Athenagoras A Plea for the Christians

than the corporeal, and that the intelligible precedes the sensible, although we become acquainted with the latter earliest, since the corporeal is formed from the incorporeal, by the combination with it of the intelligible, and that the sensible is formed from the intelligible; for nothing hinders, according to Pythagoras and Plato, that when the dissolution of bodies takes place, they should, from the very same elements of which they were constructed at first, be constructed again.[135]

Tertullian Against Marcion Book V

since also he says, that "to every seed is its own body; "[450]

Tertullian On the Resurrection of the Flesh

has assigned its own body[395]

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Old Testament