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Chapter
XXVIII.—Cerinthus the
Heresiarch.
1. We
have understood that at this time Cerinthus,834
834 The earliest account which we have of Cerinthus is that of
Irenæus (Adv. Hær. I. 26. 1; cf. III. 3. 4, quoted at
the end of this chapter, and 11. 1), according to which Cerinthus, a
man educated in the wisdom of the Egyptians, taught that the world was
not made by the supreme God, but by a certain power distinct from him.
He denied the supernatural birth of Jesus, making him the son of Joseph
and Mary, and distinguishing him from Christ, who descended upon him at
baptism and left him again at his crucifixion. He was thus Ebionitic in
his Christology, but Gnostic in his doctrine of the creation. He
claimed no supernatural power for himself as did Simon Magus and
Menander, but pretended to angelic revelations, as recorded by Caius in
this paragraph. Irenæus (who is followed by Hippolytus, VII. 21
and X. 17) says nothing of his chiliastic views, but these are
mentioned by Caius in the present paragraph, by Dionysius (quoted by
Eusebius, VII. 25, below), by Theodoret (Hær. Fab. II. 3),
and by Augustine (De Hær. I. 8), from which accounts we can
see that those views were very sensual. The fullest description which
we have of Cerinthus and his followers is that of Epiphanius
(Hær. XXVIII.), who records a great many traditions as to
his life (e.g. that he was one of the false apostles who opposed Paul,
and one of the circumcision who rebuked Peter for eating with
Cornelius, &c.), and also many details as to his system, some of
which are quite contradictory. It is clear, however, that he was Jewish
in his training and sympathies, while at the same time possessed of
Gnostic tendencies. He represents a position of transition from
Judaistic Ebionism to Gnosticism, and may be regarded as the earliest
Judaizing Gnostic. Of his death tradition tells us nothing, and as to
his dates we can say only that he lived about the end of the first
century. Irenæus (III. 2. 1) supposed John to have written his
gospel and epistle in opposition to Cerinthus. On the other hand,
Cerinthus himself was regarded by some as the author of the Apocalypse
(see Bk. VII. chap. 25, below), and most absurdly as the author of the
Fourth Gospel also (see above, chap. 24, note 1). |
the author of another heresy, made his appearance. Caius, whose words
we quoted above,835
835 See Bk. II. chap. 25, §7. Upon Caius, see the note given
there. The Disputation is the same that is quoted in that
passage. | in the
Disputation which is ascribed to him, writes as follows concerning this
man:
2. “But Cerinthus also, by
means of revelations which he pretends were written by a great apostle,
brings before us marvelous things which he falsely claims were shown
him by angels; and he says that after the resurrection the kingdom of
Christ will be set up on earth, and that the flesh dwelling in
Jerusalem will again be subject to desires and pleasures. And being an
enemy of the Scriptures of God, he asserts, with the purpose of
deceiving men, that there is to be a period of a thousand years836
836 Cf. Rev. xx. 4. On chiliasm in the early Church, see below, chap. 39, note
19. | for marriage festivals.”837
837 It is a commonly accepted opinion founded upon this passage that
Caius rejected the apostolic authorship of the Apocalypse and
considered it a work of Cerinthus. But the quotation by no means
implies this. Had he believed that Cerinthus wrote the Apocalypse
commonly ascribed to John, he would certainly have said so plainly, and
Eusebius would just as certainly have quoted his opinion, prejudiced as
he was himself against the Apocalypse. Caius simply means that
Cerinthus abused and misinterpreted the vision of the Apocalypse for
his own sensual purposes. That this is the meaning is plain from the
words “being an enemy to the Divine Scriptures,” and
especially from the fact that in the Johannine Apocalypse itself occur
no such sensual visions as Caius mentions here. The sensuality was
evidently superimposed by the interpretation of Cerinthus. Cf.
Weiss’ N. T. Einleitung, p. 82. |
3. And Dionysius,838
838 Upon Dionysius and his writings, see below, Bk. VI. chap. 40, note
1. | who was bishop of the parish of
Alexandria in our day, in the second book of his work On the Promises,
where he says some things concerning the Apocalypse of John which he
draws from tradition, mentions this same man in the following words:839
839 The same passage is quoted with its context in Bk. VII. chap. 25,
below. The verbs in the portion of the passage quoted here are all in
the infinitive, and we see, from Bk. VII. chap. 25, that they depend
upon an indefinite λέγουσιν, “they say”; so that Eusebius is quite right
here in saying that Dionysius is drawing from tradition in making the
remarks which he does. Inasmuch as the verbs are not independent, and
the statement is not, therefore, Dionysius’ own, I have inserted,
at the beginning of the quotation, the words “they say
that,” which really govern all the verbs of the passage.
Dionysius himself rejected the theory of Cerinthus’ authorship of
the Apocalypse, as may be seen from Bk. VII. chap. 25,
§7. |
4. “But (they say that)
Cerinthus, who founded the sect which was called, after him, the
Cerinthian, desiring reputable authority for his fiction, prefixed the
name. For the doctrine which he taught was this: that the kingdom of
Christ will be an earthly one.
5. And as he was himself devoted
to the pleasures of the body and altogether sensual in his nature, he
dreamed that that kingdom would consist in those things which he
desired, namely, in the delights of the belly and of sexual passion,
that is to say, in eating and drinking and marrying, and in festivals
and sacrifices and the slaying of victims, under the guise of which he
thought he could indulge his appetites with a better
grace.”
6. These are the words of
Dionysius. But Irenæus, in the first book of his work Against
Heresies,840
840 Irenæus, Adv. Hær. I. 26. 1. | gives some more abominable false
doctrines of the same man, and in the third book relates a story which
deserves to be recorded. He says, on the authority of Polycarp, that
the apostle John once entered a bath to bathe; but, learning that
Cerinthus was within, he sprang from the place and rushed out of the
door, for he could not bear to remain under the same roof with him. And
he advised those that were with him to do the same, saying, “Let
us flee, lest the bath fall; for Cerinthus, the enemy of the truth, is
within.”841
841 See
ibid. III. 3. 4. This story is repeated by Eusebius, in Bk. IV.
chap. 14. There is nothing impossible in it. The occurrence fits well
the character of John as a “son of thunder,” and shows the
same spirit exhibited by Polycarp in his encounter with Marcion (see
below, Bk. IV. chap. 14). But the story is not very well authenticated,
as Irenæus did not himself hear it from Polycarp, but only from
others to whom Polycarp had told it. The unreliability of such
second-hand tradition is illustrated abundantly in the case of
Irenæus himself, who gives some reports, very far from true, upon
the authority of certain presbyters (e.g. that Christ lived fifty
years; II. 22. 5). This same story, with much more fullness of detail,
is repeated by Epiphanius (Hær. XXX. 24), but of Ebion (who
never existed), instead of Cerinthus. This shows that the story was a
very common one, while, at the same time, so vague in its details as to
admit of an application to any heretic who suited the purpose. That
somebody met somebody in a bath seems quite probable, and there is
nothing to prevent our accepting the story as it stands in
Irenæus, if we choose to do so. One thing, at least, is certain,
that Cerinthus is a historical character, who in all probability was,
for at least a part of his life, contemporary with John, and thus
associated with him in tradition, whether or not he ever came into
personal contact with him. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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