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Chapter
XXXVIII.—The Heresy of the
Elkesites.
Another error also arose at this time, called the heresy of the
Elkesites,2055
2055 The
Elkesites (῾Ελκεσαιταί) were not a distinct sect, but “a school scattered
among all parties of the Judæo-Christian Church.” They are
described by Hippolytus (Phil. IX. 8–12) and by Epiphanius
(in chap. 19 among the Essenes, in 30 among the Ebionites, and in 53
among the Sampsæans). We learn from Hippolytus that, in the time
of Callistus or soon afterward, a certain Alcibiades, a native of
Apameia in Syria, brought to Rome a book bearing the name of
Elkesai (᾽Ηλχασαί),
which purported to contain a revelation, made in the time of Trajan, by
the Son of God and the Holy Spirit in the form of angels, and teaching
the forgiveness of all sins, even the grossest, by means of belief in
the doctrines of the book and baptism performed with certain peculiar
rites. The controversy in regard to the forgiveness of gross sins
committed after baptism was raging high at this time in Rome, and
Hippolytus, who took the strict side, naturally opposed this new system
of indulgence with the greatest vigor. Among other doctrines taught in
the book, was the lawfulness of denying the faith in time of
persecution, as told us by Origen in this chapter, and by Epiphanius in
chap. 19. The book was strongly Ebionitic in its teaching, and bore
striking resemblances to the Clementine Homilies and
Recognitions. Its exact relation to those writings has been
disputed; but Uhlhorn (Homilien und Recognition des Clemens
Romanus) has shown conclusively that it is older than the latter,
and that it represents a type of Ebionitic Christianity less modified
than the latter by the influence of Christianity. In agreement with the
Ebionites, the Elkesites (as all those were called who accepted the
teachings of the book, to whatever party they might belong) taught that
Christ was a created being; and they also repudiated sacrifices, which
compelled them to reject certain portions of the Old Testament (cf.
Origen’s statement just below). They likewise refused recognition
to the apostle Paul, and ordained the observance of the Jewish law; but
they went beyond the Clementines in teaching the necessity of
circumcision and the repetition of baptism as a means to the
forgiveness of sins. The origin of the name Elkesai has also
been disputed. Hippolytus says it was the name of the man who was
claimed to have received the revelation, and Epiphanius calls Elkesai a
false prophet; but some critics have thought them mistaken, and have
supposed that Elkesai must have been the name of the book, or of the
angel that gave the revelation. It is more probable, however, as Salmon
concludes, that it was the name of a man whom the book represented as
receiving the revelation, but that the man was only an imaginary
person, and not the real founder of the school, as Epiphanius supposed.
The book cannot well be put back of the beginning of the third century,
when it first began to be heard of in the Catholic Church. It claimed
to have been for a century in secret circulation, but the claim is
quite unfounded. Eusebius speaks of the heresy as extinguished in the
very beginning, and it seems, in fact, to have played no prominent part
in history; and yet it apparently lingered on for a long time in the
East, for we hear of a sect in Arabia, as late as the tenth century,
who counted El-Chasaiach as their founder (see Salmon’s article,
p. 98). See the work of Uhlhorn already mentioned; also Ritschl’s
Entstehung d. alt. Katholischen Kirche, p. 234 sq. (Ritschl
holds that the Clementines are older than the book of Elkesai), and
Hilgenfeld’s Nov. Test. extra Can. rec. III. 153, where
the extant fragments of the book are collected. See also Salmon’s
article in the Dict. of Christ. Biog. II. p. 95 sq. | which was extinguished in the very
beginning. Origen speaks of it in this manner in a public homily on the
eighty-second Psalm:2056
2056 On
Origen’s writings on the Psalms, see chap. 24, note 3. This
fragment is the only portion of his homily on the eighty-second Psalm
extant. |
“A certain man2057
2057 Alciabades, according to Hippolytus (see above, note
1). | came just now, puffed up greatly with his
own ability, proclaiming that godless and impious opinion which has
appeared lately in the churches, styled ‘of the Elkesites.’
I will show you what evil things that opinion teaches, that you may not
be carried away by it. It rejects certain parts of every scripture.
Again it uses portions of the Old Testament and the Gospel, but rejects
the apostle2058 altogether. It says that to deny
Christ is an indifferent matter, and that he who understands will,
under necessity, deny with his mouth, but not in his heart. They
produce a certain book which they say fell from heaven. They hold that
whoever hears and believes2059
2059 Origen does not mention the baptism of the Elkesites, which is
described at length by Hippolytus. It seems that both belief in the
teachings of the book and baptism were necessary. It may be that in
Origen’s opinion the receiving of the book itself involved the
peculiar baptism which it taught, and that, therefore, he thought it
unnecessary to mention the latter. | this shall receive
remission of sins, another remission than that which Jesus Christ has
given.” Such is the account of these persons.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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