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| Monoïmus; Man the Universe, According to Monoïmus; His System of the Monad. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
V.—Monoïmus; Man the Universe, According to Monoïmus;
His System of the Monad.
Monoïmus928
928
What is given here by Hippolytus respecting Monoïmus is
quite new. The only writer that mentions him is Theodoret,
Hær. Fab., i. 18. [See Bunsen, vol. i. p.
103.] | the Arabian was far removed from the
glory of the high-sounding poet. (For Monoïmus) supposes
that there is some such man as the poet (calls) Oceanus, expressing
himself somehow thus:—
“Oceans, source of gods and source of
men.”929
929
Iliad, xiv. 201, 246. |
Changing these (sentiments) into other words, Monoïmus
says that man is the universe. Now the universe is the
originating cause of all things, unbegotten, incorruptible, (and)
eternal. And (he says) that the son of (the) man previously
spoken of is begotten, and subject to passion, (and) that he is
generated independently of time, (as well as) undesignedly,930
930 Or,
“kinglessly,” which has no meaning here. Miller
therefore alters ἀβασιλεύτως
into ἀβουλήτως. | (and) without being predestinated.
For such, he says, is the power of that man. And he being thus
constituted in power, (Monoïmus alleges) that the son was born
quicker than thought and volition. And this, he says, is what has been
spoken in the Scriptures, “He was, and was
generated.”931
931 An
allusion is evidently made to the opening chapter of St. John’s
Gospel. Monoïmus, like Basilides, seems to have formed his
system from the prologue to the fourth Gospel. | And the
meaning of this is: Man was, and his son was generated; just as
one may say, Fire was, and, independently of time, and undesignedly,
and without being predestinated, light was generated simultaneously
with the existence of the fire. And this man constitutes a single
monad, which is uncompounded and indivisible, (and yet at the same
time) compounded (and) divisible. (And this monad is) in all
respects friendly (and) in all respects peaceful, in all respects
quarrelsome (and) in all respects contentious with itself, dissimilar
(and) similar. (This monad is likewise,) as it were, a certain
musical harmony, which comprises all things in itself, as many as one
may express and may omit when not considering; and it manifests all
things, and generates all things. This (is) Mother, this (is)
Father—two immortal names. As an illustration, however,
consider, he says, as a greatest image of the perfect man, the one
jot—that one tittle. And this one tittle is an
uncompounded, simple, and pure monad, which derives its composition
from nothing at all. (And yet this tittle is likewise)
compounded, multiform, branching into many sections, and consisting of
many parts. That one indivisible tittle is, he says, one tittle
of the (letter) iota, with many faces, and innumerable eyes, and
countless names, and this (tittle) is an image of that perfect
invisible man.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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