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| The Age of Manichæus, or Manes; His First Disciples; The Two Principles; Manichæan Matter. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
II.—The Age of Manichæus, or Manes; His First Disciples; The
Two Principles; Manichæan Matter.
So in these matters also, whilst in novelty of
opinion each endeavours to show himself first and superior, they
brought this philosophy, which is simple, almost to a nullity.
Such was he whom they call Manichæus,2197
2197
Manes, or Manichæus, lived about a.d. 240. He was a Persian by birth, and this
accounts for the Parseeism which can be detected in his teaching.
He was probably ordained a priest, but was afterwards expelled from the
Christian community, and put to death by the Persian government.
His tenets spread considerably, and were in early youth embraced by St.
Augustine. [See Confess., iii. 6.] | a Persian by race, my instructor in
whose doctrine was one Papus by name, and after him Thomas, and some
others followed them. They say that the man lived when Valerian
was emperor, and that he served under Sapor, the king of the Persians,
and having offended him in some way, was put to death. Some such
report of his character and reputation has come to me from those who
were intimately acquainted with him. He laid down two principles,
God and Matter. God he called good, and matter he affirmed to be
evil. But God excelled more in good than matter in evil.
But he calls matter not that which Plato calls it,2198 which becomes everything when it has
received quality and figure, whence he terms it all-embracing—the
mother and nurse of all things; nor what Aristotle2199
2199
In substance, but not in words, Aristotle, Met.,
Book Λ 4 (1070´ b). | calls an element, with which form and
privation have to do, but something beside these. For the motion
which in individual things is incomposite, this he calls matter.
On the side of God are ranged powers, like handmaids, all good; and
likewise, on the side of matter are ranged other powers, all
evil. Moreover, the bright shining, the light, and the superior,
all these are with God; while the obscure, and the darkness, and the inferior are
with matter. God, too, has desires, but they are all good; and
matter, likewise, which are all evil.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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