APPENDIX: AGAINST ALL HERESIES
IX. APPENDIX.
AGAINST ALL HERESIES.[1]
[TRANSLATED BY THE REV. S. THELWALL.]
CHAP. I.--EARLIEST HERETICS:[2] SIMON MAGUS, MENANDER, SATURNINUS, BASILIDES,
NICOLAUS. [THE WORK BEGINS AS A FRAGMENT.]
Of which heretics I will (to pass by a good deal) summarize some few
particulars. For of Judaism's heretics I am silent--Dositheus the Samaritan, I mean,
who was the first who had the hardihood to repudiate the prophets, on the
ground that they had not spoken under inspiration of the Holy Spirit. Of the
Sadducees I am silent, who, springing from the root of this error, had the hardihood
to adjoin to this heresy the denial likewise of the resurrection of the
flesh.[3] The Pharisees I pretermit, who were "divided" from the Jews by their
superimposing of certain additaments to the law, which fact likewise made them worthy
of receiving this very name;[4] and, together with them, the Herodians
likewise, who said that Herod was Christ. To those I betake myself who have chosen to
make the gospel the starting-point of their heresies.
Of these the first of all is Simon Magus, who in the Acts of the Apostles
earned a condign and just sentence from the Apostle Peter.[5] He had the
hardihood to call himself the Supreme Virtue,[6] that is, the Supreme God; and
moreover, (to assert) that the universe[7] had been originated by his angels; that he
had descended in quest of an erring daemon,[8] which was Wisdom; that, in a
phantasmal semblance of God, he had not suffered among the Jews, but was as if he
had suffered.[9]
After him Menander, his disciple (likewise a magician[10]), saying the
same as Simon. Whatever Simon had affirmed himself to be, this did Menander
equally affirm himself to be, asserting that none could possibly have salvation
without being baptized in his name.
Afterwards, again, followed Saturninus: he, too, affirming that the
innascible[11] Virtue, that is God, abides in the highest regions, and that those
regions are infinite, and in the regions immediately above us; but that angels far
removed from Him made the lower world;[12] and that, because light from above
had flashed refulgently in the lower regions, the angels had carefully tried to
form man after the similitude of that light; that man lay crawling on the
surface of the earth; that this light and this higher virtue was, thanks to mercy,
the salvable spark in man, while all the rest of him perishes;[13] that Christ
had not existed in a bodily substance, and had endured a quasi-passion in a
phantasmal shape merely; that a resurrection of the flesh there will by no means
be.
Afterwards broke out the heretic Basilides. He affirms that there is a
supreme Deity, by name Abraxas,[14] by whom was created Mind, which in Greek he
calls N<greek>ous</greek>; that thence sprang the Word; that of Him issued
Providence, Virtue,[15] and Wisdom; that out of these subsequently were made
Principalities, powers,[1] and Angels; that there ensued infinite issues and
processions of angels; that by these angels 365 heavens were formed, and the world,[2] in
honour of Abraxas, whose name, if computed, has in itself this number. Now,
among the last of the angels, those who made this world,[2] he places the God of
the Jews latest, that is, the God of the Law and of the Prophets, whom he
denies to be a God, but affirms to be an angel. To him, he says, was allotted the
seed of Abraham, and accordingly he it was who transferred the sons of Israel
from the land of Egypt into the land of Canaan; affirming him to be turbulent
above the other angels, and accordingly given to the frequent arousing of seditions
and wars, yes, and the shedding of human blood. Christ, moreover, he affirms
to have been sent, not by this maker of the world,[3] but by the above-named
Abraxas; and to have come in a phantasm, and been destitute of the substance of
flesh: that it was not He who suffered among the Jews, but that Simon[4] was
crucified in His stead: whence, again, there must be no believing on him who was
crucified, lest one confess to having believed on Simon. Martyrdoms, he says, are
not to be endured. The resurrection of the flesh he strenuously impugns,
affirming that salvation has not been promised to bodies.
A brother heretic[5] emerged in Nicolaus. He was one of the seven deacons
who were appointed in the Acts of the Apostles.[6] He affirms that Darkness was
seized with a concupiscence--and, indeed, a foul and obscene one--after Light:
out of this permixture it is a shame to say what fetid and unclean
(combinations arose). The rest (of his tenets), too, are obscene. For he tells of certain
Aeons, sons of turpitude, and of conjunctions of execrable and obscene embraces
and per-mixtures,[7] and certain yet baser outcomes of these. He teaches that
there were born, moreover, daemons, and gods, and spirits seven, and other
things sufficiently sacrilegious. alike and foul, which we blush to recount, and at
once pass them by. Enough it is for us that this heresy of the Nicolaitans has
been condemned by the Apocalypse of the Lord with the weightiest authority
attaching to a sentence, in saying "Because this thou holdest, thou hatest the
doctrine of the Nicolaitans, which I too hate."[8]
CHAP. II.--OPHITES, CAINITES, SETHITES.
To these are added those heretics likewise who are called Ophites:[9] for
they magnify the serpent to such a degree, that they prefer him even to Christ
Himself; for it was he, they say, who gave us the origin of the knowledge of
good and of evil.[10] His power and majesty (they say) Moses perceiving, set up
the brazen serpent; and whoever gazed upon him obtained health.[11] Christ
Himself (they say further) in His gospel imitates Moses' serpent's sacred power, in
saying: "And as Moses upreared the serpent in the desert, so it behoveth the
Son of man to be upreared."[12] Him they introduce to bless their eucharistic
(elements).[13] Now the whole parade and doctrine of this error flowed from the
following source. They say that from the supreme primary Aeon whom then speak
of[14] there emanated several other inferior Aeons. To all these, however, there
opposed himself an Aeon who name is Ialdabaoth.[15] He had been conceived by the
permixture of a second Aeon with inferior Aeons; and afterwards, when he[16]
had been desirous of forcing his way into the higher regions, had been disabled
by the permixture of the gravity of matter with himself to arrive at the higher
regions; had been left in the midst, and had extended himself to his full
dimensions, and thus had made the sky.[17] Ialdabaoth, however, had descended
lower, and had made him seven sons, and had shut from their view the upper regions
by self-distension, in order that, since (these) angels could not know what was
above,[18] they might think him the sole God. These inferior Virtues and
angels, therefore, had made man; and, because he had been originated by weaker and
mediocre powers, he lay crawling, worm-like. That Aeon, however, out of which
Ialdaboath had proceeded, moved to the heart with envy, had injected into man as
he lay a certain spark; excited whereby, he was through prudence to grow wise,
and be able to understand the things above. So, again, the Ialdaboath aforesaid,
turning indignant, had emitted out of himself the Virtue and similitude of the
serpent; and this had been the Virtue in paradise--that is, this had been the
serpent--whom Eve had believed as if he had been God the Son.[1] He[2] plucked,
say they, from the fruit of the tree, and thus conferred on mankind the
knowledge of things good and evil.[3] Christ, moreover, existed not in substance of
flesh: salvation of the flesh is not to be hoped for at all.
Moreover, also, there has broken out another heresy also, which is called
that of the Cainites.[4] And the reason is, that they magnify Cain as if he had
been conceived of some. potent Virtue which operated in him; for Abel had been
procreated after being conceived of an inferior Virtue, and accordingly had
been found inferior. They who assert this likewise defend the traitor Judas,
telling us that he is admirable and great, because of the advantages he is vaunted
to have conferred on mankind; for some of them think that thanksgiving is to be
rendered to Judas on this account: viz., Judas, they say, observing that
Christ wished to subvert the truth, betrayed Him, in order that there might be no
possibility of truth's being subverted. And others thus dispute against them, and
say: Because the powers of this world[5] were unwilling that Christ should
suffer, lest through His death salvation should be prepared for mankind, he,
consulting for the salvation of mankind, betrayed Christ, in order that there might
be no possibility at all of the salvation being impeded, which was being
impeded through the Virtues which were opposing Christ's passion; and thus, through
the passion of Christ, there might be no possibility of the salvation of mankind
being retarded.
But, again, the heresy has started forth which is called that of the
Sethites.[6] The doctrine of this perversity is as follows. Two human beings were
formed by the angels--Cain and Abel. On their account arose great contentions and
discords among the angels; for this reason, that Virtue which was above all
the Virtues--which they style the Mother--when they said[7] that Abel had been
slain, willed this Seth of theirs to be conceived and born in place of Abel, in
order that those angels might be escheated who had created those two former
human beings, while this pure seed rises and is born. For they say that there had
been iniquitous permixtures of two angels and human beings; for which reason
that Virtue which (as we have said) they style the Mother brought on the deluge
even, for the purpose of vengeance, in order that that seed of permixture might
be swept away, and this only seed which was pure be kept entire. But (in vain):
for they who had originated those of the former seed sent into the ark
(secretly and stealthily, and unknown to that Mother-Virtue), together with those
"eight souls,"[8] the seed likewise of Ham, in order that the seed of evil should
not perish, but should, together with the rest, be preserved, and after the
deluge be restored to the earth, and, by example of the rest, should grow up and
diffuse itself, and fill and occupy the whole orb.[9] Of Christ, moreover, their
sentiments are such that they call Him merely Seth, and say that He was instead
of the actual Seth.
CHAP. III.--CARPOCRATES, CERINTHUS, EBION.
Carpocrates, futhermore, introduced the following sect. He affirms that
there is one Virtue, the chief among the upper (regions): that out of this were
produced angels and Virtues, which, being far distant from the upper Virtues,
created this world[10] in the lower regions: that Christ was not born of the
Virgin Mary, but was generated--a mere human being--of the seed of Joseph, superior
(they admit) above all others in the practice of righteousness and in
integrity of life; that He suffered among the Jews; and that His soul alone was
received in heaven as having been more firm and hardy than all others: whence he would
infer, retaining only the salvation of souls, that there are no resurrections
of the body.
After him brake out the heretic Cerinthus, teaching similarly. For he,
too, says that the world[10] was originated by those angels;[11] and sets forth
Christ as born of the seed of Joseph, contending that He was merely human,
without divinity; affirming also that the Law was given by angels;[12] representing
the God of the Jews as not the Lord, but an angel.
His successor was Ebion,[13] not agreeing with Cerinthus in every point;
in that he affirms the world[13] to have been made by God, not by angels; and
because it is written, "No disciple above his master, nor servant above his lord,
"[14] sets forth likewise the law as binding,[1] of course for the purpose of
excluding the gospel and vindicating Judaism.
CHAP. IV.--VALENTINUS, PTOLEMY AND SECUNDUS, HERACLEON.
Valentinus the heretic, moreover, introduced many fables. These I will
retrench and briefly summarize. For he introduces the Pleroma and the thirty
Aeons. These Aeons, moreover, he explains in the way of syzygies, that is, conjugal
unions[2] of some kind. For among the first,[3] he says, were Depth[4] and
Silence; of these proceeded Mind and Truth; out of whom burst the Word and Life;
from whom, again, were created Man[5] and the Church. But (these are not all);
for of these last also proceeded twelve Aeons; from Speech,[6] moreover, and
Life proceeded other ten Aeons: such is the Triacontad of Aeons, which is made up
in the Pleroma of an ogdoad, a decad, and a duodecad. The thirtieth Aeon,
moreover, willed to see the great Bythus; and, to see him, had the hardihood to
ascend into the upper regions; and not being capable of seeing his magnitude,
desponded,[7] and almost suffered dissolution, had not some one,--he whom he calls
Horos, to wit,--sent to invigorate him, strengthened him by pronouncing the word
"Iao."[8] This Aeon, moreover, which was thus reduced to despondency, he calls
Achamoth, (and says) that he was seized with certain regretful passions, and
out of his passions gave birth to material essences.[9] For he was
panic-stricken, he says, and terror-stricken, and overcome with sadness; and of these
passions he conceived and bare. Hence he made the heaven, and the earth, and the sea,
and whatever is in them: for which cause all things made by him are infirm,
and frail, and capable of falling, and mortal, inasmuch as he himself was
conceived and produced from despondency. He, however, originated this world[10] out of
those material essences which Achamoth, by his panic, or terror, or sadness,
or sweat, had supplied. For of his panic, he says, was made darkness; of his
fear and ignorance, the spirits of wickedness and malignity; of his sadness and
tears, the humidities of founts, the material essence of floods and sea. Christ,
moreover, was sent by that First-Father who is Bythus. He, moreover, was not in
the substance of our flesh; but, bringing down from heaven some spiritual body
or other, passed through the Virgin Mary as water through a pipe, neither
receiving nor borrowing aught thence. The resurrection of our present flesh he
denies, but (maintains that) of some sister-flesh.[11] Of the Law and the prophets
some parts he approves, some he disapproves; that is, he disapproves all in
reprobating some. A Gospel of his own he likewise has, beside these of ours.
After him arose the heretics Ptolemy and Secundus, who agree throughout
with Valentinus, differing only in the following point: viz., whereas Valentinus
had reigned but thirty Aeons, they have added several more; for they first
added four, and subsequently four more. And Valentine's assertion, that it was the
thirtieth Aeon which strayed out from the Pleroma, (as falling into
despondency,) they deny; for the one which desponded on account of disappointed yearning
to see the First-Father was not of the original triacontad, they say.
There arose, besides, Heracleon, a brother[12]-heretic, whose sentiments
pair with Valentine's; but, by some novelty of terminology, he is desirous of
seeming to differ in sentiment. For he introduces the notion that there existed
first what he terms (a Monad);[13] and then out of that Monad (arose) two, and
then the rest of the Aeons. Then he introduces the whole system of Valentine.
CHAP. V.--MARCUS AND COLARBASUS.
After these there were not wanting a Marcus and a Colarbasus, composing a
novel heresy out of the Greek alphabet. For they affirm that without those
letters truth cannot be found; nay more, that in those letters the whole plenitude
and perfection of truth is comprised; for this was why Christ said, "I am the
Alpha and the Omega."[1] In fact, they say that Jesus Christ descended,[2] that
is, that the dove came down on Jesus;[3] and, since the dove is styled by the
Greek name <greek>peristera</greek>--(peristera), it has in itself this number
DCCCI.[4] These men run through their <greek>W</greek>, <greek>Y</greek>, X,
<greek>g</greek>, T--through the whole alphabet, indeed, up to A and B--and
compute ogdoads and decads. So we may grant it useless and idle to recount all their
trifles. What, however, must be allowed not merely vain, but likewise
dangerous, is this: they feign a second God, beside the Creator; they affirm that Christ
was not in the substance of flesh; they say there is to be no resurrection of
the flesh.
CHAP. VI.--CERDO, MARCION, LUGAN, APELLES.
To this is added one Cerdo. He introduces two first causes,[5] that is,
two Gods--one good, the other cruel:[6] the good being the superior; the latter,
the cruel one, being the creator of the world.[7] He repudiates the prophecies
and the Law; renounces God the Creator; maintains that Christ who came was the
Son of the superior God; affirms that He was not in the substance of flesh;
states Him to have been only in a phantasmal shape, to have not really
suffered,but undergone a quasipassion, and not to have been born of a virgin, nay, really
not to have been born at all. A resurrection of the soul merely does he
approve, denying that of the body. The Gospel of Luke alone, and that not entire, does
he receive. Of the Apostle Paul he takes neither all the epistles, nor in
their integrity. The Acts of the Apostles and the Apocalypse he rejects as false.
After him emerged a disciple of his, one Marcion by name, a native of
Pontus,[8] son of a bishop, excommunicated because of a rape committed on a certain
virgin.[9] He, starting from the fact that it is said, "Every good tree
beareth good fruit, but an evil evil,"[10] attempted to approve the heresy of Cerdo;
so that his assertions are identical with those of the former heretic before
him.
After him arose one Lucan by name, a follower and disciple of Marcion. He,
too, wading through the same kinds of blasphemy, teaches the same as Marcion
and Cerdo had taught.
Close on their heels follows Apelles, a disciple of Marcion, who after
lapsing, into his own carnality,[11] was severed from Marcion. He introduces one
God in the infinite upper regions, and states that He made many powers and
angels; beside Him, withal, another Virtue, which he affirms to be called Lord, but
represents as an angel. By him he will have it appear that the world[12]. was
originated in imitation of a superior world.[13] With this lower world he
mingled throughout (a principle of) repentance, because he had not made it so
perfectly as that superior world had been originated. The Law and the prophets he
repudiates. Christ he neither, like Marcion, affirms to have been in a phantasmal
shape, nor yet in substance of a true body, as the Gospel teaches; but says,
because He descended from the upper regions, that in the course of His descent He
wove together for Himself a starry and airy[14] flesh; and, in His
resurrection, restored, in the course of His ascent, to the several individual elements
whatever had been borrowed in His descent: and thus--the several parts of His body
dispersed--He reinstated in heaven His spirit only. This man denies the
resurrection of the flesh. He uses, too, one only apostle; but that is Marcion's,
that is, a mutilated one. He teaches the salvation of souls alone. He has,
besides, private but extraordinary lections of his own, which he calls
"Manifestations,[1] of one Philumene,[2] a girl whom he follows as a prophetess. He has,
besides, his own books, which he has entitled books of Syllogisms, in which he seeks
to prove that whatever Moses has written about God is not true, but is false.
CHAP. VII.--TATIAN, CATAPHRYGIANS, CATAPROCLANS, CATHESCHINETANS.
To all these heretics is added one Tatian, a brother-heretic. This man was
Justin Martyr's disciple. After Justin's death he began to cherish different
opinions from his. For he wholly savours of Valentinus; adding this, that Adam
cannot even attain salvation: as if, when the branches become salvable,[3] the
root were not!
Other heretics swell the list who are called Cataphrygians, but their
teaching is not uniform. For there are (of them) same who are called
Cataproclans;[4] there are others who are termed Cataeschinetans.[5] These have a blasphemy
common, and a blasphemy not common, but peculiar and special. The common
blasphemy lies in their saying that the Holy Spirit was in the apostles indeed, the
Paraclete was not; and in their saying that the Paraclete has spoken in Montanus
more things than Christ brought forward into (the compass of) the Gospel, and
not merely more, but likewise better and greater. But the particular one they
who follow Aeschines have; this, namely, whereby they add this, that they affirm
Christ to be Himself Son and Father.
CHAP. VIII.--BLASTUS, TWO THEODOTI, PRAXEAS.
In addition to all these, there is likewise Blastus, who would latently
introduce Judaism. For he says the passover is not to be kept otherwise than
according to the law of Moses, on the fourteenth of the month. But who would fail
to see that evangelical grace is escheated if he recalls Christ to the Law?
Add to these Theodotus the Byzantine, who, after being apprehended for
Christ's Name, and apostatizing,[6] ceased not to blaspheme against Christ. For he
introduced a doctrine by which to affirm that Christ was merely a human being,
but deny His deity; teaching that He was born of the Holy Spirit indeed of a
virgin, but was a solitary and bare human being,[7] with no pre-eminence above
the rest (of mankind), but only that of righteousness.
After him brake out a second heretical Theodotus, who again himself
introduced a sister-sect, and says that the human being Christ Himself[8] was merely
conceived alike, and born, of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary, but that He
was inferior to Melchizedek; because it is said of Christ, "Thou art a priest
unto eternity, after the order of Melchizedek."[9] For that Melchizedek, he
says, was a heavenly Virtue of pre-eminent grace; in that Christ acts for human
beings, being made their Deprecator and Advocate: Melchizedek does so[10] for
heavenly angels and Virtues. For to such a degree, he says, is he better than
Christ, that he is <greek>apatwr</greek> (fatherless), <greek>amhtwr</greek>
(motherless), <greek>agenealoghtos</greek> (without genealogy), of whom neither the
beginning nor the end has been comprehended, nor can be comprehended.[11]
But after all these, again, one Praxeas introduced a heresy which
Victorinus[22] was careful to corroborate. He asserts that Jesus Christ is God the
Father Almighty. Him he contends to have been crucified, and suffered, and died;
beside which, with a profane and sacrilegious temerity, he maintains the
proposition that He is Himself sitting at His own right hand.[13]