CRISTO RAUL. READING HALL THE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE HISTORY OF THE POPES |
THE HERETICS OF THE FIRST CENTURY
SIMON MAGUS.
Simon Magus, the subject of
many legends and much speculation. It is important to discriminate carefully
what is told of him by the different primary authorities.
The Simon of the Acts of the
Apostles.—Behind all stories concerning Simon lies what is related Acts VIII.
9-24, where we see Simon as a magician who exercised sorcery in Samaria with
such success that the people universally accepted his claim to be "some
great one", and accounted him " that power of God which is called
great." We are further told that he was so impressed by the miracles
wrought by Philip, that he asked and obtained admission to Christian baptism;
but that he subsequently betrayed the hollowness of his conversion by offering
money to Peter to obtain the power of conferring the gift of the Holy Ghost.
All subsequent accounts
represent him as possessing magical power and coming personally into collision
with Peter. The Acts say nothing as to his being a teacher of heretical
doctrine; nor do they tell whether or not he broke off all connection with the Christian
society after his exposure by Peter.
The Simon of Justin
Martyr.—When Justin Martyr wrote his Apology the Simonian sect appears to have
been formidable, for he speaks four times of their founder Simon, and
undoubtedly identified him with the Simon of Acts. He states that he was a
Samaritan, born at a village called Gitta; he describes him as a formidable
magician, who came to Rome in the days of Claudius Caesar and made such an
impression by his magical powers that he was honoured as a god, a statue being erected to him on the Tiber, between the two bridges,
bearing the inscription "Simoni deo Sancto". Now in 1574 there was
dug up in the place indicated by Justin, viz. the island in the Tiber, a marble
fragment, apparently the base of a statue, bearing the inscription, "Semoni Sanco Deo Fidio",
with the name of the dedicator. The coincidence is too remarkable to admit of
any satisfactory explanation other than that Justin imagined a statue really
dedicated to a Sabine deity to have been in honour of
the heretic Simon. Justin further states that almost all the Samaritans, and
some even of other nations, worshipped Simon, and acknowledged him as "the
first God" ("above all principality, power, and dominion"), and
that they held that a woman named Helena, formerly a prostitute, who went about
with him, was his "first conception". In connection with Simon,
Justin speaks of another Samaritan heretic, Menander, and states that he
(Justin) had published a treatise against heresies.
When Irenaeus deals with Simon
and Menander, his coincidences with Justin are too numerous and striking to
leave any doubt that he here uses the work of Justin as his authority, and we
get the following additional particulars : Simon claimed to be himself the
highest power, that is to say, the Father who is over all; he taught that he
was the same who among the Jews appeared as Son, in Samaria descended as
Father, in other nations had walked as the Holy Spirit. He was content to be
called by whatever name men chose to assign to him. Helen was a prostitute whom
he had redeemed at Tyre and led about with him, saying that she was the first
conception of his mind, the mother of all, by whom he had in the beginning
conceived the making of angels and archangels. Knowing thus his will, she had
leaped away from him, descended to the lower regions, and generated angels and
powers by whom this world was made. But this "Ennoea"
was detained in these lower regions by her offspring, and not suffered to
return to the Father of whom they were ignorant.
In this account of Simon there
is a large portion common to almost all forms of Gnostic myths, together with
something special to this form. They have in common the place in the work of
creation assigned to the female principle, the conception of the Deity; the
ignorance of the rulers of this lower world with regard to the Supreme Power;
the descent of the female (Sophia) into the lower regions, and her inability to
return. Special to the Simonian tale is the identification of Simon himself
with the Supreme, and of his consort Helena with the female principle, together
with the doctrine of transmigration of souls, necessary to give these
identifications a chance of acceptance, it not being credible that the male and
female Supreme principles should first appear in the world at so late a stage
in history.
It is possible that Justin's
Simon was not identical with the contemporary of the Apostles, the name Simon
being very common, and the Simon of the Acts being a century older than Justin.
Moreover, Justin's Simon could hardly have carried his doctrine of transmigration
of souls to the point of pretending that it was he himself who had appeared as
Jesus of Nazareth, unless he had been born after our Lord's death. Hence it is
the writer's opinion that the Simon described by Justin was his elder only by a
generation; that he was a Gnostic teacher who had gained some followers at
Samaria; and that Justin rashly identified him with the magician of the Acts of
the Apostles.
The section on Simon in
the Refutation of all Heresies, by Hippolytus, divides itself into
two parts; the larger portion is founded on a work ascribed to Simon called the Great Apofasis, which we do not hear of through any
other source than Hippolytus. But towards the close of the art. on Simon there
is a section which can be explained on the supposition that Hippolytus is
drawing directly from the source used by Irenaeus, viz. the anti-heretical
treatise of Justin. In connection with this section must be considered the
treatment of Simon in the lost earlier treatise of Hippolytus, which may be
conjecturally gathered from the use made of it by Philaster and Epiphanius. Between these two there are verbal coincidences which prove
that they are drawing from a common source. When this common matter is compared
with the section in the Refutation, it is clear that Hippolytus was that
source.
But one thing common to them
was apparently not taken from Hippolytus. Both speak of the death of Simon, but
apart from the section which contains the matter common to them and Hippolytus,
and here they have no verbal coincidences. Both, however, know the story which
became the received account of his death, viz. that to give the emperor a
crowning proof of his magical skill he attempted to fly through the air, and,
through the efficacy of the apostle's prayers, the demons who bore him were
compelled to let him go, whereupon he perished miserably. We may conclude that
the story known to Philaster and Epiphanius, though
earlier than the end of the 4th cent, when they wrote, is of later origin than
the beginning of the 3rd cent, when Hippolytus wrote. That Hippolytus did not
find his account of Simon's death in Justin may be concluded from the place it
occupies in his narrative, where it is in a kind of appendix to what is
borrowed from Justin; and also because this form of the story is unknown to all
other writers.
The Simon of the
Clementines.—The Clementines, like Justin, identify Simon of Gitta with the
Simon of Acts; but there is every reason to believe that they were merely
following Justin. Justin has evidently direct knowledge of the Simonians, and
regards them as formidable heretics; but in the Clementines the doctrines which
Justin gives as Simonian have no prominence; and the introduction of Simon is
merely a literary contrivance to bring in the theological discussions in which the
author is interested.
The Simon of 19th Cent.
Criticism.—The Clementine writings were produced in Rome early in 3rd cent, by
members of the Elkesaite sect, one characteristic of
which was hostility to Paul, whom they refused to recognize as an apostle. Baur
first drew attention to this characteristic in the Clementines, and pointed out
that in the disputations between Simon and Peter, some of the claims Simon is
represented as making (e.g. that of having seen our Lord, though not in his
lifetime, yet subsequently in vision) were really the claims of Paul; and urged
that Peter's refutation of Simon was in some places intended as a polemic
against Paul. The passages are found only in the Clementine Homilies, which may
be regarded as one of the latest forms which these forgeries assumed. In the
Clementine Recognitions there is abundance of anti-Paulism;
but the idea does not appear to have occurred to the writer to dress up Paul
under the mask of Simon. The idea started by Baur was pressed by his followers
into the shape that, wherever in ancient documents Simon Magus is mentioned,
Paul is meant. We are asked to believe that the Simon of Acts VIII. was no real
character, but only a presentation of Paul. Simon claimed to be the power of
God which is called Great; and Paul calls his gospel the power of God, and
claims that the power of Christ rested in himself, and that he lived by the
power of God. In Acts VIII. the power of bestowing the Holy Ghost, which Philip
does not appear to have exercised, is clearly represented as the special prerogative
of the apostles. When, therefore, Simon offered money for the power of
conferring the Holy Ghost, it was really to obtain the rank of apostle. We are
therefore asked to detect here a covert account of the refusal of the elder
apostles to admit Paul's claim to rank with them, backed though it was by a
gift of money for the poor saints in Jerusalem. Peter tells him that he has no
lot in the matter, i.e. no part in the lot of apostleship; that he is still in
the "gall of bitterness and bond of iniquity"—i.e. full of bitter
hatred against Peter and not observant of the Mosaic Law. We are not to be
surprised that St. Luke, Paulist though he was, should assert in his history
this libel on his master. He knew the story to be current among the Jewish
disciples, and wished to take the sting out of it by telling it in such a way
as to represent Simon as a real person, distinct from Paul. So, having begun to
speak of Paul in the beginning of c. VIII., he interpolates the episode of
Philip's adventures, and does not return to speak of Paul until his reader's
attention has been drawn off, so as not to be likely to recognize Paul under
the mask of Simon.
It is not necessary to spend
much time in pulling to pieces speculations exhibiting so much ingenuity, but
so wanting in common sense. If, by way of nickname, a public character is
called by a name not his own, common sense tells us that that must be a name to
which discreditable associations are already known to attach. If a
revolutionary agitator is called Catiline, that is because the name of Catiline
is already associated with reckless and treasonable designs. It would be silly
to conclude from the modern use of the nickname that there never had been such
a person as Catiline, and that the traditional story of him must be so
interpreted as best to describe the modern character. Further, while obscure
3rd-cent. heretics, fearing the odium of assailing directly one held in
veneration through the rest of the Christian world, might resort to disguise,
Paul's opponents, in his lifetime, had no temptation to resort to oblique
attacks : they could say what they pleased against Paul of Tarsus without
needing to risk being unintelligible by speaking of Simon of Gitta.
Lipsius, whose account of his
predecessors' speculations we have abridged from his art. "Simon," in
Schenkel's Bibel-Lexikon, exercises his own ingenuity
in dealing with the legendary history of Simon. The ingenuity which discovers
Paul in the Simon of the Acts has, of course, a much easier task in finding him
in the Simon of the legends. But since the history, as it has come down to us,
leaves much to be desired as an intentional libel on Paul, we must modify the
legends so as best to adapt them to this object, and must then believe we have
thus recovered the original form of the legend. Thus, the Homilies represent
the final disputation between Peter and Simon to have occurred at Laodicea; but
we must believe that the original form laid it at Antioch, where took place the
collision between Peter and Paul (Gal. II.). The Clementines represent Simon as
going voluntarily to Rome; but the original must surely have represented him as
taken there as a prisoner by the Roman authorities, and so on. It is needless to
examine minutely speculations vitiated by such methods of investigation.
The chronological order is—the
historical personage comes first; then legends arise about him; then the use
made of his name.
The proper order of
investigation is, therefore, first to ascertain what is historical about Simon
before discussing his legends. Now, it cannot reasonably be doubted that Simon
of Gitta is an historical personage. The heretical sect which claimed him for
its founder was regarded by Justin Martyr as most formidable; he speaks of it
as predominant in Samaria and not unknown elsewhere; probably he had met
members of it at Rome. Its existence is testified by Hegesippus and Celsus, who
states that some of them were called Heleniani; and
Clement of Alexandria, who states that one branch was called Eutychitae. It had become almost extinct in Origen's time,
who doubts whether there were then 30 Simonians in the world; but we need not
doubt its existence in Justin's time, nor the fact that it claimed Simon of
Gitta as its founder. Writings in his name were in circulation, teste the
Clementine Recognitions, and Epiphanius as confirming Hippolytus. The Simon of
Acts is also a real person. If we read Acts VIII, which relates the preaching
of Philip, in connexion with c. XXI., which tells of
several days spent by Luke in Philip's house, we have the simple explanation of
the insertion of the former chapter, that Luke gladly included in his history a
narrative of the early preaching of the gospel communicated by an eye-witness.
We need not ascribe to Luke any more recondite motive for relating the incident
than that he believed it had occurred. There is no evidence that this Samaritan
magician had obtained elsewhere any great notoriety; and there is every reason
to think that all later writers derive their knowledge from the Acts of the
Apostles.
We have already said that we
believe Justin mistaken in identifying Simon of the Acts with Simon of Gitta,
whom we take to have been a 2nd-cent. Gnostic teacher; but this identification
is followed in the Clementines. In any case, we see that the whole manufacture
of the latter story is later than Simon of Gitta, if not, as we believe, later
than Justin Martyr. The anti-Paulists, therefore, who
dressed Paul in the disguise of Simon, are more than a century later than any
opponents Paul had in his lifetime, who, if they wished to fix a nickname on
the apostle, were not likely to go to the Acts of the Apostles to look for one.
CERINTHUS
Cerinthus, a traditional opponent of St. John. It will
probably always remain an open question whether his fundamentally Ebionite
sympathies inclined him to accept Jewish rather than Gnostic additions. Modern
scholarship has therefore preferred to view his doctrine as a fusing together
and incorporating in a single system tenets collected from Jewish, Oriental,
and Christian sources; but the nature of that doctrine is sufficiently clear,
and its opposition to the instruction of St. John as decided as that of the
Nicolaitanes.
Cerinthus was of Egyptian origin, and in religion a
Jew. He received his education in the Judaeo- Philonic school of Alexandria. On leaving Egypt he visited
Jerusalem, Caesarea, and Antioch. From Palestine he passed into Asia and there
developed his heresy. Galatia, according to the same authority, was selected as
his headquarters, whence he circulated his errors. On one of his Journeys he
arrived at Ephesus, and met St. John in the public baths. The Apostle, hearing
who was there, fled from the place as if for life, crying to those about him :
"Let us flee, lest the bath fall in while Cerinthus, the enemy of the
truth, is there."
The value of this and other such traditions is
confessedly not great—that of the meeting with St. John in the bath is told of
"Ebion" as well as of Cerinthus;—but a
stratum of fact probably underlies them, and they at least indicate the feeling
with which the "early Churchmen" regarded him. Epiphanius, by whom
the majority are preserved, derived the principal portion of his statements
partly from Irenaeus, and partly, as Lipsius has shown with high probability,
from the now lost earlier work of Hippolytus on heresies.
His doctrines may be collected under the heads of his
conception of the Creation, his Christology, and his Eschatology. His opinions
upon two of these points, as preserved in existing works, support the usual
view, that Cerinthus rather than Simon Magus is to be regarded as the
predecessor of Judaeo-Christian Gnosticism.
Unlike Simon Magus and Menander, Cerinthus did not
claim a sacred and mystic power. Caius the Presbyter can only assert against
him that he pretended to angelic revelations. But his mind, like theirs,
brooded over the co-existence of good and evil, spirit and matter; and his
scheme seems intended to free the "unknown God" and the Christ from
the bare imputation of infection through contact with nature and man.
Trained as he was in the philosophy of Philo, the
Gnosis of Cerinthus did not of necessity compel him to start from opposition—in
the sense of malignity—of evil to good, matter to spirit. He recognized
opposition in the sense of difference between the one active perfect principle
of life—God—and that lower imperfect passive existence which was dependent upon
God; but this fell far short of malignity. He therefore conceived the material
world to have been formed not by "the First God", but by angelic
Beings of an inferior grade of Emanation. More precisely still he described the
main agent as a certain Power separate and distinct from the
"Principality" and ignorant of God's Fatherhood. He refused in the
spirit of a true Jew to consider the " God of the Jews" identical
with that author of the material world who was alleged by Gnostic teachers to
be inferior and evil. He preferred to identify him with the Angel who delivered
the Law. Neander and Ewald have pointed out that these are legitimate
deductions from the teaching of Philo. The conception is evidently that of an
age when hereditary and instinctive reverence for the law served as a check
upon the system maker. Cerinthus is a long way from the bolder and more hostile
schools of later Gnosticism.
The Christology is of an Ebionite cast and of the same
transition character. It must not be assumed that it is but a form of the
common Gnostic dualism, the double-personality afterwards elaborated by
Basilides and Valentinus. Epiphanius, the chief source of information, is to
many a mere uncritical compiler, sometimes following Hippolytus, sometimes
Irenaeus. Now it is Christ Who is born of Mary and Joseph, now it is Jesus Who
is born like other men, born of Joseph and Mary; He differs from others only in
being more righteous, more prudent, and more wise; it is not till after
baptism, when Jesus has reached manhood, that Christ, "that is to say, the
Holy Spirit in the form of a dove", descends upon Jesus from above,
revealing to Him and through Him to those after Him the "unknown
Father". If, as Lipsius thinks, Irenaeus has here been influenced by the
later Gnostic systems, and has altered the original doctrine of Cerinthus as
given in Hippolytus, that doctrine would seem to be that he considered
"Jesus" and "Christ" titles given indifferently to that One
Personality Which was blessed by the descent of the Holy Spirit, the Power on
high. This Power enables Jesus to perform miracles, but forsakes Him at His
Passion, "flying heavenwards". So, again, it is Jesus, according to
one passage of Epiphanius, Who dies and rises again, the Christ being spiritual
and remaining impassible; according to a second, it is Christ Who dies, but is
not yet risen, nor shall He rise till the general resurrection. That passage,
however, which allows that the human body of Jesus had been raised from the
dead separates its author completely from Gnostic successors.
The Chiliastic eschatology of Cerinthus is very
clearly stated by Theodoret, Caius, Dionysius (Eus.),
and Augustine, but not alluded to by Irenaeus. His silence need perhaps cause
no surprise : Irenaeus was himself a Chiliast of the spiritual school, and in
his notes upon Cerinthus he is only careful to mention what was peculiar to his
system. The conception of Cerinthus was highly coloured.
In his "dream" and "phantasy" the Lord shall have an
earthly kingdom in which the elect are to enjoy pleasures, feasts, marriages,
and sacrifices. Its capital is Jerusalem and its duration 1000 years :
thereafter shall ensue the restoration of all things. Cerinthus derived this
notion from Jewish sources. His notions of eschatology are radically Jewish :
they may have originated, but do not contain, the Valentinian notion of a
spiritual marriage between the souls of the elect and the Angels of the
Pleroma.
Other peculiar features of his teaching may be noted.
He held that if a man died unbaptized, another was to be baptized in his stead
and in his name, that at the day of resurrection he might not suffer punishment
and be made subject to Judgement.
He had learned at Alexandria to distinguish between
the different degrees of inspiration, and attributed to different Angels the
dictation severally of the words of Moses and of the Prophets; in this agreeing
with Saturninus and the Ophites. He insisted upon a
partial observance of the "divine" law, such as circumcision and the
ordinances of the sabbath; resembling, in this severance of the genuine from
the spurious elements of the law, the school which produced the Clementina and
the Book of Baruch. He did not even scruple to call him who gave the law
"not good", though the epithet may have been intended to express a
charge of ethical narrowness rather than an identification of the Lawgiver with
the doctrine of Marcion. Epiphanius admits that the majority of these opinions
rest upon report and oral communication. This, coupled with the evident
confusion of the statements recorded, makes it difficult to assign to Cerinthus
any certain place in the history of heresy. He can only be regarded generally
as a link connecting Judaism and Gnosticism.
The traditionary relations of Cerinthus to St. John
have probably done more to rescue his name from oblivion than his opinions. In
the course of time popular belief asserted that St. John had written his Gospel
specially against the errors of Cerinthus, a belief curiously travestied by the
counter-assertion that not St. John but Cerinthus himself was the author of
both the Gospel and the Apocalypse. It is not difficult to account on
subjective grounds for this latter assertion. The Chiliasm of Cerinthus was an
exaggeration of language current in the earliest ages of the church; and no
work in N.T. reproduced that language so ingenuously as the Apocalypse. The
conclusion was easy that Cerinthus had but ascribed the Apocalypse The Cerinthians (known also
as Merinthians) do not appear to have long survived.
If any are identical with the Ebionites mentioned by Justin, some gradually
diverged from their master in a retrograde direction; but the majority were
engulfed in sects of greater note. One last allusion to them is found in the
ecclesiastical rule applied to them by Ciennadius Massiliensis: "Ex istis si qui ad nos venerint,
non requirendum ab eis utrum baptizati sint an non, sed hoc tantum, si credant in ecclesiae fidem, et baptizentur ecclesiastico baptismate".
MENANDER
Menander, a Samaritan
false teacher in the early part of the 2nd cent. Our knowledge of him is
probably all derived, either directly or indirectly, from Justin Martyr. What
he tells directly is, that Menander was a native of the Samaritan town Capparatea, and a disciple of Simon, and, like him, had
been instigated by the demons to deceive many by his magic arts; that he had
had success of this kind at Antioch, where he had taught, and had persuaded his
followers that they should not die; and that, when Justin wrote, some of them
survived, holding this persuasion. Justin wrote a special treatise against
heresies, and from this, in all probability, was derived the somewhat fuller
account given by Irenaeus. According to this, Menander did not, like Simon, declare
himself to be the chief power, but taught that that power was unknown to all.
He gave the same account as Simon of the creation of the world—viz. that
"it had been made by angels" who had taken their origin from the Ennoea of the supreme power. He put himself forward as
having been sent by the invisible powers to mankind as a Saviour,
enabling men, by the magical power which he taught them, to get the better of
these creative angels. He taught that through baptism in his own name his
disciples received a resurrection, and should thenceforward abide in immortal
youth. Irenaeus evidently understood this language literally, and the history
of heretical sects shows that it is not incredible that such promises may have
been made; but the continuance of a belief which the experience of the past
must have disproved indicates that a spiritual interpretation must have been
found. Cyril of Jerusalem treats the denial of a literal resurrection of the
body as a specially Samaritan heresy.
Irenaeus, having spoken of
Valentinus and Marcion, says that the other Gnostics, as had been shewn, took
their beginnings from Menander, the disciple of Simon; and there is every
probability that it was from the "Samaritan" Justin that Irenaeus
learned his pedigree of Gnosticism, viz. that it originated with the Samaritan
Simon, and was continued by his disciple Menander, who taught at Antioch, and
that there Saturninus (and, apparently, Basilides) learned from him.
The name Menandrianists occurs in the list of Hegesippus. Tertullian
evidently knows only what he has learned from Irenaeus. The same may be said of
all later writers, and it is scarcely worth while to mention the imaginary
condemnation of these heretics by Lucius of Rome, invented "by Praedestinatus".
SATURNINUS
Saturninus . In the
section of his work commencing I. 22 Irenaeus gives a list of heretics,
apparently derived from Justin Martyr. The first two are the Samaritan
heretics, Simon and Menander; the next, as having derived their doctrines from
these, Saturninus and Basilides, who taught, the former in the Syrian Antioch,
the latter in Egypt. Irenaeus says that Saturninus, like Menander, ascribed the
ultimate origin of things to a Father unknown to all; and taught that this
Father made angels, archangels, powers, authorities, but that the world and the
things therein were made by a certain company of seven angels, in whom no doubt
we are to recognize the rulers of the seven planetary spheres. He taught that
man was the work of the same angels. They had seen a brilliant image descend
from the Supreme Power, and had striven to detain it, but in vain; for it
immediately shot back again. So they encouraged each other : "Let us make
man after the image and after the likeness ". They made the man, but were
too feeble to give him power to stand erect, and he lay on the ground wriggling
like a worm until the Upper Power, taking compassion on him because he had been
made "in Its likeness," sent a spark of life which raised him and
made him live. Saturninus taught that after man's death this spark runs back to
its kindred, while the rest of man is resolved into the elements whence he was
made.
The same creation myth is
reported by Irenaeus to have been included in the system commonly known as
Ophite. But according to the Ophite story it is not the Supreme Power, but Ialdabaoth, the chief of the creative company, who bestows
the breath of life; and these angels say, as in Genesis, "Let us make man
after our image."
We may count Saturninus as
the originator of the myth, for the Ophite version has marks of less simplicity
and originality. Saturninus further taught that the God of the Jews was one of
the seven creator angels. He and his company were in constant warfare with
Satan and a company of evil angels. So, likewise, there were two distinct
species of men, the bad ever aided by the demons in their conflicts with the
good. Then the Supreme Father sent a Saviour to
destroy the power of the God of the Jews and the other Archons; and to save
those who had the spark of life in them—that is to say, the good. This Saviour had no human birth or human body, and was only a
man in appearance.
Saturninus ascribed the
Jewish prophecies, some to the creator angels and some to Satan. This is one of
several points of coincidence between the reports given by Irenaeus of the
teaching of Saturninus and of the Ophites. These do
not ascribe any of the prophecies to Satan, but Irenaeus gives the scheme
according to which they distributed them among the several angels. Saturninus
does not appear to have left any writings. His sect is named by Justin Martyr
and by Hegesippus. No later heresiologist appears to know anything about him
beyond what he learned from Irenaeus; and Irenaeus probably derived all his
knowledge from Justin Martyr.
BASILIDES
Basilides, the founder of
one of the semi-Christian sects, commonly called Gnostic, which sprang up in
the early part of the 2nd cent.
I. Biography.—He called
himself a disciple of one Glaucias, alleged to be an
interpreter of St. Peter. He taught at Alexandria : Hippolytus in general terms
mentions Egypt. Indeed Epiphanius enumerates various places in Egypt visited by
Basilides; but subsequently allows it to appear that his knowledge of the districts
where Basilidians existed in his own time was his
only evidence. If the Alexandrian Gnostic is the Basihdes quoted in the Acts of the
Disputation of Archelaus and Mani, he was reported to have preached
in Persia. Nothing more is known of his life. According to Epiphanius, he had
been a fellow- disciple of Menander with Saturnilus at Antioch in Syria; but this is evidently an arbitrary extension of Irenaeus's
remarks on the order of doctrines to personal relations. If the view of the
doctrines of Basilides taken in this article is correct, they afford no good
grounds for supposing him to have had a Syrian education. Gnostic ideas derived
originally from Syria were sufficiently current at Alexandria, and the
foundation of what is distinctive in his thoughts is Greek.
Several independent
authorities indicate the reign of Hadrian (a.d. 117-138) as the time when Basilides flourished. To prove that the heretical
sects were "later than the Catholic church," Clement of Alexandria
marks out early Christian history into different periods : he assigns Christ's
own teaching to the reigns of Augustus and Tiberius; that of the apostles, of
St. Paul at least, ends, he says, in the time of Nero; whereas " the
authors of the sects arose later, about the times of the emperor Hadrian, and
continued quite as late as the age of the elder Antoninus". He gives as
examples Basilides, Valentinus, and (if the text is sound) Marcion, taking
occasion by the way to throw doubts on the claims set up for the two former as
having been instructed by younger contemporaries of St. Peter and St. Paul
respectively, by pointing out that about half a century lay between the death
of Nero and the accession of Hadrian. Again Eusebius places Saturninus and
Basilides under Hadrian. Yet his language about Carpocrates a few lines further
on suggests a doubt whether he had any better evidence than a fallacious
inference from their order in Irenaeus. He was acquainted with the refutation
of Basilides by Agrippa Castor; but it is not clear, as is sometimes assumed, that
he meant to assign both writers to the same reign. His chronicle (Armenian) at
the year 17 of Hadrian (a.d. 133) has the note
"The heresiarch Basilides appeared at these times"; which Jerome, as
usual, expresses rather more definitely. A similar statement without the year
is repeated by Jerome where an old corrupt reading (mortuus for moratus)
led some of the earlier critics to suppose they had found a limit for the date
of Basilides's death. Theodoret evidently follows Eusebius. Earliest of all,
but vaguest, is the testimony of Justin Martyr. Writing in or soon after a.d. 145, he refers briefly to the founders of heretical
sects, naming first the earliest, Simon and Menander, followers of whom were
still alive; and then apparently the latest, Marcion, himself still alive. The
probable inference that the other great heresiarchs, including Basilides, were
by this time dead receives some confirmation from a passage in his Dialogue
against Trypho, a later but probably not much later book, where the "Marcians", Valentinians, Basilidians, Saturnilians, "and others", are enumerated,
apparently in inverse chronological order : the growth of distinct and
recognized sects implies at least the lapse of some time since the promulgation
of their several creeds. It seems therefore impossible to place Basilides later
than Hadrian's time; and, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, we
may trust the Alexandrian Clement's statement that his peculiar teaching began
at no earlier date.
II. Writings.—According to
Agrippa Castor, Basilides wrote "twenty-fourbooks on the Gospel." These are no doubt the Exegetica,
from the twenty-third of which Clement gives an extract. The same work is
doubtless intended by the "treatises " (tractatuum), the
thirteenth book of which is cited in the Acta Archelai, if the
same Basilides is referred to. The authorship of an actual Gospel, of the
"apocryphal" class, is likewise attributed to Basilides on plausible
grounds. The word "taken in hand" in Luke I. 1 gives Origen occasion
to distinguish between the four evangelists, who wrote by inspiration, and
other writers who "took in hand" to produce Gospels. He mentions some
of these, and proceeds "Basilides had even the audacity" to write a Gospel
according to Basilides; that is, he went beyond other fabricators of Gospels by
affixing his own name. This passage is freely translated, though without
mention of Origen's name, by Ambrose; and is probably Jerome's authority in an
enumeration of the chief apocryphal Gospels; for among the six others which he
mentions the four named by Origen recur, including that of the Twelve Apostles,
otherwise unknown. Yet no trace of a Gospel by Basilides exists elsewhere; and
it seems most probable either that Origen misunderstood the nature of the Exegetica,
or that they were sometimes known under the other name.
An interesting question
remains, in what relation the Exegetica stand to
the exposition of doctrine which fills eight long chapters of Hippolytus.
Basilides (or the Basilidians), we are told, defined
the Gospel as "the knowledge of supermundane things", and the idea of
the progress of "the Gospel" through the different orders of beings
plays a leading part in the Basilidian doctrine. But
there is not the slightest reason to think that the "Gospel" here
spoken of was a substitute for the Gospel in a historical sense, any more than
in St. Paul's writings. Indeed several passages, with their allusions to Rom.
V. 14, vVIII. 19, 22, 23 ; I. Cor. II. 13 ; II. Cor.
XII. 4 ; Eph. I. 21, III. 3, 5, 10, prove that the writer was throughout
thinking of St. Paul's "mystery of the Gospel". Hippolytus states
distinctly that the Basilidian account of "all
things concerning the Saviour" subsequent to
"the birth of Jesus "agreed with that given in "the
Gospels". It may therefore be reasonably conjectured that his exposition, if
founded on a work of Basilides himself, is a summary of the opening book or
books of the Exegetica,
describing that part of the redemptive process, or of the preparation for it,
which was above and antecedent to the phenomenal life of Jesus. The comments on
the Gospel itself, probably containing much ethical matter, as we may gather
from Clement, would have little attraction for Hippolytus.
The certain fragments of
the Exegetica have been collected by Grabe, followed
by Massuet and Stieren in their editions of Irenaeus;
but he passes over much in Clement which assuredly has no other origin. A
single sentence quoted in Origen's commentary on Romans, and given further on,
is probably from the same source. In an obscure and brief fragment preserved in
a Catena on Job, Origen implies the existence of Odes by Basilides and
Valentinus. No other writings of Basilides are mentioned.
III. Authenticity of the Hippolytean Extracts.—In endeavouring to form a clear conception of the work and doctrine of Basilides, we are met at
the outset by a serious difficulty. The different accounts were never easy to
harmonize, and some of the best critics of the first half of the 19th cent,
considered them to refer to two different systems of doctrine. But till 1851
their fragmentary nature suggested that the apparent incongruities might
conceivably be due only to the defects of our knowledge, and seemed to invite
reconstructive boldness on the part of the historian. The publication of
Hippolytus's Refutation of
all Heresies in 1851 placed the whole question on a new
footing. Hardly any one has ventured to maintain the possibility of reconciling
its ample statements about Basilides with the reports of Irenaeus and
Epiphanius. Which account then most deserves our confidence?
Before attempting to
answer this question it is well to enumerate the authorities. They are Agrippa
Castor as cited by Eusebius, Clement of Alexandria, Irenaeus, the anonymous
supplement to Tertullian, de Praescriptione, the
Refutation of Hippolytus, Epiphanius, Philaster, and
Theodoret, and possibly the Acta Archelai, besides a few scattered notices
which may be neglected here. This ample list shrinks, however, into small
dimensions at the touch of criticism.
Theodoret's chapter is a disguised compilation from previous
Greek writers. The researches of Lipsius have proved that Epiphanius followed
partly Irenaeus, partly the lost Compendium of Hippolytus, this same work being
also the common source of the Latin authors pseudo-Tertullian and Philaster.
Our ultimate authorities
therefore are Irenaeus (or the unknown author from whom he took this section of
his work), the Compendium of Hippolytus (represented by Epiphanius, Philaster, and pseudo-Tertullian), Clement and the
Refutation of Hippolytus, together with a short statement by Agrippa Castor,
and probably a passing reference and quotation in the Acts of Archelaus.
It is now generally
allowed that the notices of Clement afford the surest criterion by which to
test other authorities. Not only does his whole tone imply exact personal
knowledge, but he quotes a long passage directly from the Exegetica.
Is then his account, taken as a whole, consistent with other accounts? And does
it agree best with the reports of Irenaeus and Hippolytus in his younger days,
or with the elaborate picture drawn by Hippolytus at a later time? This second
question has received opposite answers from recent critics. A majority have
given the preference to Hippolytus; while Hilgenfeld (who three years before,
in his earliest book, the treatise On
the Clementine Homilies and Recognitions, had described the Basilidian system from the then known records, endeavouring with perverse ingenuity to show their virtual
consistency with each other) has prided himself on not being dazzled by the new
authority, whom he holds to be in effect describing not Basilides but a late
development of his sect; and Lipsius takes the same view.
It should be observed at
the outset that the testimony of Clement is not quite so homogeneous as is
generally assumed. Six times he criticises doctrines
of "Basilides" himself; eight times he employs the ambiguous plural.
Are we to suppose a distinction here, or is the verbal difference accidental?
Both views might be maintained. The quotation from the Exegetica is a piece of moral argument on Providence, wholly free from the technical
terms of Gnostic mythology. In the succeeding discussion Clement eventually
uses plurals, which might equally imply that he employs both forms
indifferently, or that he distinguishes Basilides from his followers within the
limits of a single subject.
The other references to
"Basilides" are likewise of a distinctly ethical character, while
several of the passages containing the plural name abound in technical
language. Yet the distinction is not absolute on either side.
"Basilides" furnishes the terms "the Ogdoad", "the
election", "supermundane"; while such subjects as the nature of
faith, the relation of the passions to the animal soul, and the meaning of
Christ's saying about eunuchs, occur in the other group, though they remind us
rather of Basilides himself. In the last passage, moreover, the ambiguous
plural is applied to a quotation intended to shame by contrast the immoral Basilidians of Clement's own time; and a similar quotation
from Basilides's son Isidore immediately follows; the authors of the two
quotations being designated as "the forefathers of their (the late Basilidians') doctrines". It is hard to believe that
mere anonymous disciples, though of an earlier date, would be appealed to in
this manner, or would take precedence of the master's own son. On the whole,
there can be no reasonable doubt that all the doctrinal statements in Clement
concern Basilides himself, when not distinctly otherwise expressed, and depend
on direct knowledge of the Exegetica. With good
reason therefore they may be assumed as a trustworthy basis for the whole
investigation. The most doubtful instances are
the passages cited presently on the Baptism and on the descent of the Minister,
i.e. the Holy Spirit.
The range of possible
contact between the quotations and reports of Clement and any of the other
authorities is not large. His extant writings contain nothing like an attempt
to describe the Basilidian System. The Stromates, which furnish the quotations from Basilides,
expressly limit themselves to moral and practical questions; and reserve for a
future work, i.e. the lost Hypotyposes,
the exposition of the higher doctrine belonging to the department of knowledge
which the Stoics called Physics, beginning with the Creation and leading up to
Theology proper. Now it is precisely to this latter department that the bulk of
Gnostic speculation would belong, and especially such theories as Hippolytus
ascribes to Basilides; and moreover Clement distinctly promises that in the
course of that loftier investigation he will "set forth in detail the
doctrines of the heretic, and endeavour to refute
them to the best of his power". We have therefore no right to expect in
the Stromates any cosmological or even theological matter
respecting Basilides except such as may accidentally adhere to the ethical
statements, the subjects treated of in the various books "against all
heresies" being formally excluded by Clement. His sphere being thus
distinct from theirs, the marked coincidences of language that we do find
between him and Hippolytus afford a strong presumption that, if the one account
is authentic, the other is so likewise. Within the narrow limits of Clement's
information we meet with the phrases "primitive medley and confusion",
and on the other hand "separation" (differentiation) and restoration
;with a division of the universe into stages, and prominence given to the
sphere of "super-mundane "things; with an "Ogdoad" and an
"Archon"; all of these terms being conspicuous and essential in the Hippolytean representation. Above all, we hear of the
amazement of the Archon on receiving "the utterance of the ministering
Spirit" or "Minister" as being that fear of the Lord whichis called the beginning of wisdom; the utterance itself
being implied to be a Gospel; while Hippolytus describes the same passage as
interpreted of the amazement of the Great Archon on receiving " the
Gospel", a revelation of things unknown, through his Son, who had received
it from a "power" within the Holy Spirit. The coincidences are thus
proportionately great, and there are no contradictions to balance them : so
that it would require strong evidence to rebut the conclusion that Clement and
Hippolytus had the same materials before them. Such evidence does not exist.
The coincidences between Clement and the Irenaean tradition are limited to the widely spread "Ogdoad" and a single
disputable use of the word "Archon", and there is no similarity of
doctrines to make up for the absence of verbal identity. The only tangible
argument against the view that Hippolytus describes the original system of
Basilides is its Greek rather than Oriental character, which is assumed to be
incompatible with the fundamental thoughts of a great Gnostic leader. We shall
have other opportunities of inquiring how far the evidence supports this wide
generalization as to Gnosticism at large. As regards Basilides personally, the
only grounds for expecting from him an Oriental type of doctrine are the
quotation in the Acts of Archelaus, which will be discussed further on, and the
tradition of his connexion with Saturninus of
Antioch, which we have already seen to be founded on a misconception. The
fragmentary notices and extracts in Clement, admitted on all hands to be
authentic, are steeped in Greek philosophy; so that the Greek spirit of the Hippolytean representation is in fact an additional
evidence for its faithfulness. It may yet be asked, Did Hippolytus consult the
work of Basilides himself, or did he depend on an intermediate reporter? His
own language, though not absolutely decisive, favours the former alternative. On the one hand it may be urged that he makes no
mention of a book, that occasionally he quotes by the words "they
say", "according to them", and that his exposition is
immediately preceded by the remark, "Let us then see how openly both
Basilides and [his son] Isidore and the whole band of them not merely
calumniate Matthias [from whom they professed to have received records of
Christ's secret teaching], but also the Saviour Himself ". Against these indications may be set the ten places where
Basilides is referred to singly, and the very numerous quotations by the words
"he says". It is true that Greek usage permits the occasional use of
the singular even when no one Writer or book is intended. But in this case the
most natural translation is borne out by some of the language quoted. The first
person singular proves the book in Hippolytus's hands to have been written by
an original speculator; yet this very quotation is immediately followed by a
comment on it with the third person plural which here at least can mean no more
than that Hippolytus held the Basilidians of his own
day responsible for the doctrines of his author. The freshness and power of the
whole section, wherever we touch the actual words of the author, strongly
confirm the impression that he was no other than Basilides himself. Thus we are
led independently to the conclusion suggested by the correspondence with the
information of Clement, whom we know to have drawn from the fountain-head, the Exegetica. The fancy that the book used by Hippolytus was
itself the Traditions of Matthias has nothing to recommend it. The whole form
is unlike that which analogy would lead us to expect in such a production. If
it was quoted as an authority in the Exegetica, the
language of Hippolytus is justified. Nor is there anything in this inconsistent
with the fact vouched for by Clement that Basilides claimed to have been taught
by Glaucias, an "interpreter" of St. Peter.
We shall therefore assume
that the eight chapters of Hippolytus represent faithfully though imperfectly
the contents of part at least of the Exegetica of
Basilides; and proceed to describe his doctrine on their authority, using
likewise the testimony of Clement wherever it is available.
IV. Doctrine.—Basilides
asserts the beginning of all things to have been pure nothing. He uses every
device of language to express absolute nonentity. He will not allow the
primitive nothing to be called even "unspeakable": that, he says,
would be naming it, and it is above every name that is named. Nothing then
being in existence, "not-being God" (or Deity, the article is omitted
here) willed to make a not-being world out of not-being things. Once more great
pains are "taken to obviate the notion that willing " implied any
mental attribute whatever. Also the world so made was not the extended and
differentiated world to which we gave the name, but "a single seed
containing within itself all the seed-mass of the world", the aggregate of
the seeds of all its forms and substances, as the mustard seed contains the
branches and leaves of the tree, or the peahen's egg the brilliant colour of the full-grown peacock. This was the one origin
of all future growths; their seeds lay stored up by the will of the not-being
God in the single world-seed, as in the new-born babe its future teeth and the
resemblances to its father which are thereafter to appear. Its own origin too
from God was not a putting-forth, as a spider puts forth its web from itself.
(By this assertion, on which Hippolytus dwells with emphasis, every notion of
"emanation" is expressly repudiated.) Nor was there an antecedent
matter, like the brass or wood wrought by a mortal man. The words "Let
there be light, and there was light" convey the whole truth. The light
came into being out of nothing but the voice of the Speaker "and the
Speaker was not, and that which came into being was not". What then was
the first stage of growth of the seed? It had within itself "a tripartite
sonship, in all things consubstantial with the not-being God". Part of the
sonship was subtle of substance, part coarse of substance, part needing
purification. Simultaneously with the first beginning of the seed the subtle
sonship burst through and mounted swiftly up "like a wing or a
thought" till it reached the not-being God; "for toward Him for His
exceeding beauty and grace every kind of nature yearns, each in its own
way".
The coarse sonship could
not mount up of itself, but it took to itself as a wing the Holy Spirit, each
bearing up the other with mutual benefit, even as neither a bird can soar
without wing, nor a wing without a bird. But when it came near the blessed and
unutterable place of the subtle sonship and the not-being God, it could take
the Holy Spirit no further, as not being consubstantial or of the same nature
with itself. There, then, retaining and emitting downwards the fragrance of the
sonship like a vessel that has once held ointment, the Holy Spirit remained, as
a firmament dividing things above the world from "the world " itself
below.
The third sonship
continued still within the heap of the seed-mass. But out of the heap burst
forth into being the Great Archon, "the head of the world, a beauty and
greatness and power that cannot be uttered". He too raised himself aloft
till he reached the firmament which he supposed to be the upward end of all
things. Then he became wiser and every way better than all other cosmical
things except the sonship left below, which he knew not to be far better than
himself. So he turned to create the world in its several parts. But first he
"made to himself and begat out of the things below a son far better and
wiser than himself", for thus the not-being God had willed from the first;
and smitten with wonder at his son's beauty, he set him at his right hand.
"This is what they call the Ogdoad, where the Great Archon is
sitting". Then all the heavenly or ethereal creation (apparently included
in the Ogdoad), as far down as the moon, was made by the Great Archon, inspired
by his wiser son. Again another Archon arose out of the seed-mass, inferior to
the first Archon, but superior to all else below except the sonship; and he
likewise made to himself a son wiser than himself, and became the creator and
governor of the aerial world. This region is called the Hebdomad.
On the other hand, in the
heap and seed-mass, constituting our own (the terrestrial) stage, those things
that come to pass come to pass according to nature, as having been previously
uttered by Him Who hath planned the fitting time and form and manner of
utterance of the things that were to be uttered : and these things have no one
to rule over them, or exercise care for them, or create them : for sufficient
for them is that plan which the not-being One planned when He was making"
[the seed-mass].
Such is the original
cosmogony as conceived by Basilides, and it supplies the base for his view of
the Gospel, as well as of the interval before the coming of the Gospel into the
world. When the whole world had been finished, and the things above the world,
and nothing was lacking, there remained in the seed-mass the third sonship,
which had been left behind to do good and receive good in the seed; and it was
needful that the sonship thus left behind should be revealed and restored up
yonder above the Limitary Spirit to join the subtle and imitative sonship and
the not-being One, as it is written, "And the creation itself groaneth together and travaileth together, expecting the revelation of the sons of God". Now we the
spiritual, he said, are sons left behind here to order and to inform and to
correct and to perfect the souls whose nature it is to abide in this stage.
Till Moses, then, from Adam sin reigned, as it is written; for the Great Archon
reigned, he whose end reaches to the firmament, supposing himself to be God
alone, and to have nothing above him, for all things remained guarded in secret
silence; this is the mystery which was not made known to the former
generations. But in those times the Great Archon, the Ogdoad, was king and
lord, as it appeared, of all things : and moreover, the Hebdomad was king and
lord of this stage; and the Ogdoad is unutterable, but the Hebdomad utterable.
This, the Archon of the Hebdomad, is he who spoke to Moses and said, "I am
the God of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob, and the name of God did I not make
known to them" (for so, says Hippolytus, they will have it read), that is,
of the unutterable God who is Archon of the Ogdoad. All the prophets,
therefore, that were before the Saviour, spoke from
that source.
This short interpretation
of the times before Christ, which has evidently suffered in the process of
condensation by Hippolytus, carries us at once to the Gospel itself. "Becaustherefore it was needful that we the children of God
should be revealed, concerning whom the creation groaned and travailed,
expecting the revelation, the Gospel came into the world, and passed through
every principality and power and lordship, and every name that is named".
There was still no downward coming from above, no departure of the ascended
sonship from its place; but "from below from the formlessness of the heap
the powers penetrated up to the sonship" (i.e. probably throughout the
scale the power of each stage penetrated to the stage immediately above), and
so thoughts were caught from above as naphtha catches fire at a distance
without contact. Thus the power within the Holy Spirit "conveyed the
thoughts of the sonship, as they flowed and drifted to the son of the Great
Archon"; and he in turn instructed the Great Archon himself, by whose side
he was sitting.
Then first the Great
Archon learned that he was not God of the universe, but had himself come into
being, and had above him yet higher beings; he discovered with amazement his
own past ignorance, and confessed his sin in having magnified himself. This fear
of his, said Basilides, was that fear of the Lord which is the beginning of
wisdom (wisdom to "separate and discern and perfect and restore").
From him and the Ogdoad the Gospel had next to pass to the Hebdomad. Its
Archon's son received the light from the son of the Great Archon, he became
himself enlightened, and declared the Gospel to the Archon of the Hebdomad, and
he too feared and confessed, and all that was in the Hebdomad received the
light.
It remained only that the
formlessness of our own region should be enlightened, and that the hidden
mystery should be revealed to the third sonship left behind in the
formlessness, as to "one born out of due time". The light came down
from the Hebdomad upon Jesus the Son of Mary. That this descent of the light
was represented as taking place at the Annunciation, and not merely at the
Baptism, is clearly implied in the express reference to the words of the angel
in Luke I. 35, "A Holy Spirit shall come upon thee," which are
explained to mean" that [? spirit] which passed from the sonship through
the Limitary Spirit to the Ogdoad and the Hebdomad till it reached Mary "
(the interpretation of the following words, "And a power of the Most High
shall overshadow thee", appears to be hopelessly corrupt). On the other
hand, when it is described as a result of the descent of the light from the
Hebdomad "upon Jesus the Son of Mary", that He "was enlightened,
being kindled in union with the light that shone on Him", the allusion to
the traditional light at the Baptism can hardly be questioned; more especially
when we read in Clement's Excerpta that
the Basilidians interpreted the dove to be "the
Minister". the revealing "power" within the Holy Spirit.
From the Nativity
Hippolytus's exposition passes on at once to its purpose in the future and the
final consummation. The world holds together as it is now, we learn, until all
the sonship that has been left behind, to give benefits to the souls in formlessness
and to receive benefits by obtaining distinct form, follows Jesus and mounts up
and is purified and becomes most subtle, so that it can mount by itself like
the first sonship; "for it has all its power naturally established in
union with the light that shone down from above". When every sonship has
arrived above the Limitary Spirit, "then the creation shall find mercy,
for till now it groans and is tormented and awaits the revelation of the sons
of God, that all the men of the sonship may ascend from hence". When this
has come to pass, God will bring upon the whole world the Great Ignorance, that
everything may remain according to nature, and that nothing may desire aught
that is contrary to nature. Thus all the souls of this stage, whose nature it
is to continue immortal in this stage alone, will remain without knowledge of
anything higher and better than this, lest they suffer torment by craving for
things impossible, like a fish desiring to feed with the sheep on the
mountains, for such a desire would have been to them destruction. All things
are indestructible while they abide in their place, but destructible if they
aim at overleaping the bounds of Nature. Thus the Great Ignorance will overtake
even the Archon of the Hebdomad, that grief and pain and sighing may depart
from him : yea, it will overtake the Great Archon of the Ogdoad, and all the
creations subject to him, that nothing may in any respect crave for aught that
is against nature or may suffer pain. "And in this wise shall be the Restoration,
all things according to nature having been founded in the seed of the universe
in the beginning, and being restored at their due seasons. And that each thing
has its due seasons is sufficiently proved by the Saviour's words, 'My hour is not yet come', and by the beholding of the star by the Magi;
for even He Himself was subject to the 'genesis' [nativity] of the periodic
return, here used in the limited astrological sense, though above as
'restoration' generally of stars and hours, as foreordained in the great
heap".
"He," adds
Hippolytus, evidently meaning our Lord, "is [in the Basilidian view] the inner spiritual man in the natural [psychical] man; that is, a
sonship leaving its soul here, not a mortal soul, but one remaining in its
present place according to nature, just as the first sonship up above hath left
the Limitary Holy Spirit in a fitting place; He having at that time been
clothed with a soul of His own". These last two remarks, on the subjection
to seasons and on the ultimate abandonment of the immortal but earth-bound soul
by the ascending sonship or spiritual man, taking place first in the Saviour and then in the other "sons of God,"
belong in strictness to an earlier part of the scheme; but they may have been
placed here by Basilides himself, to explain the strange consummation of the
Great Ignorance. The principle receives perhaps a better illustration from what
purports to be an exposition of the Basilidian view
of the Gospel, with which Hippolytus concludes his report.
"According to
them," he says, "the Gospel is the knowledge of things above the
world, which knowledge the Great Archon understood not : when then it was shown
to him that there exists the Holy Spirit, that is the Limitary Spirit, and the
sonship and a God Who is the author of all these things, even the not-being
One, he rejoiced at what was told him, and was exceeding glad : this is
according to them the Gospel". Here Hippolytus evidently takes too
generally the special form under which Basilides represented the Gospel as made
known to the Great Archon. Nor, when he proceeds to say that "Jesus
according to them was born in the manner that we have previously
mentioned", is it clear that Basilides gave a different "Thus Jesus is become
the first fruits of the sorting; and the Passion has come to pass for no other
purpose than this, that the things confused might be sorted." For the
whole sonship left behind in the formlessness must needs be sorted in the same
manner as Jesus Himself hath been sorted. Thus, as Hippolytus remarks a little
earlier, the whole theory consists of the confusion of a seed-mass, and of the
sorting and restoration into their proper places of things so confused.
Clement's contributions to
our knowledge of Basilides refer chiefly, as has been said, to the ethical side
of his doctrine. Here "Faith" evidently played a considerable part.
In itself it was defined by "them of Basilides" as "an assent of
the soul to any of the things which do not excite sensation, because they are
not present"; the phrase being little more than a vague rendering of Heb.
XI. i, in philosophical language.
From another unfortunately
corrupt passage it would appear that Basilides accumulated forms of dignity in
celebration of faith. But the eulogies were in vain, Clement intimates, because
they abstained from setting forth faith as the "rational assent of a soul
possessing free will". They left faith a matter of "nature", not
of responsible choice. So again, while contrasting the honour shown by the Basilidians to faith with its
disparagement in comparison with "knowledge" by the Valentinians, he
accuses them of regarding it as "natural," and referring it to
"the election" while they apparently considered it to "discover
doctrines without demonstration by an intellective apprehension". He adds
that according to them (ot there is at once a faith
and an election of special character in each "stage", the mundane
faith of every nature follows in accordance with its supermundane election, and
for each (? being or stage) the [Divine] gift of his (or its) faith corresponds
with his (or its) hope. What "hope" was intended is not explained :
probably it is the range of legitimate hope, the limits of faculty accessible
to the beings inhabiting this or that "stage". It is hardly likely
that Clement would have censured unreservedly what appears here as the leading
principle of Basilides, the Divine resignment of a limited sphere of action to
each order of being, and the Divine bestowal of proportionally limited powers
of apprehending God upon the several orders, though it is true that Clement
himself specially cherished the thought of an upward progress from one height
of being to another, as part of the Divine salvation. Doubtless Basilides
pushed election so far as to sever a portion of mankind from the rest, as alone
entitled by Divine decree to receive the higher enlightenment. In "this
sense it must have been that he called the election a stranger to the world, as
being by nature supermundane"; while Clement maintained that no man can by
nature be a stranger to the world. It is hardly necessary to point out how
closely the limitation of spheres agrees with the doctrine on which the Great
Ignorance is founded, and the supermundane election with that of the Third
Sonship.
The same rigid adhesion to
the conception of natural fixity, and inability to accept Christian beliefs,
which transcend it, led Basilides to confine the remission of sins to those
which are committed involuntarily and in ignorance; as though, says Clement, it
were a man and not God that bestowed the gift. A like fatalistic view of
Providence is implied in the language held by Basilides in reference to the
sufferings of Christian martyrs. In this instance we have the benefit of verbal
extracts, though unfortunately their sense is in parts obscure. So far as they
go, they do not bear out the allegations of Agrippa Castor that Basilides
taught that the partaking of food offered to idols, and the heedless abjuration
of the faith in time of persecution was a thing indifferent; and of Origen,
that he depreciated the martyrs, and treated lightly the sacrificing to heathen
deities. The impression seems to have arisen partly from a misunderstanding of
the purpose of his argument, partly from the actual doctrine and practices of
later Basilidians; but it may also have had some
justification in incidental words which have not been preserved. Basilides is
evidently contesting the assumption, probably urged in controversy against his
conception of the justice of Providence, that the sufferers in "what are
called tribulations" are to be regarded as innocent, simply because they
suffer for their Christianity. He suggests that some are in fact undergoing
punishment for previous unknown sins, while "by the goodness of Him Who brings
events to pass" they are allowed the comfort of suffering as Christians,
not subject to the rebuke as the adulterer or the murderer"; and if there
be any who suffers without previous sin, it will not be "by the design of
an [adverse] power" but as suffers the babe who appears to have committed
no sin.
The next quotation
attempts at some length an exposition of this comparison with the babe. The
obvious distinction is drawn between sin committed in act and the capacity for
sin; the infant is said to receive a benefit when it is subjected to suffering,
"gaining" many hardships. So it is, he says, with the suffering of a
perfect man, for his not having sinned must not be set down to himself; though
he has done no evil, he must have willed evil; "for I will say anything
rather than call Providence evil." He did not shrink, Clement says, and
the language seems too conclusive, from applying his principle even to the
Lord. "If, leaving all these arguments, you go on to press me with certain
persons, saying, for instance, 'Such an one sinned therefore, for such an one
suffered', if you will allow me I will say, 'He did not sin, but he is like the
suffering babe'; but if you force the argument with greater violence, I will
say that any man whom you may choose to name is a man, and that God is
righteous; for 'no one', as it has been said, 'is clear of defilement'."
He likewise brought in thenotion of sin in a past
stage of existence suffering its penalty here, "the elect soul"
suffering "honourably through martyrdom, and the
soul of another kind being cleansed by an appropriate punishment."
To this doctrine of
metempsychosis "the Basilidians" are
likewise said to have referred the language of the Lord about requital to the
third and fourth generations; Origen states that Basilides himself interpreted
Rom. VII. 9 in this sense, "The Apostle said, 'I lived without a law
once', that is, before I came into this body, I lived in such a form of body as
was not under a law, that of a beast namely, or a bird"; and elsewhere
Origen complains that he deprived men of a salutary fear by teaching that transmigrations
are the only punishments after death. What more Basilides taught about
Providence as exemplified in martyrdoms is not easily brought together from
Clement's rather confused account. He said that one part of what is called the
will of God (i.e. evidently His own mind towards lower beings, not what He
would have their mind to be) is to love (or rather perhaps be satisfied with)
all things because all things preserve a relation to the universe, and another
to despise nothing, and a third to hate no single thing.
In the same spirit pain
and fear were described as natural accidents of things, as rust of iron. In
another sentence Providence seems to be spoken of as set in motion by the
Archon; by which perhaps was meant that the Archon was the unconscious agent
who carried into execution (within his own "stage") the long dormant
original counsels of the not-being God. The view of the harmony of the universe
just referred to finds expression, with a reminiscence of a famous sentence of
Plato , in a saying that Moses "set up one temple of God and an
only-begotten world".
We have a curious piece of
psychological theory in the account of the passions attributed to the Basilidians . They are accustomed, Clement says, to call
the passions Appendages, stating that these are certain spirits which have a
substantial existence, having been appended (or "attached", or
"adherent, various kinds of close external contact being expressed by to
the rational soul in a certain primitive turmoil and confusion, and that again
other bastard and alien natures of spirits grow upon these, as of a wolf, an
ape, a lion, a goat, whose characteristics, becoming perceptible in the region
of the soul, assimilate the desires of the son to the animals; for they imitate
the actions of those whose characteristics they wear, and not only acquire
intimacy with the impulses and impressions of the irrational animals, but even
imitate the movements and beauties of plants, because they likewise wear the
characteristics of plants appended to them; and [the passions] have also
characteristics of habit [derived from stones], as the hardness of adamant. In
the absence of the context it is impossible to determine the precise meaning
and origin of this singular theory. It was probably connected with the doctrine
of metempsychosis, which seemed to find support in Plato's Timaeus, and was
cherished by some neo-Pythagoreans later in the 2nd cent.; while the plurality
of souls is derided by Clement as making the body a Trojan horse, with apparent
reference to a similar criticism of Plato in the Theaetetiis.
And again Plutarch ridicules the Stoics (i.e. apparently Chrysippus) for a
"strange and outlandish" notion that all virtues and vices, arts and
memories, impressions and passions and impulses and assents (he adds further
down even "acts", such as "walking, dancing, supposing,
addressing, reviling") are not merely "bodies" (of course in the
familiar Stoic sense) but living creatures or animals, crowded apparently round
the central point within the heart where "the ruling principle" is
located : by this "swarm", he says, of hostile animals they turn each
one of us into "a paddock or a stable, or a Trojan horse". Such a
theory might seem to Basilides an easy deduction from his fatalistic doctrine
of Providence, and of the consequent immutability of all natures.
The only specimen which we
have of the practical ethics of Basilides is of a favourable kind, though grossly misunderstood and misapplied by Epiphanius. Reciting the
views of different heretics on Marriage, Clement mentions first its approval by
the Valentinians, and then gives specimens of the teaching of Basilides and his
son Isidore, by way of rebuke to the immorality of the later Basilidians, before proceeding to the sects which favoured licence, and to those
which treated marriage as unholy. He first reports the exposition of Matt. XIX.
II f. (or a similar evangelic passage), in which there is nothing specially to
note except the interpretation of the last class of eunuchs as those who remain
in celibacy to avoid the distracting cares of providing a livelihood. He goes
on to the paraphrase of I. Cor.VII. 9, interposing in
the midst an illustrative sentence from Isidore, and transcribes the language
used about the class above mentioned. "But suppose a young man either poor
or (?) depressed, and in accordance with the word [in the Gospel] unwilling to
marry, let him not separate from his brother; let him say 'I have entered into
the holy place, nothing can befall me'; but if he have a suspicion let him say,
'Brother, lay thy hand on me, that I may sin not', and he shall receive help
both to mind and to senses; let him only have the will to carry out completely
what is good, and he shall succeed. But sometimes we say with the lips, 'We
will not sin', while our thoughts are turned towards sinning : such an one
abstains by reason of fear from doing what he wills, lest the punishment be
reckoned to his account. But the estate of mankind has only certain things at
once necessary and natural, clothing being necessary and natural, but natural,
yet not necessary".
Although we have no
evidence that Basilides, like some others, regarded our Lord's Baptism as the
time when a Divine being first was joined to Jesus of Nazareth, it seems clear
that he attached some unusual significance to the event. "They of Basilides"
says Clement, "celebrate the day of His Baptism by a preliminary
night-service of [Scripture] readings; and they say that the 'fifteenth year of
Tiberius Caesar' is (or means) the fifteenth day of the [Egyptian] month Tybi, while some [make the day] the eleventh of the same
month". Again it is briefly stated in the Excerpta that the dove of the
Baptism is said by the Basilidians to be the
Minister. And the same association is implied in what Clement urges elsewhere:
"If ignorance belongs to the class of good things, why is it brought to an
end by amazement [i.e. the amazement of the Archon], and [so] the Minister that
they speak of is superfluous, and the Proclamation, and the Baptism : if
ignorance had not previously existed, the Minister would not have descended,
nor would amazement have seized the Archon, as they themselves say."
This language, taken in
conjunction with passages already cited from Hippolytus, implies that Basilides
regarded the Baptism as the occasion when Jesus received "the Gospel"
by a Divine illumination. The supposed descent of "Christ" for union
with "Jesus", though constantly assumed by Hilgenfeld, is as
destitute of ancient attestation as it is inconsistent with the tenor of Basilidian doctrine recorded by Clement, to say nothing of
Hippolytus. It has been argued from Clement's language by Gieseler, that the Basilidians were the first to celebrate our Lord's Baptism.
The early history of the Epiphany is too obscure to allow a definite conclusion
on this point; but the statement about the Basilidian services of the preceding night receives some illustration from a passage of
Epiphanius, lately published, in which we hear of the night before the Epiphany
as spent in singing and flute-playing in a heathen temple at Alexandria: so
that probably the Basilidian rite was a modification
of an old local custom.
According to Agrippa
Castor Basilides "in Pythagorean fashion" prescribed a silence of
five years to his disciples.
The same author, we hear,
stated that Basilides "named as prophets to himself Barcabbas and Barcoph, providing himself likewise with certain
other [? prophets] who had no existence, and that he bestowed upon them
barbarous appellations to strike amazement into those who have an awe of such
things". The alleged prophecies apparently belonged to the apocryphal
Zoroastrian literature popular with various Gnostics. From
Hippolytus we hear nothing about these prophecies, which will meet us again
presently with reference to Basilides's son Isidore, but he tells us that,
according to Basilides and Isidore, Matthias spoke to them mystical doctrines
which he heard in private teaching from the Saviour :
and in like manner Clement speaks of the sect of Basilides as boasting that
they took to themselves the glory of Matthias. Origen also and after him
Eusebius refer to a "Gospel" of or according to Matthias. The true
name was apparently the Traditions of Matthias : three interesting and by no
means heretical extracts are given by Clement. In the last extract the
responsibility laid on "the elect" for the sin of a neighbour recalls
a passage already cited from Basilides.
It remains only to notice
an apparent reference to Basilides, which has played a considerable part in
modern expositions of his doctrine. Near the end of the anonymous Acts of the
Disputation between Archelaus and Mani, written towards the close of the 3rd
cent, or a little later, Archelaus disputes the originality of Mani's teaching,
on the ground that it took rise a long time before with " acertain barbarian". "There was also, he says, a
preacher among the Persians, a certain Basilides of great [or greater]
antiquity, not long after the times of our Apostles, who being himself also a
crafty man, and perceiving that at that time everything was preoccupied,
decided to maintain that dualism which was likewise in favour with Scythianus," named shortly before as a
contemporary of the Apostles, who had introduced dualism from a Pythagorean
source. "Finally, as he had no assertion to make of his own, he adopted
the sayings of others " (the last words are corrupt, but this must be
nearly the sense). "And all his books contain things difficult and
rugged."
The writer then cites the
beginning of the thirteenth book of his treatises (tractatuum),
in which it was said that "the saving word" (the Gospel) by means of
the parable of the rich man and the poor man pointed out the source from which
nature (or a nature) without a root and without a place germinated and extended
itself over things. He breaks off a few words later and adds that after some
500 lines Basilides invites his reader to abandon idle and curious
elaborateness (varietate), and to investigate rather
the studies and opinions of barbarians on good and evil. Certain of them,
Basilides states, said that there are two beginnings of all things, light and
darkness; and he subjoins some particulars of doctrine of a Persian cast. Only
one set of views, however, is mentioned, and the Acts end abruptly here in the
two known MSS. of the Latin version in which alone this part of them is extant.
It is generally assumed
that we have here unimpeachable evidence for the strict dualism of Basilides.
It seems certain that the writer of the Acts held his Basilides responsible for
the barbarian opinions quoted, which are clearly dualistic, and he had the
whole book before him. Yet his language on this point is loose, as if he were
not sure of his ground; and the quotation which he gives by no means bears him
out : while it is quite conceivable that he may have had some acquaintance with duahstic Basilidians of a
later day, such as certainly existed, and have thus given a wrong
interpretation to genuine words of their master. It assuredly requires
considerable straining to draw the brief interpretation given of the parable to
a Manichean position, and there is nothing to show that the author of it
himself adopted the first set of " barbarian" opinions which he
reported.
Indeed the description of
evil (for evil doubtless is intended) as a supervenient nature, without root
and without place, reads almost as if it were directed against Persian
doctrine, and may be fairly interpreted by Basilides's comparison of pain and
fear to the rust of iron as natural accidents . The identity of the Basilides
of the Acts with the Alexandrian has been denied by Gieseler with some show of
reason. It is at least strange that our Basilides should be described simply as
a "preacher among the Persians", a character in which he is otherwise
unknown; and all the more since he has been previously mentioned with Marcion
and Valentinus as a heretic of familiar name. On the other hand, it has been
justly urged that the two passages are addressed to different persons. The
correspondence is likewise remarkable between the "treatises" in at
least thirteen books, with an interpretation of a parable among their contents,
and the "twenty-four books on the Gospel" mentioned by Agrippa
Castor, called Exegetica by Clement. Thus the
evidence for the identity of the two writers may on the whole be treated as
preponderating. But the ambiguity of interpretation remains; and it would be
impossible to rank Basilides confidently among dualists, even if the passage in
the Acts stood alone : much more to use it as a standard by which to force a
dualistic interpretation upon other clearer statements of his doctrine.
Gnosticism was throughout
eclectic, and Basilides superadded an eclecticism of his own. Antecedent
Gnosticism, Greek philosophy, and the Christian faith and Scriptures all
exercised a powerful and immediate influence over his mind. It is evident at a
glance that his system is far removed from any known form of Syrian or original
Gnosticism. Like that of Valentinus, it has been remoulded in a Greek spirit, but much more completely.
Historical records fail us
almost entirely as to the personal relations of the great heresiarchs; yet
internal evidence furnishes some indications which it can hardly be rash to
trust. Ancient writers usually name Basilides before Valentinus; but there is
little doubt that they were at least approximately contemporaries, and it is
not unlikely that Valentinus was best known personally from his sojourn at
Rome, which was probably the last of the recorded stages of his life. There is
at all events no serious chronological difficulty in supposing that the
Valentinian system was the starting point from which Basilides proceeded to
construct by contrast his own theory, and this is the view which a comparison
of doctrines suggests. In no point, unless it be the retention of the widely
spread term archon, is Basilides nearer than Valentinus to the older
Gnosticism, while several leading Gnostic forms or ideas which he discards or
even repudiates are held fast by Valentinus. Such are descent from above,
putting forth or pullulation, syzygies of male and female powers, and the
deposition of faith to a lower level than knowledge. Further, the unique name
given by Basilides to the Holy Spirit, "the Limitary Spirit",
together with the place assigned to it, can hardly be anything else than a
transformation of the strange Valentinian "Limit" (opos), which in like manner divides the Pleroma from the
lower world; though, in conformity with the unifying purpose of Basilides, the
Limitary Spirit is conceived as connecting as well as parting the two worlds.
The same softening of oppositions which retain much of their force even with
Valentinus shows itself in other instances, as of matter and spirit, creation
and redemption, the Jewish age and the Christian age, the earthly and the
heavenly elements in the Person of our Lord. The strongest impulse in this
direction probably came from Christian ideas and the power of a true though
disguised Christian faith. But Greek speculative Stoicism tended likewise to
break down the inherited dualism, while at the same time its own inherent
limitations brought faith into captivity. An antecedent matter was expressly
repudiated, the words of Gen. iI. 3 eagerly
appropriated, and a Divine counsel represented as foreordaining all future
growths and processes; yet the chaotic nullity out of which the developed
universe was to spring was attributed with equal boldness to its Maker :
Creator and creation were not confused, but they melted away in the distance
together. Nature was accepted not only as prescribing the conditions of the
lower life, but as practically the supreme and permanent arbiter of destiny.
Thus though faith regained its rights, it remained an energy of the
understanding, confined to those who had the requisite inborn capacity; while
the dealings of God with man were shut up within the lines of mechanical
justice. The majestic and, so to speak, pathetic view bounded by the large Basilidian horizon was well fitted to inspire dreams of a
high and comprehensive theology, but the very fidelity with which Basilides
strove to cling to reality must have soon brought to light the incompetence of
his teaching to solve any of the great problems. Its true office consisted in
supplying one of the indispensable antecedents to the Alexandrian Catholicism
which arose two generations later.
V.
Refutations.—Notwithstanding the wide and lasting fame of Basilides as a
typical heresiarch, no treatise is recorded as written specially in confutation
of his teaching except that of Agrippa Castor. He had of course a place in the
various works against all heresies; but, as we have seen, the doctrines
described and criticized in several of them belong not to him but to a sect of
almost wholly different character. Hippolytus, who in later years became
acquainted with the Exegetica, contented himself with
detecting imaginary plagiarisms from Aristotle. Even Origen, who likewise seems
to have known the work, shows in the few casual remarks in his extant writings
little real understanding even of Basilides's errors. On the other hand,
Clement's candid intelligence enables him to detect the latent flaws of
principle in the Basilidian theory without mocking at
such of the superficial details as he has occasion to mention. Hilgenfeld,
writing (1848) on the pseudo-Clementine literature, made a singular attempt to
show that in one early recension of the materials of part of the Recognitions Simon was
made to utter Basilidian doctrine, to be refuted by
St. Peter, the traces of which had been partly effaced by his becoming the
mouthpiece of other Gnostics in later recensions.
VI. Isodorus.—In
the passage already noticed Hippolytus couples with Basilides "his true
child and disciple" Isidore. He is there referring to the use which they
made of the Traditions of Matthias; but in the next sentence he treats them as
jointly responsible for the doctrines which he recites. Our only other
authority respecting Isidore is Clement (copied by Theodoret), who calls him in
like manner "at once son and disciple" of Basilides. In this place he
gives three extracts from the first and second books of Isidore's Expositions
of the Prophet Parchor. They are all parts of a plea,
like so many put forward after the example of Josephus against Apion, that the higher thoughts of heathen philosophers and mythologers were derived from a Jewish source. The
last reference given is to Pherecydes, who had probably a peculiar Basilides had to all
appearance no eminent disciple except his own son. In this respect the contrast
between him and Valentinus is remarkable. A succession of brilliant followers
carried forward and developed the Valentinian doctrine. It is a singular testimony
to the impression created at the outset by Basilides and his system that he
remained for centuries one of the eponymi of heresy;
his name is oftener repeated, for instance, in the writings of Origen, than
that of any other dreaded of the ante-Nicene church except Marcion, Valentinus,
and afterwards Mani. But the original teaching, for all its impressiveness, had
no vitality. The Basilidianism which did survive, and
that, as far as the evidence goes, only locally, was, as we have seen, a poor
and corrupt remnant, adulterated with the very elements which the founder had
strenuously rejected.
VII. The Spurious Basilidian System.—In briefly sketching this degenerate Basilidianism it will seldom be needful to distinguish the
authorities, which are fundamentally two, Irenaeus and the lost early treatise
of Hippolytus; both having much in common, and both being interwoven together
in the report of Epiphanius. The other relics of the Hippolytean Compendium are the accounts of Philaster, and the
supplement to Tertullian. At the head of this theology stood the Unbegotten,
the Only Father. From Him was born or put forth Nus, and from Nus Logos, from
Logos Phronesis, from Phronesis Sophia and Dynamis, from Sophia and Dynamis
principalities, powers, and angels. This first set of angels first made the
first heaven, and then gave birth to a second set of angels who made a second
heaven, and so on till 365 heavens had been made by 365 generations of angels,
each heaven being apparently ruled by an Archon to whom a name was given, and
these names being used in magic arts. The angels of the lowest or visible heaven
made the earth and man. They were the authors of the prophecies; and the Law in
particular was given by their Archon, the God of the Jews. He being more
petulant and wilful than the other angels, in his
desire to secure empire for his people, provoked the rebellion of the other
angels and their respective peoples. Then the Unbegotten and Innominable Father, seeing what discord prevailed among men
and among angels, and how the Jews were perishing, sent His Firstborn Nus, Who
is Christ, to deliver those Who believed on Him from the power of the makers of
the world.
"He", the Basilidians said, "is our salvation, even He Who came
and revealed to us alone this truth." He accordingly appeared on earth and
performed mighty works; but His appearance was only in outward show, and He did
not really take flesh. It was Simon of Cyrene that was crucified; for Jesus
exchanged forms with him on the way, and then, standing unseen opposite in
Simon's form, mocked those who did the deed. But He Himself ascended into
heaven, passing through all the powers, till He was restored to the presence of
His own Father. The two fullest accounts, those of Irenaeus and Epiphanius, add
by way of appendix another particular of the antecedent mythology; a short
notice on the same subject being likewise inserted parenthetically by
Hippolytus. The supreme power and source of being above all principalities and
powers and angels is Abraxas, the Greek letters of whose name added together as
numerals make up 365, the number of the heavens; whence, they apparently said,
the year has 365 days, and the human body 365 members. This supreme Power they
called "the Cause" and "the First Archetype", while they
treated as a last or weakest product (Hysterema, a
Valentinian term, contrasted with Pleroma) this present world as the work of
the last Archon. It is evident from these particulars that Abraxas was the name
of the first of the 365 Archons, and accordingly stood below Sophia and Dynamis
and their progenitors; but his position is not expressly stated, so that the
writer of the supplement to Tertullian had some excuse for confusing him with
"the Supreme God."
On these doctrines various
precepts are said to have been founded. The most distinctive is the
discouragement of martyrdom, which was made to rest on several grounds. To
confess the Crucified was called a token of being still in bondage to the
makers of the body (nay, he that denied the Crucified was pronounced to be free
from the dominion of those angels, and to know the economy of the Unbegotten
Father); but it was condemned especially as a vain and ignorant honour paid not to Christ, Who neither suffered nor was
crucified, but to Simon of Cyrene; and further, a public confession before men
was stigmatized as a giving of that which is holy to the dogs and a casting of
pearls before swine. This last precept is but one expression of the secrecy
which the Basilidians diligently cultivated,
following naturally on the supposed possession of a hidden knowledge. They
evaded our Lord's words, "Him that denieth Me
before men," etc., by pleading, "We are the men, and all others are
swine and dogs."
He who had learned their
lore and known all angels and their powers was said to become invisible and
incomprehensible to all angels and powers, even as also Caulacau was (the sentence in which Irenaeus, our sole authority here, first introduces Caulacau, a name not peculiar to the Basilidians,
is unfortunately corrupt). And as the Son was unknown to all, so also, the
tradition ran, must members of their community be known to none; but while they
know all and pass through the midst of all, remain invisible and unknown to
all, observing the maxim, "Do thou know all, but let no one know
thee." Accordingly they must be ready to utter denials and unwilling to
suffer for the Name, since [to outward appearance] they resembled all. It
naturally followed that their mysteries were to be carefully guarded, and
disclosed to "only one out of 1000 and two out of 10,000."
When Philaster (doubtless after Hippolytus) tells us in his first sentence about Basilides
that he was " called by many a heresiarch, because he violated the laws of
Christian truth by making an outward show and discourse (proponendo et loquendo) concerning the Law and the Prophets and
the Apostles, but believing otherwise," the reference is probably to this
contrast between the outward conformity of the sect and their secret doctrines
and practices. The Basilidians considered themselves
to be no longer Jews, but to have become more than Christians. Repudiation of
martyrdom was naturally accompanied by indiscriminate use of things offered to
idols. Nay, the principle of indifference is said to have been carried so far
as to sanction promiscuous immorality. In this and other respects our accounts
may possibly contain exaggerations; but Clement's already cited complaint of
the flagrant degeneracy in his time from the high standard set up by Basilides
himself is unsuspicious evidence, and a libertine code of ethics would find an
easy justification in such maxims as are imputed to the Basilidians.
It is hardly necessary to add that they expected the salvation of the soul
alone, insisting on the natural corruptibility of the body. They indulged in
magic and invocations, "and all other curious arts". A wrong reading
taken from the inferior MSS. of Irenaeus has added the further statement that
they used "images"; and this single spurious word is often cited in
corroboration of the popular belief that the numerous ancient gems on which
grotesque mythological combinations are accompanied by the mystic name ABRAXAS
were of Basilidian origin.
Imperfect and distorted as
the picture may be, such was doubtless in substance the creed of Basilidians not half a century after Basilides had written.
Were the name absent from the records of his system and theirs, no one would
have suspected any relationship between them, much less imagined that they
belonged respectively to master and to disciples.
Outward mechanism and
inward principles are alike full of contrasts; no attempts of critics to trace
correspondences between the mythological personages, and to explain them by
supposed condensations or mutilations, have attained even plausibility. Two misunderstandings
have been specially misleading. Abraxas, the chief or Archon of the first set
of angels, has been confounded with "the Unbegotten Father", and the
God of the Jews, the Archon of the lowest heaven, has been assumed to be the only
Archon recognized by the later Basilidians, though
Epiphanius (69 b.c.) distinctly implies that each of
the 365 heavens had its Archon. The mere name "Archon" is common to
most forms of Gnosticism. So again, because Clement tells us that Righteousness
and her daughter Peace abide in substantive being within the Ogdoad, "the
Unbegotten Father"and the five grades or forms
of creative mind which intervene between Him and the creator angels are added
in to make up an Ogdoad, though none is recorded as acknowledged by the
disciples : a combination so arbitrary and so incongruous needs no refutation.
On the other hand, those five abstract names have an air of true Basilidian Hellenism, and the two systems possess at least
one negative feature in common, the absence of syzygies and of all imagery
connected directly with sex. On their ethical side the connection is discerned
with less difficulty.
The contempt for
martyrdom, which was perhaps the most notorious characteristic of the Basilidians, would find a ready excuse in their master's
speculative paradox about martyrs, even if he did not discourage martyrdom
himself. The silence of five years which he imposed on novices might easily
degenerate into the perilous dissimulation of a secret sect, while their
exclusiveness would be nourished by his doctrine of the Election; and the same
doctrine might further after a while receive an antinomian interpretation. The
nature of the contrast of principle in the theological part of the two creeds
suggests how so great a change may have arisen.
The system of Basilides
was a high-pitched philosophical speculation, entirely unfitted to exercise
popular influence, and transporting its adherents to a region remote from the
sympathies of men imbued with the old Gnostic phantasies, while it was too artificial
a compound to attract heathens or Catholic Christians. The power of mind and
character which the remains of his writings disclose might easily gather round
him in the first instance a crowd who, though they could enter into portions
only of his teaching, might remain detached from other Gnostics, and yet in
their theology relapse into "the broad highway of vulgar Gnosticism",
and make for themselves out of its elements, whether fortuitously or by the
skill of some now forgotten leader, a new mythological combination. In this
manner evolution from below might once more give place to emanation from above,
Docetism might again sever heaven and earth, and a loose practical dualism (of
the profounder speculative dualism of the East there is no trace) might
supersede all that Basilides had taught as to the painful processes by which
sonship attains its perfection. The composite character of the secondary Basilidianism may be seen at a glance in the combination of
the five Greek abstractions preparatory to creation with the Semitic hosts of
creative angels bearing barbaric names. Basilidianism seems to have stood alone in appropriating Abraxas; but Caulacau plays a part in more than one system, and the functions of the angels recur in
various forms of Gnosticism, and especially in that derived from Saturnilus. Saturnilus likewise
affords a parallel in the character assigned to the God of the Jew as an angel,
and partly in the reason assigned for the Saviour's mission; while the Antitactae of Clement recall the
resistance to the God of the Jews inculcated by the Basilidians.
Other "Basilidian " features appear in the
Pistis Sophia, viz. many barbaric names of angels (with 365 Archons), and
elaborate collocations of heavens, and a numerical image taken from Deut.
XXXII. 30. The Basilidian Simon of Cyrene is
apparently unique. VIII. History of the Basilidian Sect.—There is no evidence that the sect
extended itself beyond Egypt; but there it survived for a long time. Epiphanius
(about 375) mentions the Prosopite, Athribite, Saite, and "Alexandriopolite" (read Andropolite) nomes or cantons, and also Alexandria itself, as the
places in which it still throve in his time, and which he accordingly inferred
to have been visited by Basilides. All these places lie on the western side of
the Delta, between Memphis and the sea. Nearer the end of cent. IV. Jerome
often refers to Basilides in connection with the hybrid Priscillianism of
Spain, and the mystic names in which its votaries delighted. According to
Sulpicius Severus this heresy took its rise in "the East andEgypt"; but, he adds, it is not easy to say
"what the beginnings were out of which it there grew". He states,
however, that it was first brought to Spain by Marcus, a native of Memphis.
This fact explains how the name of Basilides and some dregs of his disciples'
doctrines or practices found their way to so distant a land as Spain, and at
the same time illustrates the probable hybrid origin of the secondary Basilidianism itself.
Ebionism and Ebionites.
The name Ebionite first occurs in Irenaeus (c. 180-190). It was repeated,
probably from him, by Hippolytus (c. 225-235)
and Origen (d. A.D. 254),
who first introduced an explanation of the name. Others offered different
explanations; while other writers fabricated a leader, "Ebion," after whom the sect was called.
These explanations owe their origin to the tendency to
carry back Ebionism, or the date of its founder, as far as possible. Thus the
"Ebionite" was (according to his own statement) the "poor"
man, he who voluntarily strove to practise the
Master's precept in Apostolic times; and the correctness of the etymology is
not shaken by the Patristic scorn which derived the name from "poverty of
intellect," or from "low and mean opinions of Christ".
"Ebion," first
personified by Tertullian, was said to have been a pupil of Cerinthus, and the
Gospel of St. John to have been directed against them both. St. Paul and St.
Luke were asserted to have spoken and written against Ebionites. The
"Apostolical Constitutions" traced them back to Apostolic times;
Theodoret assigned them to the reign of Domitian (A.D. 81-96). The
existence of an "Ebion" is, however, now
surrendered. Ebionism, like Gnosticism, had no special founder; but that its
birthplace was the Holy Land, and its existence contemporary with the beginning
of the Christian Church, is, with certain reservations, probably correct. A
tendency to Ebionism existed from the first; gradually it assumed shape, and as
gradually developed into the two special forms presently to be noticed.
The records of the church of Jerusalem contained in Acts prove how strong was the
zeal for the Law of Moses among the Jewish converts to Christianity. After the
fall of Jerusalem (A.D. 70),
the church was formed at Pella under Symeon, and the Jewish Christians were
brought face to face with two leading facts: firstly, that the temple being
destroyed, and the observance of the Law and its ordinances possible only in
part, there was valid reason for doubting the necessity of retaining the rest;
secondly, that if they adopted this view, they must expect to find in the Jews
their most uncompromising enemies. As Christians they had expected a judgment
predicted by Christ, and, following His advice, had fled from the city. Both
prediction and act were resented by the Jews, as is shewn not only by the
contemptuous term (Minim) they applied to the Jewish Christians, but by the
share they took in the death of the aged bp. Symeon (a.d.
106). The breach was further widened by the refusal of the Jewish Christians to
take part in the national struggles—notably that of Bar-Cocheba
(a.d. 132)—against the Romans, by the tortures they
suffered for their refusal, and lastly, by the erection of Aelia Capitolina (a.d. 138) on the ruins of Jerusalem. The Jews were
forbidden to enter it, while the Jewish and Gentile Christians who crowded
there read in Hadrian's imperial decree the abolition of the most distinctively
Jewish rites, and practically signified their assent by electing as their
bishop a Gentile and uncircumcised man—Mark. Changes hitherto working gradually
now rapidly developed. Jewish Christians, with predilections for Gentile
Christianity and its comparative freedom, found the way made clear to them;
others, attempting to be both Jews and Christians, ended in being neither, and
exposed themselves to the contempt of Rabbin as well as Christian (Gratz, p.
433); others receded farther from Christianity, and approximated more and more
closely to pure Judaism. The Ebionites are to be ranked among the last. By the
time of Trajan (96-117) political events had given them a definite
organization, and their position as a sect opposed to Gentile Christianity
became fixed by the acts which culminated in the erection of Aelia Capitolina.
The Ebionites were known by other names, such as
"Homuncionites" (Gk. "Anthropians" or "Anthropolatrians")
from their Christological views, "Peratici"
from their settlement at Peraea, and "Symmachians"
from the one able literary man among them whose name has reached us.
Acquaintance with Hebrew was then confined to a few, and his Greek version of
O.T. was produced for the benefit of those who declined the LXX adopted by the
orthodox Christians, or the Greek versions of Aquila and Theodotion accepted by
the Jews. Many, if not most, of the improvements made by the Vulgate on the LXX
are due to the Ebionite version.
Ebionism presents itself under two principal types, an
earlier and a later, the former usually designated Ebionism proper or Pharisaic
Ebionism, the latter, Essene or Gnostic Ebionism. The earlier type is to be
traced in the writings of Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Hippolytus, Tertullian,
etc.; the latter in those of Epiphanius especially.
(a) Ebionism
Proper.—The term expresses conveniently the opinions and practices
of the descendants of the Judaizers of the Apostolic age, and is very little
removed from Judaism. Judaism was to them not so much a preparation for
Christianity as an institution eternally good in itself, and but slightly
modified in Christianity. Whatever merit Christianity had, it possessed as the
continuation and supplement of Judaism. The divinity of the Old Covenant was
the only valid guarantee for the truth of the New. Hence such Ebionites tended
to exalt the Old at the expense of the New, to magnify Moses and the Prophets,
and to allow Jesus Christ to be "nothing more than a Solomon or a
Jonas". Legal righteousness was to them the highest type of perfection; the
earthly Jerusalem, in spite of its destruction, was an object of adoration
"as if it were the house of God"; its restoration would take place in
the millennial kingdom of Messiah, and the Jews would return there as the
manifestly chosen people of God. The Ebionites divided the life of Jesus Christ
into two parts—one preceding, the other following, His Baptism. In common with
Cerinthus and Carpocrates, they represented Him to have been "the Son of
Joseph and Mary according to the ordinary course of human generation".
They denied His birth of a Virgin. He was "a mere man, nothing more than a
descendant of David, and not also the Son of God". But at His Baptism a
great change took place. The event is described in the "Gospel according
to the Hebrews" current among them, and the description is an altered
expansion of the record of St.
As might be expected, the Apostle Paul was especially
hateful to them. They repudiated his official character, they reviled him
personally. In language which recalls that of the Judaizers alluded to in Corinthians and Galatians, they represented him
as a teacher directly opposed to SS. Peter, James, and John; they repudiated
his Apostolical authority because (as they affirmed) he had not been
"called of Jesus Christ Himself," nor trained in the Church of
Jerusalem. They twisted into a defamatory application to himself his employment
of the term "deceiver" ; he was himself one of the "many which
corrupted the word of God"; he proclaimed "deliverance from the
Law" only "to please men" and "commend himself" . His
personal character was held up to reproach as that of one who "walked
according to the flesh", puffed up with pride, marked by levity of purpose
and even by dishonesty. They rejected his epistles, not on the ground of
authenticity, but as the work of an "apostate from the Law ". They even asserted that by birth he
was not a Jew, but a Gentile (wresting his words in Acts xxi. 39 who had become
a proselyte in the hope of marrying the High Priest's daughter, but that having
failed in this he had severed himself from the Jews and occupied himself in
writing against circumcision and the observance of the sabbath.
In common with the Nazarenes and the
Gnostic-Ebionites, the Pharisaic Ebionites used a recension of the Gospel of
St. Matthew, which they termed the "gospel according to the Hebrews."
It was a Chaldee version written in Hebrew letters, afterwards translated into
Greek and Latin by Jerome, who declared it identical with the "gospel of
the Twelve Apostles" and the "gospel of the Nazarenes". In the
Ebionite "gospel" the section corresponding to the first two chapters
of St. Matt. was omitted, the supernatural character of the narrative being
contradictory to their views about the person of Jesus Christ. It is difficult
to say with certainty what other books of the N.T. were known to them; but
there is reason to believe that they (as also the Gnostic-Ebionites) were
familiar with the Gospels of St. Mark and St. Luke.
(b) Essene or
Gnostic Ebionism.—This, as the name indicates, was a type of
Ebionism affected by external influences. The characteristic features of the
ascetic Essenes were reproduced in its practices, and the traces of influences
more directly mystical and oriental were evident in its doctrines. The
different phases through which Ebionism passed at different times render it,
however, difficult to distinguish clearly in every case between Gnostic and
Pharisaic Ebionism. Epiphanius is the chief authority on the Gnostic Ebionites.
He met them in Cyprus, and personally obtained information about them. (Their
principal tenets were as follows: Christianity they identified with primitive
religion or genuine Mosaism, as distinguished from
what they termed accretions to Mosaism, or the
post-Mosaic developments described in the later books of O.T. To carry out this
distinction they fabricated two classes of "prophets". In the former
class they placed Adam, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Aaron, Moses, and Jesus;
in the latter David, Solomon, Isaiah, Jeremiah, etc. In the same spirit they
accepted the Pentateuch alone among the O.T. writings, and emasculated it;
rejecting whatever reflected questionably upon their favourites.
They held that there were two antagonistic powers appointed by God—Christ and
devil; to the former was allotted the world to come, to the latter the present
world. The conception of Christ was variously entertained. Some affirmed that
He was created (not born) of the Father, a Spirit, and higher than the angels;
that He had the power of coming to this earth when He would, and in various
modes of manifestation; that He had been incarnate in Adam, and had appeared to
the patriarchs in bodily shape; others identified Adam and Christ. In these
last days He had come in the person of Jesus. Jesus was therefore to them a
successor of Moses, and not of higher authority. They quoted from their gospel
a saying attributed to Him, "I am He concerning Whom Moses prophesied,
saying, A prophet shall the Lord God raise unto you like unto me," etc.,
and this was enough to identify His teaching with that of genuine Mosaism. But by declining to fix the precise moment of the
union of the Christ with the man Jesus—a union assigned by Pharisaic Ebionites
to the hour of Baptism—they admitted His miraculous origin.
In pursuance of their conception that the devil was
the "prince of this world" they were strict ascetics. They abjured
flesh-meat, repudiating passages which contradicted their view; they refused to
taste wine, and communicated with unleavened bread and water. Water was to them
"in the place of a god"; ablutions and lustrations were imperative
and frequent. But they held the married life in honour,
and recommended early marriages. To the observance of the Jewish sabbath they
added that of the Christian Lord's day. Circumcision was sacred to them from
the practice of the patriarchs and of Jesus Christ; and they declined all
fellowship with the uncircumcised, but repudiated the sacrifices of the altar
and the reverence of the Jew for the Temple. In common with the Ebionites
proper, they detested St. Paul, rejected his epistles, and circulated stories
discreditable to him. The other Apostles were known to them by their writings,
which they regarded as inferior to their own gospel.
The conjecture appears not improbable that as the
siege of Jerusalem under Titus gave an impetus to Ebionism proper, so the ruin
under Hadrian developed Gnostic Ebionism. Not that Gnosticism began then to
affect it for the first time, but that Gnostic ideas hitherto held in solution
were precipitated and found a congenial home among men who through contact with
oriental systems in Syria were already predisposed to accept them. This is
further evident from the book of Elchasai and the
Clementine literature. These works are the production of the Essene Ebionites;
and where they speak of Jesus Christ and His Apostles, His sayings and their
lives, they do so, not in the words of the canonical Gospels and Epistles, but
with additions or omissions, and a colouring which
transforms (e.g.) St. Peter, St. Matthew, and St. James the Just into Essenes,
and yet with that Gnostic tendency of thought which makes them lineal
descendants of the Judaizers who imperilled the
church at Colossae.
The Essene or Gnostic-Ebionites differed from the
Pharisaic Ebionites in another respect. By missionary zeal, as well as by
literary activity, they sought to obtain converts to their views. In the
earlier part of the 3rd cent. the Ebionite Alcibiades of Apamea (Syria)
repaired to Rome. He brought with him the book of Elchasai,
and "preached unto men a new remission of sins (proclaimed) in the third
year of Trajan's reign" (A.D. 101). Hippolytus, who gives an
account of the matter , exposed the decided
antinomianism which penetrated the teaching of the mythical teacher and of the
pupil, but it is evident that many "became victims of the delusion."
The immorality which the book—in imitation of the teaching of Callistus—indirectly
encouraged probably attracted some, but would discredit the dogmatic views of
the missionary.
Ebionite Christianity did not, however, last very
long, neither did it exercise much influence west of Syria while it lasted. In
Palestine the discomfiture accorded to "a certain one" (probably
Alcibiades) who came to Caesarea c. A.D. 247
maintaining the "ungodly and wicked error of the Elkesaites"
was in keeping with the reception accorded to less extreme Ebionite views from
the time of the reconstitution of the mother-church at Aelia Capitolina.
Judaism of every kind gradually passed out of favour.
The attitude of the bishops of Palestine in the Paschal controversy of the 2nd
cent. was that of men who wished to stand clear of any sympathy with Jewish
customs; the language of Justin Martyr and of Hegesippus was the language of
the representatives of the Samaritan and the Hebrew Christianity of the day,
not of the Ebionite. Outside of Palestine Ebionism had even less chance of
survival. From the very first, the instructions and memories of St. Paul and
St. John excluded it from Asia Minor; in Antioch the names of Ignatius,
Theophilus, and Serapion were vouchers for Catholic doctrine and practice; and
the daughter-churches of Gaul and Alexandria naturally preferred doctrine
supplied to them by teachers trained in the school of these Apostles. Even in
the church of Rome, whatever tendency existed in Apostolic times towards
Ebionism, the separation—also in Apostolic times—of the Judaizers was the
beginning of the end which no after-amalgamation under Clement could retard.
The tone of the Shepherd of Hermas—a
work which emanated from the Roman church during the first half of the 2nd
cent. (see Lightfoot, Galatians, p.
99, n. 3)—however different from the tone of Clement and St. Paul, is not
Ebionite, as a comparison with another so-called Roman and certainly later
Ebionite work—the Clementine writings—shews. The end of Ebionism had actually
come in the Roman church when in the 2nd cent. Jewish practices—notably as
regards the observance of
Easter—were unhesitatingly rejected. The creed of the
Christian in Rome was the creed which he held from Irenaeus in Gaul and
Polycarp in Asia Minor, and not from the Ebionite. When the above-named
Alcibiades appeared in Rome (A.D. 219), Hippolytus denounced his
teaching (that of Elchasai) as that of "a wolf
risen up against many wandering sheep, whom Callistus had scattered
abroad": it came upon him as a novelty; it had "risen up," he
says, "in our own day" (Haer. ix.
cc. 8, 12). This language is a proof of the oblivion which had certainly
befallen any previous propagation of Ebionism in Rome.
For 200 years more Ebionism—especially of the Essene
form—lingered on. A few Ebionites were left in the time of Theodoret, about the
middle of 5th cent.; the rest had returned to strict Judaism and the utter
rejection of Christianity, or to a purer Christianity than that which Ebionism favoured.
LEUCIUS
Leucius, the reputed author of large apocryphal additions to
the N.T. history, which originated in heretical circles, and which, though now
lost, were much current in early times. The fullest account is that given by
Photius, who describes a book, called The
Circuits of the Apostles, which contained the Acts of Peter, John,
Andrew, Thomas, and Paul, and purported to have been written by Leucius Charinus. This second name Charinus is peculiar to
Photius, earlier writers calling the author simply Leucius,
a name variously altered by transcribers. Photius characterizes the book as in
style utterly unlike the genuine N.T. writings, and full of folly,
self-contradiction, falsehood, and impiety. It taught the existence of two
gods—an evil one, the God of the Jews, having Simon Magus as his minister, and
a good one, from Whom Christ came. It confounded the Father and the Son; denied
the reality of Christ's Incarnation, and gave a Docetic account of His life on
earth and especially of His crucifixion. It condemned marriage and regarded all
generation as the work of the evil principle; denied that demons were created
by God; related childish stories of miraculous restoration to life, of both men
and cattle; and in the Acts of John used language which the Iconoclasts regarded
as favouring them. From this description we can
identify as the same work a collection of Apostolic Acts, from which extracts
were read at the 2nd council of Nicaea, the story of Lycomedes being that made
use of by the Iconoclasts, and the Docetic tales being from this work. In the
council was next read a citation from Amphilochius of Iconium, denouncing
certain heretical Acts of the Apostles, and in particular arguing against the
truth of a story, evidently that to which we have just referred, because it
represented St. John as on the Mount of Olives during the crucifixion, and so
contradicted the gospel, which relates that he was close to the Cross. With
this evidence that the work read by Photius was in existence before the end of
the 4th cent., we may probably refer to the same source a statement of
Epiphanius that Leucius was a disciple of John and
joined his master in opposing the Ebionites. Church writers frequently reject
the doctrine of heretical apocrypha and yet accept stories told in such
documents as true, provided there were no doctrinal reason for rejecting them.
The Docetic Leucius, who denied the true manhood of
our Lord, was at the opposite pole from the Ebionites, who asserted Him to be
mere man, and therefore the Acts of John might well have contained a
confutation of Ebionism.
The Acts of Leucius were in use among the Manichees in the time of St. Augustine. Faustus the Manichean appeals to Acts of the four
apostles mentioned by Photius (Peter, Andrew, Thomas, and John), charging the
Catholic party with wrongly excluding them from their canon. In several places
Augustine refers to the same Acts, and he names as the author Leutius, the name being written in some MSS. Levitius or Leuticius. In the
passage last cited, the writer, supposed to be Evodius of Uzala, a contemporary of Augustine, quotes from
the Acts of Andrew a story of Maximilla, the wife of the proconsul Egeas under whom St. Andrew suffered, who, to avoid having
intercourse with her husband, without his knowledge substituted her maid in her
own place; and on another occasion, when she and her companion were engaged
hearing the apostle, an angel, by imitating their voices, deceived the husband
into the belief that they were still in her bedchamber. This story, which
agrees with what Photius tells of the author's condemnation of sexual
intercourse, is much softened in the still extant Acts of Pseudo-Abdias, which
are an orthodox recasting of a heretical original. We find still the names of
Maximilla and Egeas; but Maximilla does not refuse
intercourse with her husband, and only excites his displeasure because, on
account of her eagerness to hear the apostle, she can be with him less
frequently; and, without any angelic deception, providential means are devised
to prevent Egeas from surprising his wife at the
Christian meeting. These Augustinian notices enable us to infer that it was the
same work Philaster had in view when he stated that
the Manichees had Acts purporting to be written by
disciples of St. Andrew, and describing apostle's doings when he passed from
Pontus into Greece. He adds that these heretics had also Acts of Peter, John,
and Paul, containing stories of miracles in which beasts were made to speak;
for that these heretics counted the souls of men and of beasts alike. In the
Gelasian decree on apocryphal books we read: "Libri omnes, quos fecit Leucius discipulus diaboli, apocryphi," where we have various
readings, Lucianus and Seleucius.
In the spurious
correspondence between Jerome and Chromatius and
Heliodorus, Jerome is represented as giving an orthodox version of certain
authentic additions to St. Matthew's narrative, of which a heretical version
had been given by Leucius (or, as it is printed,
Seleucus), the author of the Acts already mentioned. In the letter of Innocent
to Exsuperius he condemns documents bearing the name
of Matthew, of James the Less, of Peter and Paul written by Leucius,
of Andrew written by Xenocharis and Leonidas the
philosophers, and of Thomas. It has been conjectured that in Xenocharis an adjective has been joined with a proper name,
and that we have here a corruption of Charinus. In the Latin version of the
apocryphal Descensus Christi ad inferos, two sons of
the aged Simeon, named Leucius and Charinus, are
represented as having died before our Lord, and as miraculously returning to
bear witness to His triumphs in the under world. The writer clearly borrowed
these names from the apocryphal Acts; did he there find warrant for regarding
them as the names of distinct persons, or was Photius right in reporting both
names to have been given to the same person? It would seem that only the Acts
of John and perhaps of Peter named Leucius as their
author: the necessities of the fiction would require the Acts of Andrew to be
attested by a different witness, possibly Charinus, and it is conceivable that
Photius may have combined the names merely from his judging, no doubt rightly,
that all the Acts had a common author.
Concerning the Acts of
Paul in use among the Manicheans see LINUS and THECLA. Besides the authorities
already cited, the Acts of Leucius are mentioned by Turribius, a Spanish bp. of the first half of the 5th
cent., from whom we learn that they were used by the Priscillianists,
and that the Acts of Thomas related a baptism, not in water but in oil,
according to the Manichean fashion; and by Pseudo-Mellitus, who acknowledges
the truth of apostolic miracles related by Leucius,
but argues against his doctrine of two principles. Pacian says, "Phryges nobiliores qui se animatos a Leucio mentiuntur,
se institutos a Proculo gloriantur." On this passage Zahn mainly relies for dating the Acts of Leucius earlier than 160. But no other writer mentions a
Montanist use of these Acts, and on this subject the authority of Pacian does not count for much. The context does not
indicate that he had much personal knowledge of the sect, and his heretical
notices appear to be derived from the Syntagma of Hippolytus, where we have no
reason to think that he would have found any mention of Leucius.
It is highly probable that Pacian, as well as others
of his contemporaries, believed that Leucius was a
real companion of St. John, and therefore no doubt earlier than Montanus; but
that he had any means of real knowledge as to this we have no reason to
believe. Besides those authorities which mention Leucius by name, others speak of apocryphal Acts, and probably refer to the same
literature. Thus the Synopsis Scripturae ascribed to
Athanasius speaks of books called the Travels
of Peter, of John, and of Thomas; and by the second the Leucian story is probably intended. Eusebius tells of Acts of Andrew and of John; Epiphanius
states that the Encratites used Acts of Andrew, John,
and Thomas; that the Apostolici relied on Acts of Andrew and Thomas; and that
those whom he calls Origeniani used Acts of Andrew. It is worth
remarking that it is of the three apostles, Thomas, Andrew, and John, whose
travels were written by Leucius, that Origen can tell
where the lot of their preaching had fallen, viz. India, Scythia, and Asia
respectively. The testimonies we have
cited are not earlier than the 4th cent., and several of them speak of Leucius as a Manichean; but Grabe, Cave, Mill, Beausobre, Lardner, and others consider that he lived in
the 2nd cent.; and, as he therefore could not have been a Manichean, was
probably a Marcionite. Some have identified him with the Marcionite LUCANUS.
But no Marcionite would have chosen for the heroes of his narrative the Jewish
apostles, John, Thomas, and Andrew.
Beausobre gives six arguments for the early date of Leucius, not one of which is conclusive, all being vitiated
by the tacit assumption that Leucius was a real
person, and not, as we hold, merely the fictitious name of an imaginary
disciple of St. John, whom the forger chose to make the narrator of the story.
Zahn published some new
fragments of Leucius, which increase our power of
recognizing as Leucian things which different fathers
have told without naming their authority. The Leucian character of these fragments is verified by various coincidences with the old.
Names recur, e.g. Lycomedes. There is a story of a miracle performed on one
Drusiana, who had submitted to die rather than have intercourse with her
husband. This agrees with that of Maximilla and Egeas in revealing the violently Encratite principles of the author; cf. that told in
the Acts of Thomas.
Zahn has argued the case for the early date of Leucius in a much more scientific way than previous supporters of the same thesis. He
tries to show that there are statements in earlier writers really derived from Leucius, though his name is not given. All Zahn's arguments
do not seem to us conclusive, yet enough remains valid to lead us to regard the Leucian Acts as of the same age as the travels of
Peter (which are the basis of the Clementines) and the Acts of Paul and Thecla.
When a writer, who in one place quotes Leucius,
elsewhere makes statements we know to be Leucian,
they doubtless come from Leucius though he does not
there name his authority; e.g.
Epiphanius names Leucius only once, but we may safely count as derived from Leucius his reference to the manner of John's death and to
John's virginity. Further, in the immediate context of the passage where
Epiphanius names Leucius, he names other heretics of
the apostolic age, and the presumption that he found these names in Leucius becomes almost a certainty when in one of the new Leucian fragments one of them, Cleobius,
is found as that of a person in John's company. Other names in the same context
are Claudius, Merinthus, and the Pauline Demas and
Hermogenes; concerning whom see the Acts of Thecla and the so-called Dorotheus.
The Augustinian and Hieronymian notices may be
treated similarly. We can identify as Leucian several
statements which are described as found "in ecclesiastica historia" or "in patrum traditionibus," and hence probably others
reported with the same formulae are from the same source.
We next enumerate some of
the statements which may be characterized as Leucian,
naming some of the early writers who have repeated them.
(1) A Leucian fragment tells how John's virginity had been preserved by a threefold
interposition of our Lord, breaking off the Apostle's designs each time that he
attempted to marry. There is a clear reference to this story in a sermon
ascribed to Augustine, and from this source probably so many of the Fathers
have derived their opinion of John's virginity, concerning which the canonical
Scriptures say nothing.
The Leucian Acts, in conformity with their strong Encratism, seem
to have dwelt much on the apostle's virginity, describing this as the cause of
our Lord's love to him, and as the reason for his many privileges, particularly
the care of the virgin mother. In Pistis Sophia the name of the apostle John
has usually the title ó παρθéνος appended, and we may therefore set down Pistis Sophia as post-Leucian, but uncertainty as to its date prevents us from
drawing any further inference. The earliest mention of John's virginity is
found in the epithet "spado" given to St. John by Tertullian, whence
Zahn infers that Tertullian must have used the Acts of Leucius.
We think Zahn does not sufficiently allow for the probability in the case of
one who is said to have lived so long, that a true tradition that he never
married might have been preserved in the churches of Asia. Zahn contends that
because Jerome uses the word "eunuchus" not
"spado," he is not copying Tertullian, but that both writers use a
common source, viz. Leucius. But when the passage in
Tertullian is read with the rest of the treatise, it appears more likely that
the epithet is Tertullian's own.
(2) Other evidence of
Tertullian's acquaintance with Leucius is found in
his story of St. John's having been cast into burning oil. Speaking of Rome he
says, "Ubi apostolus Johannes, posteaquam in oleum igneum demersus nihil passus est, in insulam relegatur." What was
Tertullian's authority? Now, though none of the extant fragments of Leucius relate to this, yet that these Acts contained the
story is probable from the following evidence. Jerome commenting on Matt. xx.
23 states on the authority of "ecclesiasticae historiae" that the apostle had been "missus in ferventis olei dolium, et inde ad suscipiendam coronam Christi athleta processerit, statimque relegatus in Pathmos insulam." Now Abdias, whose work is notoriously based
on Leucius, has "proconsul jussit eum velut rebellem in dolio ferventis olei mergi, qui statim ut conjectus in aeneo est, veluti athleta, unctus non adustus de vase exiit." The
second passage will be seen to be the original, Jerome's use of athleta receiving its explanation from Abdias. This
conclusion is strengthened by another passage in Jerome, where, though he names
Tertullian as his authority, he gives particulars not found in him, viz. the
"dolium ferventis olei,"
and that the apostle came out fresher and more vigorous than he had entered. We
feel forced to believe that Jerome, who certainly used Leucius,
found in it the statement about the boiling oil; and then there is a strong
case for suspecting that this was also the authority of Tertullian.
But though Tertullian
names Rome as the scene of the miracle, it may be doubted whether this was so
in the Greek Leucius. The mention by Abdias of a
"proconsul" suggests Asia. Hippolytus, however, agrees with
Tertullian in placing John at Rome. Some of the earliest Fathers who try to
reconcile Matt. xx. 23 with the fact that John did not suffer martyrdom, do not
mention this story of the baptism in oil. A later story makes John miraculously
"drink a cup" of poison with impunity.
(3) An acquaintance with Leucius by Clement of Alexandria has been inferred from the
agreement of both in giving on John's authority a Docetic account of our Lord.
The "traditions of Matthias" may have been Clement's authority; but
that John is appealed to no doubt gives probability to the conjecture that
Clement's source is the Acts which treat of St. John, a probability increased
on an examination of the story told by Clement as to John's composition of
Fourth Gospel at the request of his friends. In the Muratorian Fragment the
request is urged by the apostle's fellow-bishops in Asia; he asks them to fast
three days, begging for a revelation of God's will, and then it is revealed to
Andrew that John is to write. The stories of Clement and the Muratorian writer
are too like to be independent; yet it is not conceivable that one copied from
the other; therefore they doubtless used a common authority, who was not
Papias, else Eusebius, when he quotes the passage from Clement, would scarcely
have failed to mention it. Now, several later writers tell the same story,
agreeing, however, in additional particulars, which show that they did not
derive their knowledge from either the Muratorian writer or Clement. Thus they
tell that the cause of the request that John should write was the spread of
Ebionite heresy, which required that something should be added concerning the
divinity of our Lord to what St. John's predecessors had told about His
humanity; and that, in answer to their prayers, the apostle, filled with the Holy
Ghost, burst into the prologue, "In the beginning was the Word."
Other verbal coincidences make it probable that this story was found in the
Acts of Leucius, which Epiphanius tells us contained
an account of John's resistance to the Ebionite heresy; and if so, Leucius is likely to have been Clement's authority also. Combining the
probabilities under the three heads enumerated, there seems reasonable ground
for thinking that the Leucian Acts were 2nd cent.,
and known to Clement and Tertullian. Irenaeus, however, shows no sign of
acquaintance with them, and Clement must have had some other source of
Johannine traditions, his story of John and the robber being, as Zahn owns, not
derived from Leucius; for no later writer who tells
the story shews any sign of having had any source of information but Clement.
We cannot follow Zahn in
combining the two statements of Theodoret that the Quartodecimans appealed to St. John's authority, and that they used apocryphal Acts, and
thence inferring that Leucius represented St. John as
sanctioning the Quartodeciman practice. If so, we think other traces of this Leucian statement would have remained. Theodoret would have
found in Eusebius that the churches of Asia appealed to St. John as sanctioning
their practice, and that may have been a true tradition.
A brief notice will
suffice of other probable contents of the work of Leucius.
He appears to have mentioned the exile to Patmos, and as resulting from a
decree of the Roman emperor; but that the emperor was not named is likely from
the variations of subsequent writers. Zahn refers to Leucius the story of St. John and the partridge, told by Cassianus, who elsewhere shews
acquaintance with Leucius. A different story of a
partridge is told in a non-Leucian fragment. The Leucian Acts very possibly contained an account of the
Virgin's death. But the most important of the remaining Leucian stories is that concerning St. John's painless death. Leucius appears to have given what purported to be the apostle's sermon and Eucharistic
prayer on the last Sunday of his life. Then after breaking of bread—there is no
mention of wine—the apostle commands Byrrhus (the
name occurs in the Ignatian epistles as that of an Ephesine deacon) to follow him with two companions, bringing spades with them. In a
friend's burying-place they dig a grave, in which the apostle laid himself
down, and with joyful prayer blessed his disciples and resigned his soul to
God. Later versions give other miraculous details; in particular that which
Augustine mentions, that St. John lay in the grave not dead but sleeping, the
dust heaped over him showing his breathing by its motions.
Besides the Acts Leucius has been credited with a quantity of other
apocryphal literature. If, as we believe, he is only a fictitious personage, it
is likely enough that the author of the romance wrote other like fictions,
though our information is too scanty for us to identify his work. But there is
no trustworthy evidence that he affixed the name of Leucius to any composition besides the Acts of Peter and John. From the nature of the
case an apostle's martyrdom must be related by one of the apostles' disciples,
but such a one would not be regarded as a competent witness to the deeds of our
Lord Himself, and accordingly apocryphal gospels are commonly ascribed to an
apostle, and not to one of the second generation of Christians. The only
apparent evidence for a connexion of the name of Leucius with apocryphal gospels is the mention of the name
in the spurious letter of Jerome to Chromatius and
Heliodorus, a witness unworthy of credit even if his testimony were more
distinct. Probably the orthodox, finding in the Acts which bore the name of Leucius plain evidence that the writer was heretical in his
doctrine of two principles, still accepted him as a real personage of the
sub-apostolic age, and when they met with other apocryphal stories, the
doctrine of which they had to reject as heretical while willing to accept the
facts related as mainly true, Leucius seemed a
probable person to whom to ascribe the authorship.
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