Irenaeus

(Nandana) #1
Moll—The Man with No Name 91

not reveal any personal remembrance of Polycarp’s teachings on Irenaeus’s part, much
less provide a literal quote from them. All in all it must, therefore, be doubted whether
Irenaeus’s recollection of Polycarp’s words was in fact as excellent as he claims and as
excellent as it would have to be in order to identify him with the elder.


  1. “I recognize thee as first-born of Satan!” This was Polycarp’s reply to Marcion’s
    wish for recognition—at least according to the testimony of Irenaeus.^5 Once again,
    however, this story does not bear the image of personal remembrance on Irenaeus’s
    part; it has rather the character of an anecdote. While that does not necessarily mean
    that the meeting between Polycarp and Marcion never took place, we find ourselves—
    regarding the question of an anti-Marcionite stance within Polycarp’s teaching—con-
    fronted with the same problem as before, the problem of Irenaeus not providing any
    literal remains of it. As far as the above mentioned letter to Florinus is concerned, the
    information that can be derived from its fragment is very limited.^6 Hill believes that
    the theme of this letter “On the Sole Sovereignty of God or That God is not the Author
    of Evils” identifies it as an anti-Marcionite writing, as Florinus held the opinion “that
    there were two Sovereignties or Gods, not one, and that one of them, the God of the
    OT Scriptures, was the author of evils.”^7 However, this last piece of information, the
    identification of the author of evils and the Old Testament God, which would indeed
    sound very much like Marcionite doctrine, is not to be found in the fragment and thus
    constitutes an amendment by Hill. There can hardly be any doubt that Polycarp was
    opposed to Marcionite doctrine, but there is no textual evidence that would inform us
    about any particular anti-Marcionite writing or discourse.^8
    The teachings of the elder in Hae r. IV.27-32, on the other hand, have been handed
    down literally and are considered by many scholars to be directed against Marcion.^9
    That there is an anti-heretical motive in these chapters is beyond doubt; however, no
    heretic or heretical movement is mentioned by name. What is the content of this anti-
    heretical teaching? It is basically an apology for the Old Testament with the intention
    to demonstrate that the two Testaments speak of one and the same God. Certainly, this
    does sound like a treatise against Marcion, and there is no point in denying that these
    sections are directed against him, too.^10 However, defending the cruelties described in
    the Old Testament was not just an object for those fighting against Marcion. When
    Origen explains the allegorical meaning of the battles of Joshua, for instance, he explic-
    itly addresses Marcion, Valentinus, and Basilides.^11 Thus, these other heretics could
    also be envisaged in the elder’s preaching. In fact, there are certain lines that seem to
    indicate a Valentinian opponent: “All those are found to be unlearned, audacious and
    also shameless who, because of the transgressions of those who lived in earlier times
    and because of the disobedience of a great number (of them), say that one God was the
    God of those, the maker of the world, originated from deficiency,^12 but that the other
    God was the Father declared by Christ, the one all of them [the heretics] have (alleg-
    edly) conceived in spirit” (Hae r. IV.27.4).^13
    Three elements in this passage are both typical for (Irenaeus’s portrait of ) the
    Valentinians and atypical for the doctrine of Marcion. There is firstly the idea of the
    Demiurge originating from deficiency that correlates with the Valentinian myth that
    the origin of the Demiurge is the result of a fallen aeon,^14 whereas Marcion never

Free download pdf