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| Naasseni Ascribe Their System, Through Mariamne, to James the Lord's Brother; Really Traceable to the Ancient Mysteries; Their Psychology as Given in the “Gospel According to Thomas;” Assyrian Theory of the Soul; The Systems of the Naasseni and the Assyrians Compared; Support Drawn by the Naasseni from the Phrygian and Egyptian Mysteries; The Mysteries of Isis; These Mysteries Allegorized by the Naasseni. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
II.—Naasseni Ascribe Their System, Through Mariamne, to James the
Lord’s Brother; Really Traceable to the Ancient Mysteries; Their
Psychology as Given in the “Gospel According to Thomas;”
Assyrian Theory of the Soul; The Systems of the Naasseni and the
Assyrians Compared; Support Drawn by the Naasseni from the Phrygian and
Egyptian Mysteries; The Mysteries of Isis; These Mysteries Allegorized
by the Naasseni.
These are the heads of very numerous discourses
which (the Naassene) asserts James the brother of the Lord handed down
to Mariamne.326
326
The Abbe Cruice observes that we have here another proof that the
Philosophumena is not the work of Origen, who in his Contra
Celsum mentions Mariamne, but professes not to have met with any of
his followers (see Contr. Cels., lib. v. p. 272, ed.
Spenc.). This confirms the opinion mostly entertained of Origen,
that neither the bent of his mind nor the direction of his studies
justify the supposition that he would write a detailed history of
heresy. | In order,
then, that these impious (heretics) may no longer belie Mariamne or
James, or the Saviour Himself, let us come to the mystic rites (whence
these have derived their figment),—to a consideration, if it
seems right, of both the Barbarian and Grecian (mysteries),—and
let us see how these (heretics), collecting together the secret and
ineffable mysteries of all the Gentiles, are uttering falsehoods
against Christ, and are making dupes of those who are not acquainted
with these orgies of the Gentiles. For since the foundation of
the doctrine with them is the man Adam, and they say that concerning
him it has been written, “Who shall declare his
generation?”327 learn how,
partly deriving from the Gentiles the undiscoverable and
diversified328
328 Or
ἀδιάφορον,
equivocal. | generation of
the man, they fictitiously apply it to Christ.
“Now earth,”329
329
This has been by the best critics regarded as a fragment of a
hymn of Pindar’s on Jupiter Ammon. Schneidewin furnishes a
restored poetic version of it by Bergk. This hymn, we believe,
first suggested to M. Miller an idea of the possible value and
importance of the ms. of The Refutation
brought by Minöides Mynas from Greece. | say the Greeks, “gave forth a man,
(earth) first bearing a goodly gift, wishing to become mother not of
plants devoid of sense, nor beasts without reason, but of a gentle and
highly favoured creature.” “It, however, is
difficult,” (the Naassene) says, “to ascertain whether
Alalcomeneus,330
330 The
usual form is Alalcomenes. He was a Bœoian Autocthon. | first of men, rose
upon the Bœotians over Lake Cephisus; or whether it were the
Idæan Curetes, a divine race; or the Phrygian Corybantes, whom
first the sun beheld springing up after the manner of the growth of
trees; or whether Arcadia brought forth Pelasgus, of greater antiquity
than the moon; or Eleusis (produced) Diaulus, an inhabitant of Raria;
or Lemnus begot Cabirus, fair child of secret orgies; or Pallene
(brought forth) the Phlegræan Alcyoneus, oldest of the
giants. But the Libyans affirm that Iarbas, first born, on
emerging from arid plains, commenced eating the sweet acorn of
Jupiter. But the Nile of the Egyptians,” he says, “up
to this day fertilizing mud, (and therefore) generating animals,
renders up living bodies, which acquire flesh from moist
vapour.” The Assyrians, however, say that fish-eating
Oannes331
331
Or, “Iannes.” The Abbe Cruice refers to
Berosus, Chald. Hist., pp. 48, 49, and to his own dissertation
(Paris, 1844) on the authority to be attached to Josephus, as regards
the writers adduced by him in his treatise Contr.
Apion. | was (the first
man, and) produced among themselves. The Chaldeans, however, say
that this Adam is the man whom alone earth brought forth. And that
he lay inanimate, unmoved, (and) still as a statue; being an image of
him who is above, who is celebrated as the man Adam,332
332
The Rabbins, probably deriving their notions from the Chaldeans,
entertained the most exaggerated ideas respecting the perfection of
Adam. Thus Gerson, in his Commentary on Abarbanel, says
that “Adam was endued with the very perfection of wisdom, and was
chief of philosophers, that he was an immediate disciple of the Deity,
also a physician and astrologer, and the originator of all the arts and
sciences.” This spirit of exaggeration passed from the Jews
to the Christians (see Clementine Homilies, ii.). Aquinas
(Sum. Theol., pars i. 94) says of Adam, “Since the first
man was appointed perfect, he ought to have possessed a knowledge of
everything capable of being ascertained by natural
means.” | having been begotten by many powers,
concerning whom individually is an enlarged discussion.
In order, therefore, that finally the Great Man
from above may be overpowered, “from whom,” as they say,
“the whole family named on earth and in the heavens has been
formed, to him was given also a soul, that through the soul he might
suffer; and that the enslaved image may be punished of the Great and
most Glorious and Perfect Man, for even so they call him. Again,
then, they ask what is the soul, and whence, and what kind in its
nature, that, coming to the man and moving him,333
333 Or,
“vanquishing him” (Roeper). | it should enslave and punish the image
of the Perfect Man. They do not, however, (on this point)
institute an inquiry from the Scriptures, but ask this (question) also
from the mystic (rites). And they affirm that the soul is very
difficult to discover, and hard to understand; for it does not remain
in the same figure or the same form invariably, or in one passive
condition, that either one could express it by a sign, or comprehend it
substantially.
But they have these varied changes (of the soul)
set down in the gospel inscribed “according to the
Egyptians.”334
334 This
is known to us only by some ancient quotations. The Naasseni had
another work of repute among them, the “Gospel according to
Thomas.” Bunsen conjectures that the two
“Gospels” may be the same. | They
are, then, in doubt, as all the rest of men among the Gentiles, whether
(the soul) is at all from something pre-existent, or whether from the
self-produced (one),335
335
αὐτογενοῦς.
Miller has αὐτοῦ
γένους, which Bunsen rejects in
favour of the reading “self-begotten.” |
or from a widespread Chaos. And first they fly for refuge to the
mysteries of the Assyrians, perceiving the threefold division of the
man; for the Assyrians first advanced the opinion that the soul has
three parts, and yet (is essentially) one. For of soul, say they,
is every nature desirous, and each in a different manner. For
soul is cause of all things made; all things that are nourished, (the
Naassene) says, and that grow, require soul. For it is not
possible, he says, to obtain any nourishment or growth where soul is
not present. For even stones, he affirms, are animated, for they
possess what is capable of increase; but increase would not at any time
take place without nourishment, for it is by accession that things
which are being increased grow, but accession is the nourishment of
things that are nurtured. Every nature, then, (the Naasene) says,
of things celestial, and earthly, and infernal, desires a soul.
And an entity of this description the Assyrians call Adonis or
Endymion;336
336
Schneidewin considers that there have been left out in the
ms. the words “or Attis” after
Endymion. Attis is subsequently mentioned with some degree of
particularity. | and when it is
styled Adonis, Venus, he says, loves and desires the soul when styled
by such a name. But Venus is production, according to them.
But whenever Proserpine or Cora becomes enamoured with Adonis, there
results, he says, a certain mortal soul separated from Venus (that is,
from generation). But should the Moon pass into concupiscence for
Endymion, and into love of her form, the nature,337 he says, of the higher beings requires
a soul likewise. But if, he says, the mother of the gods
emasculate Attis,338
338
Or, “Apis.” See Diodorus Siculus, iii. 58,
59. Pausanias, vii. 20, writes the word Attes. See also
Minucius Felix, Octav., cap. xxi. | and herself
has this (person) as an object of affection, the blessed nature, he
says, of the supernal and everlasting (beings) alone recalls the male
power of the soul to itself.
For (the Naassene) says, there is the
hermaphrodite man. According to this account of theirs, the
intercourse of woman with man is demonstrated, in conformity with such
teaching, to be an exceedingly wicked and filthy (practice).339 For, says (the Naassene), Attis
has been emasculated, that is, he has passed over from the earthly
parts of the nether world to the everlasting substance above, where, he
says, there is neither female or male,340
340
Gal. iii. 28, and Clement’s Epist. ad
Rom., ii. 12. [This is the apocryphal Clement reserved for
vol. viii. of this series. See also same text, Ignatius, vol. i.
p. 81.] | but a new creature,341 a new man, which is hermaphrodite.
As to where, however, they use the expression “above,” I
shall show when I come to the proper place (for treating this
subject). But they assert that, by their account, they testify
that Rhea is not absolutely isolated, but—for so I may
say—the universal creature; and this they declare to be what is
affirmed by the Word. “For the invisible things of Him are
seen from the creation of the world, being understood by the things
that are made by Him, even His eternal power and Godhead, for the
purpose of leaving them without excuse. Wherefore, knowing God,
they glorified Him not as God, nor gave Him thanks; but their foolish
heart was rendered vain. For, professing themselves to be wise,
they became fools, and changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into
images of the likeness of corruptible man, and of birds, and
four-footed beasts, and creeping things. Wherefore also God gave
them up unto vile affections; for even their women did change
the natural use into that which is against nature.” What,
however, the natural use is, according to them, we shall afterwards
declare. “And likewise also the men, leaving the natural
use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men
working that which is unseemly”—now the expression that
which is unseemly signifies, according to these (Naasseni), the first
and blessed substance, figureless, the cause of all figures to those
things that are moulded into shapes,—“and receiving in
themselves that recompense of their error which was
meet.”342 For in
these words which Paul has spoken they say the entire secret of theirs,
and a hidden mystery of blessed pleasure, are comprised. For the
promise of washing is not any other, according to them, than the
introduction of him that is washed in, according to them, life-giving
water, and anointed with ineffable343
343
ἀλάλῳ; some read ἄλλῳ. | ointment (than his introduction) into
unfading bliss.
But they assert that not only is there in favour
of their doctrine, testimony to be drawn from the mysteries of the
Assyrians, but also from those of the Phrygians concerning the happy
nature—concealed, and yet at the same time disclosed—of
things that have been, and are coming into existence, and moreover will
be,—(a happy nature) which, (the Naassene) says, is the kingdom
of heaven to be sought for within a man.344 And concerning this (nature) they
hand down an explicit passage, occurring345
345 These
words do not occur in the “Gospel of Thomas concerning the
Saviour’s infancy,” as given by Fabricius and Thilo. | in the Gospel inscribed according to
Thomas,346
346
The Abbe Cruice mentions the following works as of authority
among the Naasseni, and from whence they derived their system:
The Gospel of Perfection, Gospel of Eve, The Questions of Mary,
Concerning the Offspring of Mary, The Gospel of Philip, The Gospel
according to (1) Thomas, (2) the Egyptians.
(See Epiphanius, Hæres., c. xxvi., and Origen, Contr.
Cels., vi. 30, p. 296, ed. Spenc.) These heretics likewise
make use of the Old Testament, St. John’s Gospel, and some of the
Pauline epistles. | expressing
themselves thus: “He who seeks me, will find me in children
from seven years old; for there concealed, I shall in the fourteenth
age be made manifest.” This, however, is not (the teaching)
of Christ, but of Hippocrates, who uses these words: “A
child of seven years is half of a father.” And so it is
that these (heretics), placing the originative nature of the universe
in causative seed, (and) having ascertained the (aphorism) of
Hippocrates,347
347
Miller refers to Littré, Traduct. des Œuvres
d’Hippocrate, t. i. p. 396. | that a child of
seven years old is half of a father, say that in fourteen years,
according to Thomas, he is manifested. This, with them, is the
ineffable and mystical Logos. They assert, then, that the
Egyptians, who after the Phrygians,348
348 See
Herodotus, ii. 2, 5. | it is established, are of greater
antiquity than all mankind, and who confessedly were the first to
proclaim to all the rest of men the rites and orgies of, at the same
time, all the gods, as well as the species and energies (of things),
have the sacred and august, and for those who are not initiated,
unspeakable mysteries of Isis. These, however, are not anything
else than what by her of the seven dresses and sable robe was sought
and snatched away, namely, the pudendum of Osiris. And
they say that Osiris is water.349
349
See Origen, Contr. Cels., v. 38 (p. 257, ed.
Spenc.). | But the seven-robed nature,
encircled and arrayed with seven mantles of ethereal texture—for
so they call the planetary stars, allegorizing and denominating them
ethereal350 robes,—is as
it were the changeable generation, and is exhibited as the creature
transformed by the ineffable and unportrayable,351 and inconceivable and figureless one.
And this, (the Naassene) says, is what is declared in Scripture,
“The just will fall seven times, and rise again.”352 For these falls, he says, are the
changes of the stars, moved by Him who puts all things in
motion.
They affirm, then, concerning the
substance353 of the seed which
is a cause of all existent things, that it is none of these, but that
it produces and forms all things that are made, expressing themselves
thus: “I become what I wish, and I am what I am: on
account of this I say, that what puts all things in motion is itself
unmoved. For what exists remains forming all things, and nought
of existing things is made.”354
354
See Epiphanius, Hæres., xxvi. 8. | He says that this (one) alone is
good, and that what is spoken by the Saviour355
355
Matt. xix. 17; Mark x. 18;
Luke xviii. 19. | is declared concerning this (one):
“Why do you say that am good? One is good, my Father which
is in the heavens, who causeth His sun to rise upon the just and
unjust, and sendeth rain upon saints and sinners.”356 But who the saintly ones are on whom
He sends the rain, and the sinners on whom the same sends the rain,
this likewise we shall afterwards declare with the rest. And this
is the great and secret and unknown mystery of the universe, concealed
and revealed among the Egyptians. For Osiris,357
357 Miller
has οὐδεὶς. See
Plutarch, De Isid. et Osirid., c. li. p. 371. | (the Naassene) says, is in temples in
front of Isis;358 and his
pudendum stands exposed, looking downwards, and crowned with all
its own fruits of things that are made. And (he affirms) that
such stands not only in the most hallowed temples chief of idols, but
that also, for the information of all, it is as it were a light not set
under a bushel, but upon a candlestick, proclaiming its message upon
the housetops,359 in all
byways, and all streets, and
near the actual dwellings, placed in front as a certain appointed limit
and termination of the dwelling, and that this is denominated the good
(entity) by all. For they style this good-producing, not knowing
what they say. And the Greeks, deriving this mystical
(expression) from the Egyptians, preserve it until this day. For
we behold, says (the Naassene), statues of Mercury, of such a figure
honoured among them.
Worshipping, however, Cyllenius with especial
distinction, they style him Logios. For Mercury is Logos, who
being interpreter and fabricator of the things that have been made
simultaneously, and that are being produced, and that will exist,
stands honoured among them, fashioned into some such figure as is the
pudendum of a man, having an impulsive power from the parts
below towards those above. And that this (deity)—that is, a
Mercury of this description—is, (the Naassene) says, a conjurer
of the dead, and a guide of departed spirits, and an originator of
souls; nor does this escape the notice of the poets, who express
themselves thus:—
“Cyllenian Hermes also called
The souls of mortal suitors.”360
Not Penelope’s suitors, says he, O wretches! but (souls)
awakened and brought to recollection of themselves,
“From honour so great, and from bliss so
long.”361
361
Empedocles, v. 390, Stein. |
That is, from the blessed man from above, or the primal man or
Adam, as it seems to them, souls have been conveyed down here
into a creation of clay, that they may serve the Demiurge of this
creation, Ialdabaoth,362
362
Esaldaius, Miller (see Origen, Const. Cels., v. 76, p.
297, ed. Spenc.). | a
fiery God, a fourth number; for so they call the Demiurge and father of
the formal world:—
“And in hand he held a lovely
Wand of gold that human eyes enchants,
Of whom he will, and those again who slumber
rouses.”363
This, he says, is he who alone has power of life and
death. Concerning this, he says, it has been written, “Thou
shalt rule them with a rod of iron.”364 The poet, however, he says, being
desirous of adorning the incomprehensible (potency) of the blessed
nature of the Logos, invested him with not an iron, but golden
wand. And he enchants the eyes of the dead, as he says, and
raises up again those that are slumbering, after having been roused
from sleep, and after having been suitors. And concerning these,
he says, the Scripture speaks: “Awake thou that sleepest,
and arise, and Christ will give thee light.”365
This is the Christ who, he says, in all that have
been generated, is the portrayed Son of Man from the unportrayable
Logos. This, he says, is the great and unspeakable mystery of the
Eleusinian rites, Hye, Cye.366
366 See
Plutarch, De Iside et Osiride, c. xxxiv. | And he affirms that all things have
been subjected unto him, and this is that which has been spoken,
“Their sound is gone forth unto all the earth,”367 just as it agrees with the expressions,
“Mercury368 waving his
wand, guides the souls, but they twittering follow.”
I mean the disembodied spirits follow continuously in such a way as the
poet by his imagery delineates, using these words:—
“And as when in the magic cave’s recess
Bats humming fly, and when one drops
From ridge of rock, and each to other closely
clings.”369
369
Ibid., xxiv. 6 et seq. |
The expression “rock,” he says, he
uses of Adam. This, he affirms, is Adam: “The chief
corner-stone become the head of the corner.”370
370
Ps. cxviii. 22; Isa. xxviii.
16. | For that in the head the substance
is the formative brain from which the entire family is
fashioned.371
“Whom,” he says, “I place as a rock at the
foundations of Zion.” Allegorizing, he says, he speaks of
the creation of the man. The rock is interposed (within) the
teeth, as Homer372
372
Iliad, iv. 350, ἕρκος
ὀδόντων:—
“What word hath ’scaped the
ivory guard that should
Have fenced it in.” | says,
“enclosure of teeth,” that is, a wall and fortress, in
which exists the inner man, who thither has fallen from Adam, the
primal man above. And he has been “severed without hands to
effect the division,”373
and has been borne down into the image of oblivion, being earthly
and clayish. And he asserts that the twittering spirits
follow him, that is, the Logos:—
“Thus these, twittering, came together; and then
the souls
That is, he guides them;
Gentle Hermes led through wide-extended
paths.”374
That is, he says, into the eternal places separated from all
wickedness. For whither, he says, did they come:—
“O’er ocean’s streams they came, and
Leuca’s cliff,
And by the portals of the sun and land of
dreams.”
This, he says, is ocean, “generation of gods and
generation of men”375
375
Iliad, v. 246, xxiv. 201. |
ever whirled round by the eddies of water, at one time upwards, at
another time downwards. But he says there ensues a generation of
men when the ocean flows downwards; but when upwards to the wall and
fortress and the cliff of Luecas, a generation of gods takes place. This, he
asserts, is that which has been written: “I said, Ye are
gods, and all children of the highest;”376
376
Ps. lxxxii. 6; Luke vi. 35;
John x. 34. | “If ye hasten to fly out of Egypt,
and repair beyond the Red Sea into the wilderness,” that is, from
earthly intercourse to the Jerusalem above, which is the mother of the
living;377 “If,
moreover, again you return into Egypt,” that is, into earthly
intercourse,378
378
Philo Judæus adopts the same imagery (see his De
Agricult., lib. i.). | “ye
shall die as men.” For mortal, he says, is every generation
below, but immortal that which is begotten above, for it is born of
water only, and of spirit, being spiritual, not carnal. But what
(is born) below is carnal, that is, he says, what is written.
“That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born
of the spirit is spirit.”379 This, according to them, is the
spiritual generation. This, he says, is the great Jordan380 which, flowing on (here) below, and
preventing the children of Israel from departing out of Egypt—I
mean from terrestrial intercourse, for Egypt is with them the
body,—Jesus drove back, and made it flow
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