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| Valentinus Convicted of Plagiarisms from the Platonic and Pythagoric Philosophy; The Valentinian Theory of Emanation by Duads. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXIV.—Valentinus
Convicted of Plagiarisms from the Platonic and Pythagoric Philosophy;
The Valentinian Theory of Emanation by Duads.
Of some such nature, as I who have accurately
examined their systems (have attempted) to state compendiously, is the
opinion of Pythagoras and Plato. And from this (system), not from
the Gospels, Valentinus, as we have proved, has collected the
(materials of) heresy—I mean his own (heresy)—and may
(therefore) justly be reckoned a Pythagorean and Platonist, not a
Christian. Valentinus, therefore, and Heracleon, and
Ptolemæus, and the entire school of these (heretics), as disciples
of Pythagoras and Plato, (and) following these guides, have laid down
as a fundamental principle of their doctrine the arithmetical
system. For, likewise, according to these (Valentinians), the
originating cause of the universe is a Monad, unbegotten, imperishable,
incomprehensible, inconceivable, productive, and a cause of the
generation of all existent things. And the aforesaid Monad is
styled by them Father. There is, however, discoverable among them
some considerable diversity of opinion. For some of them, in
order that the Pythagorean doctrine of Valentinus may be altogether
free from admixture (with other tenets), suppose that the Father is
unfeminine, and unwedded, and solitary. But others, imagining it
to be impossible that from a male only there could proceed a generation
at all of any of those things that have been made to exist, necessarily
reckon along with the Father of the universe, in order that he may be a
father, Sige as a spouse. But as to Sige, whether at any time she
is united in marriage (to the Father) or not, this is a point which we
leave them to wrangle about among themselves. We at present,
keeping to the Pythagorean principle, which is one, and unwedded,
unfeminine, (and) deficient in nothing, shall proceed to give an
account of their doctrines, as they themselves inculcate them.
There is, says (Valentinus), not anything at all begotten, but the
Father is alone unbegotten, not subject to the condition of place, not
(subject to the condition of) time, having no counsellor, (and) not
being any other substance that could be realized according to the
ordinary methods of perception. (The Father,) however, was
solitary, subsisting, as they say, in a state of quietude, and Himself
reposing in isolation within Himself. When, however, He became
productive,672
672
Valentinus’ system, if purged of the glosses put upon it by his
disciples, appears to have been constructed out of a grand conception
of Deity, and evidences much power of abstraction. Between the
essence of God, dwelling in the midst of isolation prior to an exercise
of the creative energy, and the material worlds, Valentinus interposes
an ideal world. Through the latter, the soul—of a kindred
nature—is enabled to mount up to God. This is the import of
the terms Bythus (depth) and Sige (silence, i.e., solitariness)
afterwards used. | it seemed to Him
expedient at one time to generate and lead forth the most beautiful and
perfect (of those germs of existence) which He possessed within
Himself, for (the Father) was not fond of solitariness. For, says
he, He was all love, but love is not love except there may be some
object of affection. The Father Himself, then, as He was
solitary, projected and produced Nous and Aletheia, that is, a duad
which became mistress,673
673
κυρία: instead of this has
been suggested the reading καὶ ῥιζα, i.e.,
“which is both the root,” etc. |
and origin, and mother of all the Æons computed by them (as
existing) within the Pleroma. Nous and Aletheia being projected
from the Father,674
674 In all
this Valentinus intends to delineate the progress from absolute to
phenomenal being. There are three developments in this
transition. Absolute being (Bythus and Sige) is the same as the
eternal thought and consciousness of God’s own essence.
Here we have the primary emanation, viz., Nous, i.e., Mind (called also
Monogenes, only-begotten), and Aletheia, i.e., Truth. Next comes
the ideal manifestation through the Logos, i.e., Word (obviously
borrowed from the prologue to St. John’s Gospel), and Zoe, i.e.,
Life (taken from the same source). We have then the passage from
the ideal to the actual in Anthropos, i.e., Man, and Ecclesia, i.e.,
Church. These last are the phenomenal manifestations of the
divine mind. | one capable of
continuing generation, deriving existence from a productive being,
(Nous) himself likewise, in imitation of the Father, projected Logos
and Zoe; and Logos and Zoe project Anthropos and Ecclesia. But
Nous and Aletheia, when they beheld that their own offspring had been
born productive, returned thanks to the Father of the universe, and
offer unto Him a perfect number, viz., ten Æons. For, he
says, Nous and Aletheia could not offer unto the Father a more perfect
(one) than this number. For the Father, who is perfect, ought to
be celebrated by a perfect number, and ten is a perfect number, because
this is first of those (numbers) that are formed by plurality, (and
therefore) perfect.675
675
τέλειος: Bunsen
would read τέλος, which Cruice objects to
on account of the word τελειότερος
occurring in the next sentence. | The
Father, however, being more perfect, because being alone unbegotten, by
means of the one primary conjugal union of Nous and Aletheia, found
means of projecting all the roots of existent
things.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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