FRAGMENTS.[3]
I.
IN his treatise, Concerning Perfection according to the Saviour, he
writes, "Consent indeed fits for prayer, but fellowship in corruption weakens
supplication. At any rate, by the permission he certainly, though delicately, forbids;
for while he permits them to return to the same on account of Satan and
incontinence, he exhibits a man who will attempt to serve two masters--God by the
'consent' (1 Cor. vii. 5), but by want of consent, incontinence, fornication, and
the devil."--CLEM. ALEX: Strom., iii. C. 12.
II.
A certain person inveighs against generation, calling it corruptible and
destructive; and some one does violence [to Scripture], applying to pro-creation
the Saviour's words, "Lay not up treasure on earth, where moth and rust
corrupt;" and he is not ashamed to add to these the words of the prophet: "You all
shall grow old as a garment, and the moth shall devour you."
And, in like manner, they adduce the saying concerning the resurrection of
the dead, "The sons of that world neither marry nor are given in
marriage."--CLEM. ALEX.: iii. c. 12, 86.
III.
Tatian, who maintaining the imaginary flesh of Christ, pronounces all
sexual connection impure, who was also the very violent heresiarch of the
Encratites, employs an argument of this sort: "If any one sows to the flesh, of the
flesh he shall reap corruption;" but he sows to the flesh who is joined to a woman;
therefore he who takes a wife and sows in the flesh, of the flesh he shall
reap corruption.--HIERON.: Com. in Ep. ad Gal.
IV.
Seceding from the Church, and being elated and puffed up by a conceit of
his teacher,[4] as if he were superior to the rest, he formed his own peculiar
type of doctrine. Imagining certain invisible AEons like those of Valentinus,
and denouncing marriage as defilement and fornication in the same way as Marcion
and Saturninus, and denying the salvation of Adam as an opinion of his
own.--IRENAEUS: Adv. Hoer., i. 28.
V.
Tatian attempting from time to time to make use of Paul's language, that
in Adam all die, but ignoring that "where sir, abounded, grace has much more
abounded."--IRENAEUS: Adv. Heres., iii. 37.
VI.
Against Tatian, who says that the words, "Let there be light," are to be
taken as a prayer. If He who uttered it knew a superior God, how is it that He
says, "I am God, and there is none beside me"?
He said that there are punishments for blasphemies, foolish talking, and
licentious words, which are punished and chastised by the Logos. And he said
that women were punished on account of their hair and ornaments by a power placed
over those things, which also gave strength to Samson by his hair, and punishes
those who by the ornament of their hair are urged on to fornication.--CLEM.
ALEX.: Frag.
VII.
But Tatian, not understanding that the expression "Let there be" is not
always precative but sometimes imperative, most impiously imagined concerning
God, who said "Let there be light," that He prayed rather than commanded light to
be, as if, as he impiously thought, God was in darkness.--ORIGEN: De Orat.
VIII.
Tatian separates the old man and the new, but not, as we say,
understanding the old man to be the law, and the new man to be the Gospel. We agree with
him in saying the same thing, but not in the sense he wishes, abrogating the law
as if it belonged to another God.--CLEM. ALEX.: Strom., iii. 12.
IX.
Tatian condemns and rejects not only marriage, but also meats which God
has created for use.--HIERON.: Adv. Jovin., i. 3.
X.
"But ye gave the Nazarites wine to drink, and commanded the prophets,
saying, Prophesy not." On this, perhaps, Tatian the chief of the Encratites
endeavours to build his heresy, asserting that wine is not to be drunk, since it was
commanded in the law that the Nazarites were not to drink wine, and now those
who give the Nazarites wine are accused by the prophet.--HIERON.: Com. in Amos.
XI.
Tatian, the patriarch of the Encratites, who himself rejected some of
Paul's Epistles, believed this especially, that is [addressed] to Tires, ought to
be declared to be the apostle's, thinking little of the assertion of Marcion and
others, who agree with him on this point.--HIERON.: Proef. in Com. ad Tit.
XII.
[Archelaus (A.D. 280), Bishop of Carrha in Mesopotamia, classes his
countryman Tatian with "Marcion, Sabellius, and others who have made up for
themselves a peculiar science," i.e., a theology of their own.--ROUTH: Reliquioe, tom.
v. p. 137. But see Edinburgh Series of this work, vol. xx. p. 267.]