The First Epistle of the Blessed Clement, the…

 Two Epistles Concerning Virginity.

 Chapter II.—For True Virginity Perfect Virtue is Necessary.

 Chapter III.—True Virgins Prove Themselves Such by Self-Denial, as Does the True Believer by Good Works.

 Chapter IV.—Continuation of the Remarks on Self-Denial Object and Reward of True Virgins.

 Chapter V.—The Irksomeness and the Enemies of Virginity.

 Chapter VI.—Divinity of Virginity.

 Chapter VII.—The True Virgin.

 Chapter VIII.—Virgins, by the Laying Aside of All Carnal Affection, are Imitators of God.

 Chapter IX.—Continuation of the Subject of Mortification Dignity of Persons Consecrated to God.

 Chapter X.—Denunciation of Dangerous and Scandalous Association with Maidens.

 Chapter XI.—Perniciousness of Idleness Warning Against the Empty Longing to Be Teachers Advice About Teaching and the Use of Divine Gifts.

 Chapter XII.—Rules for Visits, Exorcisms, and How People are to Assist the Sick, and to Walk in All Things Without Offence.

 Chapter XIII.—What Priests Should Be and Should Not Be.

Chapter VIII.—Virgins, by the Laying Aside of All Carnal Affection, are Imitators of God.

For, if a man be only in name called holy, he is not holy; but he must be holy in everything: in his body and in his spirit. And those who are virgins rejoice at all times in becoming like God and His Christ, and are imitators of them. For in those that are such there is not “the mind61 Rom. viii. 6 (φρόνημα). of the flesh.” In those who are truly believers, and “in whom the Spirit of Christ dwells”62 Rom. viii. 9.—in them “the mind of the flesh” cannot be: which is fornication, uncleanness, wantonness; idolatry,63 Lit. “the worship of idols.” The single word *** sometimes used to express “idolatry” (as in Eph. Syr., opp. tom. i. p. 116), is not found in these epistles. sorcery; enmity, jealousy, rivalry, wrath, disputes, dissensions, ill-will; drunkenness, revelry; buffoonery, foolish talking, boisterous laughter; backbiting, insinuations; bitterness, rage; clamour, abuse, insolence of speech; malice, inventing of evil, falsehood; talkativeness,64 Lit. “much talking.” babbling;65 Lit. “empty words.” threatenings, gnashing of teeth, readiness to accuse,66 The word thus rendered is not in the lexicons, but is well illustrated by Isa. xxix. 21 (“that make a man an offender”), where the Hiphil of חָטָא is used, corresponding to the Aphel of the same root, from which the present word is derived. jarring,67 The word is used in the Peschito of 1 Tim. vi. 5, to express διαπαρατριβαί (“incessant quarrellings,” Alf.); [R.V., “wranglings.”—R.]. disdainings, blows; perversions of the right,68 Ex. Conject. Beelen. The word is not in the lexicons.laxness in judgment; haughtiness, arrogance, ostentation, pompousness, boasting of family, of beauty, of position, of wealth, of an arm of flesh;69 Or “power.” quarrelsomeness, injustice,70 Lit. “folly;” but so used in 2 Cor. xii. 13. eagerness for victory; hatred, anger, envy, perfidy, retaliation;71 Or “returning of evils.” debauchery, gluttony, “overreaching (which is idolatry),”72 Col. iii. 5. “the love of money (which is the root of all evils);”73 1 Tim. vi. 10. love of display, vainglory, love of rule, assumption, pride (which is called death, and which “God fights against”).74 1 Pet. v. 5; Jas. iv. 6. Every man with whom are these and such like things—every such man is of the flesh. For, “he that is born of the flesh is flesh; and he that is of the earth speaketh of the earth,”75 John iii. 6, 31. and his thoughts are of the earth. And “the mind of the flesh is enmity towards God. For it does not submit itself to the law of God; for it cannot do so,”76 Rom. viii. 7. because it is in the flesh, “in which dwells no good,”77 Rom. vii. 18. because the Spirit of God is not in it. For this cause justly does the Scripture say regarding such a generation as this: “My Spirit shall not dwell in men for ever, because they are flesh.”78 Gen. vi. 3. [This is an example of the vicious method of interpretation, not yet extirpated, which carries Paul’s distinctive use of the term “flesh” back to the Pentateuch, where no ethical sense is necessarily implied.—R.] “Whosoever, therefore, has not the Spirit of God in him, is none of His:”79 Rom. vii. 9. [The Apostle speaks of “the Spirit of Christ.”—R.] as it is written, “The Spirit of God departed from Saul, and an evil spirit troubled him, which was sent upon him from God.”80 1 Sam. xvi. 14.