Valentinus and the Theology of Grace
Transcription
Valentinus and the Theology of Grace
Valentinus and the Theology of Grace J. WOODROW M C C R E E Introduction OVER THE COURSE OF YEARS during which I have worked with David Lotz, he has consistently emphasized the radical shift in intellectual history that came with the Reformation. The ancient Platonist/Christian theological assumption that "only like can know like" was supplanted by a new understanding that it is precisely those "unlike" God who are the recipients of grace. The gulf between the creature and the Creator, the sinfulness of humanity and the righteousness of God, was rendered absolute. No spark of divinity within the sinful human being could provide the basis for a return to one's Unfällen state; no ladder of divine ascent was possible. Only the mighty mercy of the gracious God could render a person righteous; only the gracious act of God, received by a living faith alone, could restore humanity to fellowship and enable us to stand confidently in the presence of the Living One. It is fitting, then, in a festschrift for Dr. Lotz, to take up the question of the ground of knowing God. In the second century the Christian churches faced the question of "like knowing like" most vividly in their encounter with Valentinian gnosticism. Heresiologists such as Irenaeus of Lyons and Clement of Alexandria claimed that Valentinus and his followers taught that truly spiritual Christians are "saved by nature and not by grace."1 It is the purpose of this paper to determine whether such a 1 Clement makes such an accusation against Valentinus in particular in Stromateis IV.89.1-3, fragment 4 in Völker's enumeration. I shall use this standard enumeration for convenience, though I will not discuss the fragments in Völker's sequence, since that sequence is not conducive to a discussion of Valentinus' theology of grace. 127 J. WOODROW MCCREE 128 claim is accurate in the case of Valentinus. In the end I shall conclude that there is a reasonable basis for applying this criticism to Valentinus, with some qualifications. It is important to note, however, that such an assertion must be carefully counterbalanced with the recognition that Valentinus also had an operative theology of grace, albeit in a less noticed form. These seemingly contradictory emphases are best understood as descriptions of his own mystical experience from two different perspectives. (1) The perspective "from above" describes the gnostic from the standpoint of his origin in the eternal being and purpose of God. (2) The perspective "from below" involves the experience of corruption, need, and deliverance that the gnostic endures throughout this earthly life. It is from this second perspective that Valentinus7 theology of grace can be detected. These two perspectives are held in unresolved tension, though admittedly the language implying identity with the divine nature is glaringly apparent from an orthodox Christian standpoint.2 Failure to recognize both sides of Valentinus' theology, however, results in mere caricature. In fairness, nevertheless, Valentinus was a gnostic in at least one prominent aspect: his belief in a radical identity between the true Christian and the divine nature of Christ. Valentinus developed this line of reasoning in a way that at least partly undermined emerging New Testament claims regarding the uniqueness of Christ. He did so by importing the commonplace Platonist/Pythagorean myth of the descent of the immortal soul into! the world of matter into his exegesis of the emerging Christian scripture. Mere incorporation of this Hellenistic commonplace alone would not render him gnostic. It is, rather, the specific way he reads such a myth ¡of descent into Hebrews 2 and Romans 6 in Fragment 4 that makes applying the term "gnostic" to Valentinus' theology valid.3 2 Valentinus' theology of grace has remained unnoticed also because it expresses itself in Jewish-Christian terminology that was itself only fully recognized with the discovery of The Gospel of Truth—the theology of Son as the divine Name. See S. Arai, Die Christologie des Evangelium Veritatis, 63-73; J. Daniélou, The Theology of Jewish Christianity, 147-63; J.-D. Dubois, "Le context judaïque du 'nom' dans L'Évangile de Vérité," Revue de Théologie et de Philosophie 3 (1974) 198-216; Einar Thomassen, "Gnostic Semiotics: The Valentinian Notion of the Name/'Temenos 29 (1993) 141-156. 3 The traditional pre-Nag Hammadi definition of gnosticism includes the following features. 1) A world-hating dualism that values heavenly or aeonic existence while belittling material existence. 2) A clear separation between the ultimate God who saves, and the evil or inferior god/angel who created the world and inspired the Hebrew Scriptures, usually with an accompanying mythology of fall and redemption through a female emanation called Ennoia or Sophia. 3) The view that many of the moral commands in the Bible and conventional values of ancient culture come from the inferior God rather than the true God. VALENTINUS 129 In this article, particular attention will be given to the only primary sources available: two excerptsfromthe Refutatio of Hippolytus of Rome and six from the Stromateis of Clement of Alexandria. These fragments will remain the prime source for understanding Valentinus7 own teaching, for it is very likely that Irenaeus and other church fathers attributed to Valentinus a myth that was developed by his disciple Ptolemy Indeed, this myth, normally referred to as "Valentinian" in most discussions of gnosticism, is, in fact, the myth of Ptolemy and should thus be referred to as "Ptolemaean."4 Suspicion that this was the case began to emerge with the discovery and study of the Gospel of Truth. Mary Anne McGuire has demonstrated that this is quite probable.5 Christoph Markschies' landmark work Valentinus Gnosticus? recognizes this probability and rightly bases his study of Valentinus on the knownfragments.In his view once the heresiologists' biases have been fully extracted from Valentinus' teaching, one can see that he was not a gnostic at all.6 Professor Markschies' work is highly nuanced, and his central thesis may be correct, especially if one defines gnosticism as it is presented in Ptolemy's myth or the Sethian gnostic Apocryphon of John. Markschies is certainly correct that hereosiologists such as Irenaeus, Clement and Hippolytus obliterated the distinctiveness of Valentinus' teaching by recklessly conflating his teaching with those of later Valentinians contemporary to the heresiologists. His account is quite plausible, and must stand as a definitive reading. Even if we cannot be sure that Valentinus7 teaching is exhausted by what we know from the fragments, they remain our best doorway into his thought. The greatest resistance to Markschies' claim that Valentinus was not a gnostic concerns the interpretation of Fragment 1 (Strom. II.36.2-4).7 In a review of Valentinus Gnosticus? Pheme Perkins points out that Markschies fails to see the allusions to the Sethian creation myth in FragSuch a recognition thus led to 4) either moral libertinism or extreme asceticism. 5) The belief that the true self of a Gnostic was identical with the divine being, thus undermining the Judeo-Christian distinction between the creature and the Creator. 6) Docetism in Christology· 4 1 recommend that the term "Valentinian" be limited to those texts which are explicitly dependent on the known fragments of Valentinus, such as the Nag Hammadi Epistle to Rheginus, The Gospel of Truth and The Gospel of Philip. 5 Valentinus and the Gnostiké Haeresis, 1-94,218-260. 6 (Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1992) 118-149. Markschies was inspired by G. C. Stead, who argued that Valentinus should be seen as "a Platonizing biblical theologian of some originality, whose work hardly strayed beyond the still undefined limits of Christian orthodoxy" ("In Search of Valentinus," in Rediscovery, ed. Β. Layton, Vol. 1,75). 7 See my note 34 below. 130 J· WOODROW MCCREE ment 1. While I concur with Dr. Perkins that Valentinus clearly alludes to the Sethian myth, the question remains open as to how such an allusion is being used. In my opinion, Fragment 1 is a classic example of demythologization; Valentinus draws upon the Sethian myth to explore the phenomenon of human idolatry, i.e., the tendency people have to fear the very things their hands have made. Such an analysis does not in any way imply a literal acceptance of the Sethian myth, but rather implies only that Valentinus is in dialogue with such gnostics and is able to reinterpret their myths creatively so as to find valuable insights about life in this cosmos.8 Recent attempts to dismiss Markschies' approach, such as that found in Giles Quispel's 50th anniversary restatement of "The Original Teaching Of Valentinus" and Alistair Logan's recent work on the Gnostikoi, result in a naive reliance on Ptolemy's myth for understanding Valentinus. This holds even when some differences are acknowledged, such as the likelihood of one Sophia in Valentinus' thought rather than two.9 Quispel, for example, explicitly suggests that not all the pieces fit comfortably when one compares the fragments of Valentinus with the myth of Ptolemy. He insists that the gaps can be plausibly filled by insisting that Valentinus' fragments must be read in terms of his overall Alexandrian context, especially the presence of Hermeticism.10 Such an argument is erroneous on two grounds. First, it cannot be assumed that one's work necessarily embodies all the schools of thought in the city of one's education. A writer may well reject many prominent schools of thought that surround him, even if he is necessarily in dialogue with them. Second, I intend to demonstrate by a close reading of the known fragments that many of Valentinus' teachings can be accounted for by way of themes he came into contact with at Rome. Because some scholars have not yet acknowledged the probable gulf between the teaching of Valentinus and that of his disciple Ptolemy, I will emphasize that gap as I work through the fragments of Valentinus, noting the difficulties the heresiologists encountered as they tried to attribute a more advanced myth to Valentinus on the basis of those fragments.11 8 1 will not offer a detailed reading of Fragment 1 because it is not relevant to my focus on Valentinus' theology of grace. Nevertheless, the references to the creation of the world by angels and Adam speaking with an authority higher than the angels have led many to believe that Valentinus does teach a more advanced gnostic myth (see Logan, p. 245, for example). Fragment 1 is thus crucial in resolving this aspect of the the question of Valentinus' relationship to gnosticism, a question which is beyond the scope of this paper. 9 Quispel, "The Original Doctrine of Valentinus the Gnostic," 337-48; Logan, 32-34. 10 "Valentinus the Gnostic," 346. 11 The abstracted skeleton of a myth which Irenaeus claims to be that of Valentinus VALENTINUS 131 Ancient Accusation and Modern Consensus The claim that Valentinus and his followers taught that gnostics are "saved by nature and not by grace" was central to the heresiologists' crit icism of the Valentinians. Before the discovery of the Nag Hammadi library, it was customary to take Irenaeus' "Great Account" of the teach ing of Ptolemy's disciples as found in Aiversus Haereses 1.1-8 as the nor mative description of Valentinian teaching. One of the staples of this account is the assertion that Valentinians divided humanity into three separate classes of people: material, psychic, and spiritual (1.7.5). Particu lar to Irenaeus' understanding of "the spirituals" is his claim that such people are not really saved by the grace of God, but by their own nature as spiritual beings (1.6.2). Irenaeus' description is paralleled in Clement's Excerpta ex Theodoto 56.3-4, in the context of a joint exegesis of Genesis 1,1 Corinthians 15, and Romans 11: Therefore many are the material ones, and not many are the psychics; but the pneumatics are few. Now the spiritual is saved by nature (το μεν πνευ ματικόν φύσει σφζόμενον), while the psychic possesses self-governance, which makes it capable of both faith and incorruptibility and also of unbe lief and corruption according to its own choice (το δέ ψυχικον αύτεξούσιον öv έπιτηδειότητα έχει προς τε πίστιν και άφθαρσίαν και προς άπιστίαν και φθοραν κατά την οικείαν αίρεσιν); but the material perishes by nature (το δέ ύλικον φύσει άπόλλυται). This particular passage is probably Clement's own summary of the myth he has been describing, possibly influenced by his reading of Ire naeus. The doctrine of three classes of people is best attributed to Ptolemy, since his description of three different natures in Letter to Flora 12 points in that direction. There is no evidence, however, for the threefold himself in Adv.Haer. 1.11.1 displays no knowledge of Valentinus' known fragments, and should probably be regarded as worthless in reconstructing the teaching of the master. The myth has a close parallel in the Nag Hammadi Codex XI,2. Irenaeus has accurately reported the views of certain Valentinians, but not necessarily those of Valentinus. Perhaps when Irenaeus came across this account, it seemed foundational to Ptolemy's myth as he knew it, and so he assumed that it must be the creation of Valentinus himself. This account may have inspired him to present a relatively abstract account of the Ptolemaean myth in Adv.Haer. 1.1-8 12 The Letter to Flora, preserved in Epiphanius' Panarion 33.3.1-7.10, provides adequate evidence that Irenaeus has been somewhat fair in his description of Ptolemy's tripartite division of humanity. Ptolemy does not directly discuss this division of humanity; rather he is concerned to discuss the nature of the law, and in order to do so he must distinguish three different divine beings, each with different natures; The "perfect God and Father" 132 J. WOODROW MCCREE division of humanity in the fragments of Valentinus. In fact, his use of themes drawn from Romans 5:12-6:14 in Stromateis IV.89.2-3 (Fragment 4) suggests that there can only be two humanities, the lost humanity of the earthly Adam, and the living spiritual humanity of the restored Adam, Christ. Since the discovery of the Nag Hammadi Library, however, the the sis that Valentinians themselves taught "salvation by nature and not by grace" has fallen on hard times, along with many other aspects of the ancient orthodox reports. A critical turning point was the publication of Frederic Wisse's article "Nag Hammadi and the Heresiologists." In it, Wisse exposed flaws in the heresiologists ways of classifying gnostic sects and proclaimed that "every instance of what scholars have called typical Gnostic beliefs" stood explicitly contradicted by one Nag Ham madi text or another.13 This assertion is accurate in the sense that the wide array of teachings now available do notfitinto any tidy interpretive framework. Every question must be examined on a case-by-case basis.14 Nevertheless, some features of the pre-Nag Hammadi description of gnosticism remain valuable, especially Hans Jonas' description of the fundamentally monotheistic nature of what he called "Syro-Egyptian gnosticism." Because "the dualism of existing reality is derived from an inner process within the one divinity itself,"15 the gnostics who find their salvation in a restoration to their primal unity with God often talk as though they share the same being with the Transcendent One.16 Thus it is at least a fair question to ask whether these gnostics thought they were saved by their own nature, and whether such an assertion implied a also known as "the Father of All", "the righteous God" or "the mean", and the "deathdealing Devil" (φθοροποιού διαβόλου, literally "decay-making devil"(3.2). However, it is likely that three classes of humanity, corresponding to the three natures, are implied. 13 Vigiliae Christianae 25 (1971), 205-23 (220). Wisse's assessment of Irenaeus' use of sources seem to be accurate. 14 Wisse's clarion call led to a vast reassessment of the very concept of gnosticism; his work has now borne fruit in the very useful discussion of Michael A. William's Rethinking Gnosticism. For an excellent discussion of the current scholarship on the "saved by nature" question see pp. 189-212. Note, however, that I myself am not focusing on the question of whether psychics may change their nature, which was originally posed by Elaine Pagels in The Johannine Gospel in Gnostic Exegesis: Heracleon's Commentary on John, 51-122.1 am solely addressing the question of whether members of an elect, so-called spiritual class are saved by nature in the thought of Valentinus. 15 The Gnostic Religion (Boston: Beacon Press, 1958) 105. 16 A clear example is found in Ptolemy's Letter to Flora 7.6-8, where "the nature" of the Sole Good Father is described as "begetting and bearing forth beings who are like to him self and homoousios to himself." Ptolemy seems to use the terms "ousia" and "phusis" interchangably. VALENTINUS 133 denial of grace. My own discussion of Valentinus' Fragment 4 will demonstrate that Valentinus himself maintained a radical identity between the true Christian and Christ and, because of this, his theology falls within the traditional definition of gnosticism insofar as it maintains a radical identity between the true self and the transcendent God. In this respect, salvation becomes a matter of discovering one's true self. Nevertheless, Simone Pétrement has usefully summed up an emerging consensus that the mere claim of sharing the divine nature does not in itself entail a denial of grace, since such a claim is rooted in a theory of predestination. In this view, election to eternal life is itself the primal act of grace by which the saved receive their identities.17 Barbara Aland first made this ground-breaking discovery in her discussion of Heracleon's Fragment 17, regarding the spontaneous reaction of the Samaritan woman in John 4 to the words of Jesus. Aland suggested that Heracleon's views in this regard may be the key to understanding the gnostic usage of the term "nature." For Heracleon, Valentinus' most illustrious disciple, the Samaritan woman was a prototype of the elect or spiritual category of persons; her faith emerged out of her encounter with Jesus as an outworking of her nature, not as a matter of deliberate choice: "She demonstrated a faith that was unhesitating and appropriate to her nature (την άδιάκριτον και κατάλληλον τη φύσει εαυτής πίστιν)." However, this "nature" is not simply a matter of being a certain kind of substance (spir itual), as the heresiologists supposed. Rather, the Samaritan woman's faith was more of an unconscious outgrowth of a character disposition granted at election and later awakened by the savior.18 Indeed, Heracleon explains that true faith is a matter of settled disposition (τη διαθέσει) in his remarks on martyrdom preserved by Clement of Alexandria in Strom. IV. 71,1-73,1 (Fragment 50). In these remarks, Heracleon argues that those who have true faith will live out their faith in a whole lifestyle of confes sion, and face martyrdom if necessary, thus linking the notions of saving faith and settled disposition (diathesis) of character. Curiously, the notion of faith as a natural disposition appears also in Clement of Alexandria's account of the teaching of Basilides, the great Alexandrian gnostic who may have influenced Valentinus in the 130's (Stromateis II.10.1): "Basilides' sect regards faith as a natural disposition, 17 Regarding this point, Pétrement is partly dependent on the insights of Giles Quispel. Pétrement notes that such a theology of election is found in both the Nag Hammadi Treatise on the Resurrection 46,24-29, and GosTr.27,26-27,10. A Separate God, 190-91. is "Erwählungstheologie und Menschenklassenlehre," in Gnosis and Gnosticism, ed. M. Krause, 165-167. 134 J. WOODROW MCCREE although they also make it a matter of election"(Fergeson's translation).19 More literally, faith belongs "in the realm of the natural (ενταύθα φυσικής)."20 For Basilides, at least, faith's "naturalness" does not imply sharing a common substance with the divine; rather it is a spontaneous activity that flows out of one's election—a response to the divine act. It is "natural" to act spontaneously out of the settled disposition one received at election.21 Thus the linkage of the concepts of faith and nature are best seen as parts of a predestinarían gnostic theology that suggests salvation by election, not substance. If such a notion was common to both Basilides and Heracleon, we may at least reasonably wonder if Valentinus himself did not share such a view, since he seems to be a viable link between the two. Christoph Markshies suggests that this is indeed the case in his discusión of Valentinus Fragment 4, where Clement accused Valentinus of teaching "salvation by nature" on the basis of his teaching that "From the beginning you are immortal and children of eternal life." Markschies, following Aland, argues that Clement has failed to recognize that such talk simply gives expression to a Pauline and Johannine theology of predestination. Interestingly, Markschies suggests that Ptolemy and his disciples may have misunderstood Valentinus in the same way that Clement did as they developed their own theory of three classes of people. 22 Clement's error, thus, also lay in assimiliating the teaching of Valentinus to the teaching of Ptolemy, as was typical of all the heresiologists with the exception of Tertullian. If the elect are then dependent on the grace of predestination from the beginning, this dependence becomes even more prominent in their experience on earth, for they cannot be saved without a visitation from on high: It does not seem accurate to say that for the Valentinians the spiritual is saved by nature. If some souls have been "sown" by God, or by the préexistent Christ, or by the Spirit, this "seed" needs to be "formed." If there is a 19 Fergeson, 163. For the Greek, see Mondésert, 40. Clement reacts very strongly to Basilides' reference to faith, because he is combatting Valentinians in his own time who say that faith is inferior to gnosis. This portrait of faith as an inferior way of life depends upon the Ptolemaean distinction of psychics and spirituals, and so Clement's objections are not relevant to our understanding of either Basilides or Valentinus. For Basilides, and perhaps Valentinus, faith is the primal foundation of all gnosis; it is a way of being that flows out of one's election spontaneously, that is, "by nature." 21 Pétrement, 187. 22 Valentinus Gnosticus?, 146-149. 20 VALENTINUS 135 spark in the depths of the soul, this spark needs to be revived, or "enkindled" as they say (ExtractsfromTheodotus 3:1-2). What forms the seed, what enkindles the spark, is knowledge brought by the Savior. Without it, the spiritual would not be saved.23 There is thus a theology of dependence on grace even in the Ptolemaean theology of "formation"; Sophia needed formation when she was outside the pleroma, and every gnostic seed sown into the world needs formation. In view of this crucial nuance, the "saved by nature, not by grace" polemic must be seen, at best, as a crude and inadequate description of Valentinian/Ptolemaean thought. Valentinus' History at Rome Tertullian tells us that both Marcion and Valentinus were prominent during the time of the emperor Antoninus, who ruled from 138-161 CE. Marcion proclaimed that the God of grace of the New Testament was completely alien from the malicious creator of the Old Testament, but he did not devise the elaborate myths of emanation and fall that characterize Ptolemy's myth. It is clear from the Letter to Flora that Valentinus' disciple Ptolemy tried to distance himself from Marcion's teaching in two prominent ways. First, Ptolemy said the devil was the source of evil, not the creator. Second, Ptolemy replaced Marcion's jealous, evil, and lawgiving creator with a "righteous" creator (demiurge). This creator inspired portions of the Old Testament in order to resist evil. The Old Testament laws of reward and punishment were well-intentioned and of educational value, but inferior to the values of the true God of grace who became manifest in Jesus the Savior. The demiurge was, thus, for Ptolemy, a middle figure between the perfectly Good Father of Jesus and the death-dealing devil. It is unclear, however, to what extent Valentinus himself accepted Marcion's harsh view of the Old Testament Creator, or to what extent he reacted against Marcion's views. Tertullian says that both Marcion and Valentinus were accepted as normal Christian teachers at early phases of their stays in Rome, but that both were constantly being cast out and readmitted as concern over their teaching grew (De Praesc. 30). Irenaeus gives more precise information: 23 A Separate God, 193. For an excellent discussion of issues relevant to this paper, see all of Chapter VI: "Freedom by Grace," 180-210. One may benefit from Pétrement's many useful insights without accepting her thesis regarding the exclusive origins of gnosticism in Christianity. 136 J. WOODROW MCCREE "Valentinus came to Rome in the time of Hyginus,flourishedunder Pius, and remained until Anicetus; Cerdon too, Marcion's predecessor, himself arrived in the time of Hyginus, who was the ninth bishop Marcion then, succeeding Cerdon,flourishedunder Anicetus, who held the tenth place of the episcopate" (Adv.Haer. III.4.3). Hyginus became bishop at Rome around 138. The length of his term, however, is a subject of debate, with a general consensus locating his departure around 141-143. Pius was next, governing the church until 154. He, in turn, was followed by Anecitus, who was bishop from 154-166. Tertullian tells us that Valentinus expected to become bishop of Rome on account of his "genius and eloquence," but became bitter after the church chose a confessor as bishop instead, possibly pushing him down the path of heresy (Adv. Val A). This contested election of which Tertullian speaks is probably the election of Pius c.141-43. After the death of Hyginus, Marcion was definitively excommunicated at Rome in 144,24 and it is unlikely that Valentinus would have been considered for the bishopric as late as 154, the year of the next election. While it is plausible that Valentinus could have been a candidate for episcopal office in the early 140's, since the boundaries between heresy and orthodoxy were not clearly defined, Tertullian's claim that sour grapes were responsible for Valentinus' alleged turn from orthodoxy should be completely disregarded. Mary Ann McGuire has shown that this attempt to discredit Valentinus was a stock argument of anti-heretical polemic, based on Hegesippus' almost identical claim regarding Thebuthis, who was a candidate for the leadership of Jerusalem after the death of James the Just: "Because he was not made bishop, he began to corrupt it."25 We must also be cautious about Tertullian's tendency to associate Valentinus so closely with Marcion. Irenaeus tells us that Valentinus flourished in Rome throughout the bishopric of Pius (cl42-154), and stayed through part of the ministry of Pope Anecitus (154-166), with the implication that Valentinus' influence had by then begun to wane. There is no evidence to indicate that Valentinus was ever definitively excommunicated as in the case of Marcion. However, Irenaeus does mention a couple important events in the reign of Anicetus which may have led to Valentinus' decline. First of all, the aged Polycarp of Smyrna, bearing a grand old apostolic witness, came to Rome to combat heretics and is said 24 The basis for this date is Tertullian's Adv.Mar. 1.19.2 and Epiphanius' Panarion 42.1.7-2.8, according to Lüdemann, Heretics,ttans. J. Bowden (Louisville: WJK, 1996) 298. 25 Valentinus, 80; Hegesippus' account is found in Eusebius' Hist.Eccl. IV.22.5. Epiphanius also makes a similar claim about Marcion; see Panarion 42.1.8. VALENTINUS 137 to have converted many back to orthodoxy (Adv.Haer.Ul.3A). This visit would have to have taken place at the beginning of Anicetus7 rule of the church, around 154-55, since Polycarp was martyred at Smyrna in 156. While it is clear from Irenaeus' account that Polycarp challenged Marcion personally, it is unclear to what extent he attacked Valentinus' teaching. Apparently Polycarp's gnostic efforts were only a partial success, for Marcion continued to flourish. Furthermore, a dynamic female gnostic came to town and stole the show: "From among the Carpocratians also arose Marcellina, who came to Rome under Anicetus, and, holding such doctrines, she led multitudes astray. They style themselves Gnostikoi" (Adv.Haer. I.25.6).26 As A. M. McGuire has pointed out, Irenaeus only used the term gnostikoi in reference to the Barbeloites, Ophites, Sethians and Cainites as described in Adv.Haer. 1.29-31, whose mythic structure we can now recognize as that of the Nag Hammadi Apocryphon of John and other texts in the Sethian gnostic family.27 The arrival of Marcellina may in itself account for a decline in Valentinus' influence; she was perhaps the latest rage in what was then thefickleworld of Roman theological fashions. Epiphanius tells us that Valentinus was born in a village of the Nile Delta and educated in Alexandria; he taught in the Egyptian capital and its environs. Epiphanius also tells us that Valentinus was a fairly orthodox Christian teacher while in Rome, but plunged into heresy on the island of Cyprus, where he had been both literally and spiritually shipwrecked.28 This fourth century hearsay really indicates little more than the fact that in Epiphanius' own time there were Valentinians in both Egypt and Cyprus who wished to claim Valentinus as their founder. Nevertheless, this fourth century perception that Valentinus was not a fullblown heretic while in Rome is suggestive, and for this reason scholars have sometimes spoken of an early and late phase in Valentinus' thought.29 26 Marcellina's followers began to call themselves "Gnostikoi" by the time Irenaeus composed his account; Marcellina and her followers did not necessarily identify themselves as such immediately. Nevertheless, Irenaeus account of Carpocratian teaching in Adv.Haer. 1.25.1-2 is not incompatible in its central themes with his account of the "Gnostikoi." 27 See Valentinus, 1-66. For the classic post-Nag Hammadi attempt to delineate the features of this family, see H.-M. Schenke, "Das sethianischen System nach Nag-HammadiHandschriften," Studia Coptica, ed. P. Nagel (Berlin, 1974) 165-173. 28 Panarion 31.2.2; 31.7.1-2. 29 My own analysis of Valentinus' fragments suggests that they may have been written in Rome, where the theology of the Son as the Divine Name was prominent, and where the Epistles to the Romans and the Hebrews would have had the most vivid influence; there is no reason to consider the fragments particularly early or even of Alexandrian provenance. 138 J. WOODROW MCCREE Unfortunately, none of these chronologies tell us when Ptolemy came to Rome, when he began his association with Valentinus, or when he might have adapted Valentinus' teaching in his own way. There was a general recognition among the heresiologists that there was a difference of some sort between the original teaching of Valentinus and the accounts of Ptolemy's. For example, after commenting on the "Great Account," Irenaeus attributes a slightly different version of the myth to Valentinus in Adv.Haer. 1.11.1. In particular, he insists that this myth is the result of the influence of the Gnostikoi themselves; "Valentinus adapted the principles of the heresy called Gnostiké to the distinctive style of his school." Such a claim might suggest that Valentinus held less radical teachings until the arrival of Marcellina and her converts during Anicetus' term as bishop, since these converts are described as Gnostikoi. However, it is more likely that the presence of the Gnostikoi made more of an impact on Ptolemy's theology, since there are clear parallels between Ptolemy's myth and The Apocryphon ofJohn. Tertullian, in fact, offers an important distinction between the teaching of Valentinus and Ptolemy: Finding the clue of a certain old opinion, Valentinus marked out a path for himself with the subtlety of a serpent. Ptolemy afterward followed the same path by distinguishing the names and numbers of the aeons into personal substances but set off apart from God, whereas Valentinus had included them in the very essence of deity as senses, affects and motions (Adversus.Valentinianos 4).30 In other words, Valentinus described aeons as mere attributes of God, while Ptolemy made them into distinct emanations. In view of this distinction, Tertullian notes that most Valentinians departed, to a certain extent,fromtheir founder. Tertullian's remarks were, for the most part, ignored by scholars due to the lack of corroborating evidence, until the discovery of The Gospel of Truth, the first work of the Nag Hammadi library to be studied.31 The scholarly world was thrown into a breathless bustle as a possible Valentinian text emerged which did not show any clear signs of the so-called Valentinian myth: no Sophia, no demiurge, no multiple Christ/Logos/ Savior figures, and no clearly delineated aeons in unfolding pairs. W. C. van Unnik recalled Tertullian's important claim that, whereas for Valenti30 William Schoedel's translation; see "Gnostic Monism and the Gospel of Truth/' in Layton, Rediscovery, Vol.1, (379-90) 389. 31 Nag Hammadi Codex I was discovered in 1945, along with the others, but it did not become available for study until it was purchased by the Jung Institute in Zurich in May 1952. VALENTINUS 139 nus the aeons were merely aspects of God, for Ptolemy they became dis tinct emanations. A theory was thus born. Gos.Tr. was written by Valenti nus himself, for the aeons in this work seem like little more than attributes of God or thoughts in the divine mind, and there is little in the actual fragments of Valentinus to suggest the full-blown Ptolemaean myth. The more radical individuation of the aeons in the pleroma, the incorporation of the teachings of the Gnostikoi and thus a more elaborate myth of fall and redemption might well be the work of Ptolemy instead of Valentinus.32 The thesis that Gos.Tr. was written by Valentinus himself is no longer held by many scholars, though the similarities between the fragments of Valentinus and Gos.Tr. have been well documented. 3 3 In effect, van Unnik's hypothesis launched a new search for the original teaching of Valentinus, with the realization that we must begin with the known frag ments of Valentinus and let him speak for himself. Markschies' search for Valentinus, as well as my own, is grounded on this now necessary work ing assumption. A Visionary Hymn-Writer's Theology of Praise: An Implicit Theology of Grace Now we turn at last to the known fragments of Valentinus. We shall begin with those provided by Hippolytus of Rome, since his presentation of Valentinus as a visionary who had a direct encounter with the divine Logos serves as a necessary backdrop for interpreting the evidence pre sented by Clement of Alexandria. Hippolytus, like Tertullian, points to a gulf between his knowledge of what Valentinus actually said and the more developed myth called Valentinian, but his explanation for this gulf's existence is more vacuous. In Refutatio VI.42.2, Hippolytus describes a visionary experience: For Valentinus supposes that, while he was wasting away, he saw a child, an infant newly-born. Concerning whom, he inquired as to who he might be (Και γαρ Ούαλενυνος φάσκει εαυτόν έωρακέναι παιδα νήπιον άρτιγέννητον, 32 "The Gospel of Truth and the New Testament," in The Jung Codex, éd. F. M. Cross (London: Mowbray, 1955) 81-129. 33 The most decisive of such arguments was the essay by Benoît Standaert, "L'Évangile de Vérité: critique et lecture," New Testament Studies 22 (1976) 243-75. The best argument for the date of the Gospel of Truth remains that of William RSchoedel, who placed it around 170-80, that is, in time for it to influence Irenaeus' composition of Adv.Haer. Π. See "Gnostic Monism and the Gospel of Truth," 381-89. 140 J. WOODROW MCCREE οΰ πυθόμενο? επιζητεί τίς αν εΐη). The child answered him saying, Ί am the Logos' (ό δέ άπεκρίνατο λέγων, εαυτόν είναι τον λόγον). Afterwards, Valenti nus added a certain grandiosely tragic myth, and on the basis of this (new teaching) he determined to bring together the heretical sect which he had crafted with his own hands (έπικεχειρημένην αύτφ).34 Hippolytus' testimony that Valentinus was a visionary is invaluable. Because of this witness we know that the Logos was central to Valenti nus' thought and religious experience. The use of "I am" with "the Logos" indicates that the Fourth Gospel shaped his imagination pro foundly. The Logos' appearance as a child suggests that Valentinus believed himself to have made mystical contact with the Stoic "logos spermatikos" that dwelt within him. As his contemporary Justin would soon write, each of the ancient philosophers had spoken "from a certain portion of the spermatic divine Logos innate in them from birth" (Apolo gia Minor 13.3). As Origen would put it decades later, "It is as if the Word which exists in the nature of rational beings is a teacher who is insepara ble from the student" (Comm.John 11.109). The child is probably identical with "the seed which had been given from the being above" which Valentinus mentions in Fragment 1 (Strom. II.36.2-4). As Hilgenfeld has pointed out, the particular reference to the Logos as a child is probably drawn from Psalm 8:3, "Out of the mouths of babes and suckling infants you have perfected praise" (Έκ στόματος νηπίων και θηλαζόντων Κατηρτίσω αϊνον), a thesis made likely by the parallel use of two terms for children in each: "a Child, a new-born infant" echoes "chil dren and suckingly infants."35 This likelihood does not rule out other influences as well. Markschies has suggested that Valentinus may allude to the child of Isaiah 9:6, "Unto us a παιδίον is born."36 If Hilgenfeld is 34 The phrase "crafted with his own hands" maybe an ironic jab which presupposes knowledge of Fragment 1, preserved for us only in Stromateis Π.36.2-4. There Valentinus uses a common Sethian mytheme as a device for critiquing idolatry. People all too quickly develop superstitious fear toward the carvings and theological systems which the hands construct for the sake of glorifying God. Indeed, Valentinus' concern for the mistakes peo ple make when using their creativity "unto the name of God" suggests he is trying to artic ulate a thoughtful theology of worship. We must use our creativity in order to praise the transcendent God; but God remains beyond our descriptive capabilities, and so we must not take our hymns and our meditations too seriously, lest we become idolaters. Perhaps this is why he was comfortable letting his disciples develop his insights in such varied ways. He did not want to turn his own crude etchings into an unchallengable theological system set in stone. 35 Hilgenfeld, 304. Ps. 8:3 is also cited in Matt. 21:16, where it seems to be a fulfillment of Jesus' words in Matt. 11:25. 36 Valentinus Gnosticus?, 210. The final couplet of Valentinus' hymn "Harvest-Fruits" suggests that Valentinus was drawing on themes from Isaiah 53:2,11:1, and 9:6. See below. VALENTINUS 141 correct that Psalm 8:3 shaped Valentinus' visionary experience, it is also plausible that it shaped his theological concerns as well. The "perfecting of praise/' indeed, does seem to be a central concern in the aeon theology as presented by the heresiologists. If the aeons can be said to do anything, it is to multiply and harmonize into order to praise God. Only when such praise is complete can the aeons generate the Savior as their "perfect fruit" (Adv.Haer. 1.2.6). The concern for praising God is just as central to Hippolytus' parallel account, where aeons glorify God by imitating the Father's generative capacity. Sophia's sin is not that of trying to comprehend the Father, as in Adv.Haer. 1.2.2, but that of trying to imitate the father by generating aeons alone, without a partner (Ref. 29.5-30.8). Thus, the praise and glorification of the Father is not only the reason for the generation of aeons and the generation of the Savior, but is, in fact, the cause of the fall. It is perhaps no coincidence that this theology of praise is more pivotal in Hippolytus' account, for his account shows greater awareness than Irenaeus' of the fragments of Valentinus.37 It seems that some form of a theology of worship can be traced to Valentinus himself. Nevertheless, it is clear that Hippolytus is clueless as to how a mere vision of the Logos as a child led to the complicated myth he describes in Refutatio VI.29.2-36.4. He is reduced to saying simply that Valentinus added a tragic myth. We must also give some attention to the term Pythomenos, a nominative middle participle in agreement with the subject Valentinos, since it provides a link to another prominent aspect of Valentinus' thought. It has previously been left untranslated in English, and uncommented upon overall. Literally it means "while he was rotting away," exactly how it is used in Odyssey 12.46, where it is employed to refer to the corpses of those lost to the sirens.38 It might be taken to mean "wasting away," a description of Valentinus' heart, mind, and body before his conversion experience in the presence of the Logos. Such a usage would not be inconsistent with Valentinus' own obsession with overcoming the decay inherent in this world. For example, in Stromateis III.59.3 (Fragment 3) Valentinus insists that Jesus, while he was enduring all things39, was self-controlled. He wrought divinity; though he ate and he drank, he did not pass the food out of his 37 Fragment 1, as noted above, seems to display an awareness on Valentinus' part that things can go wrong when people craft ways of glorifying God. 38 Robert Fagle's translation (New York: Viking Penguin, 1996) 273. 39 This phrase is taken directly from I Cor.l3:7d; Valentinus thus portrays the encratic life of Jesus as the embodiment of divine love itself, which "bears all things." 142 J. WOODROW MCCREE body afterward. Such was the power of self-control within him, that nour ishment was never broken down within him, since he himself does not have the capacity for decay (τοσαύτη ην αύτφ εγκράτειας δύναμις, ώστε και μη φθαρήναι την τροθην έν αύτφ", έπει το φθείρεσθαι αυτός ούκ εΐχεν). Though this fragment has long been taken as evidence of Valentinus' doceticism,40 M.A.Williams has rightly pointed out that the real topic under discussion is self-control while in the body.41 Jesus shared in our earthly experiences, as indicated in Hebrews 2:5-18 and 4:14-16; yet there also dwelt within him the "power of an indestructible life (δύναμιν ζωής ακατάλυτου)," as affirmed in Heb.7116.42 Because of this divinizing power, no form of breakdown or decay could occur within Jesus body. Appar ently Valentinus considered the mess of defecation adequate evidence that digestion was fundamentally a process of corruption; nourishment is used up, and what's left is not pleasing. Therefore, Jesus was incapable of producing waste. Valentinus uses variants on the verb phtheiró to articulate his concern for corruption; while the term has connotations of moral and spiritual ruin as well as the destruction of death itself, here it has vividly material associations. The related noun phthora also appears in Fragment 4, making it clear that a prominent motif has been established. We should, of course, expect Valentinus to be capable of literary variation, and so it is also plausible that he might have used the term pythomenos—rotting—to describe his pre-conversion state. Moreover, Tertullian's Adv.Val. 2 seems to display knowledge of Valentinus' vision of the infant. He remarks that such visions of the "face of the Lord" are reserved for the simple of heart who seek God patiently, a category for which Valentinus would not qualify. Seeking God's face is a prominent theme in Psalms 24, 27, and also 41; however, is it not a vague longing for God. Seeking God's face involved making a pilgrimage to the temple, usually during one of the three major festivals, and waiting overnight there, frequently in a state of hunger and exhaustion, in the hope of seeing the Lord.43 Such "wasting away" might well include 40 E.gvSagnard,123. Rethinking, 290, n.31.1 cannot help but think that this radically encratic vision of Jesus' divine self-control might lay behind Athanasius' own doctrine of the the divinization of thefleshin Christ, a teaching vividly imaged in Athanasius' Life of Anthony. 42 Valentinus uses the term καταλύησθε in Frag.4: "For when you annul the cosmos, and yet are not yourself destroyed " 43 See Ps. 130:5-6 and 134, both explicitly designated as "Pilgrimage Songs;" Ps. 30 also describes the state of one desperate for deliverance from death. The superscription des ignates it as "for the dedication of the temple," which implies use at either the Feast of Tabernacles or Hanukkah. 41 VALENTINUS 143 fasting in preparation for a visionary expereince, as was common in the both the Hellenistic mystery religions and in Jewish mystical traditions of divine ascent based upon Isaiah 6:3 and Ezekial 1I25-28.44 In other words, Valentinus' vision probably ocurred in the context of both ascetic preparation and anticipation, as was normal in both Jewish and Hellenist circles at the time. Valentinus was able to express his visionary experience in poetry, as the other fragment provided by Hippolytus demonstrates. Here too Hip polytus' tendency to force a more advanced mythological schema onto Valentinus is evident (Refutatio VI.37:6-8). "Harvest Fruits" is not actually a fragment, but a complete hymn. In De Carne Christi 17; 20, Tertullian indicates that Valentinus wrote many such Psalms. Apparently they were collected, for a Valentinian named Alexander exegeted them by means of syllogisms. Unfortunately, this is the only one to survive: I see in spirit the universe suspended; I perceive in spirit all things borne along: (θέρος* πάντα κρεμάμενα πνεύματι βλέπω, πάντα δ' όχούμενα πνεύματι νοω) Flesh suspended from soul, Soul hanging from air, air suspended from aether, Fruits brought forth from the deep— A newborn thrust forth, still sustained, from the womb. (εκ δέ βυθού καρπούς φερόμενους, έκ μήτρας δέ βρέφος φερόμενον.) This hymn presents us with a vision of an interconnected universe; it offers a "cosmos" of almost literal ornamentation, since everything is hanging from everything else. The cosmos is carried and sustained by God, as a fetus is carried and sustained in its mother. The term brephos, which means "fetus," suggests a newborn so recently thrust from the womb that the umbilical cord connected to the source on high has not yet been cut. Valentinus thus conveys a typical middle Platonist vision of unfolding layers of reality, each level, perhaps, a lesser image of its source, but ultimately harmonious in its unfolding interdependence. This is not a picture of aeons generating. It is a vision of the whole universe proceeding from its transcendent source Depth, or Bythos. Spirit is not a 44 In recent years Giles Quispel's suggestion that gnostic anthropos theology was based upon mystical exegesis of Ezekial 1:26 has been developed considerably in the work of Jarl Fossum and April DeConick. See Quispel, Vigiliae Christianae 34 (1980) 1-13; De Con ica Voices of the Mystics, 49-67; 86-108. 144 J. WOODROW MCCREE substance, but a way of perceiving; a mystical state in which one grasps the interdependence of the whole. Such a framework may well leave room for creative mediators at each level, though they are not mentioned. The double use of panta in the first couplet, and the double use of pheromenous/os in the final couplet is quite striking; the poem may actu ally be an expansion of Hebrews 1:3b, where the Son of God is described as "bearing up/sustaining all things by the word of his power" (φέρων τε τα πάντα τω ρήματι της δυνάμεως αύτοΰ). There are four substances mentioned, and Hippolytus claims that flesh refers to hylic matter, soul to the Demiurge, air to spiritual sub stance, and aether to Sophia herself, outside the pleroma. Hippolytus' attempt to read Valentinus' poem as evidence for the later Ptolemaic myth is now widely recognized as a forced imposition upon the text. Markschies notes that in 1975, Koschorke conclusively demonstrated that Hippolytus was obliterating the distinctiveness of Valentinus in favor of a generic presentation of his school.45 A few observations are in line: First of all, Valentinus used the term "all things" (panta) to refer to this universe, not exclusively to the aeons. Irenaeus' arguments in Adv.Haer. ILI regarding the Valentinians' limita tion of divine presence and activity to a mere spiritual realm beyond the universe are irrelevant to any discussion of Valentinus. In fact, the vision of interconnectedness running through all layers of reality is probably intended as a statement of faith in a providence that extends through all such levels, even if that providence is worked out by an array of mediat ing divinities. We should not be surprised at such a possibility, for Basilides himself declared that one should "say anything rather than 46 deny providence" (Strom. IV.82.2). The emphatic claim that all things are suspended and ultimately sustained by the transcendent source of growth implies a rudimentary theology of universal grace, as all things are dependent on the source. Finally, one cannot help but notice the prominence of the child, once again, at the climax of the poem. The child, the spermatic seed triggering growth, is sent from the very heart and source of the universe. The cli mactic couplet is particularly interesting, for the plant metaphor of fruits being brought forth during the summer harvest is parallel to that of an 45 "Das Problem des historischen Valentin/' Studia Patristica 24 (1993), 383. This concern for providence is a point of genuine convergence between Jewish piety and Stoic philosophy in the Hellenistic age, just as the two also converged around the notion of natural law. 46 VALENTINUS 145 utterly new-born infant proceeding out from the womb. A parallel infant/plant couplet is found in the LXX rendering of Isaiah 53:3, where the exilic prophet comments upon the unexpected lowliness and vulner ability of God's messenger: ''We announced one who is as a child before God's presence, as a root in a dry place; he has neither form, nor glory" (Άνηγγείλαμεν ώς παιδίον εναντίον αύτοϋ, ώς ρίζα). This very passage was exegeted by Clement of Rome (J Clement 16) and it is very likely that Valentinus had access to such a prominent Roman writing.47 The World Above and The World Below are United by the Divine Name: An Unrecognized Theology of Grace Clement of Alexandria's Stromateis IV.89.6-90.1 (Fragment 5) supplies us with a similar picture of a layered universe in which the glory of a higher realm manages to reflect itself into a lower realm. To the extent that the artistic image is inferior to the living person, so to this degree is the cosmos lesser than the living realm (όπόσον έλάττων ή είκών του ζώντος προσώπου, τοσούτον ήσσων ό κόσμος του ζώντος αιώνος). What then is the cause of the image? The majesty of the person who furnishes the pattern from the artist who paints from real life, so that the majesty might be hon ored through its name (τίς οΰν αιτία της εικόνος, μεγαλαχτύνη του προσώπου παρεσχημμένου τφ ζωγράφφ τον τύπον, "Ινα τιμηφη δι' ονόματος αύτοϋ). For the created form is not found to have any authority of its own, but rather the name filled up what was lacking in the formation (ού γαρ αύθεντικώς ευρέθη μορφή, άλλα το όνομα έπλήρωσεν το υστέρησαν έν πλάσει). Indeed, the invisi ble element from God works together (with the frailty of the formation), for the sake of the faithfulness of what has been formed. Valentinus here presents us with a parable; a comparison of two realms with a suggestion of interconnection. Any living presence, such as a real human being, is greater than the artistic image, whether painting or sculpture, which it is designed to portray. When a work of art is well executed, the real source of its greatness is not the painter, but the majesty and beauty of the living person who served as the inspiration for the work of art. So it is with the aeon above and the cosmos below. This cosmos is certainly inferior, even vastly inferior, to the eternal realm; 47 Dependence on Clement becomes even more likely when we realize that Clement is a primary source for the theology of the divine name which is developed in both Valentinus and Gos.Tr., well as a primary locus for usage of the term "megalosuné," which Valentinus uses in Frag. 5. 146 J. WOODROW MCCREE nevertheless, the glory of the higher realm manages to shine through even in its image below. The metaphor, of course, involves a painter. Clement insists that the painter referred to in this riddle is the Demiurge, called also "God and Father/' and that the demiurge formed this visible world using the Wisdom from above as his pattern in order to glorify the Invisible One. It is not clear that such an interpretive maneuver is warranted or even helpful in interpreting the text; even in Plato's Timaeus 28a-37d it is unclear whether the description of a creator who looks to the world above for his model is to be taken literally or is simply a vivid metaphor used to convey the idea that the upper world is truly reflected in the lower world. There is really one central idea in Valentinus' meditation: this cosmos is a copy of the higher realm, and, like a work of art, it reflects the beauty of the reality that it copies. There is no reason to allegorize every detail of his analogy and try to find a corresponding divine figure from the later myths. Valentinus is simply saying that the higher realm does shine through in this corrupt world, however vivid this world's failings. This world is a place of need, of deficiency, of lacking; it is a place of wasting away. But the majesty on high fills what is lacking in the "molded creation/'48 whether by Platonic reflection or divine condescension. Again, such a claim contains at least the rudiments of a theology of grace. This fact becomes even more apparent when one considers the terms Valentinus uses. Majesty—megalosuné—is a typical Hellenistic Jewish circumlocution for God. It occurs in Hebrews 1:3, where the author says that after the Son of God "had made purification from sins, he sat down at the right hand of the majesty on high." It is also used by Clement several times, who is the first writer to cite Hebrews.49 The Name is a common Jewish-Christian designation for Christ; it is rare but crucial in the Gospel of John, and is most prominent in the liturgical sections of 48 The term plasis is based upon eplasen, used in LXX Gen. 2:7,15 to describe the formation of the earthly Adam from the mud. Philo's theory that Gen. 1 was a description of the noetic creation, while Gen. 2 described the creation of earth, was widely known. Valentinus' use of terminology drawn from Gen. 2 suggests that the majesty of the divine Name reaches even into the realm of matter. 49 In I Clement 20.11 and 61.3 the term is ascribed to Christ in praise as it is in Jude 25. In 16:2, the very section in which Clement of Rome expounds Isaiah 53, the lowly Christ is described as "the majestic skepter of God." 27.4 says that the universe was established by the "majestic word." In 36.2 Clement reads the term "majesty" into his quote of Hebrews 1:3a, making Christ "the radiance of God' majesty" rather than "of his glory." Because Clement was the first writer to cite Hebrews, it is commonly believed that Hebrews was sent by the Alexandrian church to Rome. See Attridge, Hebrews, 10; Brown and Maier, Antioch and Rome, 142-51. VALENTINUS 147 Í Clement, The Shepherd of Hermas, The Excerpta ex Theodoto and The Gospel of Truth.50 Significantly, three of these texts are of Roman origin. Valentinus' claim that "the name fills what is lacking in the material formation" indicates that he is using the concept of the divine name to denote the active presence of God in the realm of matter and history, as distinct from God himself in his absolute transcendence. Such a distinction dates from the era of the so-called Deuteronomist historian. It is most apparent in I Kings 8: 27-30, which forms the theological core of Solomon's prayer dedicating the temple at the Feast of Tabernacles. God himself is said to dwell in heaven, while God's active presence in the temple is designated as the Name, a distinction probably made to combat the crude idea that God actually lived in the temple or could be carried around in the ark during a procession. The Name denotes a real and active presence of God with his people, with a recognition that the transcendent living God is uncontainable and cannot be understood as sightspecific.51 It is this Name, then, that fills up the lack so characteristic of this earthly realm. Clement of Rome links the notion of glory to the divine Name,52 and it is quite plausible that Valentinus would have made the same association. Saying that the Name fills up the lack means that glory of God is present on earth. Of course, for Valentinus, the presence of this Name in earthly life is experienced through the spermatic logos, the child who appeared to Valentinus as his truest self and rescued him from decay. Thus Valentinus here adds that the Name fills up the lack by means of "the invisible element from God," the seed from on high that awakens us to new growth. Interestingly, Jarl Fossum has recently argued that the theology of the divine name is the ultimate source of the Johannine prologue and its claim that the word became flesh. Fossum insists that the real and active presence of God himself in the Fourth Gospel cannot be accounted for by way of wisdom theology alone, for wisdom tends to be seen as the first creation of God and a heavenly assistant rather than the immediate presence of God. Only the theology of the Name can account for the real presence of God in Christ and in the eucharist as presented by John.53 50 For example, in Hermas, Vision 4.2.4, the "Great and glorious name" is described as the one who saves us. See Daniélou, 149-61; Arai, 63-73. 51 See Moshe Weinfeld, Deuteronomy and the Deuteronomic School, Oxford: 1972,190209. 52 E.g., I Clement 58.1; 59.2 53 "In the Beginning Was the Name," in The Image of the Invisible God, 109-34. As early as 1964, Sagasu Arai argued that a theology of the divine name underlay John 1:1-18,12:2328, and 17:5-6; see his Christologie, 69-70. 148 J· WOODROW MCCREE If Fossum is correct, then perhaps Valentinus was not the first to associate the incarnate Logos with the indwelling presence of the Name in the earthly Adam. Indeed, in J Clement 59:3, the Name is described as "the primal source of all creation/' a clear parallel to John 1:1-3. The the ology of the N a m e seems to be for Clement, however, an alternative to the Johannine Logos theology, whereas for Valentinus the two seem to be fused. We know that the Valentinians were exegeting John at Rome, and w e k n o w t h a t the theology of the n a m e w a s a p r o m i n e n t aspect of Roman thought as evidenced in both Clement and Hermas. It is quite plausible that Valentinus himself may have pulled these themes together under the influences of Roman traditions. The next fragment will pro vide further evidence that Valentinus w a s concerned to proclaim the dwelling of the divine glory on earth; it will also demonstrate his concern for the wholeness, or unity, of the heart. Unity, Multiplicity and an Explicit Theology of Grace Stromateis II.114.3-6 (Fragment 2) is crucial for understanding Valentinus, for here the master concisely and eloquently affirms the unity and good ness of the Father. In so doing, he locates ψ β root of human evil in multi plicity, and renders his theology of grace explicit. "One is Good," whose manifestation through the Son is boldness, through whom alone the heart is able to become clean, when every evil spirit is cast out of the heart (εις δέ έστιν αγαθός, ου παρρησία ή δία του υιού θανέρωσις, και αυτού μόνου δύναιτο αν ή καρδία καθαρά γενέσθαι, παντός πονηρού πνεύ ματος έξωθουμένου της καρδίας). For many spirits dwelling within it do not allow it to become dean, but rather each of them brings about its own work in many ways, abusively mocking the heart with passionate yearnings (έπιθυμίαις) which are not proper. Indeed, it seems to me that the heart suf fers like a roadside inn, for sudi a place is hollowed out and dug into and is frequently filled with the excrement of people who stay there brutishly and exercize no forethought (πρόνοιαν - the care of intelligent planning) for the place, since it is established by others. The heart wanders along on such a course, and as long as it does not happen upon forethought (μη προνοίας τυγχάνει) it remains undean and is a dwelling place of demons (my empha sis). But whenever the sole good Father should exercize his provident care by means of a visitation (έπειδαν δέ έπισκέψηται αυτήν ó μόνος αγαθός πατήρ), the heart has been made holy and is illumined throughout by light. And so the one who has such a heart will be blessed, for he shall see God. This meditation is striking in that clear allusions to the Gospel of Matthew serve as its framework. Matt. 19:17, "εις έστιν ό αγαθός/ 7 leads VALENTINUS 149 directly into the affirmation of Matt.ll:27b, "No one knows the Father except the Son and the one to whom the Son purposes to reveal him/' The bold manifestation of the Son in the fragmented hearts of those divided up by the many passions tormenting the heart is, in fact, the providential oversight—the visitation—which purifies the heart of its many unclean spirits.54 The Son alone manifests the unity of the Father in this world of sense-perception, casting out the many to restore us to wholeness, so that we might participate in the Father's unity. The Matthean inclusio is completed by a clear paraphrase of Matt.5:8, "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God." Central themes of mainstream Christianity are thus affirmed. Human salvation is completely dependent on the revelation of the Father in the Son and upon the Son's visitation of humanity under the conditions of human existence. The image of the cosmos as a roadside inn is cited as a Valentinian teaching in Hippolytus' Refutatio VI.34.6. If anyone has been wondering, "How inferior is this cosmos in comparison to the living aeon?" this fragment will provide an answer. The world is like a middle-eastern caravanserie: a filthy, cramped lodging for travelers where careless ruffians trash the property because it is not their own and animals and human riffraff dig holes in the dirt corners to defecate. The references to holes, partly also a reference to windows and doors, suggests that the filth of life enters the mind through the senses, the "windows to the soul" in typical Platonist thought. Valentinus' revulsion toward the realities of this life echoes the attitude toward decay and defecation seen in Fragment 3. In view of the sordidness of this worldly roadside inn, the manifestation of the Father in the realm below is truly "bold." Valentinus seems to grasp the mystery of the incarnation for it is truly shocking to imagine that the transcendent God might undertake such a visitation. It is only the manifestion of the Father in the Son that can restore primal unity to a world so characterized by multiplicity; only this visitation which can reverse the decay inherent in matter. The One took upon himself the condition of the many, so that the many might become One. A developed theology of grace is not only apparent in Valentinus' admission in Frag. 2 of dependence on God's initiative in "visiting" us in the manifestation of the Son, it is also implicit in the more curious claim 54 The image of driving evil spirits out of a heart which is described as a room is paralleled in Hermas, Mandate 5.1.2: "For if you are patient, the Holy Spirit who lives in you will be pure, uncontaminated by some other evil spirit; living in a spacious room, it will rejoice and be glad with the vessel in which it lives." Again, an important theme found in the fragments of Valentinus can be accounted for by way of traditions prominent at Rome. 150 J. WOODROW MCCREE that we cannot experience salvation until we "happen upon God's provident care, or forethought." Pronoia is, by definition, a state of mind in which one makes careful plans and exercises self-control soberly. Anyone who lives in such a way mirrors the provident care of God for the universe. This is exactly what we would expect from a Stoic who is making great effort to manifest the spermatic logos within himself. But how does one "happen upon forethought"? The very notion is a contradiction in terms. You don't just stumble upon such a lifestyle by chance; it is deliberate in its very essence. Herein lies the genius and the true Christian spirit of Valentinus. Valentinus knows from experience that the saving encounter with providence does not occur because of one's own efforts. It "just happens," by the grace of God. Like the seed that "grows spontaneously and one knows not how" of Mark 4:27, like the treasure hidden in a field or the pearl of great value that one happens upon unexpectedly in Matt.l3:4446. The visitation of the One God in this world is a surprise that no one can control. The Kingdom comes, and when it does, one stumbles upon it as if by chance, not as the reward for faith or good works, not even necessarily as the reward for seeking, but as an unexpected eruption which can only evoke an equally spontaneous response. Valentinus knows as well as anyone that Jesus taught us in his parables to expect surprises. He also knows this from his own conversion experience: he is dependent upon the initiative of a providence that embraced him before he could ever embrace it. Even the possibility that Valentinus, like many other seekers in the ancient world, prepared himself for his vision of the Logos does not exclude the possibility that he experienced the vision as grace. Andrew Louth has argued that in Plato and Philo, there is a vivid awareness that one must prepare oneself to be taken up into an experience of the divine; a certain ascetic self-discipline is necessary. Nevertheless, when the transcendent breakthrough occurs, it is experienced as a gift, something which is so far beyond what is warranted by any preparations made that it can only be seen as an experience of being lifted up into the eternal realm by a reality greater than oneself.55 Interestingly, Tertullian seems to show awareness of this aspect of Valentinus' thought and on the basis of this theology of chance insists that the Valentinians do not believe in salvation by nature. After discussing the threefold division of humanity in terms of Cain, Abel and The Origins of the Christian Mystical Tradition (Oxford: Clarendon, 1981) 1-35. VALENTINUS 151 Seth, Tertullian says in Adv. Val. 29, that "the spiritual, preordained for salvation, have their identities stored up in Seth." He goes on to say that "men's spiritual state they derive over and above the other conditions from Seth as a matter of chance occurrence (de öbvenientia), not as something natural, but something granted as a favor (non naturam sed indulgentiam)." The reference to being saved "by chance" or "as something that one happens upon" is too striking and too rare to be a coincidence. The noun obvenientia is based upon the verb obvenio which seems to be a translation of the Greek tugchanó, to happen upon, which appears in Valentinus' meditation. Tertullian recognized that the Valentinian doctrine of salvation was a doctrine of election, and that the elect spirits experience their awakenings in this world as a mysterious discovery, something that one happens upon unexpectedly, as if by chance. Any portrait of Valentinian thought which depends upon a theory of purely substantial salvation is thus a crude caricature. The "spirituals" are saved by election, and in this world, they experience that election as the surprising discovery of a seed within them, calling them to return to their origin on high. Giles Quispel has long considered Tertullian's description of Valentinian theology in chapter 29 to be far more accurate than the other heresiologists' claims that they taught "salvation by nature, not by grace."56 Nevertheless, a sense does remain in which the elect seed share the same nature with the Father. If they are begotten from the being of the Father from all eternity, how could it be otherwise? Evidence that Valentinus was a Gnostic of Sorts: His Own Theology of Grace Undermined Fully aware of, and perhaps obsessively attentive to, this aspect of Valentinian thought, Clement states in Stromateis IV.89.1-3 (frag.4) that Valentinus himself, "supposes a class saved by nature" (φύσει σφζόμενος): Valentinus, in a certain public meditation, writes in these words: "From the beginning, you are immortal and children of eternal life (άπ' αρχής αθάνατοι έστε και τέκνα ζωής έστε αιωνίας). But you wanted death to be apportioned unto yourselves, so that you might consume it and destroy it (by using it all up), so that death might die in and through you (και τον θάνατον ήθέλετε μερίζασθαι εις έαυτούς/Ίνα δαπανήσητε αύτον και άναλωσητε, και άποθάνη ό θάνατος έν ύμιν και δι* υμών). For when you annul the cosmos, while you yourselves are not destroyed, you are lords over creation and over all decay Giles Quispel, "Valentinian Gnosis and the Apocryphon of John/' in Layton, 125. J. WOODROW MCCREE 152 (όταν γαρ τον μέν κόσμον λύητε, ύμεΐς δέ μη καταλύησθε, κυριεύετε τής κτίσεως και τής φθοράς άπάσης). For he also, like Basilides, supposes a class saved by nature, and that this different race has come to us here from above for the abolition of death, and that the origin of death is the creator of the world. This passage more than any other lends plausibility to the heresiolo gists7 claim that Valentinus did not have an adequate theology of grace, for it presents a vision of such radical identity between the true Christian and Christ that there seems to be no room left for a creature/Creator distinction, no sense of the uniqueness of Christ, and little evidence for the dependence of the Christian on Christ. If this were the only fragment we had, we would have to consider Valentinus far beyond the parame ters of mainstream Christianity. Valentinus' assertion that the Christians to whom he preaches are "immortal from the beginning" is not necessary problematic in itself. It might simply imply a doctrine of divine election, such as that found in Romans 8-11 or Ephesians 1. In this case, the eternal immortality of true Christians would be a result of God's grace. The true self that the gnostic discovers, the child within that Valentinus discovered, would then be the discovery of one's true identity as called eternally by the grace of God. The experience of self-discovery would itself be a reflection of that eter nal grace in this world. Valentinus' understanding of the immortality of true Christians may be based on Eph. 1:3-4 and 2:4-6. In contrast to Colossians 3:1-3, which exhorts Christians to set their eyes on things above, Ephesians 2:6 says that God "has already seated" Christians "in the heavenly places in Christ." When such a passage is read alongside the claim that God "chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world," it could easily be taken as evidence for the existence of a precosmic heavenly church, even a world of timeless aeons.57 Belief in such a precosmic church is evi denced at Rome in The Shepherd of Hermas, Vision 2.8: "'Who then is she (the woman of the vision)?' I said. 'The church/ he replied. I said to him, 'Why then is she elderly?' 'Because,' he said, 'she was created before all things; therefore she is elderly, and for her sake the world was formed.'" If the world was created for the sake of the precosmic church, then why 57 Irenaeus acknowledges in Adv. Haer. 1.3.1 that Valentinians used the doxology from Eph.3:21 as evidence for their aeon theology. Irenaeus's remark indicates that the main stream church was using this doxology in their worship. Ephesians must have been wellestablished in the conservative Roman church by Irenaeus' time, and so it is quite plausible that is was also influential at Rome in Valentinus' day. VALENTINUS 153 might not matter itself have been generated for the sake of the elect? This is exactly what Valentinus' fragment implies, for he teaches that in the pre-existence gnostics have descended as one with Christ, bearing his mission as their own, the conquest of death. It is as this point that Valentinus becomes heretical by orthodox Christian standards. For his assertion that these pre-existent ones wanted to apportion death to themselves, so that they might destroy death in and though their own descent into the material world is a radical reworking of Hebrews 2:9-15. While the author of Hebrews does emphasize the unity of Christ with humanity in this passage, the unity is one made pos sible by divine condescension. The Son of God through whom God cre ated the world takes on our human life "so that by the grace of God he might taste death for everyone. . . . Since therefore, the children share flesh and blood, he himself likewise shared the same things, so that through death he might nullify the one who has the power of death, that is, the devil ('Ίνα δια του θανάτου κατάργηση τον το κράτος έχοντα του θανάτου, τοΰτ εστίν τον διάβολον). The unique role of Christ as both high priest and sacrifice, so central to the author of Hebrews, has been obliter ated by a theology in which all the members of the church descend to annul death by devouring it. All the gnostics taste death, apportioning the material world to themselves, so that they might prove themselves lords of all decay. No doubt to do this they must exercise ascetic restraint, controling the passions which divide us up and keep us from our primal unity with God and the Son. The notion is quite clever; the material world of decay, which tends to divide people up by very definition, is itself divided up by the gnostics as they "partition it" (merizasthat) unto themselves in the act of consumption. Valentinus' language of "ruling over creation and all decay" is Stoic, but is also grounded in Pauline precedent. Paul cites a related Stoic maxim in I Cor. 3:21-22: "All things are yours."58 Through the Stoic phi losophy of detachment, one could supposedly maintain a certain control over ones responses to life and thus gain a certain sovereignty, or "αύτοεξουσία" over the cosmos, in spite of all uncertainties. Paul rather vacu ously claims that a similar sovereignty over creation can be gained when one entrusts oneself to the Lord of creation. His assertion seems more a matter of asserting himself against a rival philosophy than articulating a coherent theology. The Christian benefits from God's generous sover eignty and rests secure in the loving arms of providence, but in no way For Stoic parallels, see Hans Conzelmann, I Corinthians, 80. 154 J. WOODROW MCCREE does such dependence and benefit imply that "all things are yours."59 Nevertheless, Paul did speak in this way, and his reckless appropriation of Stoic themes may have influenced Valentinus. The phrase "you rule over creation and all corruption (κυριεύετε της κτίσεως και της φθοράς άπάσας) echoes Romans 14:9, "For the sake of this goal Christ died and lived - that he might exercize Lordship over the dead and the living."60 More decisively, Markshies has also drawn atten tion to parallels between Frag.4 and Romans 6:3ff.61 For example, Romans 6:9b says, "Christ being raised from the dead will never die again; for death has no dominion over him (θάνατος αύτοΰ ούκέτι κυρι εύει)." Indeed, the prominence of both thanatos and variants on kurieuó in Frag. 4 and in Romans 5:12-6:14 suggests that Paul's Christ-Adam typology may well be the primary inspiration for Valentinus' own radical identification of the mission and destiny of the gnostic with Christ. Romans 5:17 makes the linkage of destinies explicit: "For if by the sin of one person, death ruled through the one (ό θάνατος έβασίλευσεν δια του ένος) much more surely will those who receive . . . the free gift of righ teousness rule in life (εν ζωή βασιλεύουσιν) through the One, Jesus Christ." J.B. Lightfoot has pointed out that "in Rom. 5:15-19 there is a sus tained contrast between 'the one (ό εις)' and 'the many (oi πολλοί)'"62 a fact which would make the passage of great interest to Valentinus. Of course, intense interest does not guarantee freedom from misinterpreta tion. While Paul insists that a Christian's reign over death comes through Christ who descended to rescue us from sin and death while we were yet helpless sinners, Valentinus' myth of a gnostic descent seems to empha size that the elect both descend and reign over death with Christ simulta neously.63 59 Not even Paul's claim in I Cor. 6:2 that Christians will judge the world in the escaton warrants the assertion that "all things are ours" now. Paul pulls back from his rather clumsy Stoidzing assertion in the more eloquent and coherent Rom. 8:28, where he affirms God's sovereignty but abandons the claim that any creature can possess all things: "All things work together for good for those who love God." A more lucid Christian reworking of the Stoic theme of mastery over all is found Phil. 4:13, "I can do all things through him who strengthens me," and in Hermas, Mandate 12.5.3: "The one who has the Lord in his heart can master everything." 60 Valentinus Gnosticus?, 145. 61 Ibid., 131. 62 Notes, 291. 63 Käsemann points out that the Adam-Christ mysticism of Rom. 5-6 cannot be understood in isolation from the mystery religions, especially the themes of initiation in the Isis cult; Commentary on Romans, 161. For the Jewish aspect of Paul's "corporate humanity" mysticism, see Dodd, Romans, 78-81. VALENTINUS 155 An even stronger metaphor of absolute identity of the Christian with Christ is found in Romans 6:3-5: Do you not know that whoever has been baptized into Christ Jesus has been baptized into his death? So then, we have been buried with him through baptism into death, so that just as Christ was raised from the dead ones through the glory of the Father, so we also might walk in newness of life. For if we have become joined inseparably to him by growth in the likeness of his death, we will also be joined to him innately in the likeness of his res urrection (εί γαρ σύμφυτοι γεγόναμεν τφ όμοιώματι του θανάτου αύτοϋ, άλλα και της αναστάσεως έσόμεθα). The crucial term here is sumphutoi, an adjective based on the the verb sumphuó, which means "to grow together." The word is an agricultural term and a close look at the range of meaning for sumphuton in Liddel and Scott shows that it means "grown together in a deep organic union." It means "joined by growth," "having grown together since birth,""congenital,""joined by nature," "innate," "inborn," "naturally one with." An adjective based on the perfect tense of sumphuó is used in Wisdom of Solomon 13:13, where it describes knots in a piece of driftwood. The knots and the wood therein are inseparable; they have grown together from the beginning of the wood's existence. The knot and the wood are so naturally intertwined that they are the same thing. This is the kind of union with Christ that the believer receives at baptism. Of course, for Paul such a usage is paradoxical; the fusion of identities received as a gift at the time of one's conversion is so profound that it is as if we had been joined to him innately from birth. As William Sanday has pointed out, this natural union by growth "exactly expresses the process by which a graft becomes united with the life of a tree." He notes that the metaphor anticipates Romans 11:17, where Paul talks of the grafting of the wild gentile shoot into the original Jewish olive tree.64 Many translations ignore the agricultural metaphor. NRSV simply says "united with him." NEB offers instead "incorporate with Christ," emphasizing the collective conception of the two humanities in both Adam and Christ in Romans 5:12-21. Neither of these are wrong, but they 64 Sanday, Romans, 157; C.H. Dodd offers the reading "grown into him by a death like his"(Romans, 85-89 ); J.B. Lightfoot suggests "connate with/' that is, integrally associated with "him in the likeness of his death"; he clarifies by offering a paraphrase, "if the likeness of his death has been coincident with our birth, has been a part of us from our birth" (Notes, 296, my emphasis). The Bultmannian existentialist Käsemann has difficulty accepting the classical meaning ("the standardized usage") of sumphutoi; he suggests that Paul created a private meaning for the term; it is of course "difficult" for the modern scholar to know what this private meaning might have been (Comm.Rom., 167). J. WOODROW MCCREE 156 fail to capture the full nuances of the term, particularly the radical extent of the union. Paul's metaphor implies that we have come to share in Christ's very being, that his nature is now ours as if innate in us by birth and as inseparable from us as a knot is from a piece of wood. If late twentieth century Protestant interpreters have shied away from such an implication, Valentinus apparently did not. The baptized Christian is one who is joined to Christ innately. Whereas Paul referred to baptism as something happening in the historical lives of believers, associated with conversion, Valentinus, reading Romans 6 though the lens of Paul's own predestinarían language and the theology of the pre-existent church found in Ephesians and Shepherd of Hermas, projected this innate fusion of identities back into eternity, to the timeless moment of election. Thus the union of the gnostic with Christ's death begins not at the moment of conversion in this life, but with Christ in the very beginning, when he purposed to condescend to this material universe to destroy death. Sharing Christ's death means, for Valentinus, descending with Christ into this world and living a life of self-control, ever consuming the earthly passions and thus reversing the processes of decay. For Valentinus, sumphutoi means that the elect is one nature with Christ by predestination. He claims that true Christians have eternally purposed with Christ to "consume death by using it up" (dapanésate) and "to exhaust it, or spend it completely" (analóséte). The term analóséte is ironic, for it is frequently associated with the natural processes of this world; here one spends, or uses up, the the passions that lead to death by means of an ascetic lifestyle. The influence of Hebrews 12:29 upon Valentinus is also likely for if it is true that "our God is a consumingfire,"so it must be that the elect who share Christ's nature and descend with him into this world also destroy death by consuming it. There is also perhaps a sense in Valentinus that the life of the elect is not fully real, not fully spiritual until it has become embodied and can then prove itself by demonstrating mastery.65 This is perhaps why Valentinus tells us in Fragment 3 that Jesus exercized such great self-control that he "wrought divinity" even within his own digestive tract. Thus Valentinus sees every eternally alive spirit as descending with Christ to conquer matter, and returning to heaven as Lords of all on the basis of the fact that they took the very form of death unto themselves (Phil.2:6-12). Jesus' story is quite literally the story of all the elect. The world was created so that the eternally elect heavenly 65 Lord. One cannot exercise Lordship unless there is something over which one can be VALENTINUS 157 church might demonstrate its godliness by overcoming temptation, thus becoming "Lords of all Creation." Furthermore, we should not underestimate the impact made upon Valentinus by Paul's claim in Romans 6:6 that "the old humanity has been crucified, so that the body of sin might be abolished." Sin resides in, and is characterized by, the body. If the body and death are to be nullified, then a rigorous asceticism is called for. Such seems to be the life that Valentinus advocated. In the end, we see that Paul's metaphor of being "joined with Christ innately" (sumphutoi) or rather, "having grown together in an inseparable union of natures" provided Valentinus with a basis for believing that the true Christian was of one nature with Christ through election. This agricultural metaphor of ingrafted growth is far more radical in implication than Paul's image of "putting on Christ" as one would put on a clean baptismal garment (Romans 13:14). Paul's use of sumphutoi points more toward a radical mystical union and it was Valentinus who developed the potential of this metaphor of union to a fuller extent than the orthodox leaders of his time. If Clement's claim that Valentinus taught a salvation by nature was not completely accurate, neither was it without foundation. Valentinus developed an aspect of Paul's thought which others did not. Indeed, the Gospels of Matthew and John, the Epistles to the Romans and Ephesians and the anonymous Epistle to the Hebrews seem to have carried particular weight with him, as did the Psalms. In only one of his known fragments, however, does he offer a theology which explicitly fails to express a theology of grace; in all other fragments, a theology of grace is implicit or, at least, the unique revelation of God in Christ is made explicit. When Valentinus described the true Christian from the standpoint of her origin in the eternal being of God, he spoke in a way that the emerging orthodox could not accept. When he spoke from the standpoint of the gnostic's vulnerability in this world and her need of deliverance from on high, he exhibited both a trust in God's grace as manifested in Christ, and a faith that the glory of the divine Name and providence could shine in this world in spite of the filth and stench that disgusted him so. Select Bibliography Aland, Barbara. "Envählungstheologie und Menschenklassenlehre: Die Theologie des Herakleon als Schlüssel zu Verständnis der christlichen Gnosis?" in Gnosis and Gnosticism. Papers read at the Seventh 158 J. 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International Critical Commentary. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1898. Thomassen, Einar. "Gnostic Semiotics: The Valentinian Notion of the Name." Témenos 29 (1993) 141-156. Williams, Michael A. Rethinking Gnosticism: An Argument for Dismantling a Dubious Category. Princeton: University Press, 1996. Volker, Walther. Quellen zur Geschichte Der Christlichen Gnosis. Tübingen: J. C.B. Mohr, 1932. ^ s Copyright and Use: As an ATLAS user, you may print, download, or send articles for individual use according to fair use as defined by U.S. and international copyright law and as otherwise authorized under your respective ATLAS subscriber agreement. No content may be copied or emailed to multiple sites or publicly posted without the copyright holder(s)' express written permission. Any use, decompiling, reproduction, or distribution of this journal in excess of fair use provisions may be a violation of copyright law. 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