DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Celsus
Celsus
Persuasive Rhetoric in Origen's Contra Celsum
Depending on Evil an Analysis of Late Antique Christian Demonologies
The Routledge Companion to Early Christian Thought Greco-Roman
The Jew of Celsus and Adversus Judaeos Literature
Pythagorean, Predecessor, and Hebrew: Philo of Alexandria and the Construction of Jewishness in Early Christian Writings
Christian Faith in the Greek World: Justin Martyr's Testimonyl by David F
The Devil in Legend and Literature
The Angelic Spirit in Early Christianity: Justin, the Martyr and Philosopher*
The Discourse of Daemonic Sacrifice in Porphyry's De Abstinentia
Porphyry's Attempted Demolition of Christian Allegory
Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations
Theodicy and the Theme of Cosmic Conflict I N T H E Early Church
The Number and Names of the Devils
The Homeric Tradition in Syrianus
Celsus, Toledot Yeshu and Early Traces of Apology for the Virgin Birth of Jesus
Porphyry's Against the Christians. the Literary
Origen. Contra Celsus
Porphyry, an Anti-Christian Plotinian Platonist Yip-Mei Loh, Chung Yuan
Top View
Zeus' Tomb. an Object of Pride and Reproach
"Justin Martyr and the Fatherhood of God"
An Introduction to Aristotle's Metaphysics Of
Against Celsus: Piety in Context
Chapter Celsus of Pergamum
Preaching Christ Crucified: Origen's Apologetic Strategy in Contra Celsum
Download (15MB)
Edward J. Young, "Celsus and the Old Testament,"
The Use of the Jewish Scriptures by Early Christian Greek Apologists 140-190 CE: Justin Martyr, Tatian and Theophilus of Antioch
Porphyry and the Motif of Christianity As Παράνομος Ilaria Ramelli
Chapter Six Miracles and Wonders: Magic, Satan, and Demons
The Alethes Logos of Celsus and the Historicity of Christ
Biblical Predictions Not Preterist but Historicist
Justin Martyr and Religious Exclusivism
The Interchange of Plain Velar and Aspirate in Kronos/Chronos: a Case for Etymological Equivalence
CELSUS, Anti-Christian Writer and Platonist Philosopher Whose
Roman Tragedy and Medicine: Language and Imagery of Illness in Seneca and Celsus