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| The System of Justinus Antiscriptural and Essentially Pagan. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XVIII.—The System of Justinus Antiscriptural and Essentially
Pagan.
Justinus558
558 What
Hippolytus here states respecting Justinus is quite new. No
mention occurs of this heretic in ecclesiastical history. It is
evident, however, that, like Simon Magus, he was contemporary with St.
Peter and St. Paul. Justinus, however, and the Ophitic sect to
which he belonged, are assigned by Hippolytus and Irenæus a prior
position as regards the order of their appearance to the system of
Simon, or its offshoot Valentinianism. The Ophites engrafted
Phrygian Judaism, and the Valentinians Gentilism, upon Christianity;
the former not rejecting the speculations and mysteries of Asiatic
paganism, and the latter availing themselves of the cabalistic
corruptions of Judaism. The Judaistic element soon became
prominent in successive phases of Valentinianism, which produced a
fusion of the sects of the old Gnostics and of Simon. Hippolytus,
however, now places the Ophitic sect before us prior to its
amalgamation with Valentinianism. Here, for the first time, we
have an authentic delineation of the primitive Ophites. This is
of great value. [See Irenæus, vol. i., this series, p. 354;
also Bunsen (on Baur), vol. i. p. 42.] |
was entirely opposed to the teaching of the holy Scriptures, and
moreover to the written or oral teaching of the blessed evangelists,
according as the Logos was accustomed to instruct His disciples,
saying, “Go not into the way of the Gentiles;”559 and this signifies that they should not
attend to the futile doctrine of the Gentiles. This (heretic)
endeavours to lead on his hearers into an acknowledgment of prodigies
detailed by the Gentiles, and of doctrines inculcated by them.
And he narrates, word for word, legendary accounts prevalent among the
Greeks, and does not previously teach or deliver his perfect mystery,
unless he has bound his dupe by an oath. Then he brings forward
(these) fables for the purpose of persuasion, in order that they who
are conversant with the incalculable trifling of these books may have
some consolation in the details of these legends. Thus it happens
as when in like manner one making a long journey deems it expedient, on
having fallen in with an inn, to take repose. And so it is that,
when once more they are induced to turn towards studying the diffuse
doctrine of these lectures, they may not abhor them while they,
undergoing instruction unnecessarily prolix, rush stupified into the
transgression devised by (Justinus); and previously he binds his
followers with horrible oaths, neither to publish nor abjure these
doctrines, and forces upon them an acknowledgment (of their
truth). And in this manner he delivers the mysteries impiously
discovered by himself, partly, according to the statements previously
made, availing himself of the Hellenic legends, and partly of those
pretended books which, to some extent, bear a resemblance to the
foresaid heresies. For all, forced together by one spirit, are
drawn into one profound abyss of pollution, inculcating the same
tenets, and detailing the same legends, each after a different
method. All those, however, style themselves Gnostics in this
peculiar sense, that they alone themselves have imbibed the marvellous
knowledge of the Perfect and Good (Being).E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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