A-Levels (Development of the Christian Church in the New Roman Empire) Religious Education Mapa Mental sobre Heresy and Schism, creado por niamhmccullough1 el 28/10/2013.
Our knowledge of Marcianism comes from
church fathers or those that opposed it
Tertullain
"Marcianism filled the entire world."
It is thought that Marcianism
continued into the 3rd Century
Background
Was a wealthy shipowner and his father was a bishop
It is thought that his father
excommunicated him because of
his views surrounding christianity
He was a respected member of the church for years and
proved his faith by providing financial contributions to the
church
In Rome he came under the influence of Cerdo
Cerdo was a pupil of Saturianus
He was excommunicated from the
church a number of times
The final time he was
excommunicated, his
money was retuned
He reapplied for admission a number of times
and the final time he applied he was told he
had to return the people he led astray
He agreed but died before he could do so
Development
Soon after being excommunicated
from the church he started up his
own empire
He had many followers by the end of the
second century
The Marcionites set up a rival church to the Christian Church
They started to decline into the fourth century
Marcian only wrote one piece of
work called 'contradictions'.
Preserved in Tertullian's five volumes
Wrote a book called against marcianism
Judaism
Marcian wanted to stop Christianity from becoming a clone of
Judaism
Marcian taught rejection of the Old Testament
A distinction between a supreme God and an inferior
God and Justin Martyr's first apology
Rejections
He argued the Old Testament and New Testament
cannot be reconciled with each other and outlined a
variety of contradictions
The Cod of Conduct advocated by
Moses was 'an eye for an eye' but this
changed.
Distinction
Had a distinction between two gods. Inferior god and superior god.
Distinction was made by by Cerdo
The god of the old testament was not the father of Jesus Christ
This showed the first two principles, the good god whom Jesus first revealed and the demiurge who created this world
The god of law and the prophets were 'a worker of two evils, a
lover of wars, inconsistent in judgement and self contradictory.'
Canon
Marcian's canon was made up of Luke's gospel and 10 Pauline letters
His canon accelerated in the process of fixing the church
It was in oppostion to Marcion's
criticism that the church first
became aware of it's church
According to Grant "Marcion forced more
orthodox Christians to examine their own
presuppositons and to state more clearly what
they already believed
He could only trust Luke's gospel
Regarded Luke as a disciple of Paul and believed he was more faithful
He removed his 10 epistles because they
disagreed with his own understanding of
what Paul should have written
Threat
He rejected everything the demiurge made and resulted in strict asceticism.
Marriage and sex were created by the demiurge so they were forbidden
If you were married you could get blessed but had to abstain from sex
If everyone converted to Marcianism
the population would die out
Tertullian
Excommunicated by his father many times
Tertullian wrote against him
Argued Christian faith was found in
apistolically founded churches
Another rule of faith was heretical
'What right have you to chop my wood?'
Protested Marcian used the knife and not the pen
He wrote five volumes of work entitled against Marcianism
Book one
Identifies Marcian's leading doctrine
separation between the law and the gospel
Criticised for not punishing sin
Book 2
A man's sin does not show badley on the creator
Book 3
Concerns OT prophsies
concerning the coming of the
Christ
The unity of 2 testaments and their one god
Book 4
shows many passages of Luke's gospel intepreted by Marcian
The Christ of the gospel is the
same as Christ the creator and
will not be separated
Book 5
Used Marcian's editied edition of Paul's
letters to refute his teachings
Marcianism
Introduction
Knowledge comes from early church
fathers and sources who opposed it
Kept by Eusebius
Appollonius and the anonymous
Epiphanus, clement of alexandria,
hippolytus, firmillion , origin and
jerome
It is difficult to describe it accuratley
due to sparsity, hostility and lateness
of the sources
Background
Lived in Phrygeria at the end of the 2nd Century
Declared the HS was giving new revelations to the church
Two heurebags Maximilla and Priscilla
Brought in the age of the paraclete
Believed they brought the most authority becaise they predicted
the comming of Jesus and the Pepuza
Lost credibility when it didn't happen
Spread from Asia Minor to NA
Teaching 1
Resisting persecution and avoiding remarriage
The spirit proclaimed no innovation in doctrine, but only
God gave directions about matters of church discipline
which were comming to be the perogative of the bishop
Tertullian was attracted by it's strict discipline
May have converted
Developed stricter views on marriage, pbs, f&p and fasting
Pieces of his writings suggest montanist christians
They exsisted in NA until the middle of 5th century
Gaius
refuted montanism
Rejected John's gospel which Monatanists like
Praxius hated Montanism and drove out prophesy
Hipollytus claimed
that pricilla and
maximilla were
more important
than the apostles
Honorius issued laws against montanist movement and backed the books
teaching
Profetic Movement and prophers felt like agents
Eschatological and apocalyptic
No gender restricitions
All one in christ
No ordination service
persecution was proof of martyrdom
Believers lived an astheic way of life
Rejection
Church had difficulty rejecting it as it was
orthodox in it's beliefs
Regarded it as a schizmatic movement
All main characteristics can be found in early
apistolic movements
Early church sources
recognised the gifts of the
prophesy in NT
Didache, shepard of
hermes, Justin Martyr,
Irenius and St. Paul
Eusebius said they were
abnormal, incomprehensible,
prophecised contrary to the
church
Montanists were criticised for their immorality despite high
moral standards
Became rivial to CC
Persecution
Christians in AM executed Montanists
Persecuted became persecutors
Montanist Christians had to get rebaptised
Serpian said Montanism abominable
Council of constantinople refused to recognise them as
Christians
Conclusion
Avoiding the Catholic laxity
Renewable movement within the church
Increased formalism, institutionalism, clericalism intellect and moral laxity of the church