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Chapter 1.
Absurd Ideas of the Disciples of Valentinus as
to the Origin, Name, Order, and Conjugal Productions of Their Fancied Aeons,
with the Passages of Scripture Which They Adapt to Their Opinions.
They maintain, then, that in the invisible and ineffable heights above
there exists a certain perfect, pre-existent Aeon, whom they call Proarche,
Propator, and Bythus, and describe as being invisible and incomprehensible.
Eternal and unbegotten, he remained throughout innumerable cycles of ages in
profound serenity and quiescence. There existed along with him Ennoea, whom they
also call Charis and Sige. At last this Bythus determined to send forth from
himself the beginning of all things, and deposited this production (which he had
resolved to bring forth) in his contemporary Sige, even as seed is deposited in
the womb. She then, having received this seed, and becoming pregnant, gave birth
to Nous, who was both similar and equal to him who had produced him, and was
alone capable of comprehending his father's greatness. This Nous they call also
Monogenes, and Father, and the Beginning of all Things. Along with him was also
produced Aletheia; and these four constituted the first and first-begotten
Pythagorean Tetrad, which they also denominate the root of all things. For there
are first Bythus and Sige, and then Nous and Aletheia. And Monogenes, perceiving
for what purpose he had been produced, also himself sent forth Logos and Zoe,
being the father of all those who were to come after him, and the beginning and
fashioning of the entire Pleroma. By the conjunction of Logos and Zoo were
brought forth Anthropos and Ecclesia; and thus was formed the first-begotten
Ogdoad, the root and substance of all things, called among them by four names,
viz., Bythus, and Nous, and Logos, and Anthropos. For each of these is masculo-feminine,
as follows: Propator was united by a conjunction with his Ennoea; then Monogenes,
that is Nous, with Aletheia; Logos with Zoe, and Anthropos with Ecclesia.
These Aeons having been produced for the glory of the Father, and wishing,
by their own efforts, to effect this object, sent forth emanations by means of
conjunction. Logos and Zoe, after producing Anthropos and Ecclesia, sent forth
other ten Aeons, whose names are the following: Bythius and Mixis, Ageratos and
Henosis, Autophyes and Hedone, Acinetos and Syncrasis, Monogenes and Macaria.
These are the ten Aeons whom they declare to have been produced by Logos and Zoe.
They then add that Anthropos himself, along with Ecclesia, produced twelve Aeons,
to whom they give the following names: Paracletus and Pistis, Patricos and Elpis,
Metricos and Agape, Ainos and Synesis, Ecclesiasticus and Macariotes, Theletos
and Sophia.
Such are the thirty Aeons in the erroneous system of these men; and they
are described as being wrapped up, so to speak, in silence, and known to none
[except these professing teachers]. Moreover, they declare that this invisible
and spiritual Pleroma of theirs is tripartite, being divided into an Ogdoad, a
Decad, and a Duodecad. And for this reason they affirm it was that the "Saviour"-for
they do not please to call Him "Lord"-did no work in public during the space of
thirty years, thus setting forth the mystery of these Aeons. They maintain also,
that these thirty Aeons are most plainly indicated in the parable of the
labourers sent into the vineyard. For some are sent about the first hour, others
about the third hour, others about the sixth hour, others about the ninth hour,
and others about the eleventh hour. Now, if we add up the numbers of the hours
here mentioned, the sum total will be thirty: for one, three, six, nine, and
eleven, when added together, form thirty. And by the hours, they hold that the
Aeons were pointed out; while they maintain that these are great, and wonderful,
and hitherto unspeakable mysteries which it is their special function to
develop; and so they proceed when they find anything in the multitude of things
contained in the Scriptures which they can adopt and accommodate to their
baseless speculations.
Chapter 2.
The Propator Was Known to Mono-Genes Alone.
Ambition, Disturbance, and Danger into Which Sophia Fell; Her Shapeless
Offspring: She is Restored by Horos. The Production of Christ and of the Holy
Spirit, in Order to the Completion of the Aeons. Manner of the Production of
Jesus.
They proceed to tell us that the Propator of their scheme was known only
to Monogenes, who sprang from him; in other words, only to Nous, while to all
the others he was invisible and incomprehensible. And, according to them, Nous
alone took pleasure in contemplating the Father, and exulting in considering his
immeasurable greatness; while he also meditated how he might communicate to the
rest of the Aeons the greatness of the Father, revealing to them how vast and
mighty he was, and how he was without beginning,-beyond comprehension, and
altogether incapable of being seen. But, in accordance with the will of the
Father, Sige restrained him, because it was his design to lead them all to an
acquaintance with the aforesaid Propator, and to create within them a desire of
investigating his nature. In like manner, the rest of the Aeons also, in a kind
of quiet way, had a wish to behold the Author of their being, and to contemplate
that First Cause which had no beginning.
But there rushed forth in advance of the rest that Aeon who was much the
latest of them, and was the youngest of the Duodecad which sprang from Anthropos
and Ecclesia, namely Sophia, and suffered passion apart from the embrace of her
consort Theletos. This passion, indeed, first arose among those who were
connected with Nous and Aletheia, but passed as by contagion to this degenerate
Aeon, who acted under a pretence of love, but was in reality influenced by
temerity, because she had not, like Nous, enjoyed communion with the perfect
Father. This passion, they say, consisted in a desire to search into the nature
of the Father; for she wished, according to them, to comprehend his greatness.
When she could not attain her end, inasmuch as she aimed at an impossibility,
and thus became involved in an extreme agony of mind, while both on account of
the vast profundity as well as the unsearchable nature of the Father, and on
account of the love she bore him, she was ever stretching herself forward, there
was danger lest she should at last have been absorbed by his sweetness, and
resolved into his absolute essence, unless she had met with that Power which
supports all things, and preserves them outside of the unspeakable greatness.
This power they term Horos; by whom, they say, she was restrained and supported;
and that then, having with difficulty been brought back to herself, she was
convinced that the Father is incomprehensible, and so laid aside her original
design, along with that passion which had arisen within her from the
overwhelming influence of her admiration.
But others of them fabulously describe the passion and restoration of
Sophia as follows: They say that she, having engaged in an impossible and
impracticable attempt, brought forth an amorphous substance, such as her female
nature enabled her to produce. When she looked upon it, her first feeling was
one of grief, on account of the imperfection of its generation, and then of fear
lest this should end her own existence. Next she lost, as it were, all command
of herself, and was in the greatest perplexity while endeavouring to discover
the cause of all this, and in what way she might conceal what had happened.
Being greatly harassed by these passions, she at last changed her mind, and
endeavoured to return anew to the Father. When, however, she in some measure
made the attempt, strength failed her, and she became a suppliant of the Father.
The other Aeons, Nous in particular, presented their supplications along with
her. And hence they declare material substance had its beginning from ignorance
and grief, and fear and bewilderment.
The Father afterwards produces, in his own image, by means of Monogenes,
the above-mentioned Horos, without conjunction, masculo-feminine. For they
maintain that sometimes the Father acts in conjunction with Sige, but that at
other times he shows himself independent both of male and female. They term this
Horos both Stauros and Lytrotes, and Carpistes, and Horothetes, and Metagoges.
And by this Horos they declare that Sophia was purified and established, while
she was also restored to her proper conjunction. For her enthymesis (or inborn
idea) having been taken away from her, along with its supervening passion, she
herself certainly remained within the Pleroma; but her enthymesis, with its
passion, was separated from her by Horos, fenced off, and expelled from that
circle. This enthymesis was, no doubt, a spiritual substance, possessing some of
the natural tendencies of an Aeon, but at the same time shapeless and without
form, because it had received nothing. And on this account they say that it was
an imbecile and feminine production.
After this substance had been placed outside of the Pleroma of the Aeons,
and its mother restored to her proper conjunction, they tell us that Monogenes,
acting in accordance with the prudent forethought of the Father, gave origin to
another conjugal pair, namely Christ and the Holy Spirit (lest any of the Aeons
should fall into a calamity similar to that of Sophia), for the purpose of
fortifying and strengthening the Pleroma, and who at the same time completed the
number of the Aeons. Christ then instructed them as to the nature of their
conjunction, and taught them that those who possessed a comprehension of the
Unbegotten were sufficient for themselves. He also announced among them what
related to the knowledge of the Father,-namely, that he cannot be understood or
comprehended, nor so much as seen or heard, except in so far as he is known by
Monogenes only. And the reason why the rest of the Aeons possess perpetual
existence is found in that part of the Father's nature which is
incomprehensible; but the reason of their origin and formation was situated in
that which may be comprehended regarding him, that is, in the Son. Christ, then,
who had just been produced, effected these things among them.
But the Holy Spirit taught them to give thanks on being all rendered equal
among themselves, and led them to a state of true repose. Thus, then, they tell
us that the Aeons were constituted equal to each other in form and sentiment, so
that all became as Nous, and Logos, and Anthropos, and Christus. The female
Aeons, too, became all as Aletheia, and Zoe, and Spiritus, and Ecclesia.
Everything, then, being thus established, and brought into a state of perfect
rest, they next tell us that these beings sang praises with great joy to the
Propator, who himself shared in the abounding exaltation. Then, out of gratitude
for the great benefit which had been conferred on them, the whole Pleroma of the
Aeons, with one design and desire, and with the concurrence of Christ and the
Holy Spirit, their Father also setting the seal of His approval on their
conduct, brought together whatever each one had in himself of the greatest
beauty and preciousness; and uniting all these contributions so as skilfully to
blend the whole, they produced, to the honour and glory of Bythus, a being of
most perfect beauty, the very star of the Pleroma, and the perfect fruit [of
it], namely Jesus. Him they also speak of under the name of Saviour, and Christ,
and patronymically, Logos, and Everything, because He was formed from the
contributions of all. And then we are told that, by way of honour, angels of the
same nature as Himself were simultaneously produced, to act as His body-guard.
Chapter 3.
Texts of Holy Scripture Used by These Heretics
to Support Their Opinions.
Such, then, is the account they give of what took place within the Pleroma;
such the calamities that flowed from the passion which seized upon the Aeon who
has been named, and who was within a little of perishing by being absorbed in
the universal substance, through her inquisitive searching after the Father;
such the consolidation [of that Aeon] from her condition of agony by Horos, and
Stauros, and Lytrotes, and Carpistes, and Horothetes, and Metagoges. Such also
is the account of the generation of the later Aeons, namely of the first Christ
and of the Holy Spirit, both of whom were produced by the Father after the
repentance [of Sophia], and of the second Christ (whom they also style Saviour),
who owed his being to the joint contributions [of the Aeons]. They tell us,
however, that this knowledge has not been openly divulged, because all are not
capable of receiving it, but has been mystically revealed by the Saviour through
means of parables to those qualified for understanding it. This has been done as
follows. The thirty Aeons are indicated (as we have already remarked) by the
thirty years during which they say the Saviour performed no public act, and by
the parable of the labourers in the vineyard. Paul also, they affirm, very
clearly and frequently names these Aeons, and even goes so far as to preserve
their order, when he says, "To all the generations of the Aeons of the Aeon."
Nay, we ourselves, when at the giving of thanks we pronounce the words, "To
Aeons of Aeons" (for ever and ever), do set forth these Aeons. And, in fine,
wherever the words Aeon or Aeons occur, they at once refer them to these beings.
The production, again, of the Duodecad of the Aeons, is indicated by the
fact that the Lord was twelve years of age when He disputed with the
teachers of the law, and by the election of the apostles, for of these there
were twelve. The other eighteen Aeons are made manifest in this way: that the
Lord, [according to them, ] conversed with His disciples for eighteen months
after His resurrection from the dead. They also affirm that these eighteen Aeons
are strikingly indicated by the first two letters of His name ['Ihsou=j], namely
Iota and Eta. And, in like manner, they assert that the ten Aeons are
pointed out by the letter Iota, which begins His name; while, for the
same reason, they tell us the Saviour said, "One Iota, or one tittle,
shall by no means pass away until all be fulfilled."
They further maintain that the passion which took place in the case of the
twelfth Aeon is pointed at by the apostasy of Judas, who was the twelfth
apostle, and also by the fact that Christ suffered in the twelfth month. For
their opinion is, that He continued to preach for one year only after His
baptism. The same thing is also most clearly indicated by the case of the woman
who suffered from an issue of blood. For after she had been thus afflicted
during twelve years, she was healed by the advent of the Saviour, when she had
touched the border of His garment; and on this account the Saviour said, "Who
touched me? " -teaching his disciples the mystery which had occurred among the
Aeons, and the healing of that Aeon who had been involved in suffering. For she
who had been afflicted twelve years represented that power whose essence, as
they narrate, was stretching itself forth, and flowing into immensity; and
unless she had touched the garment of the Son, that is, Aletheia of the first
Tetrad, who is denoted by the hem spoken of, she would have been dissolved into
the general essence [of which she participated]. She stopped short, however, and
ceased any longer to suffer. For the power that went forth from the Son (and
this power they term Horos) healed her, and separated the passion from her.
They moreover affirm that the Saviour is shown to be derived from all the
Aeons, and to be in Himself everything by the following passage: "Every
male that openeth the womb." For He, being everything, opened the womb of the
enthymesis of the suffering Aeon, when it had been expelled from the Pleroma.
This they also style the second Ogdoad, of which we shall speak presently. And
they state that it was clearly on this account that Paul said, "And He Himself
is all things; " and again, "All things are to Him, and of Him are all things; "
and further, "In Him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead; " and yet again,
"All things are gathered together by God in Christ." Thus do they interpret
these and any like passages to be found in Scripture.
They show, further, that that Horos of theirs, whom they call by a variety
of names, has two faculties,-the one of supporting, and the other of separating;
and in so far as he supports and sustains, he is Stauros, while in so far as he
divides and separates, he is Horos. They then represent the Saviour as having
indicated this twofold faculty: first, the sustaining power, when He said,
"Whosoever doth not bear his cross (Stauros), and follow after me, cannot be my
disciple; " and again, "Taking up the cross follow me; " but the separating
power when He said, "I came not to send peace, but a word." They also maintain
that John indicated the same thing when he said, "The fan is in His hand, and He
will thoroughly purge the floor, and will gather the wheat into His garner; but
the chaff He will burn with fire unquenchable." By this declaration He set forth
the faculty of Horos. For that fan they explain to be the cross (Stauros), which
consumes, no doubt, all material objects, as fire does chaff, but it purifies
all them that are saved, as a fan does wheat. Moreover, they affirm that the
Apostle Paul himself made mention of this cross in the following words: "The
doctrine of the cross is to them that perish foolishness, but to us who are
saved it is the power of God." And again: "God forbid that I should glory in
anything save in the cross of Christ, by whom the world is crucified to me, and
I unto the world."
Such, then, is the account which they all give of their Pleroma, and of
the formation of the universe, striving, as they do, to adapt the good words of
revelation to their own wicked inventions. And it is not only from the writings
of the evangelists and the apostles that they endeavour to derive proofs for
their opinions by means of perverse interpretations and deceitful expositions:
they deal in the same way with the law and the prophets, which contain many
parables and allegories that can frequently be drawn into various senses,
according to the kind of exegesis to which they are subjected. And others of
them, with great craftiness, adapted such parts of Scripture to their own
figments, lead away captive from the truth those who do not retain a stedfast
faith in one God, the Father Almighty, and in one Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of
God.
Chapter 4.
Account Given by the Heretics of the Formation
of Achamoth; Origin of the Visible World from Her Disturbances.
The following are the transactions which they narrate as having occurred
outside of the Pleroma: The enthymesis of that Sophia who dwells above, which
they also term Achamoth, being removed from the Pleroma, together with her
passion, they relate to have, as a matter of course, become violently excited in
those places of darkness and vacuity [to which she had been banished]. For she
was excluded from light and the Pleroma, and was without form or figure, like an
untimely birth, because she had received nothing [from a male parent]. But the
Christ dwelling on high took pity upon her; and having extended himself through
and beyond Stauros, he imparted a figure to her, but merely as respected
substance, and not so as to convey intelligence. Having effected this, he
withdrew his influence, and returned, leaving Achamoth to herself, in order that
she, becoming sensible of her suffering as being severed from the Pleroma, might
be influenced by the desire of better things, while she possessed in the
meantime a kind of odour of immortality left in her by Christ and the Holy
Spirit. Wherefore also she is called by two names-Sophia after her father (for
Sophia is spoken of as being her father), and Holy Spirit from that Spirit who
is along with Christ. Having then obtained a form, along with intelligence, and
being immediately deserted by that Logos who had been invisibly present with
her-that is, by Christ-she strained herself to discover that light which had
forsaken her, but could not effect her purpose, inasmuch as she was prevented by
Horos. And as Horos thus obstructed her further progress, he exclaimed, Iao,
whence, they say, this name Iao derived its origin. And when she could
not pass by Horos on account of that passion in which she had been involved, and
because she alone had been left without, she then resigned herself to every sort
of that manifold and varied state of passion to which she was subject; and thus
she suffered grief on the one hand because she had not obtained the object of
her desire, and fear on the other hand, lest life itself should fail her, as
light had already done, while, in addition, she was in the greatest perplexity.
All these feelings were associated with ignorance. And this ignorance of hers
was not like that of her mother, the first Sophia, an Aeon, due to degeneracy by
means of passion, but to an [innate] opposition [of nature to knowledge].
Moreover, another kind of passion fell upon her her (Achamoth), namely, that of
desiring to return to him who gave her life.
This collection [of passions] they declare was the substance of the matter
from which this world was formed. For from [her desire of] returning [to him who
gave her life], every soul belonging to this world, and that of the Demiurge
himself, derived its origin. All other things owed their beginning to her terror
and sorrow. For from her tears all that is of a liquid nature was formed; from
her smile all that is lucent; and from her grief and perplexity all the
corporeal elements of the world. For at one time, as they affirm, she would weep
and lament on account of being left alone in the midst of darkness and vacuity;
while, at another time, reflecting on the light which had forsaken her, she
would be filled with joy, and laugh; then, again, she would be struck with
terror; or, at other times, would sink into consternation and bewilderment.
Now what follows from all this? No light tragedy comes out of it, as the
fancy of every man among them pompously explains, one in one way, and another in
another, from what kind of passion and from what element being derived its
origin. They have good reason, as seems to me, why they should not feel inclined
to teach these things to all in public, but only to such as are able to pay a
high price for an acquaintance with such profound mysteries. For these doctrines
are not at all similar to those of which our Lord said, "Freely ye have
received, freely give." They are, on the contrary, abstruse, and portentous, and
profound mysteries, to be got at only with great labour by such as are in love
with falsehood. For who would not expend lull that he possessed, if only he
might learn in return, that from the tears of the enthymesis of the Aeon
involved in passion, seas, and fountains, and rivers, and every liquid substance
derived its origin; that light burst forth from her smile; and that from her
perplexity and consternation the corporeal elements of the world had their
formation?
I feel somewhat inclined myself to contribute a few hints towards the
development of their system. For when I perceive that waters are in part fresh,
such as fountains, rivers, showers, and so on, and in part salt; such as those
in the sea, I reflect with myself that all such waters cannot be derived from
her tears, inasmuch as these are of a saline quality only. It is clear,
therefore, that the waters which are salt are alone those which are derived from
her tears. But it is probable that she, in her intense agony and perplexity, was
covered with perspiration. And hence, following out their notion, we may
conceive that fountains and rivers, and all the fresh water in the world, are
due to this source. For it is difficult, since we know that all tears are of the
same quality, to believe that waters both salt and fresh proceeded from them.
The more plausible supposition is, that some are from her tears, and some from
her perspiration. And since there are also in the world certain waters which are
hot and acrid in their nature, thou must be left to guess their origin, how and
whence. Such are some of the results of their hypothesis.
They go on to state that, when the mother Achamoth had passed through all
sorts of passion, and had with difficulty escaped from them, she turned herself
to supplicate the light which had forsaken her, that is, Christ. He, however,
having returned to the Pleroma, and being probably unwilling again to descend
from it, sent forth to her the Paraclete, that is, the Saviour. This being was
endowed with all power by the Father, who placed everything under his authority,
the Aeons doing so likewise, so that "by him were all things, visible and
invisible, created, thrones, divinities, dominions." He then was sent to her
along with his contemporary angels. And they related that Achamoth, filled with
reverence, at first veiled herself through modesty, but that by and by, when she
had looked upon him with all his endowments, and had acquired strength from his
appearance, she ran forward to meet him. He then imparted to her form as
respected intelligence, and brought healing to her passions, separating them
from her, but not so as to drive them out of thought altogether. For it was not
possible that they should be annihilated as in the former case, because they had
already taken root and acquired strength [so as to possess an indestructible
existence]. All that he could do was to separate them and set them apart, and
then commingle and condense them, so as to transmute them from incorporeal
passion into unorganized matter. He then by this process conferred upon them a
fitness and a nature to become concretions and corporeal structures, in order
that two substances should be formed,-the one evil, resulting from the passions,
and the other subject indeed to suffering, but originating from her conversion.
And on this account (i.e., on account of this hypostatizing of ideal matter)
they say that the Saviour virtually created the world. But when Achamoth was
freed from her passion, she gazed with rapture on the dazzling vision of the
angels that were with him; and in her ecstasy, conceiving by them, they tell us
that she brought forth new beings, partly after her oven image, and partly a
spiritual progeny after the image of the Saviour's attendants.
Chapter 5.
Formation of the Demiurge; Description of Him.
He is the Creator of Everything Outside of the Pleroma.
These three kinds of existence, then, having, according to them, been now
formed,-one from the passion, which was matter; a second from the conversion,
which was animal; and the third, that which she (Achamoth) herself brought
forth, which was spiritual,-she next addressed herself to the task of giving
these form. But she could not succeed in doing this as respected the spiritual
existence, because it was of the same nature with herself. She therefore applied
herself to give form to the animal substance which had proceeded from her own
conversion, and to bring forth to light the instructions of the Saviour. And
they say she first formed out of animal substance him who is Father and King of
all things, both of these which are of the same nature with himself, that is,
animal substances, which they also call right-handed, and those which sprang
from the passion, and from matter, which they call left-handed. For they affirm
that he formed all the things which came into existence after him, being
secretly impelled thereto by his mother. From this circumstance they style him
Metropator, Apator, Demiurge, and Father, saying that he is Father of the
substances on the right hand, that is, of the animal, but Demiurge of those on
the left, that is, of the material, while he is at the same time the king of
all. For they say that this Enthymesis, desirous of making all things to the
honour of the Aeons, formed images of them, or rather that the Saviour did so
through her instrumentality. And she, in the image of the invisible Father, kept
herself concealed from the Demiurge. But he was in the image of the
only-begotten Son, and the angels and archangels created by him were in the
image of the rest of the Aeons.
They affirm, therefore, that he was constituted the Father and God of
everything outside of the Pleroma, being the creator of all animal and material
substances. For he it was that discriminated these two kinds of existence
hitherto confused, and made corporeal from incorporeal substances, fashioned
things heavenly and earthly, and became the Framer (Demiurge) of things material
and animal, of those on the right and those on the left, of the light and of the
heavy, and of those tending upwards as well as of those tending downwards. He
created also seven heavens, above which they say that he, the Demiurge, exists.
And on this account they term him Hebdomas, and his mother Achamoth Ogdoads,
preserving the number of the first-begotten and primary Ogdoad as the Pleroma.
They affirm, moreover, that these seven heavens are intelligent, and speak of
them as being angels, while they refer to the Demiurge himself as being an angel
bearing a likeness to God; and in the same strain, they declare that Paradise,
situated above the third heaven, is a fourth angel possessed of power, from whom
Adam derived certain qualities while he conversed with him.
They go on to say that the Demiurge imagined that he created all these
things of himself, while he in reality made them in conjunction with the
productive power of Achamoth. He formed the heavens, yet was ignorant of the
heavens; he fashioned man, yet knew not man; he brought to light the earth, yet
had no acquaintance with the earth; and, in like manner. they declare that he
was ignorant of the forms of all that he made, and knew not even of the
existence of his own mother, but imagined that he himself was all things. They
further affirm that his mother originated this opinion in his mind, because she
desired to bring him forth possessed of such a character that he should be the
head and source of his own essence, and the absolute ruler over every kind of
operation [that was afterwards attempted]. This mother they also call Ogdoad,
Sophia; Terra, Jerusalem, Holy Spirit, and, with a masculine reference, Lord.
Her place of habitation is an intermediate one, above the Demiurge indeed, but
below and outside of the Pleroma, even to the end.
As, then, they represent all material substance to be formed from three
passions, viz., fear, grief, and perplexity, the account they give is as
follows: Animal substances originated from fear and from conversion; the
Demiurge they also describe as owing his origin to conversion; but the existence
of all the other animal substances they ascribe to fear, such as the souls of
irrational animals, and of wild beasts, and men. And on this account, he (the
Demiurge), being incapable of recognising any spiritual essences, imagined
himself to be God alone, and declared through the prophets, "I am God, and
besides me there is none else." They further teach that the spirits of
wickedness derived their origin from grief. Hence the devil, whom they also call
Cosmocrator (the ruler of the world), and the demons, and the angels, and every
wicked spiritual being that exists, found the source Of their existence. They
represent the Demiurge as being the son of that mother of theirs (Achamoth), and
Cosmocrator as the creature of the Demiurge. Cosmocrator has knowledge of what
is above himself, because he is a spirit of wickedness; but the Demiurge
is ignorant of such things, inasmuch as he is merely animal. Their mother
dwells in that place which is above the heavens, that is, in the intermediate
abode; the Demiurge in the heavenly place, that is, in the hebdomad; but the
Cosmocrator in this our world. The corporeal elements of the world, again,
sprang, as we before remarked, from bewilderment and perplexity, as from a more
ignoble source. Thus the earth arose from her state of stupor; water from the
agitation caused by her fear; air from the consolidation of her grief; while
fire, producing death and corruption, was inherent in all these elements, even
as they teach that ignorance also lay concealed in these three passions.
Having thus formed the world, he (the Demiurge) also created the earthy
[part of] man, not taking him from this dry earth, but from an invisible
substance consisting of fusible and fluid matter, and then afterwards, as they
define the process, breathed into him the animal part of his nature. It was this
latter which was created after his image and likeness. The material part,
indeed, was very near to. God, so far as the image went, but not of the same
substance with him. The animal, on the Other hand, was so in respect to
likeness; and hence his substance was called the spirit of life, because it took
its rise from a spiritual outflowing. After all this, he was, they say,
enveloped all round with a covering of skin; and by this they mean the outward
sensitive flesh.
But they further affirm that the Demiurge himself was ignorant of that
offspring of his mother Achamoth, which she brought forth as a consequence of
her contemplation of those angels who waited on the Saviour, and which was, like
herself, of a spiritual nature. She took advantage of this ignorance to deposit
it (her production) in him without his knowledge, in order that, being by his
instrumentality infused into that animal soul proceeding from himself, and being
thus carried as in a womb in this material body, while it gradually increased in
strength, might in course of time become fitted for the reception of perfect
rationality. Thus it came to pass, then, according to them, that, without any
knowledge on the part of the Demiurge, the man formed by his inspiration was at
the same time, through an unspeakable providence, rendered a spiritual man by
the simultaneous inspiration received from Sophia. For, as he was ignorant of
his mother, so neither did he recognise her offspring. This [offspring] they
also declare to be the Ecclesia, an emblem of the Ecclesia which is above. This,
then, is the kind of man whom they conceive of: he has his animal soul from the
Demiurge, his body from the earth, his fleshy part from matter, and his
spiritual man from the mother Achamoth.
Chapter 6.
The Threefold Kind of Man Feigned by These
Heretics: Good Works Needless for Them, Though Necessary to Others: Their
Abandoned Morals.
There being thus three kinds of substances, they declare of all that is
material (which they also describe as being "on the left hand") that it must of
necessity perish, inasmuch as it is incapable of receiving any afflatus
of incorruption. As to every animal existence (which they also denominate "on
the right hand"), they hold that, inasmuch as it is a mean between the spiritual
and the material, it passes to the side to which inclination draws it. Spiritual
substance, again, they describe as having been sent forth for this end, that,
being here united with that which is animal, it might assume shape, the two
elements being simultaneously subjected to the same discipline. And this they
declare to be "the salt" and "the light of the world." For the animal substance
had need of training by means of the outward senses; and on this account they
affirm that the world was created, as well as that the Saviour came to the
animal substance (which was possessed of free-will), that He might secure for it
salvation. For they affirm that He received the first-fruits of those whom He
was to save [as follows], from Achamoth that which was spiritual, while He was
invested by the Demiurge with the animal Christ, but was begirt by a [special]
dispensation with a body endowed with an animal nature, yet constructed with
unspeakable skill, so that it might be visible and tangible, and capable of
enduring suffering. At the same time, they deny that He assumed anything
material [into His nature], since indeed matter is incapable of salvation. They
further hold that the consummation of all things will take place when all that
is spiritual has been formed and perfected by Gnosis (knowledge); and by this
they mean spiritual men who have attained to the perfect knowledge of God, and
been initiated into these mysteries by Achamoth. And they represent themselves
to be these persons.
Animal men, again, are instructed in animal things; such men, namely, as
are established by their works, and by a mere faith, while they have not perfect
knowledge. We of the Church, they say, are these persons. Wherefore also they
maintain that good works are necessary to us, for that otherwise it is
impossible we should be saved. But as to themselves, they hold that they shall
be entirely and undoubtedly saved, not by means of conduct, but because they are
spiritual by nature. For, just as it is impossible that material substance
should partake of salvation (since, indeed, they maintain that it is incapable
of receiving it), so again it is impossible that spiritual substance (by which
they mean themselves) should ever come under the power of corruption, whatever
the sort of actions in which they indulged. For even as gold, when submersed in
filth, loses not on that account its beauty, but retains its own native
qualities, the filth having no power to injure the gold, so they affirm that
they cannot in any measure suffer hurt, or lose their spiritual substance,
whatever the material actions in which they may be involved.
Wherefore also it comes to pass, that the "most perfect" among them addict
themselves without fear to all those kinds of forbidden deeds of which the
Scriptures assure us that "they who do such things shall not inherit the kingdom
of God." For instance, they make no scruple about eating meats offered in
sacrifice to idols, imagining that they can in this way contract no defilement.
Then, again, at every heathen festival celebrated in honour of the idols, these
men are the first to assemble; and to such a pitch do they go, that some of them
do not even keep away from that bloody spectacle hateful both to God and men, in
which gladiators either fight with wild beasts, or singly encounter one another.
Others of them yield themselves up to the lusts of the flesh with the utmost
greediness, maintaining that carnal things should be allowed to the carnal
nature, while spiritual things are provided for the spiritual. Some of them,
moreover, are in the habit of defiling those women to whom they have taught the
above doctrine, as has frequently been confessed by those women who have been
led astray by certain of them, on their returning to the Church of God, and
acknowledging this along with the rest of their errors. Others of them, too,
openly and without a blush, having become passionately attached to certain
women, seduce them away from their husbands, and contract marriages of their own
with them. Others of them, again, who pretend at first. to live in all modesty
with them as with sisters, have in course of time been revealed in their true
colours, when the sister has been found with child by her [pretended] brother.
And committing many other abominations and impieties, they run us down
(who from the fear of God guard against sinning even in thought or word) as
utterly contemptible and ignorant persons, while they highly exalt themselves,
and claim to be perfect, and the elect seed. For they declare that we simply
receive grace for use, wherefore also it will again be taken away from us; but
that they themselves have grace as their own special possession, which has
descended from above by means of an unspeakable and indescribable conjunction;
and on this account more will be given them. They maintain, therefore, that in
every way it is always necessary for them to practise the mystery of
conjunction. And that they may persuade the thoughtless to believe this, they
are in the habit of using these very words, "Whosoever being in this
world does not so love a woman as to obtain possession of her, is not of the
truth, nor shall attain to the truth. But whosoever being of this world
has intercourse with woman, shall not attain to the truth, because he has so
acted under the power of concupiscence." On this account, they tell us that it
is necessary for us whom they call animal men, and describe as being
of the world, to practise continence and good works, that by this means we
may attain at length to the intermediate habitation, but that to them who are
called "the spiritual and perfect" such a course of conduct is not at all
necessary. For it is not conduct of any kind which leads into the Pleroma, but
the seed sent forth thence in a feeble, immature state, and here brought to
perfection.
Chapter 7.
The Mother Achamoth, When All Her Seed are
Perfected, Shall Pass into the Pleroma, Accompanied by Those Men Who are
Spiritual; The Demiurge, with Animal Men, Shall Pass into the Intermediate
Habitation; But All Material Men Shall Go into Corruption. Their Blasphemous
Opinions Against the True Incarnation of Christ by the Virgin Mary. Their
Views as to the Prophecies. Stupid Ignorance of the Demiurge.
When all the seed shall have come to perfection, they state that then
their mother Achamoth shall pass from the intermediate place, and enter in
within the Pleroma, and shall receive as her spouse the Saviour, who sprang from
all the Aeons, that thus a conjunction may be formed between the Saviour and
Sophia, that is, Achamoth. These, then, are the bridegroom and bride, while the
nuptial chamber is the full extent of the Pleroma. The spiritual seed, again,
being divested of their animal souls, and becoming intelligent spirits, shall in
an irresistible and invisible manner enter in within the Pleroma, and be
bestowed as brides on those angels who wait upon the Saviour. The Demiurge
himself will pass into the place of his mother Sophia; that is, the intermediate
habitation. In this intermediate place, also, shall the souls of the righteous
repose; but nothing of an animal nature shall find admittance to the Pleroma.
When these things have taken place as described, then shall that fire which lies
hidden in the world blaze forth and bum; and while destroying all matter, shall
also be extinguished along with it, and have no further existence. They affirm
that the Demiurge was acquainted with none of these things before the advent of
the Saviour.
There are also some who maintain that he also produced Christ as his own
proper son, but of an animal nature, and that mention was made of him by the
prophets. This Christ passed through Mary just as water flows through a tube;
and there descended upon him in the form of a dove it the time of his baptism,
that Saviour who belonged to the Pleroma, and was formed by the combined efforts
of all its inhabit ants. In him there existed also that spiritual seed which
proceeded from Achamoth. They hold, accordingly, that our Lord, while preserving
the type of the first-begotten and primary tetrad, was compounded of these four
substances,-of that which is spiritual, in so far as He was from Achamoth; of
that which is animal, as being from the Demiurge by a special dispensation,
inasmuch as He was formed [corporeally] with unspeakable skill; and of the
Saviour, as respects that dove which descended upon Him. He also continued free
from all suffering, since indeed it was not possible that He should suffer who
was at once incomprehensible and invisible. And for this reason the Spirit of
Christ, who had been placed within Him, was taken away when He was brought
before Pilate. They maintain, further, that not even the seed which He had
received from the mother [Achamoth] was subject to suffering; for it, too, was
impassible, as being spiritual, and invisible even to the Demiurge himself. It
follows, then, according to them, that the animal Christ, and that which had
been formed mysteriously by a special dispensation, underwent suffering, that
the mother might exhibit through him a type of the Christ above, namely, of him
who extended himself through Stauros, and imparted to Achamoth shape, so far as
substance was concerned. For they declare that all these transactions were
counterparts of what took place above.
They maintain, moreover, that those souls which possess the seed of Achamoth are superior to the rest, and are more dearly loved by the Demiurge
than others, while he knows not the true cause thereof, but imagines that they
are what they are through his favour towards them. Wherefore, also, they say he
distributed them to prophets, priests, and kings; and they declare that many
things were spoken by this seed through the prophets, inasmuch as it was endowed
with a transcendently lofty nature. The mother also, they say, spake much about
things above, and that both through him and through the souls which were formed
by him. Then, again, they divide the prophecies [into different classes],
maintaining that one portion was uttered by the mother, a second by her seed,
and a third by the Demiurge. In like manner, they hold that Jesus uttered some
things under the influence of the Saviour, others under that of the mother, and
others still under that of the Demiurge, as we shall show further on in our
work.
The Demiurge, while ignorant of those things which were higher than
himself, was indeed excited by the announcements made [through the prophets],
but treated them with contempt, attributing them sometimes to one cause and
sometimes to another; either to the prophetic spirit (which itself possesses the
power of self-excitement), or to [mere unassisted] man, or that it was simply a
crafty device of the lower [and baser order of men]. He remained thus ignorant
until the appearing of the Lord. But they relate that when the Saviour came, the
Demiurge learned all things from Him, and gladly with all, his power joined
himself to Him. They maintain that he is the centurion mentioned in the Gospel,
who addressed the Saviour in these words: "For I also am one having soldiers and
servants under my authority; and whatsoever I command they do." They further
hold that he will continue administering the affairs of the world as long as
that is fitting and needful, and specially that he may exercise a care over the
Church; while at the same time he is influenced by the knowledge of the reward
prepared for him, namely, that he may attain to the habitation of his mother.
They conceive, then, of three kinds of men, spiritual, material, and
animal, represented by Cain, Abel, and Seth. These three natures are no longer
found in one person, but constitute various kinds [of men]. The material goes,
as a matter of course, into corruption. The animal, if it make choice of the
better part, finds repose in the intermediate place; but if the worse, it too
shall pass into destruction. But they assert that the spiritual principles which
have been sown by Achamoth, being disciplined and nourished here from that time
until now in righteous souls (because when given forth by her they were yet but
weak), at last attaining to perfection, shall be given as brides to the angels
of the Saviour, while their animal souls of necessity rest for ever with the
Demiurge in the intermediate place. And again subdividing the animal souls
themselves, they say that some are by nature good, and others by nature evil.
The good are those who become capable of receiving the [spiritual] seed; the
evil by nature are those who are never able to receive that seed.
Chapter 8.
How the Valentinians Pervert the Scriptures
to Support Their Own Pious Opinions.
Such, then, is their system, which neither the prophets announced, nor the
Lord taught, nor the apostles delivered, but of which they boast that beyond all
others they have a perfect knowledge. They gather their views from other sources
than the Scriptures; and, to use a common proverb, they strive to weave ropes of
sand, while they endeavour to adapt with an air of probability to their own
peculiar assertions the parables of the Lord, the sayings of the prophets, and
the words of the apostles, in order that their scheme may not seem altogether
without support. In doing so, however, they disregard the order and the
connection of the Scriptures, and so far as in them lies, dismember and destroy
the truth. By transferring passages, and dressing them up anew, and making one
thing out of another, they succeed in deluding many through their wicked art in
adapting the oracles of the Lord to their opinions. Their manner of acting is
just as if one, when a beautiful image of a king has been constructed by some
skilful artist out of precious jewels, should then take this likeness of the man
all to pieces, should rearrange the gems, and so fit them together as to make
them into the form of a dog or of a fox, and even that but poorly executed; and
should then maintain and declare that this was the beautiful image of the
king which the skilful artist constructed, pointing to the jewels which had been
admirably fitted together by the first artist to form the image of the king, but
have been with bad effect transferred by the latter one to the shape of a dog,
and by thus exhibiting the jewels, should deceive the ignorant who had no
conception what a king's form was like, and persuade them that that miserable
likeness of the fox was, in fact, the beautiful image of the king. In like
manner do these persons patch together old wives' fables, and then endeavour, by
violently drawing away from their proper connection, words, expressions, and
parables whenever found, to adapt the oracles of God to their baseless fictions.
We have already stated how far they proceed in this way with respect to the
interior of the Pleroma.
Then, again, as to those things outside of their Pleroma, the following
are some specimens of what they attempt to accommodate out of the Scriptures to
their opinions. They affirm that the Lord came in the last times of the world to
endure suffering, for this end, that He might indicate the passion which
occurred to the last of the Aeons, and might by His own end announce the
cessation of that disturbance which had risen among the Aeons. They maintain,
further, that that girl of twelve years old, the daughter of the ruler of the
synagogue, to whom the Lord approached and raised her from the dead, was a type
of Achamoth, to whom their Christ, by extending himself, imparted shape, and
whom he led anew to the perception of that light which had forsaken her. And
that the Saviour appeared to her when she lay outside of the Pleroma as a kind
of abortion, they affirm Paul to have declared in his Epistle to the Corinthians
[in these words], "And last of all, He appeared to me also, as to one born out
of due time." Again, the coming of the Saviour with His attendants to Achamoth
is declared in like manner by him in the same Epistle, when he says, "A woman
ought to have a veil upon her head, because of the angels." Now, that Achamoth,
when the Saviour came to her, drew a veil over herself through modesty, Moses
rendered manifest when he put a veil upon his face. Then, also, they say that
the passions which she endured were indicated by the Lord upon the cross. Thus,
when He said, "My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken Me? " He simply showed
that Sophia was deserted by the light, and was restrained by Horos from making
any advance forward. Her anguish, again, was indicated when He said, "My soul is
exceeding sorrowful, even unto death; " her fear by the words, "Father, if it be
possible, let this cup pass from Me; " and her perplexity, too, when He said,
"And what I shall say, I know not."
And they teach that He pointed out the three kinds of men as follows: the
material, when He said to him that asked Him, "Shall I follow Thee? "
"The Son of man hath not where to lay His head; "-the animal, when He
said to him that declared, "I will follow Thee, but suffer me first to bid them
farewell that are in my house," "No man, putting his hand to the plough, and
looking back, is fit for the kingdom of heaven" (for this man they declare to be
of the intermediate class, even as they do that other who, though he professed
to have wrought a large amount of righteousness, yet refused to follow Him, and
was so overcome by [the love of] riches, as never to reach perfection)-this one
it pleases them to place in the animal class;-the spiritual, again, when
He said, "Let the dead bury their dead, but go thou and preach the kingdom of
God," and when He said to Zaccheus the publican, "Make haste, and come down, for
to-day I must abide in thine house" -for these they declared to have belonged to
the spiritual class. Also the parable of the leaven which the woman is described
as having hid in three measures of meal, they declare to make manifest the three
classes. For, according to their teaching, the woman represented Sophia; the
three measures of meal, the three kinds of men-spiritual, animal, and material;
while the leaven denoted the Saviour Himself. Paul, too, very plainly set forth
the material, animal, and spiritual, saying in one place, "As is the earthy,
such are they also that are earthy; " and in another place, "But the animal man
receiveth not the things of the Spirit; " and again: "He that is spiritual
judgeth all things." And this, "The animal man receiveth not the things of the
Spirit," they affirm to have been spoken concerning the Demiurge, who, as being
animal, knew neither his mother who was spiritual, nor her seed, nor the Aeons
in the Pleroma. And that the Saviour received first-fruits of those whom He was
to save, Paul declared when he said, "And if the first-fruits be holy, the lump
is also holy," teaching that the expression "first-fruits" denoted that which is
spiritual, but that "the lump" meant us, that is, the animal Church, the lump of
which they say He assumed, and blended it with Himself, inasmuch as He is "the
leaven."
Moreover, that Achamoth wandered beyond the Pleroma, and received form
from Christ, and was sought after by the Saviour, they declare that He indicated
when He said, that He had come after that sheep which was gone astray. For they
explain the wandering sheep to mean their mother, by whom they represent the
Church as having been sown. The wandering itself denotes her stay outside of the
Pleroma in a state of varied passion, from which they maintain that matter
derived its origin. The woman, again, who sweeps the house and finds the piece
of money, they declare to denote the Sophia above, who, having lost her
enthymesis, afterwards recovered it, on all things being purified by the advent
of the Saviour. Wherefore this substance also, according to them, was reinstated
in Pleroma. They say, too, that Simeon, "who took Christ into his arms, and gave
thanks to God, and said, Lord, now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace,
according to Thy word," was a type of the Demiurge, who, on the arrival of the
Saviour, learned his own change of place, and gave thanks to Bythus. They also
assert that by Anna, who is spoken of in the gospel as a prophetess, and who,
after living seven years with her husband, passed all the rest of her life in
widowhood until she saw the Saviour, and recognised Him, and spoke of Him to
all, was most plainly indicated Achamoth, who, having for a little while looked
upon the Saviour with His associates, and dwelling all the rest of the time in
the intermediate place, waited for Him till He should come again, and restore
her to her proper consort. Her name, too, was indicated by the Saviour, when He
said, "Yet wisdom is justified by her children." This, too, was done by Paul in
these words," But we speak wisdom among them that are perfect." They declare
also that Paul has referred to the conjunctions within the Pleroma, showing them
forth by means of one; for, when writing of the conjugal union in this life, he
expressed himself thus: "This is a great mystery, but I speak concerning Christ
and the Church."
Further, they teach that John, the disciple of the Lord, indicated the
first Ogdoad, expressing themselves in these words: John, the disciple of the
Lord, wishing to set forth the origin of all things, so as to explain how the
Father produced the whole, lays down a certain principle,-that, namely, which
was first-begotten by God, which Being he has termed both the only-begotten Son
and God, in whom the Father, after a seminal manner, brought forth all things.
By him the Word was produced, and in him the whole substance of the Aeons, to
which the Word himself afterwards imparted form. Since, therefore, he treats of
the first origin of things, he rightly proceeds in his teaching from the
beginning, that is, from God and the Word. And he expresses himself thus: "In
the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God; the
same was in the beginning with God." Having first of all distinguished these
three-God, the Beginning, and the Word-he again unites them, that he may exhibit
the production of each of them, that is, of the Son and of the Word, and may at
the same time show their union with one another, and with the Father. For "the
beginning" is in the Father, and of the Father, while "the Word" is in the
beginning, and of the beginning. Very properly, then, did he say, "In the
beginning was the Word," for He was in the Son; "and the Word was with God," for
He was the beginning; "and the Word was God," of course, for that which is
begotten of God is God. "The same was in the beginning with God"-this clause
discloses the order of production. "All things were made by Him, and without Him
was nothing made; " for the Word was the author of form and beginning to all the
Aeons that came into existence after Him. But "what was made in Him," says John,
"is life." Here again he indicated conjunction; for all things, he said, were
made by Him, but in Him was life. This, then, which is in Him, is
more closely connected with Him than those things which were simply made by Him,
for it exists along with Him, and is developed by Him. When, again, he adds,
"And the life was the light of men," while thus mentioning Anthropos, he
indicated also Ecclesia by that one expression, in order that, by using only one
name, he might disclose their fellowship with one another, in virtue of their
conjunction. For Anthropos and Ecclesia spring from Logos and Zoe. Moreover, he
styled life (Zoe) the light of men, because they are enlightened by her, that
is, formed and made manifest. This also Paul declares in these words: "For
whatsoever doth make manifest is light." Since, therefore, Zoe manifested and
begat both Anthropos and Ecclesia, she is termed their light. Thus, then, did
John by these words reveal both other things and the second Tetrad, Logos and
Zoe, Anthropos and Ecclesia. And still further, he also indicated the first
Tetrad. For, in discoursing of the Saviour and declaring that all things beyond
the Pleroma received form from Him, he says that He is the fruit of the entire
Pleroma. For he styles Him a "light which shineth in darkness, and which was not
comprehended" by it, inasmuch as, when He imparted form to all those things
which had their origin from passion, He was not known by it. He also styles Him
Son, and Aletheia, and Zoe, and the "Word made flesh, whose glory," he says, "we
beheld; and His glory was as that of the Only-begotten (given to Him by the
Father), full of grace and truth." (But what John really does say is this: "And
the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us; and we beheld His glory, the glory
as of the only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth." ) Thus, then,
does he [according to them] distinctly set forth the first Tetrad, when he
speaks of the Father, and Charis, and Monogenes, and Aletheia. In this way, too,
does John tell of the first Ogdoad, and that which is the mother of all the
Aeons. For he mentions the Father, and Charis, and Monogenes, and Aletheia, and
Logos, and Zoe, and Anthropos, and Ecclesia. Such are the views of Ptolemaeus.
Chapter 9.
Refutation of the Impious Interpretations of
These Heretics.
You see, my friend, the method which these men employ to deceive
themselves, while they abuse the Scriptures by endeavouring to support their own
system out of them. For this reason, I have brought forward their modes of
expressing themselves, that thus thou mightest understand the deceitfulness of
their procedure, and the wickedness of their error. For, in the first place, if
it had been John's intention to set forth that Ogdoad above, he would surely
have preserved the order of its production, and would doubtless have placed the
primary Tetrad first as being, according to them, most venerable and would then
have annexed the second, that, by the sequence of the names, the order of the
Ogdoad might be exhibited, and not after so long an interval, as if forgetful
for the moment and then again calling the matter to mind, he, last of all, made
mention of the primary Tetrad. In the next place, if he had meant to indicate
their conjunctions, he certainly would not have omitted the name of Ecclesia;
while, with respect to the other conjunctions, he either would have been
satisfied with the mention of the male [Aeons] (since the others [like Ecclesia]
might be understood), so as to preserve a uniformity throughout; or if he
enumerated the conjunctions of the rest, he would also have announced the spouse
of Anthropos, and would not have left us to find out her name by divination.
The fallacy, then, of this exposition is manifest. For when John,
proclaiming one God, the Almighty, and one Jesus Christ, the Only-begotten, by
whom all things were made, declares that this was the Son of God, this the
Only-begotten, this the Former of all things, this the true Light who enlighteneth every man this the Creator of the world, this He that came to His
own, this He that became flesh and dwelt among us,-these men, by a plausible
kind of exposition, perverting these statements, maintain that there was another
Monogenes, according to production, whom they also style Arche. They also
maintain that there was another Saviour, and another Logos, the son of Monogenes,
and another Christ produced for the re-establishment of the Pleroma. Thus it is
that, wresting from the truth every one of the expressions which have been
cited, and taking a bad advantage of the names, they have transferred them to
their own system; so that, according to them, in all these terms John makes no
mention of the Lord Jesus Christ. For if he has named the Father, and Charis,
and Monogenes, and Aletheia, and Logos, and Zoe, and Anthropos, and Ecclesia,
according to their hypothesis, he has, by thus speaking, referred to the primary
Ogdoad, in which there was as yet no Jesus, and no Christ, the teacher of John.
But that the apostle did not speak concerning their conjunctions, but concerning
our Lord Jesus Christ, whom he also acknowledges as the Word of God, he himself
has made evident. For, summing up his statements respecting the Word previously
mentioned by him, he further declares, "And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt
among us." But, according to their hypothesis, the Word did not become flesh at
all, inasmuch as He never went outside of the Pleroma, but that Saviour [became
flesh] who was formed by a special dispensation [out of all the Aeons], and was
of later date than the Word.
Learn then, ye foolish men, that Jesus who suffered for us, and who dwelt
among us, is Himself the Word of God. For if any other of the Aeons had become
flesh for our salvation, it would have been probable that the apostle spoke of
another. But if the Word of the Father who descended is the same also that
ascended, He, namely, the Only-begotten Son of the only God, who, according to
the good pleasure of the Father, became flesh for the sake of men, the apostle
certainly does not speak regarding any other, or concerning any Ogdoad, but
respecting our Lord Jesus Christ. For, according to them, the Word did not
originally become flesh. For they maintain that the Saviour assumed an animal
body, formed in accordance with a special dispensation by an unspeakable
providence, so as to become visible and palpable. But flesh is that which
was of old formed for Adam by God out of the dust, and it is this that John has
declared the Word of God became. Thus is their primary and first-begotten Ogdoad
brought to nought. For, since Logos, and Monogenes, and Zoe, and Phoµs, and
Sorer, and Christus, and the Son of God, and He who became incarnate for us,
have been proved to be one and the same, the Ogdoad which they have built up at
once falls to pieces. And when this is destroyed, their whole system sinks into
ruin,-a system which they falsely dream into existence, and thus inflict injury
on the Scriptures, while they build up their own hypothesis.
Then, again, collecting a set of expressions and names scattered here and
there [in Scripture], they twist them, as we have already said, from a natural
to a non-natural sense. In so doing, they act like those who bring forward any
kind of hypothesis they fancy, and then endeavour to support them out of the
poems of Homer, so that the ignorant imagine that Homer actually composed the
verses bearing upon that hypothesis, which has, in fact, been but newly
constructed; and many others are led so far by the regularly-formed sequence of
the verses, as to doubt whether Homer may not have composed them. Of this kind
is the following passage, where one, describing Hercules as having been sent by
Eurystheus to the dog in the infernal regions, does so by means of these Homeric
verses,-for there can be no objection to our citing these by way of
illustration, since the same sort of attempt appears in both:-
"Thus saying, there sent forth from his house deeply groaning."-Od.,
x. 76.
"The hero Hercules conversant with mighty deeds."-Od., xxi. 26.
"Eurystheus, the son of Sthenelus, descended from Perseus."-Il.,
xix. 123.
"That he might bring from Erebus the dog of gloomy Pluto."-Il.,
viii. 368.
"And he advanced like a mountain-bred lion confident of strength."-Od.,
vi. 130.
"Rapidly through the city, while all his friends followed."-Il.,
xxiv. 327.
"Both maidens, and youths, and much-enduring old men."-Od., xi.
38.
"Mourning for him bitterly as one going forward to death."-Il.,
xxiv. 328.
"But Mercury and the blue-eyed Minerva conducted him."-Od., xi.
626.
"For she knew the mind of her brother, how it laboured with grief."-Il.,
ii. 409.
Now, what simple-minded man, I ask, would not be led away by such verses as
these to think that Homer actually framed them so with reference to the subject
indicated? But he who is acquainted with the Homeric writings will recognise the
verses indeed, but not the subject to which they are applied, as knowing that
some of them were spoken of Ulysses, others of Hercules himself, others still of
Priam, and others again of Menelaus and Agamemnon. But if he takes them and
restores each of them to its proper position, he at once destroys the narrative
in question. In like manner he also who retains unchangeable in his heart the
rule of the truth which he received by means of baptism, will doubtless
recognise the names, the expressions, and the parables taken from the
Scriptures, but will by no means acknowledge the blasphemous use which these men
make of them. For, though he will acknowledge the gems, he will certainly not
receive the fox instead of the likeness of the king. But when he has restored
every one of the expressions quoted to its proper position, and has fitted it to
the body of the truth, he will lay bare, and prove to be without any foundation,
the figment of these heretics.
But since what may prove a finishing-stroke to this exhibition is wanting,
so that any one, on following out their farce to the end, may then at once
append an argument which shall overthrow it, we have judged it well to point
out, first of all, in what respects the very fathers of this fable differ among
themselves, as if they were inspired by different spirits of error. For this
very fact forms an a priori proof that the truth proclaimed by the Church
is immoveable, and that the theories of these men are but a tissue of
falsehoods.
Chapter 10.
Unity of the Faith of the Church Throughout the
Whole World.
The Church, though dispersed through our the whole world, even to the ends
of the earth, has received from the apostles and their disciples this faith:
[She believes] in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven, and earth, and
the sea, and all things that are in them; and in one Christ Jesus, the Son of
God, who became incarnate for our salvation; and in the Holy Spirit, who
proclaimed through the prophets the dispensations of God, and the advents, and
the birth from a virgin, and the passion, and the resurrection from the dead,
and the ascension into heaven in the flesh of the beloved Christ Jesus, our
Lord, and His [future] manifestation from heaven in the glory of the Father "to
gather all things in one," and to raise up anew all flesh of the whole human
race, in order that to Christ Jesus, our Lord, and God, and Saviour, and King,
according to the will of the invisible Father, "every knee should bow, of things
in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth, and that every
tongue should confess" to Him, and that He should execute just judgment towards
all; that He may send "spiritual wickednesses," and the angels who transgressed
and became apostates, together with the ungodly, and unrighteous, and wicked,
and profane among men, into everlasting fire; but may, in the exercise of His
grace, confer immortality on the righteous, and holy, and those who have kept
His commandments, and have persevered in His love, some from the beginning [of
their Christian course], and others from [the date of] their repentance, and may
surround them with everlasting glory.
As I have already observed, the Church, having received this preaching and
this faith, although scattered throughout the whole world, yet, as if occupying
but one house, carefully preserves it. She also believes these points [of
doctrine] just as if she had but one soul, and one and the same heart, and she
proclaims them, and teaches them, and hands them down, with perfect harmony, as
if she possessed only one mouth. For, although the languages of the world are
dissimilar, yet the import of the tradition is one and the same. For the
Churches which have been planted in Germany do not believe or hand down anything
different, nor do those in Spain, nor those in Gaul, nor those in the East, nor
those in Egypt, nor those in Libya, nor those which have been established in the
central regions of the world. But as the sun, that creature of God, is one and
the same throughout the whole world, so also the preaching of the truth shineth
everywhere, and enlightens all men that are willing to come to a knowledge of
the truth. Nor will any one of the rulers in the Churches, however highly gifted
he may be in point of eloquence, teach doctrines different from these (for no
one is greater than the Master); nor, on the other hand, will he who is
deficient in power of expression inflict injury on the tradition. For the faith
being ever one and the same, neither does one who is able at great length to
discourse regarding it, make any addition to it, nor does one, who can say but
little diminish it.
It does not follow because men are endowed with greater and less degrees
of intelligence, that they should therefore change the subject-matter [of the
faith] itself, and should conceive of some other God besides Him who is the
Framer, Maker, and Preserver of this universe, (as if He were not sufficient for
them), or of another Christ, or another Only-begotten. But the fact referred to
simply implies this, that one may [more accurately than another] bring out the
meaning of those things which have been spoken in parables, and accommodate them
to the general scheme of the faith; and explain [with special clearness] the
operation and dispensation of God connected with human salvation; and show that
God manifested longsuffering in regard to the apostasy of the angels who
transgressed, as also with respect to the disobedience of men; and set forth why
it is that one and the same God has made some things temporal and some eternal,
some heavenly and others earthly; and understand for what reason God, though
invisible, manifested Himself to the prophets not under one form, but
differently to different individuals; and show why it was that more covenants
than one were given to mankind; and teach what was the special character of each
of these covenants; and search out for what reason "God hath concluded every man
in unbelief, that He may have mercy upon all; "and gratefully describe on what
account the Word of God became flesh and suffered; and relate why the advent of
the Son of God took place in these last times, that is, in the end, rather than
in the beginning [of the world]; and unfold what is contained in the Scriptures
concerning the end [itself], and things to come; and not be silent as to how it
is that God has made the Gentiles, whose salvation was despaired of,
fellow-heirs, and of the same body, and partakers with the saints; and discourse
how it is that "this mortal body shall put on immortality, and this corruptible
shall put on incorruption; " and proclaim in what sense [God] says, "`That is a
people who was not a people; and she is beloved who was not beloved; " and in
what sense He says that "more are the children of her that was desolate, than of
her who possessed a husband." For in reference to these points, and others of a
like nature, the apostle exclaims: "Oh! the depth of the riches both of the
wisdom and knowledge of God; how unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways
past finding out!" But [the superior skill spoken of] is not found in this, that
any one should, beyond the Creator and Framer [of the world], conceive of the Enthymesis of an erring Aeon, their mother and his, and should thus proceed to
such a pitch of blasphemy; nor does it consist in this, that he should again
falsely imagine, as being above this [fancied being], a Pleroma at one time
supposed to contain thirty, and at another time an innumerable tribe of Aeons,
as these teachers who are destitute of truly divine wisdom maintain; while the
Catholic Church possesses one and the same faith throughout the whole world, as
we have already said.
Chapter 11.
The Opinions of Valentinus, with Those of His
Disciples and Others.
Let us now look at the inconsistent opinions of those heretics (for there
are some two or three of them), how they do not agree in treating the same
points, but alike, in things and names, set forth opinions mutually discordant.
The first of them, Valentinus, who adapted the principles of the heresy called
"Gnostic" to the peculiar character of his own school, taught as follows: He
maintained that there is a certain Dyad (twofold being), who is inexpressible by
any name, of whom one part should be called Arrhetus (unspeakable), and the
other Sige (silence). But of this Dyad a second was produced, one part of whom
he names Pater, and the other Aletheia. From this Tetrad, again, arose Logos and
Zoe, Anthropos and Ecclesia. These constitute the primary Ogdoad. He next states
that from Logos and Zoe ten powers were produced, as we have before mentioned.
But from Anthropos and Ecclesia proceeded twelve, one of which separating from
the rest, and falling from its original condition, produced the rest of the
universe. He also supposed two beings of the name of Horos, the one of whom has
his place between Bythus and the rest of the Pleroma, and divides the created
Aeons from the uncreated Father, while the other separates their mother from the
Pleroma. Christ also was not produced from the Aeons within the Pleroma, but was
brought forth by the mother who had been excluded from it, in virtue of her
remembrance of better things, but not without a kind of shadow. He, indeed, as
being masculine, having severed the shadow from himself, returned to the Pleroma;
but his mother being left with the shadow, and deprived of her spiritual
substance, brought forth another son, namely, the Demiurge, whom he also styles
the supreme ruler of all those things which are subject to him. He also asserts
that, along with the Demiurge, there was produced a left-hand power, in which
particular he agrees with those falsely called Gnostics, of whom to we have yet
to speak. Sometimes, again, he maintains that Jesus was produced from him who
was separated from their mother, and united to the rest, that is, from Theletus,
sometimes as springing from him who returned into the Pleroma, that is, from
Christ; and at other times still as derived from Anthropos and Ecclesia. And he
declares that the Holy Spirit was produced by Aletheia for the inspection and
fructification of the Aeons, by entering invisibly into them, and that, in this
way, the Aeons brought forth the plants of truth.
Secundus again affirms that the primary Ogdoad consists of a right hand
and a left hand Tetrad, and teaches that the one of these is called light, and
the other darkness. But he maintains that the power which separated from the
rest, and fell away, did not proceed directly from the thirty Aeons, but from
their fruits.
There is another, who is a renowned teacher among them, and who,
struggling to reach something more sublime, and to attain to a kind of higher
knowledge, has explained the primary Tetrad as follows: There is [he says] a
certain Proarche who existed before all things, surpassing all thought, speech,
and nomenclature, whom I call Monotes (unity). Together with this Monotes there
exists a power, which again I term Henotes (oneness). This Henotes and Monotes,
being one, produced, yet not so as to bring forth [apart from themselves, as an
emanation] the beginning of all things, an intelligent, unbegotten, and
invisible being, which beginning language terms "Monad." With this Monad there
co-exists a power of the same essence, which again I term Hen (One). These
powers then-Monotes, and Henotes, and Monas, and Hen-produced the remaining
company of the Aeons.
Iu, Iu! Pheu, Pheu!-for well may we utter these tragic exclamations at
such a pitch of audacity in the coining of names as he has displayed without a
blush, in devising a nomenclature for his system of falsehood. For when he
declares: There is a certain Proarche before all things, surpassing all thought,
whom I call Monotes; and again, with this Monotes there co-exists a power which
I also call Henotes,-it is most manifest that he confesses the things which have
been said to be his own invention, and that he himself has given names to his
scheme of things, which had never been previously suggested by any other. It is
manifest also, that he himself is the one who has had sufficient audacity to
coin these names; so that, unless he had appeared in the world, the truth
would still have been destitute of a name. But, in that case, nothing hinders
any other, in dealing with the same subject, to affix names after such a fashion
as the following: There is a certain Proarche, royal, surpassing all thought, a
power existing before every other substance, and extended into space in every
direction. But along with it there exists a power which I term a Gourd;
and along with this Gourd there exists a power which again I term
Utter-Emptiness. This Gourd and Emptiness, since they are one, produced (and
yet did not simply produce, so as to be apart from themselves) a fruit,
everywhere visible, eatable, and delicious, which fruit-language calls a
Cucumber. Along with this Cucumber exists a power of the same essence, which
again I call a Melon. These powers, the Gourd, Utter-Emptiness, the
Cucumber, and the Melon, brought forth the remaining multitude of the delirious
melons of Valentinus. For if it is fitting that that language which is used
respecting the universe be transformed to the primary Tetrad, and if any one may
assign names at his pleasure, who shall prevent us from adopting these names, as
being much more credible [than the others], as well as in general use, and
understood by all?
Others still, however, have called their primary and first-begotten Ogdoad
by the following names: first, Proarche; then Anennoetos; thirdly, Arrhetos; and
fourthly, Aoratos. Then, from the first, Proarche, there was produced, in the
first and fifth place, Arche; from Anennoetos, in the second and sixth place,
Acataleptos; from Arrhetos, in the third and seventh place, Anonomastos; and
from Aoratos, in the fourth and eighth place, Agennetos. This is the Pleroma of
the first Ogdoad. They maintain that these powers were anterior to Bythus and
Sige, that they may appear more perfect than the perfect, and more knowing than
the very Gnostics To. these persons one may justly exclaim: "O ye trifling
sophists!" since, even respecting Bythus himself, there are among them many and
discordant opinions. For some/declare him to be without a consort, and neither
male nor female, and, in fact, nothing at all; while others affirm him to be
masculo-feminine, assigning to him the nature of a hermaphrodite; others, again,
allot Sige to him as a spouse, that thus may be formed the first conjunction.
Chapter 12.
The Doctrines of the Followers of Ptolemy and Colorbasus.
But the followers of Ptolemy say that he [Bythos] has two consorts, which
they also name Diatheses (affections), viz., Ennoae and Thelesis. For, as
they affirm, he first conceived the thought of producing something, and then
willed to that effect. Wherefore, again, these two affections, or powers, Ennoea
and Thelesis, having intercourse, as it were, between themselves, the production
of Monogenes and Aletheia took place according to conjunction. These two came
forth as types and images of the two affections of the Father,-visible
representations of those that were invisible,-Nous (i.e., Monogenes) of Thelesis,
and Aletheia of Ennoea, and accordingly the image resulting from Thelesis was
masculine, while that from Ennoea was feminine. Thus Thelesis (will) became, as
it were, a faculty of Ennœa (thought). For Ennoea continually yearned
after offspring; but she could not of herself bring forth that which she
desired. But when the power of Thelesis (the faculty of will) came upon her,
then she brought forth that on which she had brooded.
These fancied beings (like the Jove of Homer, who is represented as
passing an anxious sleepless night in devising plans for honouring Achilles and
destroying numbers of the Greeks) will not appear to you, my dear friend, to be
possessed of greater knowledge than He who is the God of the universe. He, as
soon as He thinks, also performs what He has willed; and as soon as He wills,
also thinks that which He has willed; then thinking when He wills, and then
willing when He thinks, since He is all thought, [all will, all mind, all
light,] all eye, all ear, the one entire fountain of all good things.
Those of them, however, who are deemed more skilful than the persons who
have just been mentioned, say that the first Ogdoad was not produced gradually,
so that one Aeon was sent forth by another, but that all the Aeons were brought
into existence at once by Propator and his Ennoea. He (Colorbasus) affirms this
as confidently as if he had assisted at their birth.Accordingly, he and his
followers maintain that Anthropos and Ecclesia were not produced, as others
hold, from Logos and Zoe; but, on the contrary, Logos and Zoe from Anthropos and
Ecclesia. But they express this in another form, as follows: When the Propator
conceived the thought of producing something, he received the name of Father.
But because what he did produce was true, it was named Aletheia. Again,
when he wished to reveal himself, this was termed Anthropos. Finally, when he
produced those whom he had previously thought of, these were named Ecclesia.
Anthropos, by speaking, formed Logos: this is the first-born son. But Zoe
followed upon Logos; and thus the first Ogdoad was completed.
They have much contention also among themselves respecting the Saviour.
For some maintain that he was formed out of all; wherefore also he was called
Eudocetos, because the whole Pleroma was well pleased through him to
glorify the Father. But others assert that he was produced from those ten Aeons
alone who sprung from Logos and Zoe, and that on this account he was called
Logos and Zoe, thus preserving the ancestral names. Others, again, affirm that
he had his being from those twelve Aeons who were the offspring of Anthropos and
Ecclesia; and on this account he acknowledges himself the Son of man, as being a
descendant of Anthropos. Others still, assert that he was produced by Christ and
the Holy Spirit, who were brought forth for the security of the Pleroma; and
that on this account he was called Christ, thus preserving the appellation of
the Father, by whom he was produced. And there are yet others among them who
declare that the Propator of the whole, Proarche, and Proanennoetos is called
Anthropos; and that this is the great and abstruse mystery, namely, that the
Power which is above all others, and contains all in his embrace, is termed
Anthropos; hence does the Saviour style himself the "Son of man."
Chapter 13.
The Deceitful Arts and Nefarious Practices of
Marcus.
But there is another among these heretics, Marcus by name, who boasts
himself as having improved upon his master. He is a perfect adept in magical
impostures, and by this means drawing away a great number of men, and not a few
women, he has induced them to join themselves to him, as to one who is possessed
of the greatest knowledge and perfection, and who has received the highest power
from the invisible and ineffable regions above. Thus it appears as if he really
were the precursor of Antichrist. For, joining the buffooneries of Anaxilaus to
the craftiness of the magi, as they are called, he is regarded by his
senseless and cracked-brain followers as working miracles by these means.
Pretending to consecrate cups mixed with wine, and protracting to great
length the word of invocation, he contrives to give them a purple and reddish colour, so that Charis, who is one of those that are superior to all things,
should be thought to drop her own blood into that cup through means of his
invocation, and that thus those who are present should be led to rejoice to
taste of that cup, in order that, by so doing, the Charis, who is set forth by
this magician, may also flow into them. Again, handing mixed cups to the women,
he bids them consecrate these in his presence. When this has been done, he
himself produces another cup of much larger size than that which the deluded
woman has consecrated,) and pouting from the smaller one consecrated by the
woman into that which has been brought forward by himself, he at the same time
pronounces these words: "May that Chaffs who is before all things, and who
transcends all knowledge and speech, fill thine inner man, and multiply in thee
her own knowledge, by sowing the grain of mustard seed in thee as in good soil."
Repeating certain other like words, and thus goading on the wretched woman [to
madness], he then appears a worker of wonders when the large cup is seen to have
been filled out of the small one, so as even to overflow by what has been
obtained from it. By accomplishing several other similar things, he has
completely deceived many, and drawn them away after him.
It appears probable enough that this man possesses a demon as his familiar
spirit, by means of whom he seems able to prophesy, and also enables as many as
he counts worthy to be partakers of his Charis themselves to prophesy. He
devotes himself especially to women, and those such as are well-bred, and
elegantly attired, and of great wealth, whom he frequently seeks to draw after
him, by addressing them in such seductive words as these: "I am eager to make
thee a partaker of my Charis, since the Father of all doth continually behold
thy angel before His face. Now the place of thy angel is among us: it behoves us
to become one. Receive first from me and by me [the gift of] Chaffs. Adorn
thyself as a bride who is expecting her bridegroom, that thou mayest be what I
am, and I what thou art. Establish the germ of light in thy nuptial chamber.
Receive from me a spouse, and become receptive of him, while thou art received
by him. Behold Charis has descended upon thee; open thy mouth and prophesy." On
the woman replying," I have never at any time prophesied, nor do I know how to
prophesy; "then engaging, for the second time, in certain invocations, so as to
astound his deluded victim, he says to her," Open thy mouth, speak whatsoever
occurs to thee, and thou shalt prophesy." She then, vainly puffed up and elated
by these words, and greatly excited in soul by the expectation that it is
herself who is to prophesy, her heart beating violently [from emotion], reaches
the requisite pitch of audacity, and idly as well as impudently utters some
nonsense as it happens. to occur to her, such as might be expected from one
heated by an empty spirit. (Referring to this, one superior to me has observed,
that the soul is both audacious and impudent when heated with empty air.)
Henceforth she reckons herself a prophetess, and expresses her thanks to Marcus
for having imparted to her of his own Chaffs. She then makes the effort to
reward him, not only by the gift of her possessions (in which way he has
collected a very large fortune), but also by yielding up to him her person,
desiring in every way to be united to him, that she may become altogether one
with him.
But already some of the most faithful women, possessed of the fear of God,
and not being deceived (whom, nevertheless, he did his best to seduce like the
rest by bidding them prophesy), abhorring and execrating him, have withdrawn
from such a vile company of revellers. This they have done, as being well aware
that the gift of prophecy is not conferred on men by Marcus, the magician, but
that only those to whom God sends His grace from above possess the
divinely-bestowed power of prophesying; and then they speak where and when God
pleases, and not when Marcus orders them to do so. For that which commands is
greater and of higher authority than that which is commanded, inasmuch as the
former rules, while the latter is in a state of subjection. If, then, Marcus, or
any one else, does command,-as these are accustomed continually at their feasts
to play at drawing lots, and [in accordance with the lot] to command one another
to prophesy, giving forth as oracles what is in harmony with their own
desires,-it will follow that he who commands is greater and of higher authority
than the prophetic spirit, though he is but a man, which is impossible. But such
spirits as are commanded by these men, and speak when they desire it, are
earthly and weak, audacious and impudent, sent forth by Satan for the seduction
and perdition of those who do not hold fast that well-compacted faith which they
received at first through the Church.
Moreover, that this Marcus compounds philters and love-potions, in order
to insult the persons of some of these women, if not of all, those of them who
have returned to the Church of God-a thing which frequently occurs-have
acknowledged, confessing, too, that they have been defiled by him, and that they
were filled with a burning passion towards him. A sad example of this occurred
in the case of a certain Asiatic, one of our deacons, who had received him
(Marcus) into his house. His wife, a woman of remarkable beauty, fell a victim
both in mind and body to this magician, and, for a long time, travelled about
with him. At last, when, with no small difficulty, the brethren had converted
her, she spent her whole time in the exercise of public confession, weeping over
and lamenting the defilement which she had received from this magician.
Some of his disciples, too, addicting themselves to the same practices,
have deceived many silly women, and defiled them. They proclaim themselves as
being "perfect," so that no one can be compared to them with respect to the
immensity of their knowledge, nor even were you to mention Paul or Peter, or any
other of the apostles. They assert that they themselves know more than all
others, and that they alone have imbibed the greatness of the knowledge of that
power which is unspeakable. They also maintain that they have attained to a
height above all power, and that therefore they are free in every respect to act
as they please, having no one to fear in anything. For they affirm, that because
of the "Redemption" it has come to pass that they can neither be apprehended,
nor even seen by the judge. But even if he should happen to lay hold upon them,
then they might simply repeat these words, while standing in his presence along
with the "Redemption: ""O thou, who sittest beside God, and the mystical,
eternal Sige, thou through whom the angels (mightiness), who continually behold
the face of the Father, having thee as their guide and introducer, do derive
their forms from above, which she in the greatness of her daring inspiring with
mind on account of the goodness of the Propator, produced us as their images,
having her mind then intent upon the things above, as in a dream,-behold, the
judge is at hand, and the crier orders me to make my defence. But do thou, as
being acquainted with the affairs of both, present the cause of both of us to
the judge, inasmuch as it is in reality but one cause." Now, as soon as the
Mother hears these words, she puts the Homeric helmet of Pluto upon them, so
that they may invisibly escape the judge. And then she immediately catches them
up, conducts them into the bridal chamber, and hands them over to their
consorts.
Such are the words and deeds by which, in our own district of the Rhone,
they have deluded many women, who have their consciences seared as with a hot
iron. Some of them, indeed, make a public confession of their sins; but others
of them are ashamed to do this, and in a tacit kind of way, despairing of
[attaining to] the life of God, have, some of them, apostatized altogether;
while others hesitate between the two courses, and incur that which is implied
in the proverb, "neither without nor within; "possessing this as the fruit from
the seed of the children of knowledge.
Chapter 14.
The Various Hypotheses of Marcus and Others.
Theories Respecting Letters and Syllables.
This Marcus then, declaring that he alone was the matrix and receptacle of
the Sige of Colorbasus, inasmuch as he was only-begotten, has brought to the
birth in some such way as follows that which was committed to him of the
defective Enthymesis. He declares that the infinitely exalted Tetrad descended
upon him from the invisible and indescribable places in the form of a woman (for
the world could not have borne it coming in its male form), and expounded to him
alone its own nature, and the origin of all things, which it had never before
revealed to any one either of gods or men. This was done in the following terms:
When first the unoriginated, inconceivable Father, who is without material
substance, and is neither male nor female, willed to bring forth that which is
ineffable to Him, and to endow with form that which is invisible, He opened His
mouth, and sent forth the Word similar to Himself, who, standing near, showed
Him what He Himself was, inasmuch as He had been manifested in the form of that
which was invisible. Moreover, the pronunciation of His name took place as
follows:-He spoke the first word of it, which was the beginning [of all the
rest], and that utterance consisted of four letters. He added the second, and
this also consisted of four letters. Next He uttered the third, and this again
embraced ten letters. Finally, He pronounced the fourth, which was composed of
twelve letters. Thus took place the enunciation of the whole name, consisting of
thirty letters, and four distinct utterances. Each of these elements has its own
peculiar letters, and character, and pronunciation, and forms, and images, and
there is not one of them that perceives the shape of that [utterance] of which
it is an element. Neither does any one know itself, nor is it acquainted with
the pronunciation of its neighbour, but each one imagines that by its own
utterance it does in fact name the whole. For while every one of them is a part
of the whole, it imagines its own sound to be the whole name, and does not leave
off sounding until, by its own utterance, it has reached the last letter of each
of the elements. This teacher declares that the restitution of all things will
take place, when all these, mixing into one letter, shall utter one and the same
sound. He imagines that the emblem of this utterance is found in Amen,
which we pronounce in concert. The diverse sounds (he adds) are those which give
form to that Aeon who is without material substance and unbegotten, and these,
again, are the forms which the Lord has called angels, who continually behold
the face of the Father.
Those names of the elements which may be told, and are common, he has
called Aeons, and words, and roots, and seeds, and fulnesses, and fruits. He
asserts that each of these, and all that is peculiar to every one of them, is to
be understood as contained in the name Ecclesia. Of these elements, the last
letter of the last one uttered its voice, and this sound going forth generated
its own elements after the image of the [other] elements, by which he affirms,
that both the things here below were arranged into the order they occupy, and
those that preceded them were called into existence. He also maintains that the
letter itself, the sound of which followed that sound below, was received up
again by the syllable to which it belonged, in order to the completion of the
whole, but that the sound remained below as if cast outside. But the element
itself from which the letter with its special pronunciation descended to that
below, he affirms to consist of thirty letters, while each of these letters,
again, contains other letters in itself, by means of which the name of the
letter is expressed. And thus, again, others are named by other letters, and
others still by others, so that the multitude of letters swells out into
infinitude. You may more clearly understand what I mean by the following
example:-The word Delta contains five letters, viz., D, E, L, T, A: these
letters again, are written by other letters, and others still by others. If,
then, the entire composition of the word Delta [when thus analyzed] runs out
into infinitude, letters continually generating other letters, and following one
another in constant succession, how much raster than that [one] word is the
[entire] ocean of letters! And if even one letter be thus infinite, just
consider the immensity of the letters in the entire name; out of which the Sige
of Marcus has taught us the Propator is composed. For which reason the Father,
knowing the incomprehensibleness of His own nature, assigned to the elements
which He also terms Aeons, [the power] of each one uttering its own enunciation,
because no one of them was capable by itself of uttering the whole.
Moreover, the Tetrad, explaining these things to him more fully, said:-I
wish to show thee Aletheia (Truth) herself; for I have brought her down from the
dwellings above, that thou mayest see her without a veil, and understand her
beauty-that thou mayest also hear her speaking, and admire her wisdom. Behold,
then, her head on high, Alpha and Omega; her neck, Beta and
Psi; her shoulders with her hands, Gamma and Chi; her
breast, Delta and Phi; her diaphragm, Epsilon and
Upsilon; her back, Zeta and Tau; her belly, Eta and
Sigma; her thighs, Theta and Rho; her knees, Iota and
Pi; her legs, Kappa and Omicron; her ankles, Lambda
and Xi; her feet, Mu and Nu. Such is the body of Truth,
according to this magician, such the figure of the element, such the character
of the letter. And he calls this element Anthropos (Man), and says that is the
fountain of all speech, and the beginning of all sound, and the expression of
all that is unspeakable, and the mouth of the silent Sige. This indeed is the
body of Truth. But do thou, elevating the thoughts of thy mind on high, listen
from the mouth of Truth to the self-begotten Word, who is also the dispenser of
the bounty of the Father.
When she (the Tetrad) had spoken these things, Aletheia looked at him,
opened her mouth, and uttered a word. That word was a name, and the name was
this one which we do know and speak of, viz., Christ Jesus. When she had uttered
this name, she at once relapsed into silence. And as Marcus waited in the
expectation that she would say something more, the Tetrad again came forward and
said, "Thou hast reckoned as contemptible that word which thou hast heard from
the mouth of Aletheia. This which thou knowest and seemest to possess, is not an
ancient name. For thou possessest the sound of it merely, whilst thou art
ignorant of its power. For Jesus ('Ihsou=j) is a name arithmetically symbolical,
consisting of six letters, and is known by all those that belong to the called.
But that which is among the Aeons of the Pleroma consists of many parts, and is
of another form and shape, and is known by those [angels] who are joined in
affinity with Him, and whose figures (mightinesses) are always present with Him.
Know, then, that the four-and-twenty letters which you possess are
symbolical emanations of the three powers that contain the entire number of the
elements above. For you are to reckon thus-that the nine mute letters are [the
images] of Pater and Aletheia, because they are without voice, that is, of such
a nature as cannot be uttered or pronounced. But the semi-vowels represent Logos
and Zoe, because they are, as it were, midway between the consonants and the
vowels, partaking of the nature of both. The vowels, again, are representative
of Anthropos and Ecclesia, inasmuch as a voice proceeding from Anthropos gave
being to them all; for the sound of the voice imparted to them form. Thus, then,
Logos and Zoe possess eight [of these letters]; Anthropos and Ecclesia seven;
and Pater and Aletheia nine. But since the number allotted to each was unequal,
He who existed in the Father came down, having been specially sent by Him from
whom He was separated, for the rectification of what had taken place, that the
unity of the Pleromas, being endowed with equality, might develop in all that
one power which flows from all. Thus that division which had only seven letters,
received the power of eight, and the three sets were rendered alike in point of
number, all becoming Ogdoads; which three, when brought together, constitute the
number four-and-twenty. The three elements, too (which he declares to exist in
conjunction with three powers, and thus form the six from which have flowed the
twenty-four letters), being quadrupled by the word of the ineffable Tetrad, give
rise to the same number with them; and these elements he maintains to belong to
Him who cannot be named. These, again, were endowed by the three powers with a
resemblance to Him who is invisible. And he says that those letters which we
call double are the images of the images of these elements; and if these be
added to the four-and-twenty letters, by the force of analogy they form the
number thirty.
He asserts that the fruit of this arrangement and analogy has been
manifested in the likeness of an image, namely, Him who, after six days,
ascended into the mountain along with three others, and then became one of six
(the sixth), in which character He descended and was contained in the Hebdomad,
since He was the illustrious Ogdoad, and contained in Himself the entire number
of the elements, which the descent of the dove (who is Alpha and Omega) made
clearly manifest, when He came to be baptized; for the number of the dove is
eight hundred and one. And for this reason did Moses declare that man was formed
on the sixth day; and then, again, according to arrangement, it was on the sixth
day, which is the preparation, that the last man appeared, for the regeneration
of the first, Of this arrangement, both the beginning and the end were formed at
that sixth hour, at which He was nailed to the tree. For that perfect being Nous,
knowing that the number six had the power both of formation and regeneration,
declared to the children of light, that regeneration which has been wrought out
by Him who appeared as the Episemon in regard to that number. Whence also
he declares it is that the double letters contain the Episemon number; for this
Episemon, when joined to the twenty-four elements, completed the name of thirty
letters.
He employed as his instrument, as the Sige of Marcus declares, the power
of seven letters, in order that the fruit of the independent will [of Achamoth]
might be revealed. "Consider this present Episemon," she says-"Him who
was formed after the [original] Episemon, as being, as it were, divided
or cut into two parts, and remaining outside; who, by His own power and wisdom,
through means of that which had been produced by Himself, gave life to this
world, consisting of seven powers, after the likeness of the power of the
Hebdomad, and so formed it, that it is the soul of everything visible. And He
indeed uses this work Himself as if it had been formed by His own free will; but
the rest, as being images of what cannot be [fully] imitated, are subservient to
the Enthymesis of the mother. And the first heaven indeed pronounces Alpha,
the next to this Epsilon, the third Eta, the fourth, which is also
in the midst of the seven, utters the sound of Iota, the fifth Omicron,
the sixth Upsilon, the seventh, which is also the fourth from the middle,
utters the elegant Omega,"-as the Sige of Marcus, talking a deal of
nonsense, but uttering no word of truth, confidently asserts. "And these
powers," she adds, "being all simultaneously clasped in each other's embrace, do
sound out the glory of Him by whom they were produced; and the glory of that
sound is transmitted upwards to the Propator." She asserts, moreover, that "the
sound of this uttering of praise, having been wafted to the earth, has become
the Framer and the Parent of those things which are on the earth."
He instances, in proof of this, the case of infants who have just been
born, the cry of whom, as soon as they have issued from the womb, is in
accordance with the sound of every one of these elements. As, then, he says, the
seven powers glorify the Word, so also does the complaining soul of infants. For
this reason, too, David said: "Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings Thou hast
perfected praise; " and again: "The heavens declare the glory of God." Hence
also it comes to pass, that when the soul is involved in difficulties and
distresses, for its own relief it calls out, "Oh" (W), in honour of the letter
in question, so that its cognate soul above may recognise [its distress], and
send down to it relief.
Thus it is, that in regard to the whole name, which consists of thirty
letters, and Bythus, who receives his increase from the letters of this [name],
and, moreover, the body of Aletheia, which is composed of twelve members, each
of which consists of two letters, and the voice which she uttered without having
spoken at all, and in regard to the analysis of that name which cannot be
expressed in words, and the soul of the world and of man, according as they
possess that arrangement, which is after the image [of things above], he has
uttered his nonsensical opinions. It remains that I relate how the Tetrad showed
him from the names a power equal in number; so that nothing, my friend, which I
have received as spoken by him, may remain unknown to thee; and thus thy
request, often proposed to me, may be fulfilled.
Chapter 15.
Sige Relates to Marcus the Generation of the
Twenty-Four Elements and of Jesus. Exposure of These Absurdities.
The all-wise Sige then announced the production of the four-and-twenty
elements to him as follows:-Along with Monotes there coexisted Henotes, from
which sprang two productions, as we have remarked above, Monas and Hen, which,
added to the other two, make four, for twice two are Four. And again, two and
four, when added together, exhibit the number six. And further, these six being
quadrupled, give rise to the twenty-four forms. And the names of the first
Tetrad, which are understood to be most holy, and not capable of being expressed
in words, are known by the Son alone, while the father also knows what they are.
The other names which are to be uttered with respect, and faith, and reverence,
are, according to him, Arrhetos and Sige, Pater and Aletheia. Now the entire
number of this Tetrad amounts to four-and-twenty letters; for the name Arrhetos
contains in itself seven letters, Seige five, Pater five, and Aletheia seven. If
all these be added together-twice five, and twice seven-they complete the number
twenty-four. In like manner, also, the second Tetrad, Logos and Zoe, Anthropos
and Ecclesia, reveal the same number of elements. Moreover, that name of the
Saviour which may be pronounced, viz., Jesus ['Ihsou=j, consists of six letters,
but His unutterable name comprises for-and-twenty letters. The name Christ
the Son (ui9o\ j Xreisto/j) comprises twelve letter, but that which is
unpronounceable in Christ contains thirty letters. And for this reason he
declares that fie is Alpha and Omega, that he may indicate the
dove, inasmuch as that bird has this number [in its name].
But Jesus, he affirms, has the following unspeakable origin. From the
mother of all things, that is, the first Tetrad; there came forth the second
Tetrad, after the manner of a daughter; and thus an Ogdoad was formed, from
which, again, a Decad proceeded: thus was produced a Decad and an Ogdoad. The
Decad, then, being joined with the Ogdoad, and multiplying it ten times, gave
rise to the number eighty; and, again, multiplying eighty ten times,
produced the number eight hundred. Thus, then, the whole number of the
letters proceeding from the Ogdoad [multiplied] into the Decad, is eight hundred
and eighty-eight. This is the name of Jesus; for this name, if you reckon up the
numerical value of the letters, amounts to eight hundred and eighty-eight. Thus,
then, you have a clear statement of their opinion as to the origin of the
supercelestial Jesus. Wherefore, also, the alphabet of the Greeks contains eight
Monads, eight Decads, and eight Hecatads , which present the number eight
hundred and eighty-eight, that is, Jesus, who is formed of all numbers;
and on this account He is called Alpha and Omega, indicating His
origin from all. And, again, they put the matter thus: If the first Tetrad be
added up according to the progression of number, the number ten appears. For
one, and two, and three, and four, when added together, form ten; and this, as
they will have it, is Jesus. Moreover, Chreistus, he says, being a word of eight
letters, indicates the first Ogdoad, and this, when multiplied by ten, gives
birth to Jesus (888). And Christ the Son, he says, is also spoken of, that is,
the Duodecad. For the name Son, (ui9o\ j) contains four letters, and Christ (Chreistus)
eight, which, being combined, point out the greatness of the Duodecad. But, he
alleges, before the Episemon of this name appeared, that is Jesus the
Son, mankind were involved in great ignorance and error. But when this name of
six letters was manifested (the person bearing it clothing Himself in flesh,
that He might come under the apprehension of man's senses, and having in Himself
these six and twenty-four letters), then, becoming acquainted with Him, they
ceased from their ignorance, and passed from death unto life, this name serving
as their guide to the Father of truth. For the Father of all had resolved to put
an end to ignorance, and to destroy death. But this abolishing of ignorance was
just the knowledge of Him. And therefore that man (Anthropos) was chosen
according to His will, having been formed after the image of the [corresponding]
power above.
As to the Aeons, they proceeded from the Tetrad, and in that Tetrad were
Anthropos and Ecclesia, Logos and Zoe. The powers, then, he declares, who
emanated from these, generated that Jesus who appeared upon the earth. The angel
Gabriel took the place of Logos, the Holy Spirit that of Zoe, the Power of the
Highest that of Anthropos, while the Virgin pointed out the place of Ecclesia.
And thus, by a special dispensation, there was generated by Him, through Mary,
that man, whom, as He passed through the womb, the Father of all chose to
[obtain] the knowledge of Himself by means of the Word. And on His coming to the
water [of baptism], there descended on Him, in the form of a dove, that Being
who had formerly ascended on high, and completed the twelfth number, in whom
there existed the seed of those who were produced contemporaneously with
Himself, and who descended and ascended along with Him. Moreover, he maintains
that power which descended was the seed of the Father, which had in itself both
the Father and the Son, as well as that power of Sige which is known by means of
them, but cannot be expressed in language, and also all the Aeons. And this was
that Spirit who spoke by the mouth of Jesus, and who confessed that He was the
son of Man as well as revealed the Father, and who, having descended into Jesus,
was made one with Him. And he says that the Saviour formed by special
dispensation did indeed destroy death, but that Christ made known the Father. He
maintains, therefore, that Jesus is the name of that man formed by a special
dispensation, and that He was formed after the likeness and form of that
[heavenly] Anthropos, who was about to descend upon Him. After He had received
that Aeon, He possessed Anthropos himself, and Loges himself, and Pater, and
Arrhetus, and Sige, and Aletheia, and Ecclesia, and Zoe.
Such ravings, we may now well say, go beyond Iu, Iu, Pheu, Pheu, and
every kind of tragic exclamation or utterance of misery. For who would not
detest one who is the wretched contriver of such audacious falsehoods, when he
perceives the truth turned by Marcus into a mere image, and that punctured all
over with the letters of the alphabet? The Greeks confess that they first
received sixteen letters from Cadmus, and that but recently, as compared with
the beginning, [the vast antiquity of which is implied] in the common proverb:
"Yesterday and before; " and afterwards, in the course of time, they themselves
invented at one period the aspirates, and at another the double letters, while,
last of all, they say Palamedes added the long letters to the former. Was it so,
then, that until these things took place among the Greeks, truth had no
existence? For, according to thee, Marcus, the body of truth is posterior to
Cadmus and those who preceded him-posterior also to those who added the rest of
the letters-posterior even to thyself! For thou alone hast formed that which is
called by thee the truth into an [outward, visible] image.
But who will tolerate thy nonsensical Sige, who names Him that cannot be
named, and expounds the nature of Him that is unspeakable, and searches out Him
that is unsearchable, and declares that He whom thou maintainest to be destitute
of body and form, opened His mouth and sent forth the Word, as if He were
included among organized beings; and that His Word, while like to His Author,
and bearing the image of the invisible, nevertheless consisted of thirty
elements and four syllables? It will follow, then, according to thy theory, that
the Father of all, in accordance with the likeness of the Word, consists of
thirty elements and four syllables! Or, again, who will tolerate thee in thy
juggling with forms and numbers,-at one time thirty, at another twenty-four, and
at another, again, only six,-whilst thou shuttest up [in these] the Word of God,
the Founder, and Framer, and Maker of all things; and then, again, cutting Him
up piecemeal into four syllables and thirty elements; and bringing down the Lord
of all who founded the heavens to the number eight hundred and eighty-eight, so
that He should be similar to the alphabet; and subdividing the Father, who
cannot be contained, but contains all things, into a Tetrad, and an Ogdoad, and
a Decad, and a Duodecad; and by such multiplications, setting forth the
unspeakable and inconceivable nature of the Father, as thou thyself declarest it
to be? And showing thyself a very Daedalus for evil invention, and the wicked
architect of the supreme power, thou dost construct a nature and substance for
Him whom thou callest incorporeal and immaterial, out of a multitude of letters,
generated the one by the other. And that power whom thou affirmest to be
indivisible, thou dost nevertheless divide into consonants, and vowels, and
semi-vowels; and, falsely ascribing those letters which are mute to the Father
of all things, and to His Ennœa (thought), thou hast driven on all that
place confidence in thee to the highest point of blasphemy, and to the grossest
impiety.
With good reason, therefore, and very fittingly, in reference to thy rash
attempt, has that divine elder and preacher of the truth burst forth in verse
against thee as follows:-"Marcus, thou former of idols, inspector of portents, Skill'd in consulting the stars, and deep in the black arts of magic, Ever by
tricks such as these confirming the doctrines of error, Furnishing signs unto
those involved by thee in deception, Wonders of power that is utterly severed
from God and apostate, Which Satan, thy true father, enables thee still to
accomplish, By means of Azazel, that fallen and yet mighty angel,-Thus making
thee the precursor of his own impious actions."Such are the words of the saintly
elder. And I shall endeavour to state the remainder of their mystical system,
which runs out to great length, in brief compass, and to bring to the light what
has for a long time been concealed. For in this way such things will become
easily susceptible of exposure by all.
Chapter 16.
Absurd Interpretations of the Marcosians.
Blending in one the production of their own Aeons, and the straying and
recovery of the sheep [spoken of in the Gospel], these persons endeavour to set
forth things in a more mystical style, while they refer everything to numbers,
maintaining that the universe has been formed out of a Monad and a Dyad. And
then, reckoning from unity on to four, they thus generate the Decad. For when
one, two, three, and four are added together, they give rise to the number of
the ten Aeons. And, again, the Dyad advancing from it |