Patristic A.D. 253
“(Hom. ii. divers. loc.) The verb to be, has a double signification, sometimes expressing the motions which take place in time, as other verbs do; sometimes the substance of that one thing of which it is predicated, without reference to time. Hence it is also called a substantive verb.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of John, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on John 1:1
PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1845) ↗