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Chapter
XIII.—Simon Magus.360
360 It is
justly remarked by Reuterdahl that no chapters of Eusebius’
History are so imperfect and unsatisfactory as those which
relate to heresies, but that this is to be ascribed more to the age
than to the author. A right understanding of heresies and an
appreciation of any truth which they might contain was utterly
impossible to men who looked upon heresy as the work of the devil, and
all heretics as his chosen tools. Eusebius has been condemned by some,
because he gives his information about heretics only from second hand,
and quotes none of them directly; but it must be remembered that this
method was by no means peculiar to Eusebius, and, moreover, it is
highly probable that he did not have access to any of their works. The
accounts of the heretics given by Irenæus, Hippolytus, and others
would of course be preserved, but the writings of heretics themselves
would be piously excluded as completely as possible from all Christian
libraries, and the knowledge of them cannot have remained long in the
Church. The sources upon which we have to rely at the present day for a
knowledge of these heresies furnish an illustration of this. We know
them almost solely through their enemies, and Eusebius knew them in the
same way and very likely for the same reason. |
1. But
faith in our Saviour and Lord Jesus Christ having now been diffused
among all men,361 the enemy of man’s salvation
contrived a plan for seizing the imperial city for himself. He
conducted thither the above-mentioned Simon,362
362 Simon Magus, of whom mention is first made in Acts viii. 9 sqq. (quoted
above, in chap. 1), played a very prominent role in early Church
history. His life has been so greatly embellished with legends that it
is very difficult to extract a trustworthy account of him. Indeed the
Tübingen school, as well as some other modern critics, have denied
altogether the existence of such a personage, and have resolved the
account of him into a Jewish Christian fiction produced in hostility to
the apostle Paul, who under the mask of Simon was attacked as the real
heretic. But this identification of Paul and Simon rests upon a very
slender foundation, as many passages can be adduced in which the two
are expressly distinguished, and indeed the thought of identifying Paul
and Simon seems never to have occurred to the writer of the
Recognitions. The most that can be said is that the author of
the Homilies gives, and without doubt purposely, some Pauline
traits to his picture of Simon, but this does not imply that he makes
Simon no more than a mask for Paul (cf. the words of Salmon in his
article, Clementine Literature, in the Dict. of Christ.
Biog. Vol. I. p. 576). The original of Simon then is not to be
found in Paul. The third century fiction is based upon a real historic
person whose actual existence must be assumed to account for the early
notices of him in the Acts and in Justin Martyr, as well as the common
tradition of him among all parties in the Church. Salmon considers
Simon of Gitton—the basis of the account of Justin Martyr and of
all the later Simon legends—a second century Gnostic distinct
from the Simon mentioned in the Acts (see his excellent article
Simon Magus, in the Dict. of Christ. Biog. IV. p. 681
sqq.). In the Pseudo-Clementines Simon is represented as traveling
widely and spreading his errors in all directions, while Peter follows
him for the purpose of exposing his impostures, and refutes him
repeatedly in public disputations, until at length he conquers him
completely in Rome, and Simon ends his life by suicide. His death, as
well as his life, is recorded in various conflicting and fabulous
traditions (see note 9, below). For ancient accounts of Simon, see
Justin Martyr, Apol. I. 26 and 56 and Dial. c. Trypho.
CXX.; the Pseudo-Clementine Homilies and Recognitions;
Irenæus, I. 23; Hippolytus, VI. 2 sq.; Tertullian’s
Apology, On Idolatry, On the Soul, etc.; Apost.
Constitutions, VII. 7 sq.; Arnobius, Adv. Gentes, II. 12,
&c.; Acts of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul (Ante-Nicene
Fathers, Am. ed. VIII. p. 477 sqq.); Epiphanius, Hær.
XXI.; and Theodoret, Hær. Fab. I. 1. See also Lipsius,
article in Schinkel’s Bibel-Lexicon, Vol. V. |
aided him in his deceitful arts, led many of the inhabitants of Rome
astray, and thus brought them into his own power.
2. This is stated by Justin,363
363 In
his Apology, I. 26, 56. | one of our distinguished writers who
lived not long after the time of the apostles. Concerning him I shall
speak in the proper place.364
364 In
Bk. IV. chaps. 8, 11, 16–18. | Take and read the
work of this man, who in the first Apology365
365 On
Justin’s Apology, see below, Bk. IV. chap. 18, note
2. | which he
addressed to Antonine in behalf of our religion writes as follows:366
366 Justin’s Apology, I. 26. |
3. “And after the
ascension of the Lord into heaven the demons put forward certain men
who said they were gods, and who were not only allowed by you to go
unpersecuted, but were even deemed worthy of honors. One of them was
Simon, a Samaritan of the village of Gitto,367
367 Gitton was a village of Samaria, near Flavia Neapolis (the modern
Nâblus), and is identified by Robinson with the present village of
Kuryet Jît (see Robinson’s Biblical Researches, III.
p. 144, note). Some have doubted the accuracy of Justin’s report,
for the reason that Josephus (Ant. XXII. 7. 2) mentions a
magician named Simon, of about the same date, who was born in Cyprus.
There was a town called Κίτιον in
Cyprus, and it has been thought that Justin may have mistaken this
place for the Samaritan Gitton. But even if we assume the identity of
the two Simons as many critics do, it is less likely that Justin, a
native of Samaria, was mistaken upon a question concerning his own
country, than that Josephus was. Simon’s activity may have
extended to Cyprus, in which case Josephus might easily have mistaken
his birthplace. |
who in the reign of Claudius Cæsar368
368 Justin here assigns Simon’s visit to Rome to the reign of
Claudius (41–54 a.d.), as Irenæus
also does. Other accounts assign it to the reign of Nero, but all
differ as to the details of his death; suicide, death from injuries
received while trying to fly, voluntary burial in expectation of rising
again on the third day, &c., are reported in different traditions.
All, however, agree that he visited Rome at some time or
another. |
performed in your imperial city some mighty acts of magic by the art of
demons operating in him, and was considered a god, and as a god was
honored by you with a statue, which was erected in the river Tiber,369
369 That is, on the island which lies in the middle of the Tiber, a
short distance below the Vatican, and which now bears the name Isola
Tiberiana, or di S. Sebastiano. | between the two bridges, and bore this
inscription in the Latin tongue, Simoni Deo Sancto, that is,
To Simon the Holy God.370
370 In
1574 a statue, bearing the inscription Semoni Sanco deo fidio,
&c., was found in the place described by Justin Martyr, but this
statue was erected to the Sabine divinity Semo Sancus. It is therefore
highly probable that Justin mistook this statue for a statue of Simon
Magus. This is now the commonly accepted view, though the translator of
Justin Martyr in the Ante-Nicene Fathers ventures to dispute it
(see the Am. ed. Vol. I. p. 171, note). The report is given a second
time by Justin in his Apol. 56, and also by Irenæus, I. 23.
1 (who, however, simply says “It is said,” and may have
drawn his knowledge only from Justin Martyr) and by Tertullian,
Apol. chap. 13. The last named is in general a poor authority
even if he be independent of Justin at this point, which is not
probable. Hippolytus, who lived at Rome, and who gives us an account of
the death of Simon (Bk. VII. chap. 15), says nothing about the statue
and his silence is a strong argument against it. |
4. And nearly all the Samaritans
and a few even of other nations confess and worship him as the first
God. And there went around with him at that time a certain Helena371
371 A
similar story is told of this Helen by Irenæus, I. 23; by
Hippolytus, VI. 15 (who adds some important particulars); by
Tertullian, De Anima, 34; by Epiphanius, Hær. 21;
and by Theodoret, Hær. Fab. I. 1; compare also Origen,
Contra Celsum, V. 62. Simon taught that this Helen was the first
conception of his mind, the mother of all things, the impersonation of
the divine intelligence, &c. The Simonians, according to
Irenæus (I. 23. 4), and Hippolytus (VI. 15; see chap. 14, note 8),
had images of Simon and Helen whom they honored as Jupiter and Minerva.
Simon’s doctrines and practice, as recorded by these Fathers,
show some of the general conceptions common to all the Gnostic systems,
but exhibit a crude and undeveloped form of Gnosticism. Upon Helen, see
Salmon, in the Dict. of Christ. Biog. II. p. 880 sq., and all
the works upon Simon Magus. | who had formerly been a prostitute in
Tyre of Phœnicia; and her they call the first idea that proceeded
from him.”372
372 This conception of the idea (žννοια) is
thoroughly Gnostic, and plays an important part in all the Gnostic
systems. Most of these systems had a dualistic element recognizing
the δύναμις and the žννοιαas the original principles from whose union all beings emanated.
These general conceptions appeared in all varieties of forms in the
different systems. |
5. Justin relates these things,
and Irenæus also agrees with him in the first book of his work,
Against Heresies, where he gives an account of the man373
373 Irenæus adv. Hær. I. 23. | and of his profane and impure teaching.
It would be superfluous to quote his account here, for it is possible
for those who wish to know the origin and the lives and the false
doctrines of each of the heresiarchs that have followed him, as well as
the customs practiced by them all, to find them treated at length in
the above-mentioned work of Irenæus.
6. We have understood that Simon
was the author of all heresy.374 From his time
down to the present those who have followed his heresy have feigned the
sober philosophy of the Christians, which is celebrated among all on
account of its purity of life. But they nevertheless have embraced
again the superstitions of idols, which they seemed to have renounced;
and they fall down before pictures and images of Simon himself and of
the above-mentioned Helena who was with him; and they venture to
worship them with incense and sacrifices and libations.
7. But those matters which they
keep more secret than these, in regard to which they say that one upon
first hearing them would be astonished, and, to use one of the written
phrases in vogue among them, would be confounded,375 are in truth full of amazing things, and
of madness and folly, being of such a sort that it is impossible not
only to commit them to writing, but also for modest men even to utter
them with the lips on account of their excessive baseness and
lewdness.376
376 This was the general opinion of the early Fathers, all of whom
picture Gnosticism as a wilderness of absurdities and nonsense; and
Irenæus, Hippolytus, and others undertake its refutation only for
the purpose of exposing these absurdities. It is treated by none of
them as an intelligent speculation with a foundation in reason or
sense. This thorough misunderstanding of the nature and aim of
Gnosticism has been perpetuated in our day by many writers upon the
subject. Neander was the first to attempt a thoroughly philosophical
treatment of it (in his Genetische Entwickelung d. gnost.
Systeme, Berlin, 1818), and since that time the subject has been
treated intelligently and discriminatingly by many writers, e.g. Baur,
Lipsius, Lightfoot, Salmon and especially Harnack who has grasped the
true principle of Gnosticism perhaps more fully than any one else. See
his Dogmengeschichte, I. p. 158 sqq. |
8. For whatever could be
conceived of, viler than the vilest thing—all that has been
outdone by this most abominable sect, which is composed of those who
make a sport of those miserable females that are literally overwhelmed
with all kinds of vices.377
377 This was true of the Simonians, who were very immoral and
licentious, and of some other Gnostic sects, as e.g. the Ophites, the
Carpocratians, &c. But many of the Gnostics, e.g. Marcion (but see
below, IV. 11, note 24), Saturninus, Tatian, &c., went to the
opposite extreme, teaching a rigid and gloomy asceticism. Underlying
both of these extremes we perceive the same principle—a dualism
of matter and spirit, therefore of body and mind—the former
considered as the work of the devil, and therefore to be despised and
abused: the latter as divine, and therefore to be honored above all
else. The abhorrence of the body, and of matter and nature in general,
logically led to one of the two opposite results, asceticism or
antinomianism, according to the character and instincts of the person
himself. See Schaff, Church Hist. II. p. 457 sqq. The Fathers,
in their hatred of all forms of heresy, naturally saw no good in any of
them, and heretics were therefore indiscriminately accused of
immorality and licentiousness in their worst forms. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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