Irenaeus

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Chapter Seven

The Man with No Name


Who Is the Elder in Irenaeus’s Adversus haereses IV?


Sebastian Moll

I


n Adversus haereses IV.27-32, Irenaeus repeatedly refers to the teachings of a certain
elder. Despite the fact that the teachings of this man seem to be of high importance to
Irenaeus, he omits revealing his name. This omission on Irenaeus’s part has given rise
to much speculation regarding the identity of his source, starting as early as in the 1575
edition of Irenaeus’s works by François Feuardent. For some time, however, the books
on this issue appeared to be closed. Scholars started to content themselves with the
anonymity of this elder as no satisfying solution could be found—until recently, when
Charles Hill tried to demonstrate that this anonymous individual can be nobody else
but Polycarp of Smyrna and thus renewed the debate.^1 The complexity of Hill’s work
makes it impossible to portray his thesis in full here, but there is one passage in his
book that, from my perspective, sums up the key elements of his argument quite well:

We must now observe that it is precisely in this letter to Florinus, on the sole
sovereignty of God and against the notion of God being the creator of evil, a
work written to refute some version of Marcionism, a work which parallels so
closely the teaching of the elder in Hae r. 4.27-32, that Irenaeus gives his well-
known description of Polycarp. It is this letter in which Irenaeus claims to have
heard Polycarp on many occasions and to have listened so attentively that he
could still reproduce many of his teacher’s actual words (HE 5.20.4)! Simply
stated, in Hae r. 4.27-32 Irenaeus recounts from memory the anti-Marcionite,
oral teaching of a respected “presbyter, a disciple of apostles” (4.32.1), and in
the letter to Florinus, a letter devoted to the very same aspects of Marcion’s
teaching, Irenaeus claims he could remember much of the oral teaching of
Polycarp of Smyrna, whom he calls “that blessed and apostolic presbyter” (HE
5.20.7). I submit that it would be too great a coincidence if these two apostolic
presbyters were not the same individual, namely, Polycarp of Smyrna.^2

In this passage we can find the three elements that Polycarp and the elder in Haer. 4.27-
32 have, according to Hill, in common, and which thus suggest the identity of the two:
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