IRENAEUS AGAINST HERESIES -- BOOK I (Chap. XVI to Chap. XXXI)
CHAP. XVI.--ABSURD INTERPRETATIONS OF THE MARCOSIANS.
1. Blending in one the production of their own AEons, and the straying and
recovery of the sheep [spoken of in the Gospel(1)], these persons endeavour to
set forth things in a more mystical style, while they refer everything to
numbers, maintaining that the universe has been formed out of a Monad and a Dyad.
And then, reckoning from unity on to four, they thus generate the Decad. For
when one, two, three, and four are added together, they give rise to the number of
the ten AEons. And, again, the Dyad advancing from itself [by twos] up to
six--two, and four, and six--brings out the Duodecad. Once more, if we reckon in
the same way up to ten, the number thirty appears, m which are found eight, and
ten, and twelve. They therefore term the Duodecad--because it contains the
Episemon,(2) and because the Episemon [so to speak] waits upon it--the passion. And
for this reason, because an error occurred in connection with the twelfth
number,(3) the sheep frisked off, and went astray; for they assert that a defection
took place from the Duodecad. In the same way they oracularly declare, that one
power having departed also from the Duodecad, has perished; and this was
represented by the woman who lost the drachma,(4) and, lighting a lamp, again found
it. Thus, therefore, the numbers that were left, viz., nine, as respects the
pieces of money, and eleven in regard to the sheep,(5) when multiplied together,
give birth to the number ninety-nine, for nine times eleven are ninety-nine.
Wherefore also they maintain the word "Amen" contains this number.
2. I will not, however, weary thee by recounting their other
interpretations, that you may perceive the results everywhere. They maintain for instance,
that the letter Eta (<greek>h</greek>) along with the Episemon (<s234)
constitutes an Ogdoad, inasmuch as it occupies the eighth place from the first letter.
Then, again, without the Episemon, reckoning the number of the letters, and
adding them up till we come to Eta, they bring out the Priacontad. For if one
begins at Alpha and ends with Eta, omitting the Episeman, and adds together the
value of the letters in succession, he will find their number altogether to amount
to thirty. For up to Epsilon (<greek>e</greek>) fifteen are formed; then adding
seven to that number, the sum of twenty-two is reached. Next, Eta being added
to these, since its value is eight, the most wonderful Triacontad is completed.
And hence they give forth that the Ogdoad is the mother of the thirty AEons.
Since, therefore, the number thirty is composed of three powers [the Ogdoad,
Decad, and Duodecad], when multiplied by three, it produces ninety, for three
times thirty are ninety. Likewise this Triad, when multiplied by itself, gives rise
to nine. Thus the Ogdoad generates, by these means, ninety-nine. And since the
twelfth AEon, by her defection, left eleven in the heights above, they
maintain that therefore the position of the letters is a true coordinate of the method
of their calculation(6) (for Lambda is the eleventh in order among the
letters, and represents the number thirty), and also forms a representation of the
arrangement of affairs above, since, on from Alpha, omitting Episemon, the number
of the letters up to Lambda, when added together according to the successive
value of the letters, and including Zambda itself, forms the sum of ninety-nine;
but that this Lambda, being the eleventh in order, descended to seek after one
equal to itself, so as to complete the number of twelve letters, and when it
found such a one, the number was completed, is manifest from the very
configuration of the letter; for Lambda being engaged, as it were, in the quest of one
similar to itself, and finding such an one, and clasping it to itself, thus filled
up the place of the twelfth, the letter Mu (M) being composed of two Lambdas
(<greek>L</greek>). Wherefore also they, by means of their "knowledge," avoid
the place of ninety-nine, that is, the defection--a type of the left
hand,(7)--but endeavour to secure one more, which, when added to the ninety and nine, has
the effect of changing their reckoning to the right hand.
3. I well know, my dear friend, that when thou hast read through all this,
thou wilt indulge in a hearty laugh over this their inflated wise folly! But
those men are really worthy of being mourned over, who promulgate such a kind of
religion, and who so frigidly and perversely pull to pieces the greatness of
the truly unspeakable power, and the dispensations of God in themselves so
striking, by means of Alpha and Beta, and through the aid of numbers. But as many as
separate from the Church, and give heed to such old wives' fables as these,
are truly self-condemned; and these men Paul commands us, "after a first and
second admonition, to avoid."(8) And John, the disciple of the Lord, has
intensified their condemnation, when he desires us not even to address to them the
salutation of "good-speed;" for, says he, "He that bids them be of good-speed is a
partaker with their evil deeds;"(1) and that with reason, "for there is no
good-speed to the ungodly,"(2) saith the Lord. Impious indeed, beyond all impiety,
are these men, who assert that the Maker of heaven and earth, the only God
Almighty, besides whom there is no God, was produced by means of a defect, which
itself sprang from another defect, so that, according to them, He was the product
of the third defect.(3) Such an opinion we should detest and execrate, while we
ought everywhere to flee far apart from those that hold it; and in proportion
as they vehemently maintain and rejoice in their fictitious doctrines, so much
the more should we be convinced that they are under the influence of the wicked
spirits of the Ogdoad,--just as those persons who fall into a fit of frenzy,
the more they laugh, and imagine themselves to be well, and do all things as if
they were in good health [both of body and mind], yea, some things better than
those who really are so, are only thus shown to be the more seriously diseased.
In like manner do these men, the more they seem to excel others in wisdom, and
waste their strength by drawing the bow too tightly,(4) the greater fools do
they show themselves. For when the unclean spirit of folly has gone forth, and
when afterwards he finds them not waiting upon God, but occupied with mere
worldly questions, then, "taking seven other spirits more wicked than himself,"(5)
and inflating the minds of these men with the notion of their being able to
conceive of something beyond God, and having fitly prepared them for the reception
of deceit, he implants within them the Ogdoad of the foolish spirits of
wickedness.
CHAP. XVII.--THE THEORY OF THE MARCOSIANS, THAT CREATED THINGS WERE MADE AFTER
THE IMAGE OF THINGS INVISIBLE.
1. I wish also to explain to thee their theory as to the way in which the
creation itself was formed through the mother by the Demiurge (as it were
without his knowledge), after the image of things invisible. They maintain, then,
that first of all the four elements, fire, water, earth, and air, were produced
after the image of the primary Tetrad above, and that then, we add their
operations, viz., heat, cold, dryness, and humidity, an exact likeness of the Ogdoad
is presented. They next reckon up ten powers in the following manner:--There are
seven globular bodies, which they also call heavens; then that globular body
which contains these, which also they name the eighth heaven; and, in addition
to these, the sun and moon. These, being ten in number, they declare to be types
of the invisible Decad, which proceeded from Logos and Zoe. As to the
Duodecad, it is indicated by the zodiacal circle, as it is called; for they affirm that
the twelve signs do most manifestly shadow forth the Duodecad, the daughter of
Anthropos and Ecclesia. And since the highest heaven, beating upon the very
sphere [of the seventh heaven], has been linked with the most rapid precession of
the whole system, as a check, and balancing that system with its own gravity,
so that it completes the cycle from sign to sign in thirty years,--they say
that this is an image of Horus, encircling their thirty-named mother.(6) And then,
again, as the moon travels through her allotted space of heaven in thirty
days, they hold, that by these days she expresses the number of the thirty AEons.
The sun also, who runs through his orbit in twelve months, and then returns to
the same point in the circle, makes the Duodecad manifest by these twelve
months; and the days, as being measured by twelve hours, are a type of the invisible
Duodecad. Moreover, they declare that the hour, which is the twelfth part of
the day, is composed(7) of thirty parts, in order to set forth the image of the
Triacontad. Also the circumference of the zodiacal circle itself contains three
hundred and sixty degrees (for each of its signs comprises thirty); and thus
also they affirm, that by means of this circle an image is preserved of that
connection which exists between the twelve and the thirty. Still further, asserting
that the earth is divided into twelve zones, and that in each zone it receives
power from the heavens, according to the perpendicular [position of the sun
above it], bringing forth productions corresponding to that power which sends
down its influence upon it, they maintain that this is a most evident type of the
Duodecad and its offspring.
2. In addition to these things, they declare that the Demiurge, desiring
to imitate the infinitude, and eternity, and immensity, and freedom from all
measurement by time of the Ogdoad above, but, as he was the fruit of defect, being
unable to express its permanence and eternity, had recourse to the expedient
of spreading out its eternity into times, and seasons, and vast numbers of
years, imagining, that by the multitude of such times he might imitate its
immensity. They declare further, that the truth having escaped him, he followed that
which was false, and that, for this reason, when the times are fulfilled, his work
shah perish.
CHAP. XVIII.--PASSAGES FROM MOSES, WHICH THE HERETICS PERVERT TO THE SUPPORT
OF THEIR HYPOTHESIS.
1. And while they affirm such things as these concerning the creation,
every one of them generates something new, day by day, according to his ability;
for no one is deemed "perfect," who does not develop among them some mighty
fictions. It is thus necessary, first, to indicate what things they metamorphose
[to their own use] out of the prophetical writings, and next, to refute them.
Moses, then, they declare, by his mode of beginning the account of the creation,
has at the commencement pointed out the mother of all things when he says, "In
the beginning God created the heaven and the earth;"(1) for, as they maintain,
by naming these four,--God, beginning, heaven, and earth,--he set forth their
Tetrad. Indicating also its invisible and hidden nature, he said, "Now the earth
was invisible and unformed."(2) They will have it, moreover, that he spoke of
the second Tetrad, the offspring of the first, in this way--by naming an abyss
and darkness, in which were also water, and the Spirit moving upon the water.
Then, proceeding to mention the Decad, he names light, day, night, the firmament,
the evening, the morning, dry land, sea, plants, and, in the tenth place,
trees. Thus, by means of these ten names, he indicated the ten AEons. The power of
the Duodecad, again, was shadowed forth by him thus:--He names the sun, moon,
stars, seasons, years, whales, fishes, reptiles, birds, quadrupeds, wild beasts,
and after all these, in the twelfth place, man. Thus they teach that the
Triacontad was spoken of through Moses by the Spirit. Moreover, man also, being
formed after the image of the power above, had in himself that ability which flows
from the one source. This ability was seated in the region of the brain, from
which four faculties proceed, after the image of the Tetrad above, and these are
called: the first, sight, the second, hearing, the third, smell, and the
fourth,(3) taste. And they say that the Ogdoad is indicated by man in this way: that
he possesses two ears, the like number of eyes, also two nostrils, and a
twofold taste, namely, of bitter and sweet. Moreover, they teach that the whole man
contains the entire image of the Triacontad as follows: In his hands, by means
of his fingers, he bears the Decad; and in his whole body the Duodecad,
inasmuch as his body is divided into twelve members; for they portion that out, as the
body of Truth is divided by them--a point of which we have already spoken.(4)
But the Ogdoad, as being unspeakable and invisible, is understood as hidden in
the viscera.
2. Again, they assert that the sun, the great light-giver, was formed on
the fourth day, with a reference to the number of the Tetrad. So also, according
to them, the courts(5) of the tabernacle constructed by Moses, being composed
of fine linen, and blue, and purple, and scarlet, pointed to the same image.
Moreover, they maintain that the long robe of the priest failing over his feet,
as being adorned with four rows of precious stones,(6) indicates the Tetrad; and
if there are any other things in the Scriptures which can possibly be dragged
into the number four, they declare that these had their being with a view to
the Tetrad. The Ogdoad, again, was shown as follows:--They affirm that man was
formed on the eighth day, for sometimes they will have him to have been made on
the sixth day, and sometimes on the eighth, unless, perchance, they mean that
his earthly part was formed on the sixth day, but his fleshly part on the eighth,
for these two things are distinguished by them. Some of them also hold that
one man was formed after the image and likeness of God, masculo-feminine, and
that this was the spiritual man; and that another man was formed out of the earth.
3. Further, they declare that the arrangement made with respect to the ark
in the Deluge, by means of which eight persons were saved,(7) most clearly
indicates the Ogdoad which brings salvation. David also shows forth the same, as
holding the eighth place in point of age among his brethren.(8) Moreover, that
circumcision which took place on the eighth day,(9) represented the circumcision
of the Ogdoad above. In a word, whatever they find in the Scriptures capable
of being referred to the number eight, they declare to fulfil the mystery of the
Ogdoad. With respect, again, to the Decad, they maintain that it is indicated
by those ten nations which God promised to Abraham for a possession.(10) The
arrangement also made by Sarah when, after ten years, she gave(11) her handmaid
Hagar to him, that by her he might have a son, showed the same thing. Moreover,
the servant of Abraham who was sent to Rebekah, and presented her at the well
with ten bracelets of gold, and her brethren who detained her for ten days;,
Jeroboam also, who received the ten sceptresa (tribes), and the ten courts(3) of
the tabernacle, and the columns of ten cubits(4) [high], and the ten sons of
Jacob who were at first sent into Egypt to buy com,(5) and the ten apostles to
whom the Lord appeared after His resurrection,--Thomas(6) being
absent,--represented, according to them, the invisible Decad.
4. As to the Duodecad, in connection with which the mystery of the passion
of the defect occurred, from which passion they maintain that all things
visible were framed, they assert that is to be found strikingly and manifestly
everywhere [in Scripture]. For they declare that the twelve sons of Jacob,(7) from
whom also sprung twelve tribes,--the breastplate of the high priest, which bore
twelve precious stones and twelve little bells,(8)--the twelve stones which
were placed by Moses at the foot of the mountain,(9)--the same number which was
placed by Joshua in the river,(10) and again, on the other side, the bearers of
the ark of the covenant,(11)--those stones which were set up by Elijah when the
heifer was offered as a burnt-offering;(12) the number, too, of the apostles;
and, in fine, every event which embraces in it the number twelve,--set forth
their Duodecad. And then the union of all these, which is called the Triacontad,
they strenuously endeavour to demonstrate by the ark of Noah, the height of
which was thirty cubits;(13) by the case of Samuel, who assigned Saul the chief
place among thirty guests;(14) by David, when for thirty days he concealed himself
in the field;(15) by those who entered along with him into the cave; also by
the fact that the length (height) of the holy tabernacle was thirty cubits;(16)
and if they meet with any other like numbers, they still apply these to their
Triacontad.
CHAP. XIX.--PASSAGES OF SCRIPTURE BY WHICH THEY ATTEMPT TO PROVE THAT THE
SUPREME FATHER WAS UNKNOWN BEFORE THE COMING OF CHRIST.
1. I judge it necessary to add to these details also what, by garbling
passages of Scripture, they try to persuade us concerning their Propator, who was
unknown to all before the coming of Christ. Their object in this is to show
that our Lord announced another Father than the Maker of this universe, whom, as
we said before, they impiously declare to have been the fruit of a defect. For
instance, when the prophet Isaiah says, "But Israel hath not known Me, and My
people have not understood Me,"(17)
they pervert his words to mean ignorance of the invisible Bythus. And that
which is spoken by Hosea, "There is no truth in them, nor the knowledge of
God,"(18) they strive to give the same reference. And, "There is none that
understandeth, or that seeketh after God: they have all gone out of the way, they are
together become unprofitable,"(19) they maintain to be said concerning ignorance
of Bythus. Also that which is spoken by Moses, "No man shall see God and
live,"(20) has, as they would persuade us, the same reference.
2. For they falsely hold, that the Creator was seen by the prophets. But
this passage, "No man shall see God and live," they would interpret as spoken of
His greatness unseen and unknown by all; and indeed that these words, "No man
shall see God," are spoken concerning the invisible Father, the Maker of the
universe, is evident to us all; but that they are not used concerning that Bythus
whom they conjure into existence, but concerning the Creator (and He is the
invisible God), shall be shown as we proceed. They maintain that Daniel also set
forth the same thing when he begged of the angels explanations of the parables,
as being himself ignorant of them. But the angel, hiding from him the great
mystery of Bythus, said unto him, "Go thy way quickly, Daniel, for these sayings
are closed up until those who have understanding do understand them, and those
who are white be made white."(21) Moreover, they vaunt themselves as being the
white and the men of good understanding.
CHAP.XX.--THE APOCRYPHAL AND SPURIOUS SCRIPTURES OF THE MARCOSIANS, WITH
PASSAGES OF THE GOSPELS WHICH THEY PERVERT.
1. Besides the above [misrepresentations], they adduce an unspeakable
number of apocryphal and spurious writings, which they themselves have forged, to
bewilder the minds of foolish men, and of such as are ignorant of the Scriptures
of truth. Among other things, they bring forward that false and wicked
story(22) which relates that our Lord, when He was a boy learning His letters, on the
teacher saying to Him, as is usual, "Pronounce Alpha," replied [as He was bid],
"Alpha." But when, again, the teacher bade Him say, "Beta," the Lord replied,
"Do thou first tell me what Alpha is, and then I will tell thee what Beta is."
This they expound as meaning that He alone knew the Unknown, which He revealed
under its type Alpha.
2. Some passages, also, which occur in the Gospels, receive from them a
colouring of the same kind, such as the answer which He gave His mother when He
was twelve years of age: "Wist ye not that I must be about My Father's
business?"(1) Thus, they say, He announced to them the Father of whom they were
ignorant. On this account, also, He sent forth the disciples to the twelve tribes, that
they might proclaim to them the unknown God. And to the person who said to
Him, "Good Master,"(2) He confessed that God who is truly good, saying, "Why
callest thou Me good: there is One who is good, the Father in the heavens;"(3)
and they assert that in this passage the AEons receive the name of heavens.
Moreover, by His not replying to those who said to Him, "By what power doest Thou
this?"(4) but by a question on His own side, put them to utter confusion; by His
thus not replying, according to their interpretation, He showed the unutterable
nature of the Father. Moreover, when He said, "I have often desired to hear
one of these words, and I had no one who could utter it,"(5) they maintain, that
by this expression "one" He set forth the one true God whom they knew not.
Further, when, as He drew nigh to Jerusalem, He wept over it and said, "If thou
hadst known, even thou, in this thy day, the things that belong unto thy peace,
but they are hidden from thee,"(6) by this word "hidden" He showed the abstruse
nature of Bythus. And again, when He said, "Come unto Me all ye that labour and
are heavy laden, and I will give you rest, and learn of Me,"(7) He announced
the Father of truth. For what they knew not, these men say that He promised to
teach them.
3. But they adduce the following passage as the highest testimony,(8) and,
as it were, the very crown of their system:--"I thank Thee, O Father, Lord of
heaven and earth, because Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent,
and hast revealed them to babes. Even so, my Father; for so it seemed good in
Thy sight. All things have been delivered to Me by My Father; and no one
knoweth the Father but the Son, or the Son but the Father, and he to whom the Son
will reveal Him."(9) In these words they affirm that He clearly showed that the
Father of truth, conjured into existence by them, was known to no one before His
advent. And they desire to construe the passage as if teaching that the Maker
and Framer [of the world] was always known by all, while the Lord spoke these
words concerning the Father unknown to all, whom they now proclaim.
CHAP. XXI.--THE VIEWS OF REDEMPTION ENTERTAINED BY THESE HERETICS.
1. It happens that their tradition respecting redemption(10) is invisible
and incomprehensible, as being the mother of things which are incomprehensible
and invisible; and on this account, since it is fluctuating, it is impossible
simply and all at once to make known its nature, for every one of them hands it
down just as his own inclination prompts. Thus there are as many schemes of
"redemption" as there are teachers of these mystical opinions. And when we come to
refute them, we shall show in its fitting-place, that this class of men have
been instigated by Satan to a denial of that baptism which is regeneration to
God, and thus to a renunciation of the whole [Christian] faith.
2. They maintain that those who have attained to perfect knowledge must of
necessity be regenerated into that power which is above all. For it is
otherwise impossible to find admittance within the Pleroma, since this [regeneration]
it is which leads them down into the depths of Bythus. For the baptism
instituted by the visible Jesus was for the remission of sins, but the redemption
brought in by that Christ who descended upon Him, was for perfection; and they
allege that the former is animal, but the latter spiritual. And the baptism of John
was proclaimed with a view to repentance, but the redemption by Jesus(11) was
brought in for the sake of perfection. And to this He refers when He says, "And
I have another baptism to be baptized with, and I hasten eagerly towards
it."(12) Moreover, they affirm that the Lord added this redemption to the sons of
Zebedee, when their mother asked that they might sit, the one on His right hand,
and the other on His left, in His kingdom, saying, "Can ye be baptized with the
baptism which I shall be baptized with?"(13) Paul, too, they declare, has often
set forth, in express terms, the redemption which is in Christ Jesus; and this
was the same which is handed down by them in so varied and discordant forms.
3. For some of them prepare a nuptial couch, and perform a sort of mystic
rite (pronouncing certain expressions) with those who are being initiated, and
affirm that it is a spiritual marriage which is celebrated by them, after the
likeness of the conjunctions above. Others, again, lead them to a place where
water is, and baptize them, with the utterance of these words, "Into the name of
the unknown Father of the universe--into truth, the mother of all things--into
Him who descended on Jesus--into union, and redemption, and communion with the
powers." Others still repeat certain Hebrew words, in order the more thoroughly
to bewilder those who are being initiated, as follows: "Basema, Chamosse,
Baoenaora, Mistadia, Ruada, Kousta, Babaphor, Kalachthei."(1) The interpretation of
these terms runs thus: "I invoke that which is above every power of the
Father, which is called light, and good Spirit, and life, because Thou hast reigned
in the body." Others, again, set forth the redemption thus: The name which is
hidden from every deity, and dominion, and truth which Jesus of Nazareth was
clothed with in the lives(2) of the light of Christ--of Christ, who lives by the
Holy Ghost, for the angelic redemption. The name of restitution stands thus:
Messia, Uphareg, Namempsoeman, Chaldoeaur, Mosomedoea, Acphranoe, Psaua, Jesus
Nazaria.(3) The interpretation of these words is as follows: "I do not divide the
Spirit of Christ, neither the heart nor the supercelestial power which is
merciful; may I enjoy Thy name, O Saviour of truth!" Such are words of the
initiators; but he who is initiated, replies, "I am established, and I am redeemed; I
redeem my soul from this age (world), and from all things connected with it in the
name of Iao, who redeemed his own soul into redemption in Christ who liveth."
Then the bystanders add these words, "Peace be to all on whom this name rests."
After this they anoint the initiated person with balsam; for they assert that
this unguent is a type of that sweet odour which is above all things.
4. But there are some of them who assert that it is superfluous to bring
persons to the water, but mixing oil and water together, they place this mixture
on the heads of those who are to be initiated, with the use of some such
expressions as we have already mentioned. And this they maintain to be the
redemption. They, too, are accustomed to anoint with balsam. Others, however, reject all
these practices, and maintain that the mystery of the unspeakable and
invisible power ought not to be performed by visible and corruptible creatures, nor
should that of those [beings] who are inconceivable, and incorporeal, and beyond
the reach of sense, [be performed] by such as are the objects of sense, and
possessed of a body. These hold that the knowledge of the unspeakable Greatness is
itself perfect redemption. For since both defect and passion flowed from
ignorance, the whole substance of what was thus formed is destroyed by knowledge; and
therefore knowledge is the redemption of the inner man. This, however, is not
of a corporeal nature, for the body is corruptible; nor is it animal, since the
animal soul is the fruit of a defect, and is, as it were, the abode of the
spirit. The redemption must therefore be of a spiritual nature; for they affirm
that the inner and spiritual man is redeemed by means of knowledge, and that
they, having acquired the knowledge of all things, stand thenceforth in need of
nothing else. This, then, is the true redemption.
5. Others still there are who continue to redeem persons even up to the
moment of death, by placing on their heads oil and water, or the pre-mentioned
ointment with water, using at the same time the above-named invocations, that the
persons referred to may become incapable of being seized or seen by the
principalities and powers, and that their inner man may ascend on high in an
invisible manner, as if their body were left among created things in this world, while
their soul is sent forward to the Demiurge. And they instruct them, on their
reaching the principalities and powers, to make use of these words: "I am a son
from the Father--the Father who had a pre-existence, and a son in Him who is
pre-existent. I have come to behold all things, both those which belong to myself
and others, although, strictly speaking, they do not belong to others, but to
Achamoth, who is female in nature, and made these things for herself. For I
derive being from Him who is pre-existent, and I come again to my own place whence
I went forth." And they affirm that, by saying these things, he escapes from
the powers. He then advances to the companions of the Demiurge, and thus
addresses them:--"I am a vessel more precious than the female who formed you. If your
mother is ignorant of her own descent, I know myself, and am aware whence I am,
and I call upon the incorruptible Sophia, who is in the Father, and is the
mother of your mother, who has no father, nor any male consort; but a female
springing from a female formed you, while ignorant of her own mother, and imagining
that she alone existed; but I call upon her mother." And they declare, that
when the companions of the Demiurge hear these words, they are greatly agitated,
and upbraid their origin and the race of their mother. But he goes into his own
place, having thrown [off] his chain, that is, his animal nature. These, then,
are the particulars which have reached us respecting "redemption."(1) But since
they differ so widely among themselves both as respects doctrine and
tradition, and since those of them who are recognised as being most modern make it their
effort daily to invent some new opinion, and to bring out what no one ever
before thought of, it is a difficult matter to describe all their opinions.
CHAP. XXII.--DEVIATIONS OF HERETICS FROM THE TRUTH.
1. The rule(2) of truth which we hold, is, that there is one God Almighty,
who made all things by His Word, and fashioned and formed, out of that which
had no existence, all things which exist. Thus saith the Scripture, to that
effect "By the Word of the Lord were the heavens established, and all the might of
them, by the spirit of His mouth."(3) And again, "All things were made by Him,
and without Him was nothing made."(4) There is no exception or deduction
stated; but the Father made all things by Him, whether visible or invisible, objects
of sense or of intelligence, temporal, on account of a certain character given
them, or eternal; and these eternal(5) things He did not make by angels, or by
any powers separated from His Ennoea. For God needs none of all these things,
but is He who, by His Word and Spirit, makes, and disposes, and governs all
things, and commands all things into existence,--He who formed the world (for the
world is of all),--He who fashioned man,--He [who](6) is the God of Abraham, and
the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, above whom there is no other God, nor
initial principle, nor power, nor pleroma,--He is the Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, as we shall prove. Holding, therefore, this rule, we shall easily show,
notwithstanding the great variety and multitude of their opinions, that these
men have deviated from the truth; for almost all the different sects of
heretics admit that there is one God; but then, by their pernicious doctrines, they
change [this truth into error], even as the Gentiles do through idolatry,--thus
proving themselves ungrateful to Him that created them. Moreover, they despise
the workmanship of God, speaking against their own salvation, becoming their own
bitterest accusers, and being false witnesses [against themselves]. Yet,
reluctant as they may be, these men shall one day rise again in the flesh, to
confess the power of Him who raises them from the dead; but they shall not be
numbered among the righteous on account of their unbelief.
2. Since, therefore, it is a complex and multiform task to detect and
convict all the heretics, and since our design is to reply to them all according to
their special characters, we have judged it necessary, first of all, to give
an account of their source and root, in order that, by getting a knowledge of
their most exalted Bythus, thou mayest understand the nature of the tree which
has produced such fruits.
CHAP. XXIII.--DOCTRINES AND PRACTICES OF SIMON MAGUS AND MENANDER.
1. Simon the Samaritan was that magician of whom Luke, the disciple and
follower of the apostles, says, "But there was a certain man, Simon by name, who
beforetime used magical arts in that city, and led astray the people of
Samaria, declaring that he himself was some great one, to whom they all gave heed,
from the least to the greatest, saying, This is the power of God, which is called
great. And to him they had regard, because that of long time he had driven them
mad by his sorceries."(7) This Simon, then--who feigned faith, supposing that
the apostles themselves performed their cures by the art of magic, and not by
the power of God; and with respect to their filling with the Holy Ghost, through
the imposition of hands, those that believed in God through Him who was
preached by them, namely, Christ Jesus--suspecting that even this was done through a
kind of greater knowledge of magic, and offering money to the apostles, thought
he, too, might receive this power of bestowing the Holy Spirit on whomsoever
he would,--was addressed in these words by Peter: "Thy money perish with thee,
because thou hast thought that the gift of God can be purchased with money: thou
hast neither part nor lot in this matter, for thy heart is not fight in the
sight of God; for I perceive that thou art in the gall of bitterness, and in the
bond of iniquity."(8) He, then, not putting faith in God a whit the more, set
himself eagerly to contend against the apostles, in order that he himself might
seem to be a wonderful being, and applied himself with still greater zeal to
the study of the whole magic art, that he might the better bewilder and overpower
multitudes of men. Such was his procedure in the reign of Claudius Caesar, by
whom also he is said to have been honoured with a statue, on account of his
magical power.(1) This man, then, was glorified by many as if he were a god; and
he taught that it was himself who appeared among the Jews as the Son, but
descended in Samaria as the Father while he came to other nations in the character of
the Holy Spirit. He represented himself, in a word, as being the loftiest of
all powers, that is, the Being who is the Father over all, and he allowed
himself to be called by whatsoever title men were pleased to address him.
2. Now this Simon of Samaria, from whom all sorts of heresies derive their
origin, formed his sect out of the following materials:--Having redeemed from
slavery at Tyre, a city of Phoenicia, a certain woman named Helena, he was in
the habit of carrying her about with him, declaring that this woman was the
first conception of his mind, the mother of all, by whom, in the beginning, he
conceived in his mind [the thought] of forming angels and archangels. For this
Ennoea leaping forth from him, and comprehending the will of her father, descended
to the lower regions [of space], and generated angels and powers, by whom also
he declared this word was formed. But after she had produced them, she was
detained by them through motives of jealousy, because they were unwilling to be
looked upon as the progeny of any other being. As to himself, they had no
knowledge of him whatever; but his Ennoea was detained by those powers and angels who
had been produced by her. She suffered all kinds of contumely from them, so that
she could not return upwards to her father, but was even shut up in a human
body, and for ages passed in succession from one female body to another, as from
vessel to vessel. She was, for example, in that Helen on whose account the
Trojan war was undertaken; for whose sake also Stesichorus(2) was struck blind,
because he had cursed her in his verses, but afterwards, repenting and writing
what are called palinodes, in which he sang her praise, he was restored to sight.
Thus she, passing from body to body, and suffering insults in every one of
them, at last became a common prostitute; and she it was that was meant by the lost
sheep.(3)
3. For this purpose, then, he had come that he might win her first, and
free her from slavery, while he conferred salvation upon men, by making himself
known to them. For since the angels ruled the world ill because each one of them
coveted the principal power for himself, he had come to amend matters, and had
descended, transfigured and assimilated to powers and principalities and
angels, so that he might appear among men to be a man, while yet he was not a man;
and that thus he was thought to have suffered in Judaea, when he had not
suffered. Moreover, the prophets uttered their predictions under the inspiration of
those angels who formed the world; for which reason those who place their trust
in him and Helena no longer regarded them, but, as being free, live as they
please; for men are saved through his grace, and not on account of their own
righteous actions. For such deeds are not righteous in the nature of things, but by
mere accident, just as those angels who made the world, have thought fit to
constitute them, seeking, by means of such precepts, to bring men into bondage. On
this account, he pledged himself that the world should be dissolved, and that
those who are his should be freed from the rule of them who made the world.
4. Thus, then, the mystic priests belonging to this sect both lead
profligate lives and practise magical arts, each one to the extent of his ability.
They use exorcisms and incantations. Love-potions, too, and charms, as well as
those beings who are called "Paredri" (familiars) and "Oniropompi"
(dream-senders), and whatever other curious arts can be had recourse to, are eagerly pressed
into their service. They also have an image of Simon fashioned after the
likeness of Jupiter, and another of Helena in the shape of Minerva; and these they
worship. In fine, they have a name derived from Simon, the author of these most
impious doctrines, being called Simonians; and from them "knowledge, falsely so
called,"(4) received its beginning, as one may learn even from their own
assertions.
5. The successor of this man was Menander, also a Samaritan by birth, and
he, too, was a perfect adept in the practice of magic. He affirms that the
primary Power continues unknown to all, but that he himself is the person who has
been sent forth from the presence of the invisible beings as a saviour, for the
deliverance of men. The world was made by angels, whom, like Simon, he
maintains to have been produced by Ennoea. He gives, too, as he affirms, by means of
that magic which he teaches, knowledge to this effect, that one may overcome
those very angels that made the world; for his disciples obtain the resurrection by
being baptized into him, and can die no more, but remain in the possession of
immortal youth.
CHAP. XXIV. -- DOCTRINES OF SATURNINUS AND BASILIDES.
1. Arising among these men, Saturninus (who was of that Antioch which is
near Daphne) and Basilides laid hold of some favourable opportunities, and
promulgated different systems of doctrine--the one in Syria, the other at
Alexandria. Saturninus, like Menander, set forth one father unknown to all, who made
angels, archangels, powers, and potentates. The world, again, and all things
therein, were made by a certain company of seven angels. Man, too, was the
workmanship of angels, a shining image bursting forth below from the presence of the
supreme power; and when they could not, he says, keep hold of this, because it
immediately darted upwards again, they exhorted each other, saying, "Let us make
man after our image and likeness."(1) He was accordingly formed, yet was unable
to stand erect, through the inability of the angels to convey to him that power,
but wriggled [on the ground] like a worm. Then the power above taking pity
upon him, since he was made after his likeness, sent forth a spark of life, which
gave man an erect posture, compacted his joints, and made him live. He
declares, therefore, that this spark of life, after the death of a man, returns to
those things which are of the same nature with itself, and the rest of the body is
decomposed into its original elements.
2. He has also laid it down as a truth, that the SAviour was without
birth, without body, and without figure, but was, by supposition, a visible man; and
he maintained that the God of the Jews was one of the angels; and, on this
account, because all the powers wished to annihilate his father, Christ came to
destroy the God of the Jews, but to save such as believe in him; that is, those
who possess the spark of his life. This heretic was the first to affirm that two
kinds of men were formed by the angels,--the one wicked, and the other good.
And since the demons assist the most wicked, the Saviour came for the
destruction of evil men and of the demons, but for the salvation of the good. They
declare also, that marriage and generation are from Satan.(2) Many of those, too, who
belong to his school, abstain from animal food, and draw away multitudes by a
reigned temperance of this kind. They hold, moreover, that some of the
prophecies were uttered by those angels who made the world, and some by Satan; whom
Saturninus represents as being himself an angel, the enemy of the creators of the
world, but especially of the God of the Jews.
3. Basilides again, that he may appear to have discovered something more
sublime and plausible, gives an immense development to his doctrines. He sets
forth that Nous was first born of the unborn father, that from him, again, was
born Logos, from Logos Phronesis, from Phronesis Sophia and Dynamis, and from
Dynamis and Sophia the powers, and principalities, and angels, whom he also calls
the first; and that by them the first heaven was made. Then other powers, being
formed by emanation from these, crated another heaven similar to the first;
and in like manner, when others, again, had been formed by emanation from them,
corresponding exactly to those above them, these, too, framed another third
heaven; and then from this third, in downward order, there was a fourth succession
of descendants; and so on, after the same fashion, they declare that more and
more principalities and angels were formed, and three hundred and sixty-five
heavens.(3) Wherefore the year contains the same number of days in conformity with
the number of the heavens.
4. Those angels who occupy the lowest heaven, that, namely, which is
visible to us, formed all the things which are in the world, and made allotments
among themselves of the earth and of those nations which are upon it. The chief of
them is he who is thought to be the God of the Jews; and inasmuch as he
desired to render the other nations subject to his own people, that is, the Jews, all
the other princes resisted and opposed him. Wherefore all other nations were
at enmity with his nation. But the father without birth and without name,
perceiving that they would be destroyed, sent his own first-begotten Nous (he it is
who is called Christ) to bestow deliverance on them that believe in him, from
the power of those who made the world. He appeared, then, on earth as a man, to
the nations of these powers, and wrought miracles. Wherefore he did not himself
suffer death, but Simon, a certain man of Cyrene, being compelled, bore the
cross in his stead; so that this latter being transfigured by him, that he might
be thought to be Jesus, was crucified, through ignorance and error, while Jesus
himself received the form of Simon, and, standing by, laughed at them. For
since he was an incorporeal power, and the Nous (mind) of the unborn father, he
transfigured himself as he pleased, and thus ascended to him who had sent him,
deriding them, inasmuch as he could not be laid hold of, and was invisible to all.
Those, then, who know these things have been freed from the principalities who
formed the world; so that it is not incumbent on us to confess him who was
crucified, but him who came in the form of a man, and was thought to be crucified,
and was called Jesus, and was sent by the father, that by this dispensation he
might destroy the works of the makers of the world. If any one, therefore, he
declares, confesses the crucified, that man is still a slave, and under the
power of those who formed our bodies; but he who denies him has been freed from
these beings, and is acquainted with the dispensation of the unborn father.
5. Salvation belongs to the soul alone, for the body is by nature subject
to corruption. He declares, too, that the prophecies were derived from those
powers who were the makers of the world, but the law was specially given by their
chief, who led the people out of the land of Egypt. He attaches no importance
to [the question regarding] meats offered in sacrifice to idols, thinks them of
no consequence, and makes use of them without any hesitation; he holds also
the use of other things, and the practice of every kind of lust, a matter of
perfect indifference. These men, moreover, practise magic; and use images,
incantations, invocations, and every other kind of curious art. Coining also certain
names as if they were those of the angels, they proclaim some of these as
belonging to the first, and others to the second heaven; and then they strive to set
forth the names, principles, angels, and powers of the three hundred and
sixty-five imagined heavens. They also affirm that the barbarous name in which the
Saviour ascended and descended, is Caulacau.(1)
6. He, then, who has learned [these things], and known all the angels and
their causes, is rendered invisible and incomprehensible to the angels and all
the powers, even as Caulacau also was. And as the son was unknown to all, so
must they also be known by no one; but while they know all, and pass through all,
they themselves remain invisible and unknown to all; for, "Do thou," they say,
"know all, but let nobody know thee." For this reason, persons of such a
persuasion are also ready to recant [their opinions], yea, rather, it is impossible
that they should suffer on account of a mere name, since they are like to all.
The multitude, however, cannot understand these matters, but only one out of a
thousand, or two out of ten thousand. They declare that they are no longer
Jews, and that they are not yet Christians; and that it is not at all fitting to
speak openly of their mysteries, but right to keep them secret by preserving
silence.
7. They make out the local position of the three hundred and sixty-five
heavens in the same way as do mathematicians. For, accepting the theorems of
these latter, they have transferred them to their own type of doctrine. They hold
that their chief is Abraxas;(2) and, on this account, that word contains in
itself the numbers amounting to three hundred and sixty-five.
CHAP. XXV.--DOCTRINES OF CARPOCRATES.
1. Carpocrates, again, and his followers maintain that the world and the
things which are therein were created by angels greatly inferior to the
unbegotten Father. They also hold that Jesus was the son of Joseph, and was just like
other men, with the exception that he differed from them in this respect, that
inasmuch as his soul was stedfast and pure, he perfectly remembered those things
which he had witnessed(3) within the sphere of the unbegotten God. On this
account, a power descended upon him from the Father, that by means of it he might
escape from the creators of the world; and they say that it, after passing
through them all, and remaining in all points free, ascended again to him, and to
the powers,(4) which in the same way embraced like things to itself. They
further declare, that the soul of Jesus, although educated in the practices of the
Jews, regarded these with contempt, and that for this reason he was endowed with
faculties, by means of which he destroyed those passions which dwelt in men as
a punishment [for their sins].
2. The soul, therefore, which is like that of Christ can despise those
rulers who were the creators of the world, and, in like manner, receives power for
accomplishing the same results. This idea has raised them to such a pitch of
pride, that some of them declare themselves similar to Jesus; while others,
still more mighty, maintain that they are superior to his disciples, such as Peter
and Paul, and the rest of the apostles, whom they consider to be in no respect
inferior to Jesus. For their souls, descending from the same sphere as his, and
therefore despising in like manner the creators of the world, are deemed
worthy of the same power, and again depart to the same place. But if any one shall
have despised the things in this world more than he did, he thus proves himself
superior to him.
3. They practise also magical arts and incantations; philters, also, and
love-potions; and have recourse to familiar spirits, dream-sending demons, and
other abominations, declaring that they possess power to rule over, even now,
the princes and formers of this world; and not only them, but also all things
that are in it. These men, even as the Gentiles, have been sent forth by Satan(5)
to bring dishonour upon the Church, so that, in one way or another, men hearing
the things which they speak, and imagining that we all are such as they, may
turn away their ears from the preaching of the truth; or, again, seeing the
things they practise, may speak evil of us all, who have in fact no fellowship with
them, either in doctrine or in morals, or in our daily conduct. But they lead
a licentious life,(1) and, to conceal their impious doctrines, they abuse the
name [of Christ], as a means of hiding their wickedness; so that "their
condemnation is just,"(2) when they receive from God a recompense suited to their works.
4. So unbridled is their madness, that they declare they have in their
power all things which are irreligious and impious, and are at liberty to practise
them; for they maintain that things are evil or good, simply in virtue of
human opinion.(3) They deem it necessary, therefore, that by means of
transmigration from body to body, souls should have experience of every kind of life as well
as every kind of action (unless, indeed, by a single incarnation, one may be
able to prevent any need for others, by once for all, and with equal
completeness, doing all those things which we dare not either speak or hear of, nay, which
we must not even conceive in our thoughts, nor think credible, if any such
thing is mooted among those persons who are our fellow-citizens), in order that,
as their writings express it, their souls, having made trial of every kind of
life, may, at their departure, not be wanting in any particular. It is
necessary(4) to insist upon this, lest, on account of some one thing being still wanting
to their deliverance, they should be compelled once more to become incarnate.
They affirm that for this reason Jesus spoke the following parable:--"Whilst
thou art with thine adversary in the way, give all diligence, that thou mayest be
delivered from him, lest he give thee up to the judge, and the judge surrender
thee to the officer, and he cast thee into prison. Verily, I say unto thee,
thou shalt not go out thence until thou pay the very last farthing."(5) They also
declare the "adversary" is one of those angels who are in the world, whom they
call the Devil, maintaining that he was formed for this purpose, that he might
lead those souls which have perished from the world to the Supreme Ruler. They
describe him also as being chief among the makers of the world, and maintain
that he delivers such souls [as have been mentioned] to another angel, who
ministers to him, that he may shut them up in other bodies; for they declare that the
body is "the prison." Again, they interpret these expressions, "Thou shalt not
go out thence until thou pay the very last farthing," as meaning that no one
can escape from the power of those angels who made the world, but that he must
pass from body to body, until he has experience of every kind of action which
can be practised in this world, and when nothing is longer wanting to him, then
his liberated soul should soar upwards to that God who is above the angels, the
makers of the world. In this way also all souls are saved, whether their own
which, guarding against all delay, participate in all sorts of actions during one
incarnation, or those, again, who, by passing from body to body, are set free,
on fulfilling and accomplishing what is requisite in every form of life into
which they are sent, so that at length they shall no longer be [shut in the body.
5. And thus, if ungodly, unlawful, and forbidden actions are committed
among them, I can no longer find ground for believing them to be such.(6) And in
their writings we read as follows, the interpretation which they give [of their
views], declaring that Jesus spoke in a mystery to His disciples and apostles
privately, and that they requested and obtained permission to hand down the
things thus taught them, to others who should be worthy and believing. We are
saved, indeed, by means of faith and love; but all other things, while in their
nature indifferent, are reckoned by the opinion of men--some good and some evil,
there being nothing really evil by nature.
6. Others of them employ outward marks, branding their disciples inside
the lobe of the right ear. From among these also arose Marcellina, who came to
Rome under [the episcopate of] Anicetus, and, holding these doctrines, she led
multitudes astray. They style themselves Gnostics. They also possess images, some
of them painted, and others formed from different kinds of material; while
they maintain that a likeness of Christ was made by Pilate at that time when Jesus
lived among them.(7) They crown these images, and set them up along with the
images of the philosophers of the world that is to say, with the images of
Pythagoras, and Plato, and Aristotle, and the rest. They have also other modes of
honouring these images, after the same manner of the Gentiles.
CHAP. XXVI.--DOCTRINES OF CERINTHUS, THE EBIONITES, AND NICOLAITANES.
1. Cerinthus, again, a man who was educated(8) in the wisdom of the
Egyptians, taught that the world was not made by the primary God, but by a certain
Power far separated from him, and at a distance from that Principality who is
supreme over the universe, and ignorant of him who is above all. He represented
Jesus as having not been born of a virgin, but as being the son of Joseph and
Mary according to the ordinary course of human generation, while he nevertheless
was more righteous, prudent, and wise than other men. Moreover, after his
baptism, Christ descended upon him in the form of a dove from the Supreme Ruler, and
that then he proclaimed the unknown Father, and performed miracles. But at last
Christ departed from Jesus, and that then Jesus suffered and rose again, while
Christ remained impassible, inasmuch as he was a spiritual being.
2. Those who are called Ebionites agree that the world was made by God;
but their opinions with respect to the Lord are similar to those of Cerinthus and
Carpocrates. They use the Gospel according to Matthew only, and repudiate the
Apostle Paul, maintaining that he was an apostate from the law. As to the
prophetical writings, they endeavour to expound them in a somewhat singular manner:
they practise circumcision, persevere in the observance of those customs which
are enjoined by the law, and are so Judaic in their style of life, that they
even adore Jerusalem as if it were the house of God.
3. The Nicolaitanes are the followers of that Nicolas who was one of the
seven first ordained to the diaconate by the apostles.(1) They lead lives of
unrestrained indulgence. The character of these men is very plainly pointed out in
the Apocalypse of John, [when they are represented] as teaching that it is a
matter of indifference to practise adultery, and to eat things sacrificed to
idols. Wherefore the Word has also spoken of them thus: "But this thou hast, that
thou hatest the deeds of the Nicolaitanes, which I also hate."(2)
CHAP. XXVII.--DOCTRINES OF CERDO AND MARCION.
1. Cerdo was one who took his system from the followers of Simon, and
came to live at Rome in the time of Hyginus, who held the ninth place in the
episcopal succession from the apostles downwards. He taught that the God proclaimed
by the law and the prophets was not the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. For
the former was known, but the latter unknown; while the one also was righteous,
but the other benevolent.
2. Marcion of Pontus succeeded him, and developed his doctrine. In so
doing, he advanced the most daring blasphemy against Him who is proclaimed as God
by the law and the prophets, declaring Him to be the author of evils, to take
delight in war, to be infirm of purpose, and even to be contrary to Himself. But
Jesus being derived from that father who is above the God that made the world,
and coming into Judaea in the times of Pontius Pilate the governor, who was the
procurator of Tiberius Caesar, was manifested in the form of a man to those
who were in Judaea, abolishing the prophets and the law, and all the works of
that God who made the world, whom also he calls Cosmocrator. Besides this, he
mutilates the Gospel which is according to Luke, removing all that is written
respecting the generation of the Lord, and setting aside a great deal of the
teaching of the Lord, in which the Lord is recorded as most dearly confessing that the
Maker of this universe is His Father. He likewise persuaded his disciples that
he himself was more worthy of credit than are those apostles who have handed
down the Gospel to us, furnishing them not with the Gospel, but merely a
fragment of it. In like manner, too, he dismembered the Epistles of Paul, removing all
that is said by the apostle respecting that God who made the world, to the
effect that He is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, and also those passages
from the prophetical writings which the apostle quotes, in order to teach us that
they announced beforehand the coming of the Lord.
3. Salvation will be the attainment only of those souls which had learned
his doctrine; while the body, as having been taken from the earth, is incapable
of sharing in salvation. In addition to his blasphemy against God Himself, he
advanced this also, truly speaking as with the mouth of the devil, and saying
all things in direct opposition to the truth,--that Cain, and those like him,
and the Sodomites, and the Egyptians, and others like them, and, in fine, all the
nations who walked in all sorts of abomination, were saved by the Lord, on His
descending into Hades, and on their running unto Him, and that they welcomed
Him into their kingdom. But the serpent(3) which was in Marcion declared that
Abel, and Enoch, and Noah, and those other righteous men who sprang(4) from the
patriarch Abraham, with all the prophets, and those who were pleasing to God,
did not partake in salvation. For since these men, he says, knew that their God
was constantly tempting them, so now they suspected that He was tempting them,
and did not run to Jesus, or believe His announcement: and for this reason he
declared that their souls remained in Hades.
4. But since this man is the only one who has dared openly to mutilate the
Scriptures, and unblushingly above all others to inveigh against God, I
purpose specially to refute him, convicting him out of his own writings; and, with
the help of God, I shall overthrow him out of those(1) discourses of the Lord and
the apostles, which are of authority with him, and of which he makes use. At
present, however, I have simply been led to mention him, that thou mightest know
that all those who in any way corrupt the truth, and injuriously affect the
preaching of the Church, are the disciples and successors of Simon Magus of
Samaria. Although they do not confess the name of their master, in order all the
more to seduce others, yet they do teach his doctrines. They set forth, indeed,
the name of Christ Jesus as a sort of lure, but in various ways they introduce
the impieties of Simon; and thus they destroy multitudes, wickedly disseminating
their own doctrines by the use of a good name, and, through means of its
sweetness and beauty, extending to their hearers the bitter and malignant poison of
the serpent, the great author of apostasy?
CHAP. XXVIII.--DOCTRINES OF TATIAN, THE ENCRATITES, AND OTHERS.
1. Many offshoots of numerous heresies have already been formed from those
heretics we have described. This arises from the fact that numbers of
them--indeed, we may say all--desire themselves to be teachers, and to break off from
the particular heresy in which they have been involved. Forming one set of
doctrines out of a totally different system of opinions, and then again others from
others, they insist upon teaching something new, declaring themselves the
inventors of any sort of opinion which they may have been able to call into
existence. To give an example: Springing from Saturninus and Marcion, those who are
called Encratites (self-controlled) preached against marriage, thus setting aside
the original creation of God, and indirectly blaming Him who made the male and
female for the propagation of the human race. Some of those reckoned among them
have also introduced abstinence from animal food, thus proving themselves
ungrateful to God, who formed all things. They deny, too, the salvation of him who
was first created. It is but lately, however, that this opinion has been
invented among them. A certain man named Tatian first introduced the blasphemy. He
was a hearer of Justin's, and as long as he continued with him he expressed no
such views; but after his martyrdom he separated from the Church, and, excited
and puffed up by the thought of being a teacher, as if he were superior to
others, he composed his own peculiar type of doctrine. He invented a system of
certain invisible AEons, like the followers of Valentinus; while, like Marcion and
Saturninus, he declared that marriage was nothing else than corruption and
fornication.(3) But his denial of Adam's salvation was an opinion due entirely to
himself.
2. Others, again, following upon Basilides and Carpocrates, have
introduced promiscuous intercourse and a plurality of wives, and are indifferent about
eating meats sacrificed to idols, maintaining that God does not greatly regard
such matters. But why continue? For it is an impracticable attempt to mention
all those who, in one way or another, have fallen away from the truth.
CHAP. XXIX.--DOCTRINES OF VARIOUS OTHER GNOSTIC SECTS, AND ESPECIALLY OF THE
BARBELIOTES OR BORBORIANS.
1. Besides those, however, among these heretics who are Simonians, and of
whom we have already spoken, a multitude of Gnostics have sprung up, and have
been manifested like mushrooms growing out of the ground. I now proceed to
describe the principal opinions held by them. Some of them, then, set forth a
certain AEon who never grows old, and exists in a virgin spirit: him they style
Barbelos.(4) They declare that somewhere or other there exists a certain father who
cannot be named, and that he was desirous to reveal himself to this Barbelos.
Then this Ennoea went forward, stood before his face, and demanded from him
Prognosis (prescience). But when Prognosis had, [as was requested,] come forth,
these two asked for Aphtharsia (incorruption), which also came forth, and after
that Zoe Aionios (eternal life). Barbelos, glorying in these, and contemplating
their greatness, and in conception s [thus formed], rejoicing in this greatness,
generated light similar to it. They declare that this was the beginning both
of light and of the generation of all things; and that the Father, beholding
this light, anointed it with his own benignity, that it might be rendered perfect.
Moreover, they maintain that this was Christ, who again, according to them,
requested that Nous should be given him as an assistant; and Nous came forth
accordingly. Besides these, the Father sent forth Logos. The conjunctions of Ennoea
and Logos, and of Aphtharsia and Christ, will thus be formed; while Zoe
Aionios was united to Thelema, and Nous to Prognosis. These, then, magnified the
great light and Barbelos.
2. They also affirm that Autogenes was afterwards sent forth from Ennoea
and Logos, to be a representation of the great light, and that he was greatly
honoured, all things being rendered subject unto him. Along with him was sent
forth Aletheia, and a conjunction was formed between Autogenes and Aletheia. But
they declare that from the Light, which is Christ, and from Aphtharsia, four
luminaries were sent forth to surround Autogenes; and again from Thelema and Zoe
Aionios four other emissions took place, to wait upon these four luminaries; and
these they name Charis (grace), Thelesis (will), Synesis (understanding), and
Phronesis (prudence) Of these, Chaffs is connected with the great and first
luminary: him they represent as Sorer (Saviour), and style Armogenes.(1) Thelesis,
again, is united to the second luminary, whom they also name Raguel; Synesis
to the third, whom they call David; and Phronesis to the fourth, whom they name
Eleleth.
3. All these, then, being thus settled, Auto-genes moreover produces a
perfect and true man, whom they also call Adamas, inasmuch as neither has he
himself ever been conquered, nor have those from whom he sprang; he also was, along
with the first light, severed from Armogenes. Moreover, perfect knowledge was
sent forth by Autogenes along with man, and was united to him; hence he attained
to the knowledge of him that is above all. Invincible power was also conferred
on him by the virgin spirit; and all things then rested in him, to sing
praises to the great AEon. Hence also they declare were manifested the mother, the
father, the son; while from Anthropos and Gnosis that Tree was produced which
they also style Gnosis itself.
4. Next they maintain, that from the first angel, who stands by the side
of Monogenes, the Holy Spirit has been sent forth, whom they also term Sophia
and Prunicus.(2) He then, perceiving that all the others had consorts, while he
himself was destitute of one, searched after a being to whom he might be united;
and not finding one, he exerted and extended himself to the uttermost and
looked down into the lower regions, in the expectation of there finding a consort;
and still not meeting with one, he leaped forth [from his place] in a state of
great impatience, [which had come upon him] because he had made his attempt
without the good-will of his father. Afterwards, under the influence of simplicity
and kindness, he produced a work in which were to be found ignorance and
audacity. This work of his they declare to be Protarchontes, the former of this
[lower] creation. But they relate that a mighty power carried him away from his
mother, and that he settled far away from her in the lower regions, and formed the
firmament of heaven, in which also they affirm that he dwells. And in his
ignorance he formed those powers which are inferior to himself--angels, and
firmaments, and all things earthly. They affirm that he, being united to Authadia
(audacity), produced Kakia (wickedness), Zelos (emulation), Phthonos (envy),
Erinnys (fury), and Epithymia (lust). When these were generated, the mother Sophia
deeply grieved, fled away, departed into the upper regions, and became the last
of the Ogdoad, reckoning it downwards. On her thus departing, he imagined he was
the only being in existence; and on this account declared, "I am a jealous
God, and besides me there is no one."(3) Such are the falsehoods which these
people invent.
CHAP. XXX.--DOCTRINES OF THE OPHITES AND SETHIANS.
1. Others, again, portentously declare that there exists, in the power of
Bythus, a certain primary light, blessed, incorruptible, and infinite: this is
the Father of all, and is styled the first man. They also maintain that his
Ennoea, going forth from him, produced a son, and that this is the son of man--the
second man. Below these, again, is the Holy Spirit, and under this superior
spirit the elements were separated from each other, viz., water, darkness, the
abyss, chaos, above which they declare the Spirit was borne, calling him the
first woman. Afterwards, they maintain, the first man, with his son, delighting
over the beauty of the Spirit--that is, of the woman--and shedding light upon her,
begat by her an incorruptible light, the third male, whom they call
Christ,--the son of the first and second man, and of the Holy Spirit, the first woman.
2. The father and son thus both had intercourse with the woman (whom they
also call the mother of the living). When, however,(4) she could not bear nor
receive into herself the greatness of the lights, they declare that she was
filled to repletion, and became ebullient on the left side; and that thus their
only son Christ, as belonging to the right side, and ever tending to what was
higher, was immediately caught up with his mother to form an incorruptible AEon.
This constitutes the true and holy Church, which has become the appellation, the
meeting together, and the union of the father of all, of the first man, of the
son, of the second man, of Christ their son, and of the woman who has been
mentioned.
3. They teach, however, that the power which proceeded from the woman by
ebullition, being besprinkled with light, fell downward from the place occupied
by its progenitors, yet possessing by its own will that besprinkling of light;
and it they call Sinistra, Prunicus, and Sophia, as well as masculo-feminine.
This being, in its simplicity, descended into the waters while they were yet in
a state of immobility, and imparted motion to them also, wantonly acting upon
them even to their lowest depths, and assumed from them a body. For they affirm
that all things rushed towards and clung to that sprinkling of light, and begin
it all round. Unless it had possessed that, it would perhaps have been totally
absorbed in, and overwhelmed by, material substance. Being therefore bound
down by a body which was composed of matter, and greatly burdened by it, this
power regretted the course it had followed, and made an attempt to escape from the
waters and ascend to its mother: it could not effect this, however, on account
of the weight of the body lying over and around it. But feeling very ill at
ease, it endeavoured at least to conceal that light which came from above, fearing
lest it too might be injured by the inferior elements, as had happened to
itself. And when it had received power from that besprinkling of light which it
possessed, it sprang back again, and was borne aloft; and being on high, it
extended itself, covered [a portion of space], and formed this visible heaven out of
its body; yet remained under the heaven which it made, as still possessing the
form of a watery body. But when it had conceived a desire for the light above,
and had received power by all things, it laid down this body, and was freed
from it. This body which they speak of that power as having thrown off, they call
a female from a female.
4. They declare, moreover, that her son had also himself a certain breath
of incorruption left him by his mother, and that through means of it he works;
and becoming powerful, he himself, as they affirm, also sent forth from the
waters a son without a mother; for they do not allow him either to have known a
mother. His son, again, after the example of his father, sent forth another son.
This third one, too, generated a fourth; the fourth also generated a son: they
maintain that again a son was generated by the fifth; and the sixth, too,
generated a seventh. Thus was the Hebdomad, according to them, completed, the mother
possessing the eighth place; and as in the case of their generations, so also
in regard to dignities and powers, they precede each other in turn.
5. They have also given names to [the several persons] in their system of
falsehood, such as the following: he who was the first descendant of the mother
is called Ialdabaoth;(1) he, again, descended from him, is named Iao; he, from
this one, is called Sabaoth; the fourth is named Adoneus; the fifth, Eloeus;
the sixth, Oreus; and the seventh and last of all, Astanphaeus. Moreover, they
represent these heavens, potentates, powers, angels, and creators, as sitting in
their proper order in heaven, according to their generation, and as invisibly
ruling over things celestial and terrestrial. The first of them, namely
Ialdabaoth, holds his mother in contempt, inasmuch as he produced sons and grandsons
without the permission of any one, yea, even angels, archangels, powers,
potentates, and dominions. After these things had been done, his sons turned to strive
and quarrel with him about the supreme power,--conduct which deeply grieved
Ialdabaoth, and drove him to despair. In these circumstances, he cast his eyes
upon the subjacent dregs of matter, and fixed his desire upon it, to which they
declare his son owes his origin. This son is Nous himself, twisted into the form
of a serpent;(2) and hence were derived the spirit, the soul, and all mundane
things: from this too were generated all oblivion, wickedness, emulation, envy,
and death. They declare that the father imparted(3) still greater crookedness
to this serpent-like and contorted Nous of theirs, when he was with their
father in heaven and Paradise.
6. On this account, Ialdabaoth, becoming uplifted in spirit, boasted
himself over all those things that were below him, and exclaimed, "I am father, and
God, and above me there is no one." But his mother, hearing him speak thus,
cried out against him, "Do not lie, Ialdabaoth: for the father of all, the first
Anthropos (man), is above thee; and so is Anthropos the son of Anthropos." Then,
as all were disturbed by this new voice, and by the unexpected proclamation,
and as they were inquiring whence the noise proceeded, in order to lead them
away and attract them to himself, they affirm that Ialdabaoth exclaimed, "Come,
let us make man after our image."(4) The six powers, on hearing this, and their
mother furnishing them with the idea of a man (in order that by means of him she
might empty them of their original power), jointly formed a man of immense
size, both in regard to breadth and length. But as he could merely writhe along
the ground, they carried him to their father; Sophia so labouring in this matter,
that she might empty him (Ialdabaoth) of the light with which he had been
sprinkled, so that he might no longer, though still powerful, be able to lift up
himself against the powers above. They declare, then, that by breathing into man
the spirit of life, he was secretly emptied of his power; that hence man became
a possessor of nous (intelligence) and enthymesis (thought); and they affirm
that these are the faculties which partake in salvation. He [they further
assert] at once gave thanks to the first Anthropos (man), forsaking those who had
created him.
7. But Ialdabaoth, feeling envious at this, was pleased to form the design
of again emptying man by means of woman, and produced a woman from his own
enthymesis, whom that Prunicus [above mentioned] laying hold of, imperceptibly
emptied her of power. But the others coming and admiring her beauty, named her
Eve, and falling in love with her, begat sons by her, whom they also declare to be
the angels. But their mother (Sophia) cunningly devised a scheme to seduce Eve
and Adam, by means of the serpent, to transgress the command of Ialdabaoth.
Eve listened to this as if it had proceeded from a son of God, and yielded an
easy belief. She also persuaded Adam to eat of the tree regarding which God had
said that they should not eat of it. They then declare that, on their thus
eating, they attained to the knowledge of that power which is above all, and departed
from those who had created them.(1) When Prunicus perceived that the powers
were thus baffled by their own creature, she greatly rejoiced, and again cried
out, that since the father was incorruptible, he (Ialdabaoth) who formerly called
himself the father was a liar; and that, while Anthropos and the first woman
(the Spirit) existed previously, this one (Eve) sinned by committing adultery.
8. Ialdabaoth, however, through that oblivion in which he was involved,
and not paying any regard to these things, cast Adam and Eve out of Paradise,
because they had transgressed his commandment. For he had a desire to beget sons
by Eve, but did not accomplish his wish, because his mother opposed him in every
point, and secretly emptied Adam and Eve of the light with which they had been
sprinkled, in order that that spirit which proceeded from the supreme power
might participate neither in the curse nor opprobrium [caused by transgression].
They also teach that, thus being emptied of the divine substance, they were
cursed by him, and cast down from heaven to this world.(2) But the serpent also,
who was acting against the father, was cast down by him into this lower world;
he reduced, however, under his power the angels here, and begat six sons, he
himself forming the seventh person, after the example of that Hebdomad which
surrounds the father. They further declare that these are the seven mundane demons,
who always oppose and resist the human race, because it was on their account
that their father was cast down to this lower world.
9. Adam and Eve previously had light, and clear, and as it were spiritual
bodies, such as they were at their creation; but when they came to this world,
these changed into bodies more opaque, and gross, and sluggish. Their soul also
was feeble and languid, inasmuch as they had received from their creator a
merely mundane inspiration. This continued until Prunicus, moved with compassion
towards them, restored to them the sweet savour of the besprinkling of light,
by means of which they came to a remembrance of themselves, and knew that they
were naked, as well as that the body was a material substance, and thus
recognised that they bore death about with them. They thereupon became patient,
knowing that only for a time they would be enveloped in the body. They also found out
food, through the guidance of Sophia; and when they were satisfied, they had
carnal knowledge of each other, and begat Cain, whom the serpent, that had been
cast down along with his sons, immediately laid hold of and destroyed by
filling him with mundane oblivion, and urging into folly and audacity, so that, by
slaying his brother Abel, he was the first to bring to light envy and death.
After these, they affirm that, by the forethought of Prunicus, Seth was begotten,
and then Norea,(3) from whom they represent all the rest of mankind as being
descended. They were urged on to all kinds of wickedness by the inferior Hebdomad,
and to apostasy, idolatry, and a general contempt for everything by the
superior holy Hebdomad,(4) since the mother was always secretly opposed to them, and
carefully preserved what was peculiarly her own, that is, the besprinkling of
light. They maintain, moreover, that the holy Hebdomad is the seven stars which
they call planets; and they affirm that the serpent cast down has two names,
Michael and Samael.
10. Ialdabaoth, again, being incensed with men, because they did not
worship or honour him as father and God, sent forth a deluge upon them, that he
might at once destroy them all. But Sophia opposed him in this point also, and Noah
and his family were saved in the ark by means of the besprinkling of that
light which proceeded from her, and through it the world was again filled with
mankind. Ialdabaoth himself chose a certain man named Abraham from among these, and
made a covenant with him, to the effect that, if his seed continued to serve
him, he would give to them the earth for an inheritance. Afterwards, by means of
Moses, he brought forth Abraham's descendants from Egypt, and gave them the
law, and made them the Jews. Among that people he chose seven days,(1) which they
also call the holy Hebdomad. Each of these receives his own herald for the
purpose of glorifying and proclaiming God; so that, when the rest hear these
praises, they too may serve those who are announced as gods try the prophets.
11. Moreover, they distribute the prophets in the following manner: Moses,
and Joshua the son of Nun, and Amos, and Habakkuk, belonged to Ialdabaoth;
Samuel, and Nathan, and Jonah, and Micah, to Iao; Elijah, Joel, and Zechariah to
Sabaoth; Isaiah, Ezekiel, Jeremiah, and Daniel, to Adohai; Tobias and Haggai to
Eloi; Michaiah and Nahum to Oreus; Esdras and Zephaniah to Astanphaeus. Each
one of these, then, glorifies his own father and God, and they maintain that
Sophia, herself has also spoken many things through them regarding the first
Anthropos (man),(2) and concerning that Christ who is above, thus admonishing and
reminding men of the incorruptible light, the first Anthropos, and of the descent
of Christ. The [other] powers being terrified by these things, and marveiling
at the novelty of those things which were announced by the prophets, Prunicus
brought it about by means of Ialdabaoth (who knew not what he did), that
emissions of two men took place, the one from the barren Elizabeth, and the other from
the Virgin Mary.
12. And since she herself had no rest either in heaven or on earth, she
invoked her mother to assist her in her distress. Upon this, her mother, the
first woman, was moved with compassion towards her daughter, on her repentance, and
begged from the first man that Christ should be sent to her assistance, who,
being sent forth, descended to his sister, and to the besprinkling of light.
When he recognised her (that is, the Sophia below), her brother descended to her,
and announced his advent through means of John, and prepared the baptism of
repentance, and adopted Jesus beforehand, in order that on Christ descending he
might find a pure vessel, and that by the son of that Ialdabaoth the woman might
be announced by Christ. They further declare that he descended through the
seven heavens, having assumed the likeness of their sons, and gradually emptied
them of their power. For they maintain that the whole besprinkling of light rushed
to him, and that Christ, descending to this world, first clothed his sister
Sophia [with it], and that then both exulted in the mutual refreshment they felt
in each other's society: this scene they describe as relating to bridegroom and
bride. But Jesus, inasmuch as he was begotten of the Virgin through the agency
of God, was wiser, purer, and more righteous than all other men: Christ united
to Sophia descended into him, and thus Jesus Christ was produced.
13. They affirm that many of his disciples were not aware of the descent
of Christ into him; but that, when Christ did descend on Jesus, he then began to
work miracles, and heal, and announce the unknown Father, and openly to
confess himself the son of the first man. The powers and the father of Jesus were
angry at these proceedings, and laboured to destroy him; and when he was being led
away for this purpose, they say that Christ himself, along with Sophia,
departed from him into the state of an incorruptible AEon, while Jesus was crucified.
Christ, however, was not forgetful of his Jesus, but sent down a certain
energy into him from above, which raised him up again in the body, which they call
both animal and spiritual; for he sent the mundane parts back again into the
world. When his disciples saw that he had risen, they did not recognise him--no,
not even Jesus himself, by whom he rose again from the dead. And they assert
that this very great error prevailed among his disciples, that they imagined he
had risen in a mundane body, not knowing that "flesh(3) and blood do not attain
to the kingdom of God."
14. They strove to establish the descent and ascent of Christ, by the fact
that neither before his baptism, nor after his resurrection from the dead, do
his disciples state that he did any mighty works, not being aware that Jesus
was united to Christ, and the incorruptible AEon to the Hebdomad; and they
declare his mundane body to be of the same nature as that of animals. But after his
resurrection he tarried [on earth] eighteen months; and knowledge descending
into him from above, he taught what was clear. He instructed a few of his
disciples, whom he knew to be capable of understanding so great mysteries, in these
things, and was then received up into heaven, Christ sitting down at the right
hand of his father Ialdabaoth, that he may receive to himself the souls of those
who have known them,(4) after they have laid aside their mundane flesh, thus
enriching himself without the knowledge or perception of his father; so that, in
proportion as Jesus enriches himself with holy souls, to such an extent does his
father suffer loss and is diminished, being emptied of his own power by these
souls. For he will not now possess holy souls to send them down again into the
world, except those only which are of his substance, that is, those into which
he has breathed. But the consummation [of all things] will take place, when the
whole besprinkling of the spirit of light is gathered together, and is carried
off to form an incorruptible AEon.
15. Such are the opinions which prevail among these persons, by whom, like
the Lernaean hydra, a many-headed beast has been generated from the school of
Valentinus. For some of them assert that Sophia herself became the serpent; on
which account she was hostile to the creator of Adam, and implanted knowledge
in men, for which reason the serpent was called wiser than all others. Moreover,
by the position of our intestines, through which the food is conveyed, and by
the fact that they possess such a figure, our internal configuration(1) in the
form of a serpent reveals our hidden generatrix.
CHAP. XXXI.--DOCTRINES OF THE CAINITES.
1. Others again declare that Cain derived his being from the Power above,
and acknowledge that Esau, Korah, the Sodomites, and all such persons, are
related to themselves. On this account, they add, they have been assailed by the
Creator, yet no one of them has suffered injury. For Sophia was in the habit of
carrying off that which belonged to her from them to herself. They declare that
Judas the traitor was thoroughly acquainted with these things, and that he
alone, knowing the truth as no others did, accomplished the mystery of the
betrayal; by him all things, both earthly and heavenly, were thus thrown into
confusion. They produce a fictitious history of this kind, which they style the Gospel
of Judas.
2. I have also made a collection of their writings in which they advocate
the abolition of the doings of Hystera.(2) Moreover, they call this Hystera the
creator of heaven and earth. They also hold, like Carpocrates, that men cannot
be saved until they have gone through all kinds of experience. An angel, they
maintain, attends them in every one of their sinful and abominable actions, and
urges them to venture on audacity and incur pollution. Whatever may be the
nature(3) of the action, they declare that they do it in the name of the angel,
saying, "O thou angel, I use thy work; O thou power, I accomplish thy operation
!" And they maintain that this is "perfect knowledge," without shrinking to rush
into such actions as it is not lawful even to name.
3. It was necessary clearly to prove, that, as their very opinions and
regulations exhibit them, those who are of the school of Valentinus derive their
origin from such mothers, fathers, and ancestors, and also to bring forward
their doctrines, with the hope that perchance some of them, exercising repentance
and returning to the only Creator, and God the Former of the universe, may
obtain salvation, and that others may not henceforth be drown away by their wicked,
although plausible, persuasions, imagining that they will obtain from them the
knowledge of some greater and more sublime mysteries. But let them rather,
learning to good effect from us the wicked tenets of these men, look with contempt
upon their doctrines, while at the same time they pity those who, still
cleaving to these miserable and baseless fables, have reached such a pitch of
arrogance as to reckon themselves superior to all others on account of such knowledge,
or, as it should rather be called, ignorance. They have now been fully exposed;
and simply to exhibit their sentiments, is to obtain a victory over them.
4. Wherefore I have laboured to bring forward, and make clearly manifest,
the utterly ill-conditioned carcase of this miserable little fox.(4) For there
will not now be need of many words to overturn their system of doctrine, when
it has been made manifest to all. It is as when, on a beast hiding itself in a
wood, and by rushing forth from it is in the habit of destroying multitudes, one
who beats round the wood and thoroughly explores it, so as to compel the
animal to break cover, does not strive to capture it, seeing that it is truly a
ferocious beast; but those present can then watch and avoid its assaults, and can
cast darts at it from all sides, and wound it, and finally slay that destructive
brute. So, in our case, since we have brought their hidden mysteries, which
they keep in silence among themselves, to the light, it will not now be necessary
to use many words in destroying their system of opinions. For it is now in thy
power, and in the power of all thy associates, to familiarize yourselves with
what has been said, to overthrow their wicked and undigested doctrines, and to
set forth doctrines agreeable to the truth. Since then the case is so, I shall,
according to promise, and as my ability serves, labour to overthrow them, by
refuting them all in the following book. Even to give an account of them is a
tedious affair, as thou seest.(5) But I shall furnish means for overthrowing
them, by meeting all their opinions in the order in which they have been described,
that I may not only expose the wild beast to view, but may inflict wounds upon
it from every side.