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Book II
The Stromata, or Miscellanies · Clement of Alexandria
- Chapter I.—Introductory.
- Chapter II.—The Knowledge of God Can Be Attained Only Through Faith.
- Chapter III.—Faith Not a Product of Nature.
- Chapter IV.—Faith the Foundation of All Knowledge.
- Chapter V.—He Proves by Several Examples that the Greeks Drew from the Sacred Writers.
- Chapter VI.—The Excellence and Utility of Faith.
- Chapter VII.—The Utility of Fear. Objections Answered.
- Chapter VIII.—The Vagaries of Basilides and Valentinus as to Fear Being the Cause of Things.
- Chapter IX.—The Connection of the Christian Virtues.
- Chapter X.—To What the Philosopher Applies Himself.
- Chapter XI.—The Knowledge Which Comes Through Faith the Surest of All.
- Chapter XII.—Twofold Faith.
- Chapter XIII.—On First and Second Repentance.
- Chapter XIV.—How a Thing May Be Involuntary.
- Chapter XV.—On the Different Kinds of Voluntary Actions, and the Sins Thence Proceeding.
- Chapter XVI.—How We are to Explain the Passages of Scripture Which Ascribe to God Human Affections.
- Chapter XVII.—On the Various Kinds of Knowledge.
- Chapter XVIII.—The Mosaic Law the Fountain of All Ethics, and the Source from Which the Greeks Drew Theirs.
- Chapter XIX.—The True Gnostic is an Imitator of God, Especially in Beneficence.
- Chapter XX.—The True Gnostic Exercises Patience and Self-Restraint.
- Chapter XXI.—Opinions of Various Philosophers on the Chief Good.
- Chapter XXII.—Plato’s Opinion, that the Chief Good Consists in Assimilation to God, and Its Agreement with Scripture.
- Chapter XXIII.—On Marriage.
- Elucidations