On jeremiah and ezekiel.

 On daniel.

 On daniel.

 Ii.

 Iii.

 Iv.

 V.

 Vi.

 On matthew.

 On luke.

 Doubtful fragments on the pentateuch.

 Doubtful fragments on the pentateuch.

 The law.

 Section i.

 Sections ii., iii.

 Section iv.

 Section v.

 Section x.

 On the psalms.

 On the psalms.

 Other fragments on the psalms.

 Iii.

 Iv.

 V.

 Vi.

 Vii.

 Viii.

 Ix.

 X.

 Xi.

 Xii.

 Dogmatical and historical.

 Fragments of discourses or homilies.

 Fragments of discourses or homilies.

 Ii.

 Iii.

 Iv.

 V.

 Vi.

 Vii.

 Viii.

 Ix.

 X.

 Xi.

 Fragments from other writings of hippolytus.

 Fragments from other writings of hippolytus.

 Ii.

 Iii.

 The story of a maiden of corinth, and a certain magistrianus.

On Matthew.77 Simon de Magistris, Daniel secundum Septuaginta, from the Codex Chisianus, Rome, 1772; and Mai, Script. vet. collectio nova, i. iii. ed. 1831, pp. 29–56. De Magistris, Acta Martyrum Ostiens., p. 405.

Matt. vi. 11.78 Shallum. See 1 Chron. iii. 15. He is giving his opinion on the ἐπιούσιον, i.e., the “daily bread.”

For this reason we are enjoined to ask what is sufficient for the preservation of the substance of the body: not luxury, but food, which restores what the body loses, and prevents death by hunger; not tables to inflame and drive on to pleasures, nor such things as make the body wax wanton against the soul; but bread, and that, too, not for a great number of years, but what is sufficient for us to-day.