<title>ORTHODOXY AND HERESY IN EARLIEST CHRISTIANITY</> 

by <au>Walter Bauer</> 
[German original, copyright J.C.B.Mohr, Tu%bingen, 1934]
 
Second German Edition 
ed and supplemented by <ed>Georg Strecker</>
[Copyright J.C.B.Mohr, Tu%bingen, 1964] 

English Translation 
ed and supplemented by <ed>Robert A. Kraft</> 
and <ed>Gerhard Kroedel</> 
with a team from the 
Philadelphia Seminar on Christian Origins
[Copyright Fortress Press, Philadelphia, 1971] 

Updated Electronic English Edition
by <ed>Robert A. Kraft</>
[Copyright Robert A. Kraft, 09 April 1993]

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-----

[[77]] [81] [ch 4] 
<chapter>Asia Minor Prior to Ignatius</>
 
@ In the preceding chapter (p. 69), we found it to be probable 
that at the time of Ignatius, the majority of the faithful in the 
churches of Asia Minor at Ephesus, Magnesia, Tralles, and 
Philadelphia held to a form of Christianity that allowed Ignatius 
to consider them to be his special allies. But at the same time, 
we advised against hastily extending this judgment to cover the 
whole of Asia Minor, or even of only its western part. The 
surviving clues concerning Antioch, Philippi, and Polycarp's 
Smyrna should at least urge us to be cautious, if not frighten us 
away from such a generalization. It seems to me that this warning 
is reinforced and provided with even greater justification by the 
following considerations. 

@ Approximately two decades prior to Ignatius another Christian 
had written to communities in Asia Minor -- John, the apocalyptic 
seer (Rev. 1-3). It would not be easy to uncover significant 
common features that would permit us to group these two authors 
together as representatives of the same sort of Christian 
religious position. What distinguishes them from one another is, 
above all, the difference that separates a Syrian gentile 
Christian from a Palestinian, or at any rate an unmistakably 
Jewish Christian (cf. 84-87). Moreover, in this early period 
"orthodoxy" is just as much a sort of collective concept as is 
"heresy," and can clothe itself in quite different forms 
according to the circumstances. There is also roorn for doubt as 
to whether the apocalypticist, with his extremely confused 
religious outlook that peculiarly mixes Jewish, Christian, and 
mythological elements and ends [[78]] in chiliasm, can be 
regarded in any sense as an intellectual and spiritual leader of 
an important band of Christians in western Asia Minor. To what 
extent was he really an influential figure in the region to which 
he addresses himself? [82] To what extent might this have been 
only wishful thinking? Did anything else meet with general 
approval, other than his stormy outburst, seething with hate, 
against the pagan empire, which perhaps found acceptance in those 
circles directly affected by the persecution? Unqualified 
confidence that his recipients would follow his lead is not 
exactly the impression left by the apocalyptic letters, at least 
when taken as a whole! 
 
@ But a real connection between John and Ignatius does appear in 
the fact that John's letters find him in opposition to a false 
teaching of an umistakably gnostic brand\1/ -- a heresy which 
pursues its path within the churches themselves, and not 
alongside them.\2/ There is no need here to enter into the lively 
controversy, connected especially with Ramsay's notions,\3/ as to 
the reasons that prompted John to select precisely these seven 
cities. That the number is significant for Revelation, with its 
propensity for sevenfold divisions, requires no proof. The 
<ts>Muratorian Canon</> already recognized this and thought that 
a kind of "catholic" appearance had been achieved thereby (lines 
48-59). But why did John select precisely these communities from 
the Christianity round about him? What, for example, gave 
Laodicea precedence over Colossae and Hierapolis? In view of our 
earlier explanations, I think that I am entitled to suppose that 
John selected the most prominent communities from those in his 
area which met the prerequisite of seeming to afford him the 
possibility of exerting a real influence. Subsequently, Ignatius 
apparently followed a similar procedure and in turn made a 
selection from among those seven communities. The necessity of 
retaining the number seven resulted less in pressuring the 
apocalypticist to exclude communities in great number, as in 
compelling him to include one church or another which only to a 
very limited degree belonged to the sphere of his influence. 

-----
\1/ Theophilus, a later successor to Ignatius as a leader of 
Antiochian orthodoxy, used the Apocalypse in his struggle against 
the gnostic, Hermogenes (EH 4.24). 

\2/ Knopf, <tm>Zeitalter</>, pp. 291 f. 

\3/ W. M. Ramsay, <tm>The Letters to the Seven Churches of 
Asia</> (London, 1904), pp. 171 ff. 

=====

@ Of the seven communities of Asia Minor mentioned in Revelation, 
Ignatius addresses only three -- Ephesus, Smyrna, and 
Philadelphia; [[79]] [83] he does not address those of Pergamum, 
Thyatira, Sardis, and Laodicea. Can it be a coincidence that the 
churches of Smyrna and Philadelphia, to which Ignatius turns, are 
precisely those which fare best in the Apocalypse, appear also to 
be especially free of heresy,\4/ and later produce the martyrs of 
the catholic church during the persecution connected with 
Polycarp (<ts>Martyrdom of Polycarp</> 19.1-2)? Is it by chance 
that the communities of Pergamum, Thyatira,\5/ Sardis, and 
Laodicea\6/ are missing from Ignatius' audience -- communities 
that the seer vehemently rebukes, in which Balaamites and 
Nicolaitans (2.14 f.), the prophetess Jezebel and those who know 
"the deep things of Satan" (2.20, 24) live undisturbed and are 
allowed to mislead the servants of the Son of God (2.20), or 
which from the viewpoint of the author are utterly indifferent 
and lukewarm (3.15 ff.)? On his final journey, Ignatius passed 
through Laodicea and Sardis as well as Philadelphia and Smyrna, 
and yet neither of the former names is even mentioned by him, 
much less are the communities of the respective cities addressed 
in a letter. In Sardis, however, there were also a few who had 
not soiled their garments, according to Revelation 3.4. Similarly 
in Thyatira, which for the travelling Ignatius was no more 
difficult to reach nor more remote than Ephesus, Magnesia, and 
Tralles (which likewise had not seen him within their walls), 
already in the view of John (Rev. 2.24) the heretics are opposed 
by "the rest" (<gk>hoi loipoi</>) in such a way that the latter 
also is branded as a minority. 

@ Is it too much to claim if, on the basis of what Ignatius both 
says and does not say, and considering the evidence of the 
Apocalypse, one concludes that in his attempt to stretch the 
circle of his influcnce as widely as possible for the sake of his 
constituency there was nothing Ignatius could hope for from the 
Christian groups represented at Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis, and 
Laodicea, because no points of contact existed for him there -- 
no "bishop" was present whom he [[80]] could press into service, 
because the heretics had maintained, or had come to exercise, 
leadership there? Even Smyrna no longer left Ignatius [84] with 
the same favorable impression as it had the apocalypticist (see 
above, 69). It is unfortunate that no gnostic revelation is 
extant in answer to the seer, that no heretical community leader 
describes the conditions in Asia Minor from his point of view! In 
light of the early and abundant literary activity of the heretics 
in diverse regions, I do not doubt for a moment that those 
concerned would neither meekly swallow the attacks of a John or 
of Ignatius and Polycarp, nor limit themselves to oral defense. 
Surely they sent out letters and written works of various sorts. 
But unfortunately the tradition has been prejudiced against them, 
and their literary protests have perished just like the heretical 
gospels of Egypt and Antioch, to which reference already has been 
made (see 50-53, 66 f.). 

-----
\4/ Cf. Knopf, <tm>Zeitalter</>, p. 290. 

\5/ A few decades after Ignatius, Thyatira was completely lost to 
Montanism (Epiphanius <ts>Her</>. 51.33). Cf. Zahn, 
<tm>Forschungen</>, 5 (1893): 35 f. 

\6/ Cf. the Christian <ts>Sibylline Oracle</> 7.22 f.: 
  @@ Woe Laodicea, you who not once did see God, 
  @@ You will deceive yourself, insolent one! 
  @@ The surge of the Lycus will wash you away. 
[For other ETs, see R. McL. Wilson in Hennecke-Schneemelcher, 2: 
721; also M. S. Terry, <tm>The Sibylline Oracles</>\2(New York: 
Eaton and Mains, 1899), p. 150.] 
 
=====

@ One further point should not be overlooked in this connection. 
While the community of Laodicea to which Paul once had written 
(Col. 4.16) makes a very unfavorable impression on the 
apocalypticist but still can serve to round out the number seven, 
two other churches from the immediate vicinity, well known to the 
Apostle to the Gentiles, are completely neglected. The community 
of Hierapolis (Col. 4.13) and that of Colossae are bypassed in 
icy silence by both John and Ignatius.\7/ The latter went right 
through Hierapolis, and as for Colossae, if he did not also go 
through it, he at least passed very close by. Furthermore, a 
figure like that of Papias prevents us from even toying with the 
idea that there might not have been Christians at least in 
Hierapolis at the time of Revelation and of Ignatius. Indeed, 
Paul already had testified of his friend Epaphras, that he had 
labored much with the people of Colossae, Laodicea, and 
Hierapolis (Col. 4.13). 

-----
\7/ Geographical considerations providc no satisfactory 
explanation. Whoever treats Laodicea as part of Asia (Rev. 1.4) 
cannot consider Hierapolis and Colossae as Phrygian, and thus 
exclude them. 

=====

@ In Asia Minor, Ignatius appears in approximately the same small 
region as does the apocalypticist. This fact, and the way in 
which they both conduct themselves, furthers our insight into the 
extent of orthodoxy's authority at the end of the first and the 
beginning of the second century. We might learn even more from 
Ignatius if we [85] were informed in greater detail about the 
route of his journey. Unfortunately, however, we do not know for 
sure whether he covered [[81]] the whole distance from Antioch to 
Smyrna by the land route, or whether, as has been conjectured and 
is surely possible, he made use of a ship as far as, say, 
Attalia.\8/ If he had not done the latter,\9/ then the yawning 
gap between Antioch in the east and Philadelphia in the west in 
which Ignatius left behind no traces\10/ would surprise us even 
more than his bypassing of Hierapolis, Laodicea, and Colossae. 
For in that case a district is completely omitted in which 
numerous Christian communities already must have existed prior to 
Ignatius. Paul traveled through Lycaonia and Pisidia during his 
first missionary journey, and later he revisited the communities 
founded at that time. Why is it that these regions also, like the 
Phrygian area reached by Paul, are so completely thrust aside, 
while Ignatius' concern and his attempt to exercise influence are 
first aroused as he draws near to the west coast? 

----- 
\8/ On this problem, cf. Eusebius EH 3.36.3-6, who in any event 
attests that Ignatius used a land route through Asia. 

\9/ The land route is supported particularly by T. Zahn, among 
the older commentators -- see his <tm>Ignatius von Antioch</> 
(Gotha, 1873), pp. 250-295 and especially 264 f. Cf. also J. B. 
Lightfoot, <tm>Apostolic Fathers</>\2, 2 (<tm>S. Ignatius, S. 
Polycarp</>).l (London: Macmillan, 1889); 33 ff. [and W. M. 
Ramsay, <tm>The Church in the Roman Empire</> (London, 1893), p. 
318], 

\10/ Philo, the "deacon from Cilicia" (<ts>Philad</>. 11.1; cf. 
<ts>Smyr</>. 10.1), can scarcely be viewed as evidence for the 
land route, any more than can the "nearby (<gk>eggista</>) 
churches" (<ts>Philad</>. 10.2). 

=====

@ Does it not provide further food for thought, that we miss here 
a reference to the very same sector in southern and eastern Asia 
Minor to which the opening words of 1 Peter fail to refer -- a 
fact that, in the latter instance, has repeatedly caused 
astonishment and occasioned all sorts of attempts at explanation? 
Thus, for example, writes H. Windisch: "He [i.e. 1 Peter] 
apparently wanted to include all the provinces of Asia Minor. 
That he did not mention Lycia, Pamphylia, and Cilicia is indeed 
surprising; nevertheless, Lycia may still have been without any 
important congregations, Pamphylia may have been included in 
Galatia, and Cilicia may have been excluded as belonging to 
Syria."\11/ I find this just as unpersuasive as the notion that 
the unnamed Phrygia is hidden away in the designation "Asia." No 
doubt that was true for the Roman administration. But the Romans 
also united Pontus with Bithynia,\12/ which are as clearly 
separated as possible in 1 Peter, where the one district is 
mentioned at the [[82]] start of the series, while the other, 
separated by three names, concludes it. The Christians who, in 
the year 177/78, composed the account of martyrdoms [86] that 
occurred in the churches of Vienna and Lyons still are able to 
distinguish accurately between Asia and Phrygia (EH 5.1.3, 5.3.4; 
cf. 5.14); and from the very beginning the Montanists\13/ are 
called Phrygians or Kataphrygians, which shows that even for a 
long time after 1 Peter, Phrygia has by no means been absorbed 
into Asia from the Christian perspective.\14/ I should therefore 
prefer to explain the blank spot on the map of Asia Minor in 1 
Peter by believing that there simply was nothing to be gained for 
"ecclesiastically" oriented Christianity in that area at that 
time. In southeastern Asia Minor, from the borders of Syria 
westward to Phrygia, "ecclesiastical" intervention was not 
tolerated at the end of the first century, and even Rome realized 
the futility of such an attempt -- the same Rome which at about 
the same time acted in a quite different manner with respect to 
Corinth (see below, chap. 5). 

-----
\11/ <tm>Die katholischen Briefe</>\2, HbNT 15 (1930): 51. 

\12/ J. Weiss, RPTK\3 10 (1901): 536.29 f. 

\13/ N. Bonwetsch, RPTK\3 13 (1903): 420.25 ff. Achelis, 
<tm>Christentum</> 2, 45, 420.49. 

\14/ Cf. the references to "Phrygians" and "Asia" in the anti-
Montanist writing quoted in EH 5.16.9-10. 

=====

@ The estimation of the situation in southern and eastern Asia 
Minor as proposed above appears to me to receive further support 
through an examination of the earliest history of that church 
which occupies the first place both for the apocalypticist and 
for Ignatius, and receives excellent treatment from both. Even 
<em>Ephesus</> cannot be considered as a center of orthodoxy, but 
is rather a particularly instructive example of how the life of 
an ancient Christian community, even one of apostolic origin, 
could erode when caught in the turbulent crosscurrents of 
orthodoxy and heresy. Paul had laid the foundation in Ephesus and 
built up a church through several years of labor. If Romans 16 
represents a letter to the Ephesians, then, on the basis of 
verses 17-20, we must conclude that already during the lifetime 
of the apostle, certain people had appeared there whose teaching 
caused offense and threatened divisions in the community. To this 
would correspond the complaint in 1 Corinthians 16.9, concerning 
"many adversaries" in Ephesus, if it refers to those who had been 
baptized. In any event, the book of Acts has Paul warning the 
Ephesian elders (<gk>presbyteroi</>) in his farewell to them at 
Miletus that <em>from their own midst</> there will arise men 
speaking perverse things [[83]] to draw away the Christians for 
themselves (20.30). This prediction actually describes the 
situation in Ephesus at the time of the composition of Acts. 

@ Ignatius also knows of difficulties in Ephesus. But the picture 
that [87] he sketches for us obviously is already rather blurred. 
In clear contrast to the earlier book of Acts, Ignatius praises 
the Ephesians for having stopped their ears against the strange 
teachers who had stealthily slipped into their midst <em>from 
elsewhere</> (<ts>Eph</>. 9.1). And although the book of Acts 
presupposes that a presbyterate consisting of several members was 
leading the church of Ephesus, Ignatius, faithful to his 
interests, treats the monarchial episcopate as a deeply-rooted 
institution also in this city (see 1.3, 2.1, 6.2 -- Bishop 
Onesimus). 

@ To what extent Ignatius was still conscious of the fact that 
Paul was the actual father of the community cannot be determined. 
To be sure, he calls the Ephesians "fellow initiates with Paul" 
(<gk>Paulou symmystai</>, <ts>Eph</>. 12.2). But not only can the 
<em>one</> Apostle become "the apostles" with whom the Ephesians 
"always agree in the power of Jesus Christ" (11.2), but the 
expression in 12.2 is in no way based upon Paul's apostolic 
activity but rather on the fact that the road to martyrdom, which 
Paul also traveled, leads past this city, and thus on the claim 
that the Apostle mentions the Ephesians in every letter (12.2). 
Nevertheless, Ignatius knows 1 Corinthians (see below, chap. 9) 
and he could have learned from it that Paul actually had labored 
in Ephesus. 

@ While this last point must remain open, we find as we turn to 
the Apocalypse that in this book the recollection of the Pauline 
establishment of the church of Ephesus appears to have been 
completely lost, or perhaps even deliberately suppressed. At most 
one finds a faint recollection that at an earlier time this 
community had been better off, in the statement about having 
"abandoned the love you had formerly" (Rev. 2.4). But now it is 
in danger of slipping into gnosticism; now it must strive against 
the false apostles and the Nicolaitans (2.2, 6). The threatening 
words of the Son of Man (2.5) surely do not sound as if the 
struggle were easy and the victory certain! And as far as Paul is 
concerned, in the Apocalypse only the names of the twelve 
apostles are found on the foundations of the new Jerusalem 
(21.14); there is no room for Paul. And at the very least, it 
will be but a short time before the Apostle to the Gentiles will 
[[84]] have been totally displaced in the consciousness of the 
church of Ephesus in favor of one of the twelve apostles, John. 
[88] In Ephesus, Paul had turned out to be too weak to drive the 
enemies of the church from the battlefield. 

@ The Apocalypse does not leave us with a particularly impressive 
idea of what sought to replace the Pauline gospel in the 
"ecclesiastically oriented" circles at Ephesus. Aside from 
Revelation's being a book of comfort and faith for threatened and 
persecuted Christians, features which are the result of the 
difficult contemporary situation and which thus to some degree 
transcend party lines, there remains for the most part a Jewish 
Christianity, presumably of Palestinian origin.\15/ This was 
undoubtedly better suited for the anti-gnostic struggle than was 
the Pauline proclamation, but in other respects it is hardly 
comparable. 

-----
\15/ If the apocalypticist is to be identified with the 
"presbyter John, a disciple (<gk>maqhths</>) of the Lord" 
mentioned by Papias (in Eusebius EH 3.39.4). 

=====

@ The pastoral Epistles (see below, chap. 9) are chronologically 
most recent, compared with Acts, Ignatius, and the Apocalypse. 
For the earliest history of Christianity in Ephesus they yield 
hardly anything that originated in actual recollection of the 
apostolic age. To the same extent that we are unwilling to 
concede that the epistle to Titus conveys actual knowledge about 
the relationship of Paul to Christianity in Crete (see above, 
76), neither do we grant that 1-2 Timothy give us insight into 
the relations between the Apostle to the Gentiles and Ephesus. 
What they report to us concerning the apostolic period, namely 
that Paul himself already left one of his helpers there in order 
to check the danger of heresy which was already in full bloom (1 
Tim. 1.3 ff.) is not correct, and is refuted by the future tense 
in Acts 20.30. This merely reveals to us the desire of orthodoxy 
to know that the Apostle to the Gentiles, whose activity in 
Ephesus is related by 1 Corinthians as well as Acts (which may 
also have provided the basis for the relationship between Paul 
and Crete), also stood on their side in the struggle against 
heresy. The Paul of the pastoral Epistles fights in union with 
"the church" <em>against</> the heretics. Nevertheless, history 
categorically prohibits ascribing victory to him on the Ephesian 
front, from which he and his influence fade rapidly in the second 
century. Even the Pastorals, in agreement with Revelation, have 
to admit that in the second century, the Apostle [89] had [[85]] 
lost the contest in Ephesus. While 2 Timothy 1.18 heaps praise on 
Onesiphorus for special services performed at Ephesus, it is at 
the same time admitted that his labors had not borne fruit. All 
the brethren in Asia, laments the same passage (1.15), have 
turned their backs on Paul. And Onesiphorus himself has vacated 
this futile battlefield in order to visit the Apostle in Rome 
(1.17). If we inquire into the history of heresy in Ephesus as to 
whence this difficulty may have arisen, we encounter, without 
supposing thereby to have found a complete explanation, the 
person of Cerinthus,\16/ whom we can introduce at this point with 
all the more justification since not only his gnostic teaching in 
general, but also his specific enmity toward Paul and his letters 
are clearly attested.\17/ 

-----
\16/ See Polycarp's story about John and Cerinthus at the 
bathhouse in Ephesus (Irenaeus AH 3.3.4 = EH 4.14.6). Cf. Knopf, 
<tm>Zeitalter</>, pp. 328-330. 

\17/ See Filaster <ts>Her</>. 36 and Epiphanius <ts>Her</>. 
28.5.3, which probably reflect the lost <ts>Syntagma</> of 
Hippolytus [Hilgenfeld, <tm>Ketzergeschichte</>, pp. 411 ff.; see 
also below, 280-282]. 

=====

@ I can understand this state of affairs, which I have sketched 
in bold strokes, only by supposing that in Ephesus a community of 
apostolic origin has, through its struggles with external 
enemies\18/ and above all through internal discord and 
controversies (see above, 82-84), suffered such setbacks and 
transformations that for many, even the name of its founder 
became lost. Orthodox Christianity underwent reorganization and 
now found an apostolic patron in that member of the twelve who 
shared his name with the apocalypticist and who established close 
connection with Jesus more securely than had Paul, which was 
considered to be the highest trump in the struggle with heresy. 
Only the canonization of the book of Acts and of the Pauline 
letters, including the Pastorals, once again provided clear 
insight into the real situation with respect to Paul.\19/ 

-----
\18/ Even prior to the writing of the Apocalypse, Paul could 
speak of such problems -- 1 Cor. 15.31, 2 Cor. 1.8 ff.; perhaps 
also Rom. 16.3 f. 

\19/ See Irenaeus AH 3.3.4 (end), and the <ts>Acts of Paul</>, 

=====

@ I cannot agree with K. Holl and E. Schwartz in describing what 
took place in Ephesus in postapostolic times and resulted in the 
transfer of leadership from Paul to John [90] as a taking over of 
the province of Asia by the primitive (Palestinian) 
community.\20/ [[86]] Probably a better explanation for what 
seems to have happened may be found in the fact that in the wake 
of the devastating blow that at first threatened, and then 
actually struck Jerusalem and Palestine in the war with the 
Romans, but under the pressure of other influences, something 
occurred that was similar to what had already taken place after 
the persecution of Stephen. Just as at that time the primitive 
(Palestinian) community did not "take over" Antioch (Acts 11.19 
ff.), neither did it now bring under its dominion the province of 
Asia. Rather, now Jewish <em>Christians</>, who no longer felt 
safe and secure in the Holy Land and east of the Jordan, sought a 
new home in more distant territory. Philip the evangelist, who 
had already left Jerusalem at the occasion of the persecution of 
Stephen (Acts 8.1 ff.) and had come to live in the coastal city 
of Caesarea where we still find him around the year 60 (Acts 21.8 
f.), emigrated to Hierapolis together with his prophesying 
daughters.\21/ John the "elder," the disciple of the Lord (above, 
84 n.15), probably also exchanged Jerusalem for Ephesus. 

-----
\20/ K. Holl, <tm>Gesammelte Aufsa%tze zur Kirchengeschichte, 2: 
Der Osten</> (Tu%bingen: Mohr, 1928; repr. Darmstadt, 1964), p. 
66; E. Schwartz, ZNW 31 (1932): 191. Cf. also Lietzmann, 
<tm>History</>, 1: 189 f. 

\21/ See Polycrates of Ephesus in EH 3.31.3 = 5.24:2; also Papias 
in EH 3.39.9. 

=====

@ On the other hand, I cannot pass over in silence the fact that, 
as far as we can tell, no such migration took place either to 
Egypt or to Syria and the adjacent southeastern portion of Asia 
Minor.\22/Perhaps Christianity did not yet exist in Egypt at that 
time. And we may presume that in the other regions just mentioned 
things had become a bit too hot for a Jewish Christian version of 
the new religion. Here gnosticism predominated, with its 
explicitly anti-Jewish attitude. Even in not overtly gnostic 
circles of Christianity located closer to Palestine, there was 
little sympathy for Jews and their associates, as seems to me to 
be clear from the Gospel of John and the letters of Ignatius (see 
below, 88), not to mention writings which are later in time and 
cannot be localized with certainty. 

-----
\22/ I am quite aware of how scanty the material on this matter 
is, and I do not want to make any fuss about it if this idea does 
not fit naturally into what to me is becoming an increasingly 
clearer picture. 

=====

@ In the western part of Asia Minor, the conditions apparently 
were more favorable. Here the Jewish Christian element, which 
from the very beginning was no more absent than it was in Corinth 
(see below, 99 f.), gained [91] impetus through the immigration 
of outstanding members of Palestinian Christianity, of whom John 
and Philip are [[87]] examples; an impetus that must have been 
all the more effective since, at the very latest, the catastrophe 
in Palestine forever erased the demand that the gentile 
Christians of the diaspora should be circumcised and should to 
some extent observe the ceremonial law. Thus the fence of the law 
had been pulled down and fellowship between Jewish and gentile 
Christians in the outside world became really possible. The line 
of demarcation henceforth no longer runs between Jewish and 
gentile Christianity, but rather, between orthodoxy and heresy. 
And in Ephesus we find the former embodied in the alliance 
between a type of Jewish Christianity which has no commitment to 
the ceremonial law and gentile Christians of similar orientation. 
Here orthodoxy and heresy struggle over the Pauline heritage, and 
in the process something is lost; certainly it is not the entire 
Pauline inheritance, but something that once existed -- the 
consciousness of him to whom they were indebted. 

@ The Jewish Christianity that had outgrown its legalistic 
narrowness and the "church" found themselves, where they existed, 
to be united against gnosticism with respect to their high esteem 
for the Old Testament and their mutual preference for a concrete 
(historical) interpretation of religious situations and events, 
especially as they relate to the life of Jesus and the age to 
come. The heresy fighter, Justin, a gentile by birth, who 
received the decisive stimuli for his conversion in the city of 
John and later lived there for some years as a Christian,\23/ 
based his Christian faith upon the Old Testament, the synoptic 
gospels, and the book of Revelation (utilizing also certain 
suggestions from the hellenistic world of ideas).\24/ And Papias, 
who lived in the city where Philip settled and who also struggled 
against heretics, wants to ground himself primarily on the 
apostolic tradition concerning the life of Jesus; along with it, 
he taught an eschatology that is also dependent on the 
Apocalypse, the coarseness of which certainly would not have been 
judged more leniently by the gnostics than it was by 
Eusebius!\25/ In exchange for having sacrificed the law for their 
orthodox gentile Christian brethren, Asian Jewish Christianity 
[92] received in turn the knowledge that henceforth [[88]] the 
"church" would be open without hesitation to the Jewish influence 
mediated by Christians, coming not only from the apocalyptic 
traditions, but also from the synagogue with its practices 
concerning worship, which led to the appropriation of the Jewish 
passover observance.\26/ 

-----
\23/ See Zahn, <tm>Forschungen</>, 6 (1900): 8, 192. 

\24/ Cf. EH 4.18 and the writings of Justin. 

\25/ EH 3.39.13, "a man of exceedingly small intelligence." For 
general information on Papias, see EH 3.39, based in part on 
Irenaeus AH 5.33.3f. 

\26/ Of course, this did not take place without difficulty. 
Melito of Sardis wrote a treatise concerning the Passover after 
the martyrdom of Sagaris, bishop of Laodicea (ca, 164/166; 
Neumann, <tm>Ro%mische Staat</>, p. 66), because a great 
discussion on this matter had arisen in the bereaved community 
(EH 4.26.3). [This is not the "Pascal Homily" of Melito that has 
come to light in several manuscipts and versions since 1940; see 
below, p. 315 n. 37.] Shortly thereafter, Apollinaris, bishop of 
Hierapolis in Phrygia, wrote a work on the same situation (cited 
in the "Easter Chronicle" or <ts>Chronicon paschale</>, pp. 13 
f., ed. L. Dindorf [Bonn, 1832]). 

=====

@ Even the observance of the sabbath by Christians appears to 
have found some favor in Asia.\27/ And the aversion of Ignatius, 
in Magnesia (8-11) and Philadelphia (5-9), toward a Jewish 
Christianity that apparently had abandoned its most offensive 
demands\28/ is less characteristic of ecclesiastically oriented 
circles in Asia than of that Syrian gentile Christian for whom 
the Old Testament itself meant very little, at least in practice. 
For him, all such things belong to the realm of the heretics. 
Thus the existence of gnosticism side by side with Jewish 
Christianity in Ignatius' picture of the heretics he opposed in 
those two cities is, in my opinion, due less to the complicated 
nature of the heresy there than to the complex personality of 
Ignatius, who as an ecclesiastical leader rejects gnosticism, and 
as a gentile Syrian Christian opposes the Jewish falsification of 
the gospel wherever he thinks he finds it. 

-----
\27/ Ignatius <ts>Magn</>. 9.1; cf. Bauer, <tm>Ignatius</>, ad 
loc. 


\28/ According to <ts>Philad</>. 6.1, it can even include the 
uncircumcised. 

=====

@ The fact that 1 Timothy also opposes a gnosticism containing 
Jewish features could be regarded as an indication that in 
Ephesus and Asia there actually existed a gnosticizing Jewish 
Christianity large and powerful enough to evoke opposition, so 
that one could not simply classify the Jewish Christianity of 
this region as being on the side of ecclesiastical orthodoxy 
without further examination. Thus Jewish Christianity would be 
divided, just as gentile Christianity was divided, into orthodox 
and heretical types. But since with reference to Crete also, the 
author of the Pastorals opposes the same admixture of Jewish 
Christianity and gnosticism, which is hardly natural and [[89]] 
certainly not frequent, it appears to me to be more convincing to 
understand the peculiar heresy combatted in the Pastorals from 
the perspective of the mentality of the pseudonymous letter 
writer -- as "Paul" [93] he must deal with the "teachers of the 
law" (1 Tim. 1.7) and the "circumcision party" (Titus 1.10), but 
as a second century churchman, he opposes gnosticism. 

@ At Paul's time those communities that he had established or 
which developed under his influence and which were situated 
either in Asia or in adjacent Phrygia were almost totally of a 
gentile Christian type. Evidence of this is the letter to the 
Colossians, in the case of Phrygia.\29/ Unfortunately, we do not 
possess a reliable witness from Paul himself that would reveal 
the conditions in Ephesus. But everything we know of other 
communities founded by Paul permits us to conclude that the 
congregations of Asia (1 Cor. 16.19) also were composed mainly of 
gentile Christians. Why do we find that in postapostolic times, 
in the period of the formation of the ecclesiastical structure, 
the Jewish Christians in these regions come into prominence as 
described above? It would seem to me that the easiest explanation 
for this is found in the assumption already suggested by the 
Apocalypse and by Ignatius, that a large segment of the gentile 
Christians became less and less suited for "ecclesiastical" 
fellowship, so that in the developing church the emphasis would 
automatically shift sharply in favor of the Jewish Christian 
element. We will now briefly survey those New Testament writings 
of the postapostolic age which, in addition to the Apocalypse, 
are engaged in the struggle with heretics, even though we cannot 
claim their origin in Asia Minor with certainty. The <ts>epistle 
of Jude</>, the polemic of which is taken up in 2 Peter, shows us 
that the heretical gnostic teachers and their followers have not 
yet withdrawn from the orthodox group, but still participate in 
the common love feasts (Jude 12). Their influence is important 
and therefore the tone of their orthodox opponent is quite 
vehement. He makes the concession to the Christian group that he 
addresses that the deception has been brought into the community 
from the outside (Jude 4). Yet when we recall that, contrary to 
Acts 20.30 (above, 82 f.), Ignatius made the same concession to 
the Ephesian church, it is difficult to suppress the suspicion 
that in Jude also the reference merely represents a device of the 
[[90]] letter writer, or better, an attempt to prove the absolute 
correctness of his own group. The faith for which his fellow 
believers must fight [94] has been delivered once and for all to 
the saints (Jude 3); therefore that which troubles the faith must 
come "from without." For the church members addressed in Jude, 
such a view may bring some consolation, but it does not satisfy 
the historian. Rather, he sees a problem in the convenient 
expression "they secretly sneaked in," and asks the question 
"whence did they come?" Then, if he wants to attribute 
credibility to the letter of Jude for the congregations to which 
it first came, the historian must assume that the heresy had its 
home somewhere else in Christendom, and that it successfully 
sallied forth from there in conquest. 

-----
\29/ Ju%licher(-Fascher), <tm>Einleitung</>\7, p. 129. 

=====

@ The <ts>pastoral Epistles</> have already been of assistance in 
our invesgitation and description of the earliest history of the 
church of Crete (above, 75 f.) and of Ephesus (above, 84 f.). 
Thus I can bypass them here without examining them anew from 
different perspectives. With regard to the Pastorals and the 
other primitive Christian writings under discussion here, I am 
not interested in renewing the oft-repeated attempt of describing 
the false teachings that are presupposed, interpreting exactly 
their meaning, testing their uniformity, and connecting them with 
names from the history of heresy -- or else denying such a 
relationship. All this may be presupposed as already known (see 
above, xxv). For us, it suffices to observe that the Pastorals 
also deal with a situation in which there existed the antithesis 
between ecclesiastically oriented faith of some sort and a many 
headed heresy (Titus 1.10, <gk>polloi</>) in one form or another. 
But when we speak of orthodoxy and heresy in this way, we must 
once more guard ourselves against simply equating these words 
with the notions of majority and minority, of original form and 
deviation (see above, xxii f.). The confession of Jesus as Lord 
and heavenly redeemer is a common foundation for both tendencies, 
and for a long time sufficed to hold the differently oriented 
spirits together in <em>one</> fellowship. 

@ When it is reported -- and that by a non-Christian gentile\30/ 
-- that a Christian group like the one in Bithynia sang hymns to 
Christ as God, pledged itself to live a holy life, and observed 
cultic meals, it [[91]] is by no means clear from such a 
description whether it refers to heretics or whether it was a 
mixed community of heretics and ecclesiastically oriented 
Christians, or finally, whether orthodox belief predominated 
there. All too [95] quickly, in my opinion, the final option is 
accepted as self-evident.\31/ But Marcion of Sinope in Pontus\32/ 
proves that at least very soon after Pliny's term of office, 
heresy was present in that region and the ground must have been 
somewhat suitable for the spread of heresy. Already in his 
homeland, Marcion had achieved a special status, and when he left 
he received letters of recommendation from his followers and 
friends in Pontus.\33/ A couple of decades later, Dionysius of 
Corinth wrote to Nicomedia against Marcion (EH 4.23.4) and in 
another letter to the church of Amastris in Pontus, he advised 
them not to make the readmission of penitent heretics too 
difficult (EH 4.23.6). There were, moreover, more martyrs from 
among the Marcionites,\34/ the Montanists,\35/ and other 
heretical groups than orthodoxy would like to admit, and the 
church took great pains to divest this fact of its significance 
and seductive splendor.\36/ Even from this point of view, we have 
no reason to conclude that Pliny was opposing a Christianity of 
an indubitably ecclesiastical orientation. 

-----
\30/ Pliny the Younger <ts>Epistles</> 10.96.7 [ed. and ET by W. 
Melmoth, LCL 2 (1915). ET also in Stevenson, <tm>New 
Eusebius</>,pp. 13-15, and in similar source books]. 

\31/ E.g, by Harnack, <tm>Marcion</>\2, p. 23. 

\32/ Epiphanius <ts>Her</>. 42.1; cf. Justin <ts>Apol</>. 26.5 
and 58.1, Irenaeus AH 1.27.2 (= 25,1), Tertullian <ts>Against 
Marcion</> 1.1. 

\33/ This information is found in an ancient Latin prologue to 
the Gospel of John: cf. Harnack, <tm>Evangelien-Prologe</> pp. 6, 
15 f. [= 325 and 334 f.]. Also his <tm>Marcion</>\2 pp. 24, 11* 
ff. 

\34/ See the material in Harnack, <tm>Marcion</>\2, pp. 150 (esp. 
n. 4), 154, n. 1, 315* f., 340*, 348*. 

\35/ See the treatment in K. J. Neumann, <tm>Ro%mische Staat</>, 
pp. 66-69. 

\36/ See especially the anonymous anti-Montanist from Asia Minor 
quoted in EH 5.16.20-22: even though there are a great number 
(<gk>pleistoi</>) of martyrs from the vaious sects, and 
particularly from Marcionites, we still do not admit that they 
possess the truth and confess Christ truly (21). 

=====

@ Just as Titus 1.10 f. laments about the many deceivers who are 
successful in winning whole families and household churches and 
therefore counsels to have as little as possible to do with them 
(3.10 f.), so also in the <ts>Johannine Epistles</> we find that 
there are many seducers (1 John 2.18, 2 John 7) and the danger is 
increasing at such an alarming rate that the antichrist himself 
appears to have taken shape in them (1 John 2.18). Boasting of 
their possession of the spirit, they deny the identity of the man 
Jesus with Christ, the Son of God (1 John 2.22; 4.2 f.; 5.1, 5, 6 
ff., 20). "This is the one form of docetism [[92]] that is 
attested and is conceivable only within gnostic [96] circles; 
apparently those in question have boasted that with their new and 
perfect knowledge (2.3 f.) of the true God (e.g. 5.20 f.), which 
excludes the idea of an incarnation of the divine, they 
themselves are the true bearers of the spirit (4.1-6, 
"pneumatics") and promise eternal life only to their followers 
(2.25-28)."\37/ 

-----
\37/ Ju%licher(-Fascher), <tm>Einleitung</>\7, p. 227. 

=====

@ How this particular form of gnosticism is related to that of 
Ignatius' opponents is open to question. But the author of 1 John 
resembles his ally against heresy (see above, 88) in that he also 
makes practically no use of the Old Testament, except for 
borrowing from it the figure of Cain as the monstrous prototype 
of the heretics (3.12). This attitude toward "scripture" is not 
really characteristic of the ecclesiastical approach of Asia, but 
would, in my judgment, fit better in the east, perhaps in Syria, 
where as I still hold to be extremely probable, the longer 
Johannine Epistle and the Gospel of John originated, around the 
time of Ignatius. 

@ But be that as it may, it is certain that the separation of the 
two parties has already taken place in the Christian situation to 
which the author of 1 John carefully addresses himself. We hear 
that it took place in such a way that the heretics left the 
community and made themselves independent so that they now viewed 
their orthodox fellow Christians with hellish, fratricidal 
hatred: "If they really had belonged to our group, they would 
have remained with us" (2.19). The author of 1 John celebrates 
this as a victory (4.4). But when in the very next verse we hear 
his strained admission that "the world" listens to the others, 
our confidence that here the "church" represents the majority and 
is actually setting the pace evaporates. And it is hardly a sign 
of strength when we read the anxious instruction in 2 John, which 
originated in similar conditions, that heretics should not be 
received into one's house, nor even be greeted (10 f.). Only by 
strictest separation from the heretics can salvation be expected; 
orthodoxy here appears to have been pushed completely onto the 
defensive, and to be severely restricted in its development. And 
perhaps we do more justice to the actual historical situation if 
we suppose that it was not the heretics who withdrew, but rather 
the orthodox who had retreated [97] in order to preserve what 
could be protected from entanglement with "the world." [[93]] 

@ Insofar as we can hardly ascribe 3 John to a different author 
from, at least, 2 John, we ought to interpret the former in terms 
of the same background, as an attempt of the "elder" to carry 
forward the offensive -- an offensive, however, that runs aground 
on the resistance of the heretical leader Diotrephes. The latter 
pays back the elder in kind\38/ and sees to it that the elder's 
emissaries find no reception in his group (10). To be sure, 3 
John does not contain an explicit warning against false teachers. 
Nevertheless, its close connection with 2 John is a sufficient 
indication of its thrust. And the assurance repeated no less than 
five times in this brief writing that the brethren who support 
the elder possess the "truth" -- that entity which in 2 John and 
also in 1 John distinguishes the orthodox believer from the 
heretic -- renders it very unlikely, to my way of thinking, that 
we are here dealing merely with personal frictions between the 
elder and Diotrephes. This situation would seem to be similar to 
that in Philippi, where the letter of Polycarp suggests the 
presence of a heretical community leader (above, 73 f.). 
Diotrephes holds the place of leadership (3 John 9) -- according 
to the elder's opinion he presumptuously assumed it, but his 
opinion cannot be decisive for us -- rejects the approaches of 
the elder, who feels himself unjustly suspected (10), and 
summarily excludes from the community those of his members who 
are sympathetic to the elder. Since 2 John shows the elder to be 
a determined opponent of a docetic interpretation of Christ, we 
need not spend time in searching for the real reasons that time 
and again prompt him to renew his efforts to maintain contact 
with the beloved Gaius through letters like 3 John, and with the 
church of Diotrephes through emissaries. 

-----
\38/ That is, corresponding to 2 John 10 f. [See further below, 
pp. 289, 308.] 

=====

@ Third John thus becomes especially valuable and instructive for 
us in that it represents the attempt of an ecclesiastical leader 
to gain influence in other communities in order to give 
assistance to likeminded persons within those communities, and if 
possible, to gain the upper hand. Polycarp of Smyrna had 
attempted the very same thing in Philippi, and Ignatius also 
tried it in Asia by encouraging those churches that were 
accessible to him to join in an effort in behalf of the orthodox 
[98] in his home city in Syria (above, chap. 3). Later, Dionysius 
of Corinth wrote his letters for the same purpose,\39/ and [[94]] 
the letters of recommendation for Marcion by the brethren in 
Pontus probably should not be regarded as being much different 
(see above, 91). Also the writer of the Apocalypse endeavored to 
influence a larger circle of communities in his vicinity to 
exhibit a clearly anti-heretical position. Contemporary with the 
Apocalypticist is <ts>1 Clement</>, and I am of the opinion that 
this famous letter of the Roman community to Corinth can only be 
understood correctly if it is considered in this sort of context, 
even though many particulars concerning <ts>1 Clement</> may 
remain obscure. 

-----
\39/ Cf. Harnack, <tm>Briefsammlung</> pp. 36-40. 

=====

@ With <ts>1 Clement</> we have reached Rome, and have thereby 
come to an arena which is to be of unique significance for 
reaching a decision in the struggle between orthodoxy and heresy. 
This is indicated already in that, while the above-mentioned 
attempts to reach beyond one's own community either were 
completely unsuccessful or had no noticeable success, Rome was 
able to achieve a great and lasting result. 

//end ch 4//