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Chapter XIII.—Rhodo and his
Account of the Dissension of Marcion.
1. At
this time Rhodo,1535
1535 We
know nothing of Rhodo except what is contained in this chapter. Jerome
gives a very brief account of him in his de vir. ill. 37, but it
rests solely upon this chapter, with the single addition of the
statement that Rhodo wrote a work Against the Phrygians. It is
plain enough, however, that he had for his account no independent
source, and that he in this statement simply attributed to Rhodo the
work quoted by Eusebius as an anonymous work in chap. 16. Jerome
permits himself such unwarranted combinations very frequently, and we
need not be at all surprised at it. With him a guess is often as good
as knowledge, and in this case he doubtless considered his guess a very
shrewd one. There is no warrant for supposing that he himself saw the
work mentioned by Eusebius, and thus learned its authorship. What
Eusebius did not learn from it he certainly could not, and his whole
account betrays the most slavish and complete dependence upon Eusebius
as his only source. In chap. 39 Jerome mentions Rhodo again as
referring, in a book which he wrote against Montanus, Prisca, and
Maximilla, to Miltiades, who also wrote against the same heretics. This
report is plainly enough taken directly from Eusebius, chap. 17, where
Eusebius quotes from the same anonymous work. Jerome’s utterly
baseless combination is very interesting, and significant of his
general method.
Rhodo’s works are
no longer extant, and the only fragments we have are those preserved by
Eusebius in this chapter. | a native of Asia,
who had been instructed, as he himself states, by Tatian, with whom we
have already become acquainted,1536
1536 See Bk. IV. chap. 29. | having
written several books, published among the rest one against the heresy
of Marcion.1537
1537 Upon Marcion and Marcionism, see Bk. IV. chap. 11, note
22. | He says that this heresy was
divided in his time into various opinions;1538
1538 It is noticeable that Rhodo says γνώμας,
opinions, not parties. Although the different Marcionites
held various theoretical beliefs, which gave rise to different schools,
yet they did not split up into sects, but remained one church, and
retained the one general name of Marcionites, and it is by this general
name alone that they are always referred to by the Fathers. The fact
that they could hold such variant beliefs (e.g. one, two, or three
principles; see below, note 9) without splitting up into sects, shows
that doctrines were but a side issue with them, and that the religious
spirit was the matter upon which they laid the chief emphasis. This
shows the fundamental difference between Marcion and the
Gnostics. | and while describing those who
occasioned the division, he refutes accurately the falsehoods devised
by each of them.
2. But hear what he writes:1539
1539 These fragments of Rhodo are collected and discussed by Routh in
his Rel. Sacræ, I. 437–446. |
“Therefore also they
disagree among themselves, maintaining an inconsistent opinion.1540
1540 The
Fathers entirely misunderstood Marcion, and mistook the significance of
his movement. They regarded it, like Gnosticism in general, solely as a
speculative system, and entirely overlooked its practical aim. The
speculative and theological was not the chief thing with Marcion, but
it is the only thing which receives any attention from his opponents.
His positions, all of which were held only with a practical interest,
were not treated by him in a speculative manner, nor were they handled
logically and systematically. As a consequence, many contradictions
occur in them. These contradictions were felt by his followers, who
laid more and more emphasis upon the speculative over against the
practical; and hence, as Rhodo reports, they fell into disagreement,
and, in their effort to remove the inconsistencies, formed various
schools, differing among themselves according to the element upon which
the greatest weight was laid. There is thus some justification for the
conduct of the Fathers, who naturally carried back and attributed to
Marcion the principles of his followers. But it is our duty to
distinguish the man from his followers, and to recognize his greatness
in spite of their littleness. Not all of them, however, fell completely
away from his practical religious spirit. Apelles, as we shall see
below, was in many respects a worthy follower of his master. | For Apelles,1541
1541 Apelles was the greatest and most famous of Marcion’s
disciples. Tertullian wrote a special work against him, which is
unfortunately lost, but from his own quotations, and from those of
Pseudo-Tertullian and Hippolytus, it can be in part restored (cf.
Harnack’s De Apellis Gnosis Monarchia, p. 11 sqq.). As he
was an old man (see §5, below) when Rhodo conversed with him, he
must have been born early in the second century. We know nothing
definite either as to his birth or death. The picture which we have of
him in this chapter is a very pleasing one. He was a man evidently of
deep religious spirit and moral life, who laid weight upon “trust
in the crucified Christ” (see §5, below), and upon holiness
in life in distinction from doctrinal beliefs; a man who was thus
thoroughly Marcionitic in his principles, although he differed so
widely with Marcion in some of his doctrinal positions that he was said
to have founded a new sect (so Origen, Hom. in Gen. II. 2). The
slightest difference, however, between his teaching and Marcion’s
would have been sufficient to make him the founder of a separate
Gnostic sect in the eyes of the Fathers, and therefore this statement
must be taken with allowance (see note 4, above). The account which
Hippolytus (Phil. X. 16) gives of the doctrinal positions of
Apelles is somewhat different from that of Rhodo, but ambiguous and
less exact. The scandal in regard to him, reported by Tertullian in his
De Præscriptione, 30, is quite in accord with
Tertullian’s usual conduct towards heretics, and may be set aside
as not having the slightest foundation in fact, and as absolutely
contradicting what we know of Apelles from this report of his
contemporary, Rhodo. His moral character was certainly above reproach,
and the same may be said of his master, Marcion. Upon Apelles, see
especially Harnack’s De Apellis Gnosis Monarchia, Lips.
1874. |
one of the herd, priding himself on his manner of life1542
1542 The
participle (σεμνυνόμενος) carries with it the implication that Apelles’
character was affected or assumed. The implication, however, does not
lessen the value of Rhodo’s testimony to his character. He could
not deny its purity, though he insinuated that it was not
sincere. | and his age, acknowledges one principle,1543
1543 This means that Apelles accepted only one God, and made the
creator but an angel who was completely under the power of the Supreme
God. Marcion, on the contrary, held, as said below, two principles,
teaching that the world-creator was himself a God, eternal, uncreated,
and independent of the good God of the Christians. It is true that
Marcion represented the world-creator as limited in power and
knowledge, and taught that the Christian God would finally be supreme,
and the world-creator become subject to him; but this, while it
involves Marcion in self-contradiction as soon as the matter is looked
at theoretically, yet does not relieve him from the charge of actual
dualism. His followers were more consistent, and either accepted one
principle, subordinating the world-creator completely to the good God,
as did Apelles, or else carried out Marcion’s dualism to its
logical result and asserted the continued independence of the Old
Testament God and the world-creator, who was thus very early identified
with Satan and made the enemy of the Christian God. (Marcion’s
world-creator was not the bad God, but the righteous in distinction
from the good God.) Still others held three principles: the good God of
the Christians, the righteous God or world-creator, and the bad God,
Satan. The varying doctrines of these schools explain the discrepant
and often contradictory reports of the Fathers in regard to the
doctrines of Marcion. Apelles’ doctrine was a decided advance
upon that of Marcion, as he rejected the dualism of the latter, which
was the destructive element in his system, and thus approached the
Church, whose foundation must be one God who rules the world for
good. His position is very significant, as remarked by Harnack, because
it shows that one could hold Marcion’s fundamental principle
without becoming a dualist. | but says that the prophecies1544
1544 i.e. the Old Testament prophecies. Apelles in his
Syllogisms (see below, note 28) exhibited the supposed
contradictions of the Old Testament in syllogistic form, tracing them
to two adverse angels, of whom the one spoke falsely, contradicting the
truth spoken by the other. Marcion, on the other hand (in his
Antitheses), referred all things to the same God, the
world-creator, and from the contradictions of the book endeavored to
show his vacillating and inconsistent character. He, however, accepted
the Old Testament as in the main a trustworthy book, but referred the
prophecies to the Jewish Messiah in distinction from the Christ of the
New Testament. But Apelles, looking upon two adverse angels as the
authors of the book, regarded it as in great part false. Marcion and
Apelles were one, however, in looking upon it as an anti-Christian
book. | are from an opposing spirit, being led to
this view by the responses of a maiden by name Philumene,1545
1545 This
virgin, Philumene, is connected with Apelles in all the reports which
we have of him (e.g. in Hippolytus, Tertullian, Jerome, &c.), and
is reported to have been looked upon by Apelles as a prophetess who
received revelations from an angel, and who worked miracles.
Tertullian, De Præscriptione, 6, evidently accepts these
miracles as facts, but attributes them to the agency of a demon. They
all unite in considering her influence the cause of Apelles’
heretical opinions. Tertullian (ibid. 30, &c.) calls her a
prostitute, but the silence of Rhodo and Hippolytus is sufficient
refutation of such a charge, and it may be rejected as a baseless
slander, like the report of Apelles’ immorality mentioned in note
7. There is nothing strange in the fact that Apelles should follow the
prophecies of a virgin, and the Fathers who mention it evidently do not
consider it as anything peculiar or reprehensible in itself. It was
very common in the early Church to appeal to the relatives of virgins
and widows. Cf. e.g. the virgin daughters of Philip who prophesied
(Acts
xxi. 9; Eusebius, III. 31), also the Eccles. Canons, chap. 21,
where it is directed that three widows shall be appointed, of whom two
shall give themselves to prayer, waiting for revelations in regard to
any question which may arise in the Church, and the third shall devote
herself to nursing the sick. Tertullian also appeals for proof of the
materiality of the soul to a vision enjoyed by a Christian sister
(de Anima, 9). So Montanus had his prophetesses Priscilla and
Maximilla (see the next chapter). | who was possessed by a demon.
3. But others, among whom are
Potitus and Basilicus,1546
1546 Of
these two men we know only what is told us here. They are not mentioned
elsewhere. | hold to two
principles,1547 as does the mariner1548
1548 ὁ ναύτης.
This word is omitted by many mss., but is
found in the best ones and in Rufinus, and is accepted by most of the
editors of Eusebius. Tertullian calls Marcion a ship-master (Adv.
Marc. III. 6, and IV. 9, &c.) and a pilot (ibid. I. 18),
and makes many plays upon his profession (e.g. ibid. V. 1), and
there is no reason to take the word in a figurative sense (as has been
done) and suppose that he is called a mariner simply because of his
nationality. We know that he traveled extensively, and that he was a
rich man (for he gave 200,000 sesterces at one time to the church of
Rome, which was a large sum for those days; see Tertullian, de
Præscript. 30). There is, therefore, no reason to doubt that
he was a “ship-master,” as Tertullian calls him. | Marcion himself.
4. These following the wolf1549
1549 It
was the custom of the Fathers to call the heretics hard names, and
Marcion received his full share of them from his opponents, especially
from Tertullian. He is compared to a wolf by Justin also, Apol.
I. 58, on account of his “carrying away” so many
“lambs” from the truth. | of Pontus, and, like him, unable to fathom
the division of things, became reckless, and without giving any proof
asserted two principles. Others, again, drifting into a worse error,
consider that there are not only two, but three natures.1550 Of these, Syneros1551
1551 Of
Syneros we know only what is told us here. He is not mentioned
elsewhere. Had the Marcionites split into various sects, these leaders
must have been well known among the Fathers, and their names must have
been frequently referred to. As it was, they all remained Marcionites,
in spite of their differences of opinion (see above, note
4). | is
the leader and chief, as those who defend his teaching1552
1552 διδασκ€λιον, which is the reading of the majority of the mss., and is adopted by Heinichen. Burton and Schwegler
read διδασκαλεῖον, on the authority of two mss. | say.”
5. The same author writes that
he engaged in conversation with Apelles. He speaks as
follows:
“For the old man Apelles,
when conversing with us,1553
1553 Apelles was evidently like Marcion in his desire to keep within
the Church as much as possible, and to associate with Church people. He
had no esoteric doctrines to conceal from the multitude, and in this he
shows the great difference between himself and the Gnostics. Marcion
did not leave the Church until he was obliged to, and he founded his
own church only under compulsion, upon being driven out of the Catholic
community. | was refuted in
many things which he spoke falsely; whence also he said that it was not
at all necessary to examine one’s doctrine,1554 but that each one should continue to hold
what he believed. For he asserted that those who trusted in the
Crucified would be saved, if only they were found doing good works.1555
1555 This
is a truly Christian sentiment, and Apelles should be honored for the
expression of it. It reveals clearly the religious character of
Marcionism in distinction from the speculative and theological
character of the Gnostics, and indeed of many of the Fathers. With
Marcion and Apelles we are in a world of sensitive moral principle and
of deep religious feeling like that in which Paul and Augustine lived,
but few others in the early Church. Rhodo, in spite of his orthodoxy,
shows himself the real Gnostic over against the sincere believer,
though the latter was in the eyes of the Church a “blasphemous
heretic.” Apelles’ noble words do honor to the
movement—however heretical it was—which in that barren age
of theology could give them birth.
The latter clause, taken
as it stands, would seem to indicate an elevation of good works to the
level of faith; but though it is possible that Apelles may have
intended to express himself thus, it is more probable, when we remember
the emphasis which Marcion laid upon Paul’s doctrine of salvation
by the grace of God alone, that he meant to do no more than emphasize
good works as a natural result of true faith, as we do to-day. The
apparent co-ordination of the two may perhaps lie simply in
Rhodo’s reproduction of Apelles’ words. He, at least, did
not comprehend Paul’s grand doctrine of Christian liberty, nor
did any of his orthodox contemporaries. The difference between the
common conception of Christ’s relation to the law, and the
conception of Paul as grasped by Marcion and perhaps by Apelles, is
well illustrated by a passage in Tertullian, in which he expresses
astonishment that the Marcionites do not sin freely, so long as they do
not expect to be punished, and exclaims (to his own dishonor), “I
would sin without scruple, if I believed as you do.” | But as we have said before, his opinion
concerning God was the most obscure of all. For he spoke of one
principle, as also our doctrine does.”
6. Then, after stating fully his
own opinion, he adds:
“When I said to him, Tell
me how you know this or how can you assert that there is one principle,
he replied that the prophecies refuted themselves, because they have
said nothing true;1556
1556 Rhodo had probably brought forward against Apelles proof from
prophecy which led to the discussion of the Old Testament prophecies in
general. Although Apelles had rejected Marcion’s dualism, and
accepted the “one principle,” he still rejected the Old
Testament. This is quite peculiar, and yet perfectly comprehensible;
for while Marcion was indeed the only one of that age that understood
Paul, yet as Harnack well says, even he misunderstood him; and neither
himself nor his followers were able to rise to Paul’s noble
conception of the Old Testament law as a “schoolmaster to bring
us to Christ,” and thus a part of the good God’s general
plan of salvation. It took, perhaps, a born Jew, as Paul was, to reach
that high conception of the law in those days. To Marcion and his
followers the law seemed to stand in irreconcilable conflict with the
Gospel,—Jewish law on the one side, Gospel liberty on the
other,—they could not reconcile them; they must, therefore,
reject the former as from another being, and not from the God of the
Gospel. There was in that age no historical interpretation of the Old
Testament. It must either be interpreted allegorically, and made a
completely Christian book, or else it must be rejected as opposed to
Christianity. Marcion and his followers, in their conception of law and
Gospel as necessarily opposed, could follow only the latter course.
Marcion, in his rejection of the Old Testament, proceeded simply upon
dogmatic presumptions. Apelles, although his rejection of it
undoubtedly originated in the same presumptions, yet subjected it to a
criticism which satisfied him of the correctness of his position, and
gave him a fair basis of attack. His procedure was, therefore, more
truly historical than that of Marcion, and anticipated modern methods
of higher criticism. | for they are
inconsistent, and false, and self-contradictory. But how there is one
principle he said that he did not know, but that he was thus
persuaded.
7. As I then adjured him to
speak the truth, he swore that he did so when he said that he did not
know how there is one unbegotten God, but that he believed it.
Thereupon I laughed and reproved him because, though calling himself a
teacher, he knew not how to confirm what he taught.”1557
1557 A
true Gnostic sentiment, over against which the pious
“agnosticism” of Apelles is not altogether unrefreshing.
The Church did not fully conquer Gnosticism,—Gnosticism in some
degree conquered the Church, and the anti-Gnostics, like Apelles, were
called heretics. It was the vicious error of Gnosticism that it looked
upon Christianity as knowledge, that it completely identified the two,
and our existing systems of theology, some of them, testify to the fact
that there are still Gnostics among us. |
8. In the same work, addressing
Callistio,1558
1558 Of
this Callistio we know nothing; but, as has been remarked by another,
he must have been a well-known man, or Eusebius would probably have
said “a certain Callistio” (see Salmon’s article in
Smith and Wace). | the same writer acknowledges that
he had been instructed at Rome by Tatian.1559
1559 Upon
Tatian, see Bk. IV. chap. 29, note 1. |
And he says that a book of Problems1560
1560 Upon
this work (προβλημ€των
βιβλίον)
see ibid. | had been
prepared by Tatian, in which he promised to explain the obscure and hidden parts
of the divine Scriptures. Rhodo himself promises to give in a work of
his own solutions of Tatian’s problems.1561
1561 Whether Rhodo fulfilled this promise we do not know. The work is
mentioned by no one else, and Eusebius evidently had no knowledge of
its existence, or he would have said so. |
There is also extant a Commentary of his on the Hexæmeron.1562
1562 εἰς τὴν
ἑξαήμερον
ὑπόμνημα. This work of Rhodo’s, on the Hexæmeron (or
six days’ work), is mentioned by no one else, and no
fragments of it are known to us. For a notice of other works on the
same subject, see below, Bk. VI. chap. 22, note 3. |
9. But this Apelles wrote many
things, in an impious manner, of the law of Moses, blaspheming the
divine words in many of his works, being, as it seemed, very zealous
for their refutation and overthrow.1563
1563 Hippolytus (X. 16) also mentions works of Apelles against the law
and the prophets. We know of but one work of his, viz. the
Syllogisms, which was devoted to the criticism of the Old
Testament, and in which he worked out the antitheses of Marcion in a
syllogistic form. The work is cited only by Origen (in Gen. II.
2) and by Ambrose (De Parad. V. 28), and they have preserved but
a few brief fragments. It must have been an extensive work, as Ambrose
quotes from the 38th book. From these fragments we can see that
Apelles’ criticism of the Old Testament was very keen and
sagacious. For the difference between himself and Marcion in the
treatment of the Old Testament, see above, note 9. The words of
Eusebius, “as it seemed,” show that he had not himself seen
the book, as might indeed be gathered from his general account of
Apelles, for which he depended solely upon secondary
sources. |
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