Irenaeus - Against Heresies
Irenaeus - Against Heresies
[a.d. 120–202.] This history introduces us to the Church in her
Western outposts. We reach the banks of the Rhone, where for nearly a century
Christian missions have flourished. Between Marseilles and Smyrna there seems
to have been a brisk trade, and Polycarp had sent Pothinus into Celtic Gaul at
an early date as its evangelist. He had fixed his see at Lyons, when Irenæus
joined him as a presbyter, having been his fellow‑pupil under Polycarp.
·
There, under the “good
Aurelius,” as he is miscalled (a.d. 177), arose the terrible persecution which
made “the martyrs of Lyons and Vienne” so memorable.
·
It was during this persecution
that Irenæus was sent to Rome with letters of remonstrance against the rising
pestilence of heresy; and he was probably the author of the account of the
sufferings of the martyrs which is appended to their testimony. But he had the
mortification of finding the Montanist heresy patronized by Eleutherus the
Bishop of Rome; and there he met an old friend from the school of Polycarp, who
had embraced the Valentinian heresy.
·
We cannot doubt that to this
visit we owe the lifelong struggle of Irenæus against the heresies that now
came in, like locusts, to devour the harvests of the Gospel.
·
But let it be noted here, that,
so far from being “the mother and mistress” of even the Western Churches, Rome
herself is a mission of the Greeks; Southern Gaul is evangelized from Asia
Minor, and Lyons checks the heretical tendencies of the Bishop at Rome. Ante‑Nicene
Christianity, and indeed the Church herself, appears in Greek costume which
lasts through the synodical period; and Latin Christianity, when it begins to
appear, is African, and not Roman. It is strange that those who have recorded
this great historical fact have so little perceived its bearings upon Roman
pretensions in the Middle Ages and modern times.
Returning to Lyons, our author found that the venerable Pothinus had
closed his holy career by a martyr’s death; and naturally Irenæus became his
successor. When the emissaries of heresy followed him, and began to disseminate
their licentious practices and foolish doctrines by the aid of “silly women,”
the great work of his life began.
·
He condescended to study these
diseases of the human mind like a wise physician; and, sickening as was the
process of classifying and describing them, he made this also his laborious
task, that he might enable others to withstand and to overcome them.
·
The works he has left us are
monuments of his fidelity to Christ, and to the charges of St. Paul, St. Peter,
and St. Jude, whose solemn warnings now proved to be prophecies. No marvel that
the great apostle, “night and day with tears,” had forewarned the churches of
“the grievous wolves” which were to make havoc of the fold.
That the intolerable absurdities of Gnosticism should have gained so
many disciples, and proved itself an adversary to be grappled with and not
despised, throws light on the condition of the human mind under heathenism,
even when it professed “knowledge” and “philosophy.”
The task of Irenæus was twofold:
·
(1) to render it impossible for
any one to confound Gnosticism with Christianity, and
·
(2) to make it impossible for
such a monstrous system to survive, or ever to rise again. His task was a
nauseous one; but never was the spirit enjoined by Scripture more patiently
exhibited, nor with more entire success.
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