speaks of the Word as " the Alpha and the Omega of Whom alone the end becomes beginning, and ends again at the original beginning without any break " ( Stromata, IV, 25 ).
The suppressed Greek Gospel of the Egyptians, ( which is quite distinct from the later, wholly Gnostic Coptic Gospel of the Egyptians ), perhaps written in the second quarter of the 2nd century, was already cited in Clement of Alexandria's miscellany, the Stromata, where quotations give us many of the brief excerpts that are all that remain ; it was also mentioned by Hippolytus, who alludes to " these various changes of the soul, set forth in the Gospel entitled according to the Egyptians " and connects the Gospel of the Egyptians with the Gnostic Naassene sect.
The work, which according to Clement of Alexandria ( Stromata, yr. ch.

Clement and referred
Henry had invested the Ravenna bishop, and now he referred to the new pope, Clement III, Antipope Clement III as “ our pope ”.
The conflict lasted for more than a year ; and Clement X, who loved peace, at length referred the matter to a congregation.
He credits James Goodby ( of the Brookings Institution ) with tracing what he considers the earliest known English-language use soon after the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki ( although it is not quite verbatim ): a communique from a 15 November 1945, meeting of Harry Truman, Clement Attlee and Mackenzie King ( probably drafted by Vannevar Bush – or so Bush claimed in 1970 ) referred to " weapons adaptable to mass destruction ".
It was probably this Icarius whom Clement of Alexandria referred to as husband of Phanothea, a woman who was believed to have invented the hexameter.
In addition to the bronze statue of Perseus and the medallions already referred to, the works of art in existence today are a medallion of Clement VII commemorating the peace between the Christian princes, 1530, with a bust of the pope on the reverse and a figure of Peace setting fire to a heap of arms in front of the temple of Janus, signed with the artist's name ; a signed portrait medal of Francis ; a medal of Cardinal Pietro Bembo ; and the celebrated gold, enamel and ivory salt-cellar ( known as Saliera ) made for Francis I of France at Vienna.
The commercial strip of restaurants, pubs, bars and shops along Clement Street between Arguello and Park Presidio Boulevard is referred to by some as " New Chinatown.
The style of title " Apostolic King " was confirmed by Pope Clement XIII in 1758 and used afterwards by all the Kings of Hungary, so after this date the kings are referred to as " Apostolic King of Hungary ".
St. Clement Eastcheap considers itself to be the church referred to in the nursery rhyme that begins Oranges and lemons / Say the bells of St. Clement's.
For example, in the 2004 Conservative Party leadership election, Tony Clement was sometimes referred to as a Red Tory even though he advocated privatization, tax cuts, curtailment of social and economic development spending and free trade with the United States.
By the end of the first century, Clement of Rome had repeatedly referred to the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and linked the Father to creation, 1 Clement 19. 2 stating: " let us look steadfastly to the Father and Creator of the universe ".
A style referred to by the recently coined buzzword ' Nouvelle Chanson ', or ' New Chanson ', artists such as Keren Ann, Benjamin Biolay, Coralie Clement and Emilie Simon are often cited as exponents of the updated style.
This letter is consequently referred to as the Mar Saba letter of Clement of Alexandria.
The controversial Secret Gospel of Mark, that was referred to and quoted in the Mar Saba letter ascribed by his modern editors to Clement of Alexandria, contains a further mention of Salome which is not present in the canonical Mark at 10. 46.
Pope Clement XIII, referred to in the prophecy as Rosa Umbriae, the rose of Umbria, is stated to have used a rose " as his personal emblem " ( his coat of arms does not include one, however, nor was he from Umbria nor had any but the most marginal connection with the region, having been briefly pontifical governor of Rieti, at the time part of Umbria ).
Colonel Josiah Clement Wedgwood, 1st Baron Wedgwood, DSO, PC, DL sometimes referred to as Josiah Wedgwood IV ( 16 March 1872 – 26 July 1943 ) was a British Liberal and Labour politician who served in government under Ramsay MacDonald.
Ion optic designer Steve Clement based the prototype instrument ( now referred to as ' SHRIMP-I ') on a design by Matsuda which minimised aberrations in transmitting ions through the various sectors.
The Demotic script was referred to by the Egyptians as " document writing ," which the 2nd century scholar Clement of Alexandria called ( epistolographikē ) " letter writing ," while early Western scholars, notably Thomas Young, formerly referred to it as ' Enchorial Egyptian '.

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