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H e r e s y o f t h e M o n t h
MARCIONISM
By Mark Wheeler


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This Rock
Volume 5, Number 3
March 1994
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Dates
144-650
Founder
Marcion (110-160)
Principal errors
Rejects monotheism and the goodness of God's creation
and denies the compatibility of the Law and gospel.
History
Ostensibly an attempt to recapture "primitive"
Christianity, this movement derives its name from Marcion, a wealthy
shipowner, son of a bishop, and probably a bishop himself, who arrived
in Rome around 140. The Church was still in its infancy, and it can
be argued that Marcionism was the most dangerous heresy yet to plague
it. Whereas most heresies produce esoteric cliques within the Church
instead of new churches, the personality and organizational skills
of Marcion led to a schismatic body.
Expounding on Paul's characterization of the Mosaic Law as the cause
of sin, Marcion desired a Christianity untainted by any elements of
Judaism. He saw the God of the Old Testament as cruel and vengeful,
an embarrassment and a stumbling block in the evangelization of the
Gentiles.
How could the God who commanded adulterers to be stoned be reconciled
with the God who let them go free? This was overcome by postulating
the existence of two gods. Marcion concluded that the tyrannical Creator-God
of the Old Testament, Yahweh, was in opposition to the merciful and
loving God of the New Testament.
He began to amass a following in Rome, and in July of 144 he was called
before the presbytery to explain his teachings. He steadfastly maintained
his dualistic beliefs and was promptly excommunicated. He charged
that the Church had erred in clinging to the Old Testament, that the
gospel had completely superseded the Torah, and that the apostles,
except Paul, had allowed their Jewish notions to corrupt the message
of the loving God.
Although Marcion's teaching strongly resembled the good god/bad god
dualism that would achieve its full flowering in Manichaeism more
than a century later, his theology was neither systematic nor deep.
His chief motive in reducing the canon and renouncing the God of the
Old Testament was to avoid any connection between Christianity and
Judaism. He cared little for the philosophical and theological inconsistencies
that his doctrines entailed. He set up his rival sect to purify the
Catholic Church of what he considered to be its Judaizing tendencies.
Marcion created a biblical canon of his own by seizing on Paul's claim
to have received the gospel not from man but directly from the Lord
(Gal. 1:11-12). He rejected all the books of the Old Testament and
retained only those of the New which were clearly authored by Paul,
purging any texts which conflicted with his personal beliefs. A version
of Luke, minus the infancy narrative, was acceptable to Marcion since
Luke was the loyal companion of Paul and faithfully handed on Paul's
words.
Marcion denied the resurrection of the body because "flesh and
blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God" (1`>Cor. 15:50). He
denied that Christ was truly incarnate because flesh, like all matter,
was the creation of Yahweh and therefore evil. Jesus only appeared
to be human, much the way the angels seen by Abraham appeared to be
human (Gen. 18:1-33).
Marcion denied the second coming of Christ and maintained that Jesus
was not the Jewish Messiah but a manifestation of the "good"
God. He mandated fasting on Saturday in opposition to the God of the
Jewish Sabbath. He rejected marriage and would baptize only the unmarried--an
attitude that resulted in an understandable tendency to minimize the
natural growth of his sect.
Despite elements of rigorism, Marcionism remained a major force in
the West for three centuries, and eventually it was absorbed by Mani chaeism,
which itself died out in the West in the sixth century. In the East
Marcionism's followers were active into the seventh century.
Orthodox response
The Catholic Church responded vigorously to the threat
posed by the Marcionites. Since Marcion's argument was dualistic in
nature (good vs. bad gods), apologists such as Justin Martyr, Irenaeus,
Hippolytus, and Tertullian insisted on there being only one, perfectly
good God. (Tertullian, for example, produced Against Marcion,
a five-volume defense of the traditional faith; later Tertullian himself
would fall prey to a different heresy, Montanism.)
These writers developed systematic treatises on the chief doctrines
challenged by the Marcionites: monotheism, the Trinity, the holiness
of marriage (Marcion rejected matrimony and allowed only vowed celibates
to be baptized). Many of the Church's arguments were drawn from Paul's
epistles, especially Galatians, to show that Catholics were not "Judaizing"
the faith by accepting the Old Testament and by teaching that the
God of the Old and New Testaments is one.
Modern parallels
In the sixteenth century Martin Luther likewise sensed
a conflict between the works of the Law and the faith of the gospel.
This led him, like Marcion, to reject canonical books from the Old
Testament, to attempt to remove from the New Testament books conflicting
with his perception of the gospel, and to mistranslate texts to suit
his beliefs. Some of the churches spawned by Luther continue to propagate
the attitude he shared with Marcion. Whenever one hears that the Old
Testament's moral law is no longer in force, one is hearing an echo
of Marcionism.
Mark Wheeler is a contributing editor of This Rock.
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