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Preface
Source: Asceticism and Anthropology in Irenaeus and Clement
This work explores the ways in which Irenaeus and Clement, the two earliest Christian writers with a substantial
body of extant work, reflected on the related topics of asceticism and anthropology, that is, how they understood
what it is to be human. Writing before monasticism became the dominant paradigm for Christian asceticism, these
two figures offer us fascinating glimpses of alternative approaches. Their reflections, however, are embedded within
writings concerned with larger theological issues, and can therefore only be comprehended fully from the theological
perspective of each corpus. It has thus been necessary to examine in detail the theological visions, different as they
are, of each author. While these studies can stand by themselves, they also substantiate a theological critique,
examined in the introduction and the conclusion, of those approaches to the asceticism of late antiquity which
overlook the theological perspective of the texts being used, treating them instead as raw, uninterpreted material for
their own concernsin the cases of M. Foucault and P. Brown, tracing the genealogy of the modern (sexual) subject.
The works of these two authors might appear to be far more sensitive and sympathetic than the vitriolic pages of
Gibbon and his epigones, and the characters which populate their pages more plausible than the emaciated fanatics
who haunted earlier studiesand indeed, their works do have much to offerbut unless the texts upon which these
histories are built are first examined as what they are, the resulting mirages will be no less our own projections.
Clearly this also entails that the analyses in the present study, which examine how two writers engaged in their own
polemics reflected upon the nature and place of human beings within Gods larger scheme, can be no more than
episodes in the history of thought. The works of these writers say little, if anything, about the actual lives of real
people in the second or third century. For this, other types of evidenceeconomic, legal, or artisticare needed, each
(p. viii ) requiring its own proper hermeneutic. But this is not a limitation; such reflections are capable of inspiring
real people and transforming history.
This work is a revised version of a thesis submitted to the University of Oxford in 1995. I would like to express my
gratitude to Bishop Kallistos of Diokleia for gently guiding my research and reading my work and for his constant
inspiration, and to all the others from whom I benefited so greatly while in Oxford, and to the British Academy for
making those years possible. I would also like to thank Bishop Rowan Williams and Andrew Louth, my examiners,
for their insightful suggestions about how the work might be revised, and the readers appointed by the editors of
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Oxford Early Christian Studies for their comments. I have been fortunate in being able to explore some of the
material contained here while teaching at St Vladimirs Orthodox Theological Seminary, New York; for this
opportunity, and for their comments, I thank both my colleagues and my students. Finally, the publication of this
work is the result of the diligent labours of the staff at Oxford University Press, to whom my thanks.
I would like to point out that, without wishing to minimize the problems involved, I have used the word man
throughout this work to refer to all human beings, male and female, and the human race considered generically.
John Behr
March 1999
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Abbreviations
Source: Asceticism and Anthropology in Irenaeus and Clement
primary sources
The following abbreviations are used in the course of this work. The numeration of the editions cited in the
Bibliography is followed, except where stated otherwise. For the works of Philo, I have used the abbreviations as
given after the title in the Bibliography.
AH
Irenaeus, Against the Heresies (in the numeration of Massuet)
Dem.
Irenaeus, Demonstration of the Apostolic Preaching
EH
Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History
Exc. Th.
Clement of Alexandria, Excerpta ex Theodoto
Paed.
Clement of Alexandria, Paedagogus
Prot.
Clement of Alexandria, Protrepticus
QDS
Clement of Alexandria, Quis Dives Salvetur
Strom.
Clement of Alexandria, Stromata
SVF
Stoicorum Veterum Fragmenta, ed. J. Von Arnim
journals and series
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ACW
Ancient Christian Writers
ANF
Ante-Nicene Fathers
BKV
Bibliothek der Kirchenvater
CSCO
Corpus Scriptorum Christianorum Orientalium
CSEL
Corpus Scriptorum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum
ECR
Eastern Churches Review
ETL
Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses
FC
Fathers of the Church
GCS
Die griechischen christlichen Schriftsteller der ersten drei Jahrhunderte
GOTR
Greek Orthodox Theological Review
Greg.
Gregorianum
HJ
Heythrop Journal
(p. xi ) HTR
Harvard Theological Review
JAAR
Journal of the American Academy of Religion
JBL
Journal of Biblical Literature
JECS
Journal of Early Christian Studies
JEH
Journal of Ecclesiastical History
JRS
Journal of Roman Studies
JTS
Journal of Theological Studies
LCL
Loeb Classical Library
LV
Lumire et Vie
NAWG
Nachrichten von der Akademie der Wissenschaften in Gttingen
NPNF
Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers
NRT
Nouvelle Revue Thologique
OCP
Orientalia Christiana Periodica
OECT
Oxford Early Christian Texts
PG
Patrologia Graeca
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PO
Patrologia Orientalis
PTS
Patristische Texte und Studien
RAM
Revue dAsctique et Mystique
RB
Revue Bndictine
REA
Revue des tudes Anciennes
REG
Revue des tudes Grecques
RSPhTh
Revue des Sciences Philosophiques et Thologiques
RSR
Recherches de Science Religieuse
SC
Sources Chrtiennes
SJT
Scottish Journal of Theology
SM
Studia Moralia
St. Patr.
Studia Patristica
SVTQ
Saint Vladimirs Theological Quarterly
TS
Theological Studies
TSK
Theologische Studien und Kritiken
TU
Texte und Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der altchristlichen Literatur
TZ
Theologische Zeitschrift
VC
Vigiliae Christianae
ZKG
Zeitschrift fr Kirchengeschichte
ZKT
Zeitschrift fr katholische Theologie
ZNTW
Zeitschrift fr die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft und die Kunde der Urchristentums
ZTK
Zeitschrift fr Theologie und Kirche
(p. xii )
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Introduction
Chapter: (p. 1 ) IntroductionAsceticism and Anthropology in Irenaeus and ClementJohn Behr
Source:
Author(s):
John Behr
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198270003.003.0001
Although the term asceticism tends to evoke images of emaciated fanatics populating long gone and far removed
deserts, a wide range of contemporary popular culture and scholarship exhibits an intense attraction to, and interest
in, asceticism; it is perhaps no surprise that a culture whose catchword is Just say no1 should have occasioned the
first multi-disciplinary conference devoted to this subject.2 The phenomenon of asceticism is indeed a subject of
perennial and universal interest. It brings into prominence fundamental questions concerning what, as human
beings, we think we are and, intrinsically related to this, questions pertaining to what is the appropriate way, or ways,
of realizing this in our lives.
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Within this broad phenomenon of asceticism, the history of Christian asceticism is of particular interest, if only
because it is a significant part, whether accepted or rejected, of the background of modern Western civilization. But,
to be able to speak in this way, of Christian asceticism, demands a prior consideration of the specificity of this
asceticism: is Christian asceticism, as some have alleged, a corruption of true Christianity, or is it intrinsic to
Christian existence, and if so, how does it differ from other forms of asceticism?
It has long been popularly supposed that the ideals of virginity, abstinence, and continence were unique to
Christianity, (p. 2 ) and stood in stark contrast to a sensual and licentious antiquity; or, alternatively, that
Christianity introduced a repressive sense of guilt and shame into an ancient world that otherwise had a more
healthy attitude towards sexuality.3 However, neither of these two representations accurately reflects the way that
early Christians and their pagan contemporaries themselves reflected on the distinctiveness which marked
Christians out as a third race, neither Jew nor Gentile but children of the one God. Justin Martyr, for instance,
writing in the middle of the second century, certainly knew of various practices of virginity and continence. One of
his anecdotes concerns a Christian youth who was so enthusiastic that he went to the governor of Alexandria to
request permission for the surgeons to castrate him (Justin, interestingly, shows no signs of disapproval for this
act).4 Justin also insists that sexual intercourse be engaged in only for the sake of procreation, and that one could
find many men and women in the Christian communities who had chosen to remain virgin.5 However, Justin never
supposed that such practices were the distinguishing features of Christian life. Similarly, Athenagoras, a little later,
describes procreation as the limit set for our lust, and states, as if it were an accepted commonplace, that virginity
and abstention from sexual intercourse bring us closer to God.6 But, as with Justin, in the (p. 3 ) context of an
apologetic text these assertions were intended to defend devout Christians from the charge that promiscuous
intercourse formed part of their mysteries, and to assimilate them to the cultivated ideals of the time. The clearest
text which demonstrates that Christians saw themselves as a third race, yet did not differ from the rest of the
population as regards the outward expression of their lives, is found in the Epistle to Diognetus:
For the distinction between Christians and other humans is neither in country nor language nor customs. For
they do not dwell in cities in some place of their own, nor do they use any strange variety of dialect, nor
practice () an extraordinary kind of life. Yet while living in Greek and barbarian cities, according as
each obtained their lot, and following the local customs, both in clothing and food and in the rest of life, they
show forth the wonderful and confessedly strange constitution of their own citizenship (
). (5. 14)
The specificity and distinctiveness of Christian existence, that which makes them a third race, is not to be found in
the outward forms and practices of their lives, but in the constitution of their citizenship.
Contemporary pagan evidence leads to the same conclusion. For example, in a commentary on Plato, preserved in
Arabic, Galen writes of Christians:
Just as now we see the people called Christians drawing their faith from parables [and miracles], and yet
sometimes acting in the same way [as those who philosophize]. For their contempt of death [and of its sequel]
is patent to us every day, and likewise their restraint in cohabitation. For they include not only men but also
women who refrain from cohabiting all through their lives; and they also number individuals who, in
self-discipline and self-control in matters of food and drink, and in their keen pursuit of justice, have attained
a pitch not inferior to that of genuine philosophers.7
Galen praises the Christians for possessing three important virtues: courage, temperance, and justice. Rather than
being (p. 4 ) struck by the practice of temperance displayed by the Christians in matters of food and sexual
relations, Galen takes it as a sign of their cultivation: by demonstrating these virtues, Christians are not inferior to
genuine philosophers.8 The supposed harmfulness of sexual activity was a problem that continually vexed ancient
doctors from the time of Hippocrates. Some, including Galen, suggested that, if practised under a strict regime,
sexual intercourse need not necessarily be harmful. Others, such as Soranus, argued that, despite the natural
necessity of procreation, permanent virginity is healthful in males and females alike as intercourse is harmful in
itself.9 More importantly, such thought did not develop in a vacuum. According to A. Rousselle, self-imposed
restraint in sexual relations and the desire for a life of continence had become such a common phenomenon in late
antique society that research was dedicated to the problems that such abstention might cause, whilst reassurance
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had to be given to those who were unable to abstain completely from sexual activity.10
The popular, hackneyed contrast between the pleasure-loving, licentious (or healthy) pagans and the virtuous, chaste
(or repressed) Christians does not stand up to close scrutiny. As Foucault comments, regarding different moralities:
one notices that they ultimately revolve around a rather small number of rather simple principles: perhaps
men are not much more inventive when it comes to interdictions than they are when it comes to pleasures.11
(p. 5 ) The similarities between the philosophical moralities of late antiquity, especially Stoicism, and early
Christian morality, at least in their external codification, are striking. However, simply to affirm a continuity between
the precepts and prohibitions of pagan and Christian morality is to miss the specificity of each. The debate
concerning the relationship of Epictetus to Christianity, for instance, has added little to our knowledge of either.12 To
achieve a fuller appreciation of their particular characteristics, it is necessary to analyse the internal dynamics at
work within each moralitythat is, their particular style of asceticism.13
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those intentional and voluntary actions by which men not only set themselves rules of conduct, but also seek
to transform themselves, to change themselves in their singular being, and to make their life into an uvre
that carries certain aesthetic values and meets certain stylistic criteria.24
So instead of a history of behaviours, or a history of their codification in moral systems, Foucaults intention was to
write a history of the technologies of the self, a history of the various ways in which individuals constitute
themselves as subjects of their experience. This would be a history of ethics or ascetics, in which the study of the
experience and problematization of sexuality in antiquity was but an initial chapter.
The formation of individuals as ethical subjects, according to Foucault, involves a fourfold process: (a) of delimiting
and defining that part of themselves and their experience which is to be the object of their moral practice, the ethical
substance; (b) of determining a relationship to the precept codifying or expressing such behaviour, the mode of
subjection; (c) thereby establishing a relationship to themselves; and (d) deciding upon a manner of being that is to
be the goal of the moral activity, the final uvre of the arts or technologies of the self. Whilst any number of forms
of subjectivity can be constructed through this process, there are basically only two directions which can be taken.
Either the relationship between our action (p. 9 ) and its codification is paramount, in which case the resulting
morality will be concerned primarily with the codification of behaviour, stipulating, for instance, what is permissible
or according to nature and what is not. In such a system the relationship between the subject and the codes will be
one of obedience, to a divine law, perhaps, or to a utilitarian principle. Alternatively, the greatest weight can be
asigned to the relationship with the self. This will result in an ethics or ascetics which is primarily concerned with
the practices of the self, the formation of the self as a work of art or through whatever other criterion one takes as
the standard or goal.
With regard to early Christianity specifically, it was Foucaults contention that despite the fairly constant character of
the problematization of sexual activity throughout history (similar themes and principles recurring in various
moralities, albeit with a difference of degree and emphasis), the ethical subject and the construction of human
sexuality in early Christianity were markedly different from those of earlier epochs in all four of the dimensions
involved in the formation of the ethical subject.
According to Foucault, in Classical Greece, (a) the ethical subject was elaborated by delimiting the aphrodisia, sexual
activity itself, as the substance of moral concern; (b) the style of subjectivity was developed through a concern for the
way in which these pleasures were used, rather than by codifying the legitimate forms of sexual activity; (c) this
demanded virile moderation, an agonistic form of self-mastery or enkrateia, in the use of pleasure; and (d) the goal
of this asceticism was sphrosyn, a freedom from the potential enslavement to the aphrodisia that one risked in
their use. This heautocratic structure of subjectivity, nevertheless, needed to buttress itself by advising austerity in
the domain of sexual activity. The Imperial epoch retained the same basic heautocratic structure, but increasingly
brought it under a preoccupation with the self, and by this attention strengthened and intensified the themes of
austerity. Foucault claims that both these technologies of the self were centred upon the acceptance of death: that
their reputations, the uvres which they made of their lives, would be the only memorial left for posterity, freed the
individuals for a care for the self based entirely upon the self.
(p. 10 ) According to Foucault, Christianity upset this balance by introducing the idea of a salvation beyond this life,
connected with a certain transformation of the self in this life.25 Foucault suggests that the specificity of the
Christian technology of the self and its style of subjectivity are characterized, quite differently, by (a) the
stigmatization of the ethical substance, desires, rather than the aphrodisia, as evil in themselves rather than in their
effects; (b) a mode of subjection which took the form of obedience towards divine precepts and the confessor; (c) a
relationship to oneself elaborated in terms of a hermeneutics of the self, probing ever deeper into the realm of
desires that lurk within the heart and that need to be deciphered; and (d) the ideal of self-renunciation as the goal
and fulfilment of this asceticism. It is this necessity for verbalization, developed within the Christian confessional,
but refined within the context of the human sciences on the psychoanalysts couch, without, however, a
corresponding demand for renunciation, that Foucault considers to be the process at work in the formation of the
modern subject.26
The work of Peter Brown presents Christian asceticism and its experience of sexuality from a different perspective to
that of Foucault. Rather than analysing different styles of subjectivity, Brown attempts to explain what the ideals of
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chastity and renunciation meant for the early Christians in their understanding of sexuality, by reconstructing, in a
series of vivid sketches situated throughout the lands of the Mediterranean, the experiences of individuals and their
communities. His analysis is developed through three major tectonic plates, structural axes or tendencies which
were operative in shaping Christian asceticism: first, the tendency to treat sexuality as an indication of the most
irreducible aspects of the human will; second, the idea that sexual renunciation was constitutive and descriptive of
true human freedom; and, third, the defiant struggle, through the body itself, for freedom from the demand for
procreation placed upon the body by the needs of society.27
(p. 11 ) The first tendency is a result of the sexualization of the hidden impulses of the heart. The heart was the
place where Christians expected to meet God; but it was also the domain in which desires and thoughts remained
unspoken and even unknown to the subjects themselves. To meet God face to face in the heart, therefore, required
the transparency gained through simplicity. With the sexualization of the hidden desires,28 the attempt to avoid the
duplicity of a soul trusting in God but still caught up in the affairs of the world became, somewhat exclusively, the
pursuit of chastity. The connection between freedom and sexual renunciation developed through the attempt to
realize the victory achieved by Christ over the present age. Since sexuality was a result of the Fallif indeed it had
not caused the Fallsexual renunciation was understood as a means of reversing the momentum of the present
age, while continence and virginity were emblems of this victory, anticipating the angelic state of those worthy of the
resurrection.29 Finally, the connection between sexuality and the present age meant that the struggle for freedom
through sexual renunciation became a social battle. This resulted in a new horizontal dualism, that of the individual
against society, rather than the older vertical relation of the individual to the cosmos; and it was through this
horizontal dualism that (p. 12 ) sexuality and its renunciation acquired both intensity and new significance.30
It is via the interplay of these three tendencies that Brown guides us through the first five centuries of the history of
Christian asceticism. The three forces were not always of equal importance; insistence on the resurrection of the
body balanced pretensions to an angelic life, although the imagery was to remain, while the Christianization of the
Empire and the development of monasticism necessarily redirected the battle against society. For Brown, the most
important and the most influential aspect of Christian asceticism was the tendency first delineated: that sexuality
was used as a seismograph of the hidden recesses of the heart meant, conversely, that sexuality became the most
personal aspect of the individual. Body and mind were connected in and through sexuality, resulting in a new form of
the unity of the self, a unity based upon our own sexuality.31
Although various individual details of their analyses are debatable, the work of Foucault and Brown has the great
merit of drawing our attention away from the outward forms and codes of morality and directing it instead to the
inner mechanics, the style of asceticism and the mode of subjectivity, operating within different moralities. However,
this undoubted merit cannot be allowed to obscure the issue of the adequacy of their work to the early Christian
texts themselves. Given that a stated concern of both writers is to help elucidate the movements that led to the
formation of the modern subject and the modern experience of sexuality, careful attention must be given to whether
this desire has in fact unduly shaped their reading of early Christian texts.
With regard to the first tendency Brown delineates, duplicity of soul () was certainly a problem for early
Christians, but it is doubtful whether hidden thoughts were ever sexualized as exclusively as Browns argument
suggests; monastic literature in particular remained sensitive to all types of known or unknown thoughts which
might shut us off from God. The interplay between protology and eschatology as a motivation for asceticism certainly
entered Christian theology in the third (p. 13 ) century, finding its apogee, perhaps, in the works of Gregory of
Nyssa, but it does not form part of the matrix of the thought of Justin and Athenagoras, referred to earlier; neither,
as we will see, does it significantly influence the theologies of Irenaeus and Clement. Indeed, in the second century,
this perspective seems to have been the exclusive concern of those outside the Catholic Church, various Gnostics
and the Encratites. This is not to suggest that such arguments may not thereafter have been adopted by writers of the
Catholic Church, but great care needs to be taken in determining to what extent such arguments are intrinsic to the
broader context of Christian theology, or whether they were used as an ad hoc or post factum justification of a style
of asceticism already practised by Christians, such as that proposed by Justin, Athenagoras, or Clement. It is, finally,
doubtful whether the horizontal or social dimension of sexual renunciation contains anything that is intrinsic to the
Christian revelation: one does not need to be born again to act defiantly towards society.
Browns socio-historical analysis certainly provides an insight into some of the roles that Christianity was made to
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play and the battles that were being fought through it, aspects which were no doubt important both for the early
Christians and for us as we try to understand their concerns. But it is questionable whether Browns own
interpretative framework, in his reconstruction of early Christian asceticism, is sufficiently open and sensitive to
those of his subjects as they themselves attempted to explain and interpret their own experience.32 We do not
possess their experiences as raw data for our own historical reconstructions; rather, we gain access to their thought
through their texts, their experience as they themselves interpreted and understood it. And for the early Christian
writers, their interpretative frameworks and the resulting texts were primarily theological, concerned with Christian
revelation. Brown notes the importance of this fact when discussing the martyrdom of Blandina.33 After citing the
(p. 14 ) description of her martyrdom, which recalls how her companions in their agony saw with their outward
eyes in the person of their sister the One who was crucified for them,34 Brown then comments:
For Irenaeus, such a person stood for nothing less than human nature at its highest. Only a very trivial man,
indeed, would have asked, at such a time, whether Blandina had prepared herself for the presence of the Spirit
by practising sexual abstinence. Irenaeus was not such a man.35
Yet, despite this recognition, it is this very question which Brown asks of Perpetua and the Montanists in the pages
that follow and which recurs throughout his work! This question clearly did trouble early Christian writers, but it
nevertheless forms part of a larger matrix. Browns work is full of references to theological thematics, but these are
always subordinated to his overall project. It would surely be more appropriate to enquire into the relationship
between this highest manifestation of human nature and co-crucifixion with Christ, and to understand their
asceticism from this perspective. W. Treadgolds not unjust description of the later work of Brown and Cameron on
rhetoric, as being a map redrawn without regard for the real topography, is perhaps equally appropriate here.36
As the early Christians themselves felt that they were a third race, Foucaults analysis of Christian asceticism in
terms of a new style of subjectivity might perhaps be more promising. However, his analysis of the Christian style of
subjectivity as the interplay between obedience, the hermeneutics of the self in the realm of desires, and
renunciation suggests that he also bracketed too many of the concerns expressed by the early Christians
themselves, as a result of his self-confessed interest (p. 15 ) in the relationship between, and deployment of, power
and knowledge. More importantly, we cannot assume, in comparing the theories of asceticism elaborated by
Christians and their pagan contemporaries, that we are dealing with parallel or commensurate modalities of
subjectivity. For, beyond the horizontal plane of the differing technologies of the self offered by the philosophical
schools of late antiquity, the Christian style of subjectivity is elaborated in a vertical and eschatological perspective.
Consequent upon the incarnation, crucifixion, and resurrection of Christ, Christians claimed to be born again as
children of God, a third race with a confessedly strange constitution of their own citizenship (Diognetus 5.4).
Granted a personal immortality in Christ, Christians did not need to stylize their lives into an uvre, which could
only ever gain them a relative immortality. It is on the foundation of the evangelical proclamation that early
Christian texts were written, and it is only within this perspective that we can begin to appreciate what was
distinctive in their style of subjectivity, their asceticism. We might wish to suspend our belief in these claims, but it
would be hermeneutically unsound to do so on behalf of those whom we are studying, and so fail to take account of
the perspective described by the early Christian texts themselves.37 The temptation to do so is, perhaps, the shadow
side of the erosion of the boundaries between academic disciplines, a phenomenon which has otherwise offered so
much and has revitalized our interest in the late antique world.
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Historiography, in focusing on the eventual results of these gradual processes, and often anachronistically
presupposing them for the earlier period, thus allowed the later results to be seen as being original, as if the
ways of ascetic perfection which became the norm were indeed the only ones ever conceived as possible.38
With regard to Christian asceticism, this tendency has effectively meant that its classical form, monasticism, has
assumed a hegemony by virtue of which studies into the history of Christian asceticism have taken the form of
tracing the roots of monasticism;39 similarly, reflection on non-monastic asceticism has proceeded by assimilation to
monasticism: to be a Christian ascetic means to be a monk or a nun, at least inwardly; and, taken to its ultimate
conclusion, to be a real, perfect Christian necessitates the withdrawal into the desert.40
(p. 17 ) The two subjects chosen for study here, the near contemporaries Irenaeus of Lyons (c.130c.200) and
Clement of Alexandria (C.150-C.215), were writing almost a century before Antony retreated into the desert. For
them, asceticism was not a detachable dimension of Christian life, a specialized technique within the more general
life of the Christian, or the domain of ascetic specialists, the monastics. Rather, asceticism was the realization, the
putting into practice, of the new eschatological life granted in baptism within the confines of the present life. They
are, moreover, two of the earliest Christian writers from whom a sizeable body of work remains. Tertullian would
have been an obvious companion, but the problems which arise from a study of his writings, from the different
periods of his life, are too numerous to be adequately dealt with here. Nevertheless, the styles of asceticism proposed
by Irenaeus and Clement, together with their understanding of the human person, are sufficiently different to invite
comparison.
A further aspect common to both Irenaeus and Clement is that the positions which they articulate, as different as
they may be, are developed in response to common opponents. While these opponents are now usually grouped
together under the umbrella title of Gnostics, Irenaeus and Clement, and also Hippolytus, perhaps conforming to
their opponents own usage, do not employ this term for the more familiar figures such as Basilides and Valentinus,
but reserve it for various obscure yet related sects.41 Nevertheless, in so far as the (p. 18 ) systems of these diverse
thinkers exhibit certain similar characteristics, the title Gnostic is a convenient one to use here.42 However, this
must not be taken to imply that the acquisition of gnsis is outside the purview of our writers, or that gnsis itself is
necessarily other than faith even for the Gnostics, at least the earliest of them. For both, the gnsis concerned, albeit
variously understood, is the saving knowledge delivered uniquely by the Saviour and accepted by faith.43 If
Valentinus came to differentiate between the faith of those in the Church, who have remained at the psychical level,
and the deeper gnsis, as above all a knowledge of the self, possessed by those like himself who were truly spiritual,
it is perhaps in recognition of the distance which separated him from the larger body of the Church in Rome.44
Moreover, although Clement, in a manner alien to Irenaeus, consistently describes his ideal mature Christian as a
Gnostic, not even Irenaeus disparages gnsis itself or its acquisition; it is the abuse of this term, by those who lay
claim to it, that leads to his polemic against gnsis falsely so-called.
As the studies which follow are primarily concerned to investigate the asceticism and anthropology of Irenaeus and
Clement, rather than their polemic against the Gnostics, it will be useful to consider briefly some of the
characteristic features of Gnosticism and the different responses of Irenaeus and Clement. The first and most
important criticism that Irenaeus levels against the Gnostics concerns the radical distinction that they introduced
between the Creator God, the Demiurge, and the true God, the Father of Jesus Christ. Perhaps carrying to an extreme
the characteristic Johannine assertion that the Jews do not know the true God (cf. John 5: 378, 8: 19, etc.) rather
(p. 19 ) than modifying some pre-Christian dualism,45 it was a fundamental belief of the Gnostics that the
Demiurge was other than the true God.46 Consequent upon this was the Gnostic division of Scripture into two
discontinuous sections, the Jewish Scriptures and the apostolic writings, relating to the Demiurge and the true God
respectively, and the introduction of various narratives describing the origin of the Demiurge and his activity,
narratives which assume a higher, because explanatory, status than Scripture.47 Paul was perhaps aware of such
teaching when, in his Second Letter to the Corinthians, he emphasized the identity of the Creator, the God who said
Let light shine out of darkness, and the God whose glory has given the light of knowledge (gnsis) in the face of
Christ (2 Cor. 4: 6).48 This Pauline conviction forms the basic determinant of Irenaeuss theology, the ground-plan or
plot () of Scripture and of the truth itself: that there is one God who has acted continuously in one economy,
unfolded in Scripture, to bring his creation to share in his own life. While this presupposition is shared by Clement,
his understanding of the history of salvation is somewhat different from that of Irenaeus: not without important
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implications, as we will see, Clement is prepared to look upon philosophy as a pedagogue leading the Greeks to
Christ, parallel to, though not necessarily independent of, the Jewish Law.
To distinguish between the Creator and the true God, Irenaeus repeatedly insists, is to despise God himself and to
disparage his creation. The Gnostics were not dualists, in the sense of postulating two eternal principles, for the
Demiurge and the matter he uses are derived ultimately from the Pleroma; but their understanding of the salvific
call from the true God, who is other than the Demiurge, leads to a transcendental dualism together with a marked
devaluation of the world.49 That which is ultimately saved is not so much the (p. 20 ) body and soul resurrected in
Christ, but only that which Christ awakens in the Gnostic, that which is itself of Christ rather than of the Demiurge.
Thus a shared theme in Irenaeus and Clement is the insistence on the resurrection of the body, and the possibility
that the flesh itself may be sanctified, along with the appropriate attitude of gratitude towards God for his munificent
creation. The emphasis, more so in Irenaeus than in the Alexandrian Clement, upon flesh illustrates the way in
which key terms were transformed through the course of the controversy. Used predominantly in a negative sense by
Paul, the term flesh begins to be used as a Christological shibboleth by John (i John 4: 2) and culminates in
Irenaeuss exegetical tour de force of 1 Cor. 15: 50: flesh and blood do not inherit the Kingdom, but they certainly are
inherited (AH 5. 9)!50 By insisting upon the radical otherness of the Creator and creation, his absolute transcendence
rather than what is ultimately only a relative transcendence of the Gnostics God, who remains connected with the
world through a kind of chain of being, Irenaeus can paradoxically maintain the presence of God to his creation and
his salvific activity within it and for it.51
One further charge raised against the Gnostics by Irenaeus and Clement is that they either demand an excessively
rigorous asceticism or offer a hedonistic libertinism, opposite sides of the same coin of their mythologies.52 Such
allegations are frequent in polemical literature, and there is no evidence, apart from the Christian writings of this
genre, that the Gnostics did adopt an antinomian attitude. However, if, as Maclntyre has argued, the narrative
structure in which the subject is embedded and which provides a framework for his ethical thought is a central
element in (at least) ancient morality,53 then the narratives which the Gnostics elaborated (p. 21 ) to explain
themselves and their situation would inevitably be taken to include an anti-cosmic moral dimension.54 The
relationship between the narrative in which the subject is located and the morality or asceticism proposed for that
subject is also evident in the positions elaborated by Irenaeus and Clement: while Irenaeus places the subject firmly
within the economy of God as unfolded in Scripture, which entails an asceticism understood as living the life of God
as exemplified in the crucified and risen Christ, Clement, by recasting this economy to a form which includes Greek
philosophy, relates a different narrative, one of a cultivated paideia, and proposes instead what he considers to be a
godly life.
This relationship between asceticism and anthropology, as understood by Irenaeus and Clement, is the subject of
this study. In so far as Clements works are already concerned, to a large extent, with elaborating Christian asceticism
from anthropological and cosmological considerations, the section on Clement can be much more straightforward
than that on Irenaeus. However, as I stressed earlier, it is necessary to attempt to understand any early Christian text
within its own terms of reference. As such, in both cases my analyses will necessarily be much broader than
investigations of asceticism and anthropology usually are, considering these themes as they fall within a wider
context, one which is properly theological. I will need to tackle the full spectrum of theological issues concerning the
nature and existence of human beings, from our creation in the image and likeness of God to the resurrection and
eschatology. However, whilst addressing many different issues, I will not necessarily proceed along traditional lines.
It is important, for an adequate interpretation of both authors, that we do not approach their works with
unacknowledged, preconceived ideas or paradigms (for instance, concerning the Fall or the question of the presence
of the Spirit in the human person) derived from later theological developments. As my readings of the texts of
Irenaeus, and to a lesser degree those of Clement, differ significantly from standard interpretations, (p. 22 )
especially in the complex question of the relationship between the soul, the breath of life, and the Holy Spirit in
Irenaeuss theology, my analyses may appear to be both more intensive and extensive than at first seems necessary.
It has at times been a question of the correct interpretation of a single sentence of Irenaeus, referring to both the
Latin and the Armenian versions, but it has also been necessary to establish such particulars within a more
comprehensive reading.
Notes:
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(1) As G. Harpham points out, this injunction extends beyond drugs to include dietary intake (non-fat, non-dairy,
etc.), relationship to the self (on the psychiatrists couch), and also, though Harpham does not mention this, sexual
relationships, all in the search for a particular culture and life-style (Old Water in New Bottles, Semeia, 58 (1992),
137). He was drawing upon M. ONeill, Partys Over: Self-Denial is Hot, The Times-Picayune, 27 May 1990, A-16,
who encapsulates this modern attitude neatly: Non is more than a prefixit has become a lifestyle.
(2) V. L. Wimbush and R. Valantasis (eds.), Asceticism (Oxford, 1995).
(3) P. Veyne: If any aspect of ancient life has been distorted by legend, this is it. It is widely but mistakenly believed
that antiquity was a Garden of Eden from which repression was banished, Christianity having yet to insinuate the
worm of sin into the forbidden fruit (The Roman Empire, in P. Aris and G. Duby (eds.), A History of Private Life,
1: From Pagan Rome to Byzantium, ed. P. Veyne, trans. A. Goldhammer (Cambridge, Mass., 1987), 202). The first
contrast is typically drawn by theologians: e.g. W. Rordorf, Marriage in the New Testament and in the Early Church,
JEH 20 (1969), 208, and H. I. Marrou, Virginity as an Ideal, and the Position of Women in Ancient Civilization, in L.
C. Sheppard (trans.), Chastity, Religious Life, 5 (London, 1955), 2838. The latter contrast is one generally favoured
by historians: it was standardized by Gibbon in The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, and was still being drawn
two centuries later, e.g. by E. R. Dodds, Pagan and Christian in an Age of Anxiety (Cambridge, 1965), 326, who
nevertheless argues that Christian asceticism was an extreme representative of a more endemic disease in the later
Empire; see also R. L. Fox, Pagans and Christians (New York, 1987), 33674.
(4) Justin, First Apology, 29.
(5) Ibid. 15, 29.
(6) Athenagoras, Legatio, 33. 13.
(7) From Galens lost commentary on Platos Republic, in Galeni compendium Timaei Platonis aliorumque
dialogorum synopsis quae extant fragmenta, ed. P. Kraus and R. Walzer, Plato Arabus, 1, ed. R. Walzer (London,
1951), 99; trans, in R. Walzer, Galen on Jews and Christians (Oxford, 1949), 15; cf. 5674.
(8) Marrou cites the first half of the third sentence as a demonstration that the idea of virginity or chastity was
practically foreign to the pagan mentality of the Graeco-Roman world (Virginity as an Ideal, 28). Galens charge that
Christians rely upon faith drawn from parables, rather than a reasoned basis, is significant; as J. A. Francis points
out, Though the results may be admirable, they are vitiated by a method that appeals to emotion and faith rather
than reason (Subversive Virtue: Asceticism and Authority in the Second-Century Pagan World (University Park,
Pa.: Pennslyvania State University Press, 1995), 34 n. 35).
(9) Soranus, Gynaecia, 1. 7. 32.
(10) A. Rousselle, Porneia (Paris, 1983), 32; trans. F. Pheasant (Oxford, 1988), 20. Fox (Pagans and Christians,
34950), reminds us, however, that such writings were addressed to a small section of the population.
(11) M. Foucault, Histoire de la sexualit, 2:LUsage des plaisirs (Paris, 1984), 39; trans. R. Hurley (Harmondsworth,
1987), 32.
(12) Cf. M. Foucault, Histoire de la sexualit, 3: Le Souci de soi (Paris, 1984), 26971; trans. R. Hurley
(Harmondsworth, 1990), 2357.
(13) Cf. Veyne, Roman Empire, 49.
(14) Cf. E. A. Clark, The State and Future of Historical Theology: Patristic Studies, Union Papers, 2 (New York,
1982), 4656; repr. in Clark, Ascetic Piety and Womens Faith: Essays on Late Ancient Christianity, Studies in
Women and Religion, 20 (Lewiston, NY, 1986), 319.
(15) This is not to say that his work is without (major) problems, especially for classicists, in particular with regard to
the status of the workIs it history or, as Foucault claimed, only philosophy? See the reviews by M. Nussbaum, New
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York Times Review Book Review, 10 Nov. 1985, 1314, and G. E. R. Lloyd, The Mind on Sex, review of Foucault, The
Use of Pleasure, New York Review of Books, 33. 4 (13 Mar. 1986), 248. For an evaluation of his contribution to the
study of Christian asceticism, see A. Cameron, Redraw ing the Map: Early Christian Territory after Foucault, JRS 76
(1986), 26671; E. A. Clark, Foucault, the Fathers, and Sex, JAAR 56. 4 (1988), 61941; and the various articles in V.
L. Wimbush (ed.), Discursive Formations: Ascetic Piety and the Interpretation of Early Christian Literature,
Semeia, 578 (1992).
(16) As Harpham points out, Old Water in New Bottles, 13940.
(17) The main sources are: Le Combat de la chastet, Communications, 35 (1982), 1525, first trans, in P. Aries and
A. Bjin (eds.), Western Sexuality (Oxford, 1985), 1425 (Foucault prefaced this essay by stating that it belonged to
the third volume of his Histoire, although it seems to have been intended for a projected fourth volume, Les Aveux
de la chair); Technologies of the Self, in L. H. Martin, H. Gutman, and P. H. Hutton (eds.), Technologies of the Self:
A Seminar with Michel Foucault (London, 1988), 1649; The Ethic of Care for the Self as a Practice of Freedom, an
Interview with Foucault on Jan. 20, 1984, in J. Bernauer and D. Rasmussen (eds.), The Final Foucault (Cambridge,
Mass., 1988), 120; Sexuality and Solitude, in P. Rabinow (ed.), Michel Foucault: Ethics, Subjectivity and Truth
(New York, 1997), 17584; Self Writing, ibid. 20722; On the Genealogy of Ethics: An Overview of Work in
Progress, ibid. 25380.
(18) P. Brown, The Body and Society: Men, Women and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity (New York, 1988;
London, 1989).
(19) V. L. Wimbush and R. Valantasis, introduction to their Asceticism, p. xxi.
(20) For such an explanation see Dodds, Pagan and Christian, 136.
(21) For a more detailed analysis of the positions of Foucault and Brown, and their problems, see my article Shifting
Sands: Foucault, Brown and the Framework of Christian Asceticism, HJ 34. 1 (1993), 121. Mention must also be
made of A. Rousselles Porneia; but as her work focuses primarily on the historical study of behaviour, the various
practices of abstention and their effects, rather than the whole framework within which such behaviour is located,
whilst being very useful, it remains outside the concerns of this work. Other important works concerned with
asceticism in terms of a spiritual exercise are P. Rabbow, Seelenfhrung: Methodik der Exerzitien in der Antike
(Munich, 1954) and P. Hadot, Exercices spirituels et Philosophie antique, 3rd rev. edn. (Paris, 1993).
(22) In the first place, I do indeed believe that there is no sovereign founding subject, a universal form of subject to
be found everywhere.I believe, on the contrary, that the subject is constituted through practices of subjection, or, in
a more autonomous way, through practices of liberation, of liberty, as in Antiquity, on the basis, of course, of a
number of rules, styles, inventions to be found in the cultural environment (An Aesthetics of Existence, Le Monde,
1516 July 1984; trans. A. Sheridan in L. D. Kritzman (ed.), Michel Foucault: Politics, Philosophy, Culture (London,
1988), 501).
(23) Cf. M. Foucault, The Return to Morality, Les Nouvelles, 28 June 1984; trans. T. Levin and I. Lorentz in
Kritzman (ed.), Michel Foucault, 253.
(24) Foucault, LUsage des plaisirs, 1617; trans. 1011.
(25) Cf. Foucault, Ethic of Care for the Self, 9.
(26) Cf. Foucault, Technologies of the Self, 489.
(27) In addition to his numerous earlier articles and his magnum opus, Body and Society, P. Browns later essay,
Bodies and Minds: Sexuality and Renunciation in Early Christianity, in D. M. Halperin, J. J. Winkler, and F. I.
Zeitlin (eds.), Before Sexuality: The Construction of Erotic Experience in the Ancient Greek World (Princeton, 1990),
47993, is especially important; in this essay he attempts to summarize his early work in terms of the interplay
between three tectonic plates. The reference is to Bodies and Minds, 480.
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(28) While Brown ascribes this sexuahzation to Paul, who thus stands apart from his pagan and Jewish
contemporaries (cf. Body and Society, 55), D. Boyarin argues that a pessimistic attitude towards sexuality was more
prevalent in contemporary Judaism than has previously been thought (Body Politic among the Brides of Christ: Paul
and the Origins of Christian Sexual Renunciation, in Wimbush and Valantasis (eds.), Asceticism, 45978).
(29) The protological and eschatological dimensions of sexual renunciation have been the subject of many recent
studies. For general surveys, see. T. H. J. van Eijk, Marriage and Virginity, Death and Immortality, in J. Fontaine
and C. Kannengiesser (eds.), EPEKTASIS (Paris, 1972), 20935, and G. Sfameni Gasparro, Enkrateia e Antropologa:
Le motivazioni protologiche della continenza e della verginit nel cristianesimo dei primi secolie nello gnosticismo
(Rome, 1984).
(30) Cf. Brown, Bodies and Minds, 485.
(31) Cf. ibid. 492.
(32) Cf. A. Louths review of The Body and Society, JTS ns 41 (1990), 2315; and, on Foucault and Brown, G. G.
Stroumsa, Caro salutis cardo: Shaping the Person in Early Christian Thought, History of Religion, 30. 1 (1990),
2550.
(33) I owe this observation to M. Burch.
(34) EH 5. 1. 41; an account perhaps written by Irenaeus himself, as argued by P. Nautin, Lettres et crivains
chrtiens des lie et Hie sicles (Paris, 1961), 5461.
(35) Brown, The Body, 73.
(36) W. Treadgold, Imaginary Early Christianity, International History Review, 15. 3 (1993), 545. If there is an
allusion in this quotation to the title of the article by Cameron mentioned earlier (n. 15), Redrawing the Map: Early
Christian Territory after Foucault, then his complaint falls equally upon Foucault.
(37) This, of course, entails the reverse demand that we consciously acknowledge our own presuppositions, with all
the inevitable problems that this entails, as analysed especially by H. G. Gadamer, Wahrheit und Methode, 5th edn.
(Tbingen, 1986), trans. J. Weinsheimer and D. G. Marshall (New York, 1997).
(38) S. Elm, Virgins of God: The Making of Asceticism in Late Antiquity (Oxford, 1994), 385; cf. 118.
(39) The contention of J. C. ONeill, The Origins of Monasticism, in R. Williams (ed.), The Making of Orthodoxy
(Cambridge, 1989), 27087, that Christian monasticism dates back to apostolic times, originating in Jewish ascetic
communities which converted to Christianity and continued perhaps in Gnostic communities, does not weaken the
point being made here: it is the appearance of one particular form of asceticism with startling suddenness in great
power, together with the prejudice that God requires the same obedience from all (ibid. 2856), that occasioned
the belief that monasticism began with Antony and Pachomius and obscured from view other possible forms of
asceticism.
(40) K. Ware has pointed out that the various stories which relate how a desert monk is led into the city to be shown
married Christians who excel him in virtue (such as acts of mercy and charity) invariably include an affirmation of
their celibacy, and often conclude with an exhortation to the married person not to neglect their salvation, at which
point they forsake everything and follow the monk back to the desert, where they also become monks (The Monk
and the Married Christian: Some Comparisons in Early Monastic Sources, ECR 6. 1 (1974), 7283).
(41) Cf. M. J. Edwards, Gnostics and Valentinians in the Church Fathers, JTS ns 40. 1 (1989), 2647. The body of
scholarship on Gnosticism is vast, but very uneven. Standard works, such as H. Jonas, The Gnostic Religion, 2nd rev.
edn. (London, 1992 [1958]) and K. Rudolph, Gnosis, trans. R. McL. Wilson 1977; Edinburgh, 1983), are still useful; of
more recent works, S. Ptrement, Le Dieu spar: Les origines du gnosticisme (Paris, 1984; trans. C. Harrison, San
Francisco, 1990), and M. A. Williams, Rethinking Gnosticism: An Argument for Dismantling a Dubious Category
(Princeton, 1996), are the most important and challenging.
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(42) M. Williams argues very convincingly against the continued use of the typological categories of gnostic and
gnosticism as misleading over-general izations, and proposes instead biblical demiurgical traditions (Rethinking
Gnosticism, 51 and passim). But, as most of the points I raise here concerning gnosticism are ones which
Williams himself acknowledges are common traits of these biblical demiurgical traditions, and as I raise them only
to illustrate the context in which Irenaeus and Clement developed their work, rather than to make genealogical
claims about their opponents, I have retained the terms gnostic and gnosticism for the sake of simplicity.
(43) Cf. Ptrement, Le Dieu spar, 18599; trans. 12939.
(44) Cf. ibid. 1901, 273, 50517; trans. 133, 192, 3708.
(45) As argued by Ptrement, ibid. 4977; trans. 2950.
(46) Cf. Williams, Rethinking Gnosticism, 268, 51, 265.
(47) Cf. ibid. 87 on Ptolemys metamyth.
(48) Cf. G. W. MacRae, Why the Church Rejected Gnosticism, in E. P. Sanders (ed.), Jewish and Christian
Self-Definition, i: The Shaping of Christianity in the Second and Third Centuries (Philadelphia, 1980), 1301.
(49) Williams argues that the Gnostics in fact had a much higher estimation of the body than has previously been
acknowledged (cf. Rethinking Gnosticism, esp. 11638). Yet he cannot extend this re-evaluation to material reality
itself; as he comments regarding the body in Gnostic thought: Its substance was doomed. Yet its form was a mirror
on the divine. Somehow, even the physical human form recalled the divinity, in spite of the imperfect and defiled
material medium in which the shape had been cast (ibid. 130).
(50) Cf. R. Noormann, Irenus als Paulusinterpret (Tbingen, 1994), 50812.
(51) Cf. D. Minns, Irenaeus (London, 1994), 304.
(52) On this whole polemic, cf. Williams, Rethinking Gnosticism, 13988.
(53) A. Maclntyre, After Virtue, 2nd edn. (Notre Dame, Ind., 1984), esp. 1746.
(54) Williams, Rethinking Gnosticism, 118, speaks of a mythological devaluation of the human body, what the
gnostics said about their bodies rather than what they did. Plotinuss criticisms, according to Williams, were also
based on rhetorical logic rather than direct observation (ibid. 178).
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DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198270003.003.0002
In AH 1. 10. 3 Irenaeus specifies that it is only within the overall economy of the true hypothesis of Scripture that
theologians are to pursue their theological reflections.1 After giving his fullest exposition of the rule of truth in AH 1.
10. 1 and claiming that this faith is held equally by all churches throughout the world who hold to one and the same
tradition, for eloquent leaders can add nothing to its fullness any more than poor speakers can detract from it,
Irenaeus turns to consider how it is that some, by virtue of their intelligence ( , AH 1. 10. 3), nevertheless
know more than others. He excludes the acquisition of more knowledge by the alteration of the hypothesis itself, by
positing, for instance, another God besides the Creator or another Christ,2 but offers instead a series of theological
topics all pertaining to the economy for further investigation: bringing out more fully what is contained in the
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parables by adapting them to the hypothesis of truth; explaining the economy of God, which is for the sake of man;
why God was patient in regard to the apostasy; why some things were made temporal and others eternal; the
different characters of the various covenants; the consignment of all to disobedience, so that God can have mercy on
all (cf. Rom. 11: 32); the Incarnation and the appearance of (p. 35 ) the Beginning, Christ at the end; the inheritance
of incorruptibility and the extension of the promise to the Gentiles. Although Against the Heresies does not rehearse
all the events of the economy in as straightforward a fashion as the Demonstration, Irenaeus does offer considered
reflection on most of these topics throughout Against the Heresies. It will therefore be useful, first, to follow these
reflections, the economy and its unfolding, together with the way in which man is inscribed within it, before turning
to Irenaeuss anthropology and asceticism proper.
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participate.
The relationship between God and man is based on the unalterable fact of creation: it is God who has skilfully
created man, while man has been made by God. And, being made, man must also have a beginning and receive
growth and increase:
And indeed in this respect God differs from man, that God indeed makes, but man is made. And he who makes
is always the same, while he who is made must receive a beginning, a middle, addition and increase.12 And
God indeed makes well, while man is well made. (AH 4. ii. 2)
(p. 38 ) Irenaeus frequently uses the word plasma, handiwork, to denote man, particularly Adam.13 This word has
the advantage of emphasizing the immediacy of the fashioning of man by God: it is, quite literally, a hands-on affair.
It also emphasizes the materiality of man, the fact that man is made from the earth, from mud. Human beings are,
for Irenaeus, essentially and profoundly fleshy or earthy: they are skilfully fashioned mud.14 Furthermore, the term
plasma indicates the solidarity of the whole human race in Adam, a prominent and important principle for
Irenaeus.15
There are two aspects of the divine fashioning of man that should be noted. First, that in this activity each Person of
the Trinity has a particular role: the Father plans and orders, the Son executes these orders and performs the work of
creating, and the Spirit nourishes and increases, while man makes continual progress.16 The Father is the origin of all
creation, expressed by the prepositions and , but he created everything through () the Son and in () the
Spirit, making the creation of man into a trinitarian activity of the one God.17 The second important point is the
continuity of the creative activity of God, the ordering of the Son, and the nourishing of the Spirit: For never at any
time did Adam (p. 39 ) escape the Hands of God, to whom the Father speaking said Let us make man in our image,
after our likeness. 18 As there is one God, so there is but one Word and one Spirit, who are always present with the
one human race throughout the various events which constitute the one economy of God. Yet, as it is only recently
that the Word was made manifest, and in the last times that the Spirit was poured out in a new manner, all our
knowledge of God is thus bound to his manifestation in the Incarnation of Christ and his bestowal of the Spirit: that
the Word and the Spirit were no less present in the Old Testament economies indicates their prophetic or proleptic,
and preparatory, but no less real, presence in that period of history.19
Whereas God is perfect in all things, man receives advancement and growth towards God; and whereas God, as
uncreated, is always the same, so man, as created, will always advance towards God, his Creator.20 God never ceases
bestowing gifts upon man; nor does man ever cease from receiving these benefits and being enriched. It is for each
human being to choose how to respond to Gods bounteousness, thankfully or ungratefully, and everything depends
on this reaction:
For the vessel of his goodness and the instrument of his glorification is the man who is thankful towards him
that made him; and again, the (p. 40 ) vessel of his just judgement is the ungrateful man, who despises his
Maker and is not subject to his Word. (AH 4. 11. 2)
Corresponding to the basic principle of the relationship between God and man, that God makes and man is made, is
the necessary attitude of thankfulness with which man must respond in order to be able to receive and benefit from
the goodness of God: man must allow himself to be made, to be fashioned in the image and likeness of God.
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are thus subject to change. It is, therefore, God himself who is responsible for the temporal nature of the sensible
universe, and hence its mutability.24
More specifically, God created the sensible world and the things in it to be of a temporal or transitory nature in view
of an (p. 41 ) economy. In AH 4. 4. 15. 1 Irenaeus provides an important analysis of the rationale for this. The
Gnostics argued that if the author of the Law was indeed the true God, then Jerusalem, the city of the great King
(Matt. 5: 35), should not have been deserted. Irenaeus suggests that this is similar to maintaining that if straw or
vine twigs were a creation of God, they would never be separated from the wheat or grapes. The truth is, rather, that
they were created for the sake of the fruit that they produce. All things created in time necessarily have an end in
time, so the passing away of the things of the world is a natural occurrence.25 Thus the law of bondage, which
originated with Moses, finished with John the Baptist, when Christ came to fulfil the law and produced the fruit of
liberty. Similarly, Jerusalem, which began with David, fulfilling its own time of legislation, came to an end when the
New Covenant was revealed. This does not apply only to Jerusalem, for the fashion of the whole world must also
pass away when the time of its disappearance has come, so that the fruit may be gathered into the granary and the
chaff be consumed by the fire.26 In AH 5. 36. 1, referring to a preceding book in which he has explained as far as
possible the cause of the creation of this world of temporal things, Irenaeus specifies that it is the fashion (figura,
) of this world that will pass awaythat is, that in which the transgression occurred and man has grown
oldwhile the nature or substance (, ) will remain, as its Creator is true and faithful.27 The beginning
and end of all these things is with God, who does all things by measure and in order, (p. 42 ) for they have been
realized by the Son who is himself the measure of the immeasurable Father.28
In the midst of all these changeable things is man, who, being created, is also changeable, but who has nevertheless
been created for immortality. Unlike the wheat and the chaff, where the One who creates them is also the One who
separates them, man has been created like God, endowed with reason and free will, and so is himself the cause of his
becoming either wheat or chaff.29 Man belongs to the world of changeable things, yet differs from the rest of the
world, in that the world was created to enable the growth of man into the immortality of God.30 So Irenaeus
concludes this section in AH 4. 5. 1 thus:
God, therefore, is one and the same, who rolls up the heaven like a book and renews the face of the earth; who
made the temporal things for man, so that, maturing in them, he may bear as fruit immortality, and who,
through his kindness, also confers eternal things, that in the ages to come he may show the exceeding riches
of his grace [Eph. 2: 7]. (AH 4. 5.1)31
Thus the various temporal economies have as their goal the growth of man into the immortality of God. Just as the
present fashion () of the world will pass away, so too, when man participates in his immortality, God will
transfigure () the initial fashion of man, conforming the corruptible body to the body of his glory.32
Although he will remain a created being, man has the possibility of sharing in the eternal life of God, and thus of
receiving the power of the Uncreated.33 Only things which are subject to time can grow, and have the possibility of
changing their mode of existence while remaining (p. 43 ) what they are by nature. Thus, the temporality of
sensible creation is a pre-condition for the possibility of the created sharing in the life of the Uncreated, and this is
precisely the outcome of the economy, the reason for which sensible creation was created as temporal.
A further point of interest is that man, although made to be the lord of the earth, was, according to Irenaeus, but
newly created, and so appeared as a child in a world specially prepared for his nourishment and growth. The angels
were also appointed to be the servants of man. But as they are eternal, and thus not subject to change or growth
within the temporal unfolding of sensible creation, they were already fully developed. The infant man was thus
secretly established as their lord.34 Neither in protology nor in eschatology does Irenaeus ever characterize or
assimilate man or human life to the angelic: it is man, and the becoming fully human in communion with God in
Christ, that is the centre of the divine economy and of Irenaeuss theology.35
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and 3. 20. 12. AH (p. 44 ) 4. 379 is an exposition, from Scripture, of the ancient law of human liberty, the fact
that God created man free, having, from the beginning, power over himself.36 Only such creatures are capable of
initiative and response, and this is of fundamental importance, for only such creatures are capable of changing their
mode of existence, of growing into the immortality of God. Irenaeus draws out the presuppositions in his opponents
question, by rephrasing it rather bluntly:
But, they say, he should not have created angels such that they were able to transgress, nor men such that
they immediately [statim] became ungrateful towards him, because they were created rational and capable of
examining and judging, and not like irrational or inanimate creatures which are not able to do anything of
their own will but are drawn by necessity and force towards the good, with one inclination and one bearing,
unable to deviate and without the power of judging, and unable to be anything other than what they were
created. (AH 4. 37. 6)
Irenaeus points out that it would not have benefited either God or man for this to have been the case: communion
with God would have been something neither desired nor sought after; it would be by nature and not by choice.37
Freedom, therefore, along with temporality, is a pre-condition for creatures to be capable of becoming other than
what they were created: for creatures to enter into communion with God, and so be transfigured.
Irenaeus continues, in AH 4. 37. 7, by citing Matt. 11: 12 and I Cor. 9: 247, to emphasize the need for struggle, on the
grounds that endeavour heightens the appreciation of the gift. He further points out that just as sight is desired more
by those who know blindness and health is prized more by those who know disease, so life is treasured more by
those acquainted with death. In AH 4. 39. 1 Irenaeus develops this analysis by contrasting two types of knowledge:
that gained through experience and that arrived at by opinion. As the tongue (p. 45 ) learns of bitterness and
sweetness only through experience, so the mind receives knowledge (disciplina) of the goodobedience to God,
which is life for manthrough the experience of both good and evilthe latter being disobedience, which is death for
man. In this way, through experience of both, and casting away disobedience through repentance, man becomes ever
more tenacious in his obedience to God. But if he tries to avoid the knowledge of both of these, and the twofold
faculty of knowledge, he will forget himself and kill his humanity.38 So, Irenaeus continues in AH 4. 37. 7, the
heavenly kingdom is more precious to those who have known the earthly kingdom, and, if they prize it more, so will
they love it more; and loving it more, they will be more glorified by God. Irenaeus thus concludes:
God therefore has borne39 all these things for our sake, in order that, having been instructed through all
things, henceforth we may be scrupulous in all things and, having been taught how to love God in accordance
with reason, remain in his love: God exhibiting patience [magnanimitatem] in regard to the apostasy of man,
and man being taught by it, as the prophet says: Your own apostasy shall heal you [Jer. 2: 19]. (AH 4. 37. 7)
Irenaeus continues immediately by placing this particular action of God within the economy as a whole:
God, thus, determining all things beforehand for the perfection of man, and towards the realization and
manifestation of his economies, that goodness may be displayed and righteousness accomplished, and that the
Church may be conformed to the image of his Son [Rom. (p. 46 ) 8: 29], and that, finally, man may be
brought to such maturity as to see and comprehend God. (AH 4. 37. 7)
That Irenaeus can inscribe mans apostasy into the unfolding of the divine economy indicates that he did not
consider the economy simply as a plan which progresses automatically. Rather, God created beings capable of
initiative, as only such beings would be able to respond freely to God and to love him. The aim of the whole economy
is twofold: first, the perfection of man, by, second, the realization and manifestation of the economies of Goda
perfection which, at the same time, displays his goodness and realizes his justice. Finally, if AH 4. 379 in discussing
the question of human freedom, has seemed to privatize the relationship to God of each human person by
emphasizing the need for each to gain personal experience and to endeavour to love God more, the section
nevertheless ends with the assertion that through this process the Church, a community, is conformed to the image
of the Son, and in this way each is brought to such perfection as to see and comprehend God.
In AH 4. 38 Irenaeus approaches the same problem from a different angle. He argues that God could have created
man perfect or as a god from the beginning, for all things are possible to him. However, created things, by virtue of
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being created, are necessarily inferior to the One who created them, and so fall short of the perfect: they are of a later
date, infantile, and so unaccustomed to, and unexercised in, perfect conduct.40 Yet, just as it is possible for a mother
to give an infant solid food, so too God could have made man perfect from the beginning, but man, still in his
infancy, could not have received this perfection.41 It is not that the omnipotence of God is restricted by the nature of
that on which he is working,42 or (p. 47 ) that the infantile state, despite only beginning to grow towards its full
perfection, is itself imperfect.43 As a creature, man can never be uncreated, can never cease existing in the mode
proper to a creaturethat is, being created. But the aim of this creating or fashioning of man is that he should come
to be ever more fully in the image and likeness of the uncreated God. There can be, for man, no end to this process,
since he can never become uncreated; his perfection lies, instead, in his continual submission to the creative activity
of God, through which he is brought to share in the glory of the Uncreated.44 Finally, Irenaeus concludes AH 4. 38 by
recapitulating the preceding discussion in a few brief strokes:
It was necessary, first, for nature to be manifest; after which, for what was mortal to be conquered and
swallowed up by immortality, and the corruptible by incorruptibility, and for man to be made in the image and
likeness of God, having received the knowledge of good and evil. (AH 4. 38. 4)45
Thus creation and salvation, the appearance of human nature and the conquering of mortality by immortality, belong
to the same economy, the purposeful arrangement of history, in which the acquisition of the knowledge of good and
evil has its place, contributing to the realization, in the end, of the original divine intention of making man in the
image and likeness of God.
In AH 4. 379 Irenaeus speaks of Gods patience in the face of the apostasy of man, and explains it, within the
framework of Gods overall economy, by the general principle of the need for newly created man to acquire
experience, of both good and evil, in order to hold ever more firmly to the good and to continue indefinitely
progressing towards God, becoming ever more fully in his image and likeness. Irenaeus treats the same (p. 48 )
question of Gods great patience in the face of mans apostasy in AH 3. 20. 12, but this time he makes two points
clearer: first, how the vocation of growth, described in AH 4. 379, relates to the specific economy of the Incarnation,
the Passion, and Christs work of recapitulation;46 and second, how the general principle elaborated in AH 4. 379
relates to protology.
Irenaeus begins AH 3. 20 by asserting that God was patient with mans apostasy, as he foresaw the victory which
would be granted to man through the Word; for, as strength is made perfect in weakness, God could thus
demonstrate his goodness and magnificent power.47 As an example of this, Irenaeus gives the case of Jonah, who, by
Gods arrangement, was swallowed by the whale, not that he should thus perish, but that, having been cast out, he
might be more obedient to God, and so glorify more the One who had unexpectedly saved him.48 Irenaeus continues:
so also, from the beginning, God did bear49 man to be swallowed up by the great whale, who was the author of
transgression, not that he should perish altogether when so engulfed, but arranging in advance the finding of
salvation, which was accomplished by the Word, through the sign of Jonah [Matt. 12: 3940], for those who
held the same opinion as Jonah regarding God, and who confessed, and said, I am a servant of the Lord, and I
worship the Lord God of heaven, who made the sea and the dry land [Jonah 1:9], that man, receiving an
unhoped for salvation from God, might rise from the dead, and glorify God, and utter the word prophesied by
Jonah, I cried to the Lord my God in my affliction, and he heard me from the (p. 49 ) belly of hell [Jonah 2:
2], and that he might always continue glorifying God, and giving thanks without ceasing for that salvation
which he has obtained from Him, that no flesh should glory in the Lords presence [1 Cor. 1: 29], and that
man should never adopt an opposite opinion with regard to God, supposing that the incorruptibility which
surrounds him is his own by nature, nor, by not holding the truth, should boast with empty superciliousness,
as if he was by nature like to God. (AH 3. 20. 1)
So, for Irenaeus, God has borne man, from the beginning, while he was swallowed up by the whale.50 Although God
did not actually create the human race in this condition, there was, nevertheless, no period of time prior to which
human beings were not engulfed: there is, for Irenaeus, no lost golden age of primordial perfection.51 This is not to
deny that man transgressed or apostatized, and that there was an author of transgression, an agent provocateur of
the human transgression.52 However, the law which God gave to Adam and Eve to obey was that of recognizing that
they had as their Lord the Lord of all53that is, the general law of human existence, confessed by Jonah in the above
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quotation. Had they kept this law, they would have remained immortal; but if they were to take up an attitude of
self-conceited arrogance, to suppose (p. 50 ) that this immortality which they enjoyed was theirs by nature, as it is
Gods by nature, then, as they would no longer be receiving the gift of existence from God, they would thus become
subject to death.54 Hence the Devils temptation, according to Irenaeus, is to offer what he could not give: Adam and
Eve were beguiled under the pretext of immortality.55 Mans death is the result of apostasy, of turning away from
the one and only source of life; and at the same time it is the expression of the Devils dominion over the human
race.
The newly created humans were inexperienced, however; so they immediately gave way to temptation.56 But, just as
Jonah was swallowed by the whale, so that he might learn the true attitude to take towards God, so was man
engulfed from the beginning as part of the divine pedagogy, receiving an unhoped-for, but none the less divinely
foreseen, salvation, accomplished by the Word through the sign of Jonah. This pedagogy, the whole of the divine
economy, thus acquaints man both with his own weakness, his total dependence on God, and also with the strength
and graciousness of God. As Irenaeus explains:
Such then was the patience of God, that man, passing through all things and acquiring knowledge of death,
then attaining to the resurrection from the dead, and learning by experience whence he has been delivered,
may thus always give thanks to the Lord, having received from him the gift of incorruptibility, and may love
him the more, for he to whom more is forgiven, loveth more [cf. Luke 7: 423], and may himself know how
mortal and weak he is, but also understand that God is so immortal and powerful as to bestow immortality on
the mortal and eternity on the temporal, and that he may also know the other powers of God made manifest in
himself and, being taught by them, may think of God in accordance with the greatness of God. For the glory of
man is God, while the vessel of the workings of God, and of all his wisdom and power is man. (AH 3. 20. 2)57
(p. 51 ) God was thus patient, while man learnt by experience of his own weakness and death in his ungrateful
apostasy, knowing that having passed through this experience, and having an unhoped-for salvation bestowed upon
him, man would remain ever more thankful to God, willing to accept from him the eternal existence which he alone
can give. It is within this perspective that Irenaeus immediately cites Pauls assertion that God has consigned all to
disobedience, that he may have mercy on all (Rom. 11: 32). Both dimensions of this economy, the engulfing of the
human and the salvation wrought by the Word, are represented by Jonah, who thus becomes a type of both the
transgressing human race and its Saviour.
Thus, for Irenaeus, human death plays a pedagogical role within the divine economy, enabling man to experience to
the uttermost his weakness and mortality in apostasy from God, the only source of life.58 Irenaeus also follows
Theophilus of Antioch in ascribing a positive, remedial value to death. In AH 3. 23. 6 Irenaeus describes the action of
God in response to the apostasy:
Wherefore also he drove him [Adam] out of Paradise, and removed him far from the tree of life, not because
he envied him the tree of life, as some venture to assert, but having mercy on him, that he should not
continue a transgressor for ever, nor that the sin which surrounded him should be immortal, and evil
interminable and irremediable. But he set a bound to his transgression, by interposing death and causing sin
to cease, putting an end to it by the dissolution of the flesh into the earth, so that man, ceasing at length to live
to sin, and dying to it, might begin to live to God [cf. Gen. 3: 224; Rom. 6: 2, 10]. (AH 3. 23. 6)59
(p. 52 ) Thus, from this perspective, the subjection of man to death was an act of mercy, for had man been created
in such a way as to be able to remain immortal after apostatizing from God (if, for instance, he possessed a life of his
own, other than the one he receives from God), then sin and evil would also have remained immortal and thus
irremediable, and so Gods economy would have been frustrated, conquered by the serpent.60
It has to be noted, however, that despite the pedagogical character of the apostasy and the pedagogical and remedial
characteristics of death, Irenaeus does not trivialize either. Whilst the apostasy and death can be seen positively from
the point of view of the unfolding of the economy, they are, nevertheless, nothing less than a catastrophe: the being
created by God for communion with himself in his glory turned his back on him; man, the image of God, created for
life, rots in the earth. This is the victory of the Devil over man; his power consists of inciting to apostasy and
transgression, and into this he has enticed and imprisoned mankind.61 It was not possible for man, who had been
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thus conquered and destroyed by disobedience, to fight back and obtain the prize of victory. This could be done only
by the Word of God becoming incarnate, stooping low, even unto death, and so fulfilling the economy of salvation.62
Although one can discern two dimensions to the apostasy and death, pedagogical and catastrophic, these remain a
matter of perspective: for Irenaeus, there is but the one economy of the one God, which is the history unfolded in
Scripture.
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spiritual. For, since he who saves already existed, it was necessary that he who would be saved should come
into existence, that the One who saves should not exist in vain. (AH 3. 22. 3)80
In Adam the Word prefigured, sketched out in advance, the fullness of the human being that would be manifested in
the economy of the Incarnation. Hence, Adam is a type of the One to come.81 However, the One who was to come
existed before Adam; it was by him and for him that Adam came into being. So, although only appearing at the end,
this One is indeed the Beginning.
This passage from AH 3. 22. 3 also introduces a second great Pauline theme: that the first Adam was psychical, while
the last is spiritual (cf. 1 Cor. 15: 458; Gen. 2: 7). Adam was established as a psychical being, animated by the breath
of life, as a type of, and to be saved by, the Spiritual One, he who was vivified by the Spirit. In this schema, Irenaeus
makes no mention of the apostasy: the apostasy rendered the creature who had been created for immortality mortal;
it did not transform an originally spiritual Adam into a merely psychical being. Through the apostasy Adam and
Eve lost the (p. 59 ) strength of the breath of life; they did not lose the Spirit.82 The Spirit was certainly present
with Adam in Paradise, yet never ceased being present with the human race throughout the foreseen apostasy.83 But
the Spirit was present with Adam and the human race in a preparatory manner, typifying the fullness which was, and
still is, to come. The way in which the economy unfolded includes the apostasy. Nevertheless, this fact does not
determine the relationship of salvation described in AH 3. 22. 3; Irenaeus understands salvation as the continuing
process of Gods activity in his handiwork, man, bringing him, when he allows himself to be skilfully fashioned, to
the stature of the Saviour.
Irenaeus draws a similar parallel between the first, psychical Adam and the perfection of man in the Word and Spirit
in the last times, in AH 5. 1. 3. Here the parallel is made slightly more complicated, as Irenaeus includes in the
picture the apostasy of Adam and mans state of death in him. Irenaeus is writing about the Ebionites, for whom
Christ was the human child of Mary and Joseph, and who therefore denied the possibility of the union of God and
man, so rejected the possibility of a new generation:
they remain in that Adam who had been conquered and was expelled from Paradise: not considering that as, at
the beginning of our formation in Adam, the breath of life which proceeded from God, having been united to
what had been fashioned, animated man, and manifested him as a being endowed with reason; so also, in the
end, the Word of the Father and the Spirit of God having become united with the ancient substance of Adams
formation, rendered man living and perfect, receptive of the perfect Father, in order that as in the psychical we
all die, so in the spiritual we all may be made alive [1 Cor. 15: 22]. (AH 5. 1. 3)
Here the parallel is drawn between mans original formation in Adam, as a psychical being, animated with the breath
of life (p. 60 ) that comes from God, and the union of the Word and the Spirit with that formation, rendering man
living and perfect. Encompassing this parallel is the observation that Adam was conquered and expelled from
Paradise, becoming subject to death, as are those who remain in his formation, in its post-lapsarian state. But rather
than a return to the pre-lapsarian state of the psychical formation, now, through the Incarnation, the union of the
Word and Spirit with the ancient substance of Adams formation, man has the opportunity to be made alive
againthis time, however, in the spiritual One, himself also thereby becoming spiritual.
The Incarnation of the Word is thus central to the accomplishment of the divine economy, and although perhaps
conditioned by human apostasy, the Incarnation was certainly not occasioned by it.84 The goal of the economy is the
manifestation of the glory of God in a fully living man, partaking of the life, incorruptibility, and glory of God. But
how can the created become a partaker in the Uncreated, unless the Uncreated first joins himself to his creature?
This requirement is decisive for Irenaeuss understanding of the Incarnation:
For it was for this that the Word [became] man, and the Son of God the Son of man, that man, joined
(commixtus) to the Word and receiving adoption, might become the son of God. For by no other means could
we participate in incorruptibility and immortality, unless we had been joined to incorruptibility and
immortality. But how could we be joined to incorruptibility and immortality, unless, first, incorruptibility and
immortality had become that which we also are, so that the corruptible might be swallowed up by
incorruptibility and the mortal by immortality, that we might receive the adoption of sons? [cf. I Cor. 15:
534; 2 Cor. 5: 4; Gal. 4: 5]. (AH 3. 19. 1)85
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The growth and increase that God set before the creature from the beginning could not itself have brought about
such an outcome; rather, the growth was intended to accustom man to (p. 61 ) be able to receive this adoption. On
the one hand, God himself needed to be incarnate, to become man, so that man, joined to or bearing the Word, might
be adopted as a son of God; whilst, on the other hand, man needed to be trained in preparation for this ascent
towards God.86
However, as mans apostasy and death are not simply part of the unfolding of the economy, but also the catastrophic
response of man, prompted by the Devil, and its result, so too the Incarnation does not function within the economy,
as it actually unfolded in history, only to render the psychical being fully spiritual, to bring the created being into full
communion with the incorruptibility and glory of the uncreated God, the event for which the pedagogy of the
economy was but a preparation. As man, after the apostasy, is dead in Adam, enslaved by the Devil, so Christ came
to set man free:
For he fought and conquered; for, on the one hand, he was man contending for the fathers, and through
obedience doing away with disobedience completely; and on the other hand, he bound the strong man, and set
free the weak, and endowed his own handiwork with salvation, by destroying sin [cf. Rom. 5: 19; Matt. 12: 29].
(AH 3 18.6)87
The liberation of man from the tyranny of the Devil is effected by Christ, who, as man, fought the enemy, and
loosened the knot of disobedience through obedience, and who, as God, set free the weak and gave salvation to his
handiwork.88
As the two dimensions of the apostasy, the catastrophic and the pedagogic, are but a matter of perspective, so also are
the two dimensions of Christs work of salvationliberating the weak man from the Devil and bestowing
incorruptibilitya matter of perspective, relating to the human and the divine in the one Jesus Christ.89 Jesus Christ,
not Adam, is the first manifestation in history of the true, fully human being; thus, (p. 62 ) whereas man in Adam
was inexperienced, weak, and so, from the beginning, easily led into apostasy, the man Christ, being strong,
conquered the enemy by remaining obedient. Likewise, Adam was a psychical being, and, whilst obedient, he could
have remained immortal, yet he could not have become a partaker in incorruptibility, or have been united to the
Spirit, had God not united himself to man in Christ. These two aspects are, of course, inseparable: they were realized
by the one historical Jesus Christ.
It is important to note that, in accordance with Irenaeuss general understanding of the human person, the focus of
Christs work is located in the flesh: it is in the flesh that Christ suffered, and through it that he reconciled the flesh
which was in bondage, bringing it into union with God.90 Nevertheless, the work of redemption is solely the work of
God, the incarnate Son, throughout:
the Lord has redeemed us through his own blood, giving his soul for our soul, his flesh for our flesh, and has
poured out the Spirit of the Father for the union and communion of God and men, bringing God down to men
through the Spirit, and lifting man up to God through his incarnation, and by his granting to us
incorruptibility, firmly and truly, through communion with him. (AH 5. 1. 1)
Again, it is God, who, in man, by himself becoming man, accomplishes the economy.
That God did indeed become man is thus the foundation upon which economy is built and salvation achieved. But
this must not be understood in too mechanical or physical a manner, for the work of salvation was accomplished by
Christ through his obedience, suffering, and death.91 Both of these dimensions are expressed in Irenaeuss use of the
idea of recapitulation. Christ, in becoming man, recapitulates the (p. 63 ) ancient formation of Adam, that he
should be truly man, so that what had been created in the beginning might now be saved. The virgin birth, far from
depriving Christ of a real human nature, is in fact the indication that, in this recapitulation, he became fully man:
And just as the first-fashioned Adam had his substance from untilled and yet virgin soil, for God had not yet
sent rain, and there was no man to till the ground [Gen. 2: 5], and was fashioned by the Hand of God, that is,
by the Word of God, for all things were made through him [John 1: 3], and the Lord took mud from the
ground and fashioned man [Gen. 2: 7]; so, when the Word, himself, recapitulated Adam in himself, he rightly
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received from Mary, who was as yet a virgin, that generation which was the recapitulation of Adam. If then the
first Adam had a man for his father, and was born from male seed, they would be right to say that the second
Adam was begotten of Joseph. But if the former was taken from the mud, and fashioned by the Word of God,
so the Word himself, when bringing about the recapitulation of Adam within himself, ought to have the
likeness of generation itself. Why then did God not once again take mud, rather than work this fashioning
from Mary? So that there should not be another fashioning, nor that it should be another fashioning which
would be saved, but that the same thing should be recapitulated, preserving the similitude. (AH 3. 21. 10)92
That the manner of Christs incarnation preserved the manner of Adams formation is due both to the fact that Adam
was a type of Christ and to the need for Christs flesh to be that of Adam, if he is to recapitulate all in himself, so
becoming the head of all those whose head had been Adam.93
For Christs work of recapitulation to be complete, He has to recapitulate not only Adams formation, by becoming
man, but also all the stages pertaining to human life: He therefore passed through every age, becoming an infant for
infants, thus sanctifying infants, a child for children, a youth for youths, and an old man for old men, offering to
each an example appropriate to their age.94 Likewise, becoming man (p. 64 ) in order to undergo temptation,95 he
recapitulated Adams temptation. But while Adam was defeated through disobedience, Christ reversed that defeat
through his own obedience. The parallels between Adams temptation and disobedience and Christs temptations in
the desert and his obedience are worked out in great detail in AH 5. 21. 2. Irenaeus extends the dynamics of
typological parallelism to include many other features of the one economy: most importantly, the parallel between
Eve, the wife who was yet a virgin and who, seduced by the angel, by her disobedience became the cause of death to
herself and to the human race, and Mary, the obedient wife of Joseph, who, by obedience to the Word of God
conveyed by the angel, became the cause of salvation to herself and the human race.96 While Adam was disobedient
with respect to the tree, and thereby brought about death, so Christ was obedient unto death on the tree and by it
brought life.97 Finally, Christ, in his work of recapitulation, waging war against the enemy, also recapitulated the
enmity between the woman and the serpent, and between their offspring, trampling on the head of him who had led
us away as captives in Adam.98
Christs work of salvation culminated in his passion and resurrection, foreshadowed by Abrahams readiness to
sacrifice his only son.99 Although the incarnate Son was anointed as Christ at his baptism, it was not until his
Passion and Resurrection, that his flesh was permanently transfigured by the glory of the Father and so made
incorruptible:
Similarly [to Eph. 4: 6] does the Lord say, All things are delivered to me by my Father [Matt. 11: 27], clearly by
him who made all things.For no one was able, either in heaven or in earth or under the earth, to open the
book of the Father, or to behold him, with the exception of the Lamb who was slain [cf. Rev. 5: 312], and who
redeemed us with his own blood, receiving power over all things from the same God who made all things by
the Word and adorned them by wisdom, when the Word was made flesh [John 1: 14], so that, as the (p. 65 )
Word of God had first place in the heavens, so he should have first place on earth, as the just man who
committed no sin neither was guile found in his mouth [Isa. 53: 9], and that he might have first place also of
those under the earth, he became the first-born of the dead [Col. 1: 18], so that all should see their Kingand
so that the paternal light might fall upon our Lords flesh, and from his resplendent flesh come to us, and so
that man might attain to incorruptibility, wrapped around with the paternal light. (AH 4. 20. 2)
By his real passion, Christ both destroyed death and put an end to corruption, whilst manifesting life, revealing truth,
and bestowing incorruptibility.100 Similarly, it is by hanging on the tree that Christ, who as the Word contains all
things and inheres in the entire creation, recapitulates all things in himself.101
It is thus through Christs recapitulation of the ancient formation of Adam and of the various aspects pertaining to
human growth that salvation, the divine fashioning of man, is fully achieved. All the events of the Old Testament
pertaining to the unfolding of the economy, from the initial fashioning of Adam onwards, typify, or refer to, that
which was to happen in and through Christ.
We have already seen something of how the Church was established, when looking at the unfolding of the economy:
how God called the Gentiles to the faith of Abraham, making his people those who were not his people, and how the
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Church is conformed to the image of the Son through the pedagogy of the economy. In the context of exhorting his
readers to flee from the doctrines of heretics and take refuge in the Church, be nurtured in her bosom and nourished
by the Lords Scriptures, Irenaeus describes the Church as having been planted as a Paradise in this world.102 The
instruction to eat freely from every tree of the Paradise (Gen. 2: 16) refers to mans freedom to eat from every
Scripture of the Lord, but not with an uplifted mind or to touch any heretical discord, lest he be cast out of the
Paradise of life,
(p. 66 ) into which the Lord has introduced those who obey his proclamation, recapitulating in himself all
things which are in heaven, and which are on earth [Eph. 1: 10]; but the things in heaven are spiritual, while
those on earth are the arrangements concerning man. These things, therefore, he recapitulated in himself,
uniting man to the Spirit and making the Spirit to dwell in man, becoming himself the head of the Spirit, and
giving the Spirit to be the head of man: through him we see and hear and speak. (AH 5. 20. 2)
The Church is thus the Paradise which the Garden of Eden prefigured. The Church is also prefigured in all the
prophets and righteous103 who desired to see the day of the Lordthat is, in all those who, at various stages of the
one economy, feared and loved God, practised justice and piety, and desired to see Christ. In reverse, it is in their true
descendants, those of the Church, that the patriarchs and forefathers receive their recompense.104
The fulfilment of the prfigurations of the Church effected by Christ in his incarnation, joining God to man, and
through his work of recapitulation is described in AH 5. 20. 2 in terms of the bestowal of the Spirit, making the Spirit
to dwell in man, to be his head as he is the head of the Spirit. The gift of the Spirit is itself placed in the relationship
of type fulfilment in AH 3. 24. , where it is compared to the breath of life given in Genesis 2: 7: just as the breath
animated man at the beginning, so also the Spirit vivifies those in the Church:
It is to the Church itself that this gift of God has been entrusted, as was the breath to the handiwork, for this
purpose, that all the members receiving it may be vivified; and in it [the Church] is deposited the communion
with Christ, that is, the Holy Spirit, the pledge of incorruptibility, the means of confirming our faith, and the
ladder of ascent to God. (AH 3. 24. 1)105
The Church is the locus of the Spirit. So Irenaeus continues: Where the Church is, there is the Spirit of God, and
where the (p. 67 ) Spirit of God is, there is the Church, and every kind of grace, and the Spirit is truth (AH 3. 24. 1).
It is, thus, in the Paradise which is the Church, that man, trained to follow the Word and accustomed to bear the
Spirit through the pedagogy of the economy, can, by being vivified by the Spirit, attain the fullness of human nature,
which was prefigured by the psychical Adam, but realized for the first time by Jesus Christ.
Jesus, at his baptism, was anointed by the Father with the Spirit so that man might also share in the abundance of
his Unction which made him Christ.106 At first it was in Jesus Christ that the Spirit became accustomed to dwell in
the human race, working the will of the Father in them, and renewing them from oldness to the newness of
Christ.107 But after his passion and resurrection, the same Spirit was poured out on all the disciples at Pentecost,
uniting all nations, bringing them to life and opening the New Covenant, so that with one accord they praised God in
many languages, thus reversing the divisive consequences of Babel (AH 3. 17. 2). After Pentecost, entry into the
Church is through baptism. Irenaeus was fond of using water imagery for the Spirit,108 and he continues in AH 3. 17.
2 by describing the work of the Spirit at Pentecost and in baptism in such terms:
Wherefore also the Lord promised to send the Paraclete who would make us fit for God. For just as a lump of
dough or a loaf of bread cannot be made from dry flour without water, so neither could we, being many, be
made one in Christ Jesus without the Water from heaven. Just as dry earth, unless it receives water, does not
fructify, so we, who formerly were dry wood, would never have borne, as fruit, life without the willing Rain
from above [cf. Ps. 67: 10 LXX]. For, by the washing, our bodies have received that unity which is towards
incorruptibility, while our souls have received it from the Spirit. Wherefore both being necessary, since both
contribute towards the life of God, our Lord took pity on that unfaithful Samaritan womanby showing and
promising her living Water, so that she should thirst no more, nor occupy herself in acquiring the moistening
water obtained in labour, having in herself a Drink welling up to eternal life [John 4: 14], [a Drink] which the
Lord received as a gift from the (p. 68 ) Father, and himself gives to those who are partakers of himself,
sending the Holy Spirit upon all the earth. (AH 3. 17. 2)
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Just as God established the creation by his Word and bound it together by his Spirit,109 so, to be made one in Christ,
human beings need the Water from heaven. Their bodies need to be washed in baptism to receive the unity or
cohesion which opens out onto incorruptibility, whilst their souls receive it directly from the Spirit.110 The Spirit is
the author of communal unity in Christ, and of mans personal and bodily cohesion. The Spirit, as the willing Rain, is
also the author of the fruitfulness of the baptized, enabling them to bear, as fruit, life. Having received the Water
from heaven, the willing Rain, and having been washed in baptism, the believer also becomes a source of living
Water, a Drink which wells up to eternal life, having received the Spirit from Christ, who himself received it from the
Father.
Irenaeus seldom writes of baptism as being for the remission of sins.111 Remission of sins, or a purificatory washing,
would still leave man in Adam. For Irenaeus, the primary content of baptism is the regeneration unto God which
accomplishes mans adoption as a son of God.112 Thus, while in AH 3. 17. 2 he speaks of the baptismal washing in
terms of reception of the unity which leads to incorruptibility, in the Demonstration Irenaeus defines baptism as:
the seal of eternal life and rebirth unto God, that we may no longer be sons of mortal men, but of the eternal and
everlasting God (Dem. 3). Baptism is a regeneration unto God which accomplishes adoption as sons of God. It is a
regeneration, effected by the new generation of Christ from the Virgin, which liberates man from the generation (p.
69 ) of death.113 Yet, this regeneration itself is but a prelude to the second generation of the human race at the
resurrection after their dissolution into the earth.114
The full significance of the baptismal regeneration, for Irenaeus, is that through it believers are adopted as sons of
God. Just as this relationship was not realized, nor could it have been, except by God himself becoming incarnate, the
Son of God become the Son of man, so, conversely, their entry into the reality manifested in the incarnate Son of God
is not achieved by the believers own powers, but by adoption (), by sons of men being established as sons of
God. In AH 4. 41. 23 Irenaeus, following one of his predecessors, notes that the term son has a twofold meaning: it
is according to nature or according to teaching.115 According to nature, the word son applies both to the offspring
and to the work or product of a creator, with the difference that the offspring is begotten while the work is made.
Inasmuch as all human beings were created by God, all are sons of God. With regard to teaching, if they keep the true
belief and remain in filial obedience to God, they can also be called sons of God in a deeper sense. But just as such a
son can be disinherited, so they will be regarded as sons only so long as they remain in filial obedience to him. If,
turning aside from this filial obedience, they join the apostasy of the Devil and do his works, they become sons of the
Devil. It is only through conversion and repentance that an apostate son can return to his filial inheritance. In Dem.
8, Irenaeus distinguishes three different relationships between God and man: whereas God is the Creator of allof
Gentiles, Jews, and believersto the Gentiles he is the Maker and Creator (sons as created by their Maker), to the
(p. 70 ) Jews he is a Lord and Lawgiver (sons as slaves to his Law), but to the faithful he is as Father, since in the
last times he opened the testament of the adoption of sons. As a creature, man was clearly not begotten of Godnor
can he bein the same way as the only begotten Son of God. But, to be adopted as a son of the Father means more
than God simply regarding him as his son; he has established the believer as his son, incorporating him into the
sonship of the Son of God, who became the Son of man for this end.116 Becoming thus true sons of God, Ireneaus
does not hesitate to describe the faithful as gods: God stood in the congregation of gods, he judges in the midst of
the gods (Ps. 81: 1 LXX): [this text] speaks of the Father and the Son and those who have received the adoption, for
they are the Church.117 It is, therefore, by adoption that believers become established as sons of God, as gods; and
gathered together, in and through the Son, they form the Church, the congregation of God.
Regenerated and adopted as sons of God, believers are no longer subject to the law of slavery, the pedagogue that led
us to Christ (cf. Gal. 3: 24), for Christ has cancelled it by the new covenant of liberty.118 The natural precepts of the
love of God and justice towards ones neighbour, the free and willing observance of which were sufficient for those
who were justified by faith, were implanted by God in the human heart.119 These precepts were forgotten during the
slavery in Egypt, and so, having been led out of Egypt, the Decalogue was instituted so that the people might once
again be followers of God.120 However, when they turned away to the golden calf, showing that in their hearts they
preferred the slavery of Egypt, they were subjected to the yoke of slavery through the various precepts promulgated
by Moses.121 It is these precepts that Christ has abolished in the new covenant of (p. 71 ) liberty which he has
inaugurated. However, Christ did not abrogate the natural precepts implanted in the heart, but has extended and
fulfilled them.122 Whereas the Law prohibited adultery and murder, Christ forbade lust and anger. This must not be
misunderstood as an interiorization or spiritualization of the Law.123 Rather, if piety and obedience are required
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just as much from sons as from slaves, in sons it is expressed voluntarily, and they in turn possess greater confidence
and liberty.124 Paradoxically, however, the liberty given to the sons in the new covenant of liberty is also realized as a
greater subjection to God.125 As man is the handiwork of God, subject to his creative activity, the more ready he is to
be fashioned by God, the more God can fashion him. As such, the extension and fulfilment of the natural precepts
in the words of the Lord do not indicate an interiorization, but a greater subjection to the creative activity of God,
appropriate to those who have been adopted as sons.
Besides being nourished by Scripture (AH 5. 20. 2), in the Church believers are also nourished and prepared for
incorruptibility by the reception of the eucharist, which, as the body and blood of Christ, is itself a union of flesh and
Spirit:
For we offer to him his own, fittingly proclaiming the communion and union of the flesh and the Spirit. For
just as the bread from the earth, when it has received the invocation of God, is no longer ordinary bread, but
eucharist, consisting of two things, earthly and heavenly, so also our bodies, receiving the eucharist, are no
longer corruptible, having the hope of the resurrection. (AH 4. 18. 5)126
(p. 72 ) That flesh is nourished by the body and blood of Christ is evidence, for Irenaeus, that it can also partake of
incorruptibility and life. As the eucharist is no longer common bread, so also by partaking of the eucharist the bodies
of Christians are no longer corruptible flesh, but, as the eucharist is the union and communion of flesh and Spirit,
so also do their bodies have the hope of the resurrection; that is, their flesh is nourished, even now, by that for which
they are being prepared, the reception of incorruptibility.
Irenaeus develops this parallel in AH 5. 2. 3, where he uses the same image of the fecundity of the Spirit as in AH 3.
17. 2. He has been emphasizing that just as the believers flesh has grown and [been] strengthened by the mixed cup
and the manufactured bread, which having received the Word of God is the body and blood of Christ, so also their
flesh is capable of receiving eternal life from God. Furthermore, when the Apostle describes Christians as members
of his body and of his flesh and of his bones (cf. Eph. 5: 30), he is not speaking of a spiritual human being, for a
spirit has neither flesh nor bones (cf. Luke 24: 39), but of a genuine human being, made of flesh and blood,
nourished by Christs body and blood. Irenaeus then continues:
Just as the wood of the vine, planted in the earth, bore fruit in its own time, and the grain of wheat, falling
into the earth and being decomposed, was raised up manifold by the Spirit of God who sustains all, then, by
wisdom,127 they come to the use of men, and receiving the Word of God, become eucharist, which is the body
and blood of Christ; in the same way, our bodies, nourished by it, having been placed in the earth and
decomposing in it, shall rise in their time, when the Word of God bestows on them the resurrection to the
glory of God the Father, who secures immortality for the mortal and (p. 73 ) bountifully bestows
incorruptibility on the corruptible [cf. 1 Cor. 15:53], because the power of God is made perfect in weakness [cf.
2 Cor. 12: 9], that we may never become puffed up, as if we had life from ourselves, nor exalted against God,
entertaining ungrateful thoughts, but learning by experience that it is from his excellence, and not from our
own nature, that we have eternal continuance, that we should neither undervalue the true glory of God nor be
ignorant of our own nature, but should know what God can do and what benefits man, and that we should
never mistake the true understanding of things as they are, that is, of God and man. (AH 5. 2. 3)128
There is clearly a close relationship between the dynamism and fecundity of the Spirit and the action of the Word
operative in the processes that lead both to the eucharist and to the resurrection. This relationship, however, is more
than a simple correspondence or parallelism.129 It is by receiving the eucharist, as the wheat and the vine received
the fecundity of the Spirit, that Christians are prepared, as they also make the fruits into the bread and wine, for their
own resurrection effected by the Word, at which point, just as the bread and wine receive the Word and so become
the body and blood of Christ, the eucharist, so also will their bodies receive immortality and incorruptibility from the
Father. Christians themselves, therefore, need to use the fruits of the world eucharistically, for it is by these that they
are prepared for the resurrection and the gift of incorruptibility. This understanding of the eucharist falls quite
clearly within Irenaeuss theology of the economy of God: it is within the temporal things of this world that man is
prepared, maturing in order to be able to bear the fruit of immortality.130 As such, the divine economy can be seen as
the eucharist of God the Father. This relationship between the eucharist and the divine economy is further
emphasized by the role of death in both. We saw (p. 74 ) earlier, when looking at The Sign of Jonah, how death
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functions pedagogically within the economy, as the means by which man experiences both his own weakness and the
strength of God deployed in such weakness. Irenaeus reiterates these themes in AH 5. 2. 3, adding that in this way
man comes to learn the truth about both God and himself. However, in AH 5. 2. 3, mans death is not simply
pedagogical or remedial, but functions within the eucharist of God.
It is important to note that the human activity in the preparation of the eucharist corresponds to a passivity or
receptivity with regard to the resurrection and the bestowal of incorruptibility. Christians are the ones who make
bread and wine out of the fruits of the earth,131 which, receiving the invocation (, AH 4. 18. 5) and the Word
of God, become the body and blood of Christ; while they themselves, prepared by their reception of the eucharist,
will be raised by Christ and will be rendered immortal by the Father. It is, thus, as we have continually seen
throughout our investigation of Irenaeuss theology of the economy, a matter of the receptive-ness of man to the
gifts of God and his thankfulness for them: his thankful use of the material things provided by God, in and through
which he learns whence his life has its source, and an attitude of thankfulness, through which he comes to share
ever more fully in that life.
As Israel, having passed through the Red Sea, sojourned in the desert, sustained by manna from heaven, before
entering the Promised Land, so too believers, having passed through the waters of baptism and being nourished and
strengthened by the eucharist, still have not entered the Promised Land. In the two passages concerning the
eucharist that we have considered, the eucharist is said to provide the hope of the resurrection (AH 4. 18. 5) or a
nourishment which sustains and prepares believers for the resurrection (AH 5. 2. 3). It is also, as we have already
seen, as a pledge of incorruptibility that members of the Church have received the Spirit, so that, despite her (p. 75
) members being dispersed throughout the world,132 the Church, though in the world, is located in the Spirit (AH 3.
24. 1). It is in AH 5. 8. 1 that Irenaeus provides his most sustained analysis of the nature and function of this pledge:
For now we receive a certain portion of the Spirit towards perfection and preparation for incorruptibility, being
slowly accustomed to contain and to bear God, which the Apostle called a pledge, that is, a part of the honour
which God has promised us, saying, in the Epistle to the Ephesians, In him you also, having heard the word of
truth, the Gospel of your salvation, and believing in him, have been sealed with the Holy Spirit of the promise,
which is the pledge of our inheritance [Eph. 1: 1314]. This pledge, therefore, thus dwelling in us, renders us
spiritual even now, and the mortal is swallowed up by immortalityfor he declares, you are not in the flesh,
but in the Spirit, if the Spirit of God dwells in you [Rom. 8: 9]and this is not by a casting away of the flesh,
but by the communion of the Spirit, for those to whom he was writing were not without flesh, but those who
had received the Spirit of God, in whom we cry Abba, Father [Rom. 8: 15]; if then now, having the pledge, we
cry Abba, Father, what shall it be when rising again we behold him face to face, when all the members shall
burst forth in an effervescent hymn of exultation, glorifying him who raised them from the dead and gave
them eternal life? For if the pledge, gathering man together into itself, makes him now say Abba, Father,
what shall the full grace of the Spirit, which shall be given to men by God, effect? It will render us like unto
him, and perfect the will of the Father: for it shall make man in the image and likeness of God. (AH 5. 8. 1)
Christians now receive a certain portion (partem aliquam) of the Spirit towards their perfection and preparation for
incorruptibility, when they will be able to contain and bear God. By this they are enabled to call on God as Abba,
Father, and are made spiritual even now. Irenaeus is emphatic, as one would expect, that this takes place in the
flesh: they become spiritual not by abandoning the flesh, but by being in the Spirit, having the Spirit dwelling in
them. As Adam became a psychical being, flesh animated by the breath of life given from God, so too, by the
imparting of the Holy Spirit, do Christians become spiritual beings, flesh vivified by the Spirit. Nevertheless, what
they have received by being adopted and sealed (p. 76 ) with the Spirit is but a pledge of what is promised to them
for when they are raised to see God face to face and to receive the full grace of the Spirit. Just as the incarnate Son
was anointed by the Spirit at his baptism, yet only through his death and resurrection radiated the glory of the Father
in flesh rendered fully incorruptible, so also do those who have been baptized have the Spirit dwelling in them,
working the will of the Father in them and renewing them from their oldness to the newness of Christ (AH 3. 17. 1);
but it is only through their own death, the dissolution of their flesh into the earth, like the wheat (AH 5. 2. 3),
causing the cessation of sin (AH 3. 23. 6), that they are raised and fully receive incorruptibility from the Father, so
becoming the image and likeness of God.
The cross of Christ his suffering and death is the same as that which his disciples must endure and undergo A
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propos of Christs words If any man would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.
For whoever would save his life, will lose it; and whoever loses his life for my sake shall find it (Matt. 16: 245) and
You will stand before governors and kings for my sake, and they shall scourge some of you, and shall slay you and
persecute you from city to city (cf. Matt. 10: 18; Mark 13: 9; Matt. 23: 34), Irenaeus comments:
He knew, therefore, those who would suffer persecution, and he knew those who would be scourged and slain
because of him; and he did not speak of any other cross, but of the Passion which he should himself undergo
first, and then his disciples afterwards. (AH 3. 18. 5)
Those who would be disciples of Christ must also take up his cross, deny themselves, and lose their lives for his sake,
and this has no referent other than the Passion, which Christ and his disciples, following him, suffer. His disciples
are those: who are slain on account of the confession of the Lord, and who endure all things predicted by the Lord,
and who in this way strive to follow the footprints of the Lords Passion, becoming martyrs of the suffering One (AH
3. 18. 5). Irenaeus thus understands martyrdom in terms of Christs own passion, his death and resurrection.133
(p. 77 ) This identity between the death of Christ and that of the martyr extends to an identification between Christ
and those confessing him. The idea that the martyr imitates Christ, and that Christ is united with the martyr in
suffering, is a commonplace in the Acts of the Martyrs. It is vividly illustrated in the martyrdom of Blandina as
recorded in the Letter of the churches of Vienne and Lyons to the churches of Asia and Phrygia, preserved in
Eusebiuss Ecclesiastical History, and which was quite possibly composed by Irenaeus himself.134 According to this
letter,
Blandina, hung on a stake ( ), was offered as food for the wild beasts that were let in. She, by being
seen hanging in the form of a cross, by her vigorous prayer, caused great zeal in the contestants, as, in their
struggle, they beheld with their outward eyes, through the sister, him who was crucified for them, that he
might persuade those who believe in him that everyone who suffers for the glory of Christ has for ever
communion with the living God. the small and weak and despised woman had put on the great and
invincible athlete, Christ, routing the adversary in many bouts, and, through the struggle, being crowned with
the crown of incorruptibility.135
Blandina became an image, a living icon, of Christ for those who were suffering alongside her. It is in Blandinas
weakness that the strength of God is victorious, and through her martyrdom that incorruptibility was bestowed upon
her. The description is not simply a literary convention or topos, but is clearly inscribed within, and gives a very real
sense of, Irenaeuss understanding of the economy: the strength of God being manifested in the weakness of man,
bestowing incorruptibility on those who follow him, through martyrdom, and who become, in this way, the image
and likeness of God.
Irenaeus picks up this theme of becoming in the image and likeness of God through martyrdom in AH 5. 28. 4.
However, the framework used here is not that of following Christ and sharing in his passion, but that of the
eucharist. Just as death, besides its pedagogical and remedial function, falls within the eucharistie understanding of
the economy, so the sufferings of the martyrs prepare them for God in the same way that Christians prepare bread
for the eucharist.
(p. 78 ) And therefore throughout all time, man, formed at the beginning by the Hands of God, that is, by the
Son and the Spirit, becomes after the image and likeness of God: the chaff, that is, the apostasy, being cast
away, while the wheat, that is, those who bear as fruit faith in God, being gathered into the granary. And
therefore tribulation is necessary for those who are being saved, that, in a certain way, having been threshed
and kneaded together, through endurance, with the Word of God, and baked in the fire, they may be suitable
for the banquet of the King, as one of ours said, when condemned to the wild beasts because of his testimony
() to God: I am the wheat of Christ, and I am ground by the teeth of the wild beasts, that I may be
found [to be] pure bread of God. (AH 5. 28. 4)136
The perspective of this passage is oriented towards the fashioning of man in the image and likeness of God. Man,
formed in the beginning by the Word and the Spirit, is continually being fashioned throughout all time into the
image and likeness of God.137 We have seen how God bore the apostasy of man, that man might come to learn of his
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own mortality and acknowledge the one and only Source of life. Here the process of fashioning man into the image,
salvation, is described from a different perspective: threshed by tribulation, the chaff or apostasy being cast away,
man is kneaded together with Christ, and through fire the martyr is made into bread suitable for the Fathers
celebration. Just as Christs death and resurrection are the basis on which Christians celebrate the eucharist, so the
martyrs death, kneaded together with the Word, and resurrection, as appropriate bread, are celebrated by God.
We saw earlier how through baptism believers receive a pledge of the Spirit, rendering them spiritual even now,
absorbing what is mortal into the Spirits own immortality, and so preparing them for incorruptibility (AH 5. 8. 1). In
the same way as the Incarnate Word was anointed by the Spirit, (p. 79 ) but in undergoing death was vivified by the
Spirit to the point where his flesh became permanently incorruptible, transfigured by the glory of the Father, so also
members of the Church, receiving a pledge of the Spirit in baptism, are vivified by the Spirit in their martyrdom:
For it is testified by the Lord that as the flesh is weak, so the Spirit is ready [Matt. 26: 41], that is, is able to
accomplish what it wills. If, therefore, anyone mixes the readiness of the Spirit as a stimulus to the weakness
of the flesh, it necessarily follows that what is strong will prevail over what is weak, so that the weakness of
the flesh will be absorbed by the strength of the Spirit, and such a one will no longer be carnal but spiritual
because of the communion of the Spirit. In this way, therefore, the martyrs bear witness and despise death:
not after the weakness of the flesh, but by the readiness of the Spirit. For when the weakness of the flesh is
absorbed, it manifests the Spirit as powerful; and again, when the Spirit absorbs the weakness, it inherits the
flesh for itself, and from both of these is made a living man: living, indeed, because of the participation of the
Spirit; and man, because of the substance of the flesh. (AH 5. 9. 2)138
The strength of God is made perfect in weakness; and so, paradoxically, it is in their death, their ultimate
vulnerability, that the martyrs bear greatest witness to the strength of God. Not that they reckon death to be a thing
of no importance, but that in their confession they are vivified by the Spirit, and live the life of the Spirit, who
absorbs the weakness of their flesh into his own strength. When the Spirit so possesses the flesh, the flesh itself
adopts the quality of the Spirit and is rendered like the Word of God.139 It is thus not only in the resurrection that
man comes to be fully vivified by the Spirit. Rather, our paradigm of the living human beingflesh vivified by the
Spiritis the martyr.140
As the patriarchs learnt to follow the Word, but did not enter the Promised Land before their death, so too their
descendants, (p. 80 ) the followers of Christ, do not receive the fullness of the promise until the resurrection. And
as it was precisely land that was promised to the patriarchs, so it is the transfigured, though fully material, world that
the human race will inhabit after the resurrection. The economy, which, as we have repeatedly seen, is centred upon
the flesh formed from mud being fashioned into the image of God, culminates not in a mystical union of the soul
with God, but in an earthly Kingdom, thus fulfilling the promises made to the patriarchs.141 Irenaeuss emphasis on
this fact is striking. As von Balthasar observes:
In his eschatology Irenaeus produces an important counterweight to the flight from the world and the failure
to take seriously the resurrection of the flesh which marks the Platonizing Christian eschatologies of a later
period and indeed the average Christian consciousness.142
Irenaeuss main thrust in Against the Heresies was to counter the teaching of the Gnostics, according to whose
anthropology and soteriology there was, as he put it, nothing left of man to enter the Pleroma.143 Yet he knew that
his own views on the resurrection of the flesh in a fully material world were already under attack by some reputedly
orthodox churchmen who despised the handiwork of God, denied the salvation of the flesh, so rejected the complete
resurrection.144 Although he tactfully refrained from mentioning his opponents by name, he did not shrink from
responding with vivid, earthy descriptions of the Kingdom to come. Within a few decades, Dionysius of Alexandria
began writing against those who, by a too literal (p. 81 ) interpretation of Scripture, especially the Book of
Revelation, taught that the Kingdom of Christ would be on earth. Dionysius also adds the polemical slur that they
dreamt that the Kingdom would consist of those things that were the objects of their own desireseating, drinking,
sexual desire, and marriagefor they were nothing but carnal lovers of the body.145 According to Eusebius, the idea
that there will be a millennium, after the resurrection from the dead, in which the Kingdom of Christ will be
established in a bodily way on this earth stems from Papias, who had presented this idea as an unwritten tradition,
but had come to it by misunderstanding the apostolic accounts, for he was a man of very little intelligence and had
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not realized that such Scriptures were to be read symbolically (). That Irenaeus followed Papias (cf. AH 5.
33. 4) was explained by Eusebius on the grounds that Irenaeus had been impressed by Papiass antiquity.146
The increasing distance placed by such churchmen between themselves and the theology of the flesh and the
Kingdom of Christ on earth, as represented by Irenaeus, has, as its correlate, an increasing allegorization or mystical
interpretation of Scripture and an increasing spiritualization of the resurrection. Irenaeus, although not averse to
the occasional allegory, emphasized that the resurrection and the Kingdom spoken of in Scripture cannot be
allegorized.147 However, it was the spiritualization of man, rather than the legitimate scope of allegory, that was of
greatest concern for Irenaeus, and which he attacked by maintaining a literal reading of Scripture. It was easy to pass
from the teaching of the resurrection of the flesh to that of the body, a term which is open to many more
interpretations than flesh, and thence to an understanding of the spiritual body as a sut generis body of the soul or
the real, inner person, rather than the flesh which has been vivified by the Spirit.148 With such an understanding of
what is properly (p. 82 ) human, salvation concerns the soul or inner person alone in its ascent to a mystical union
with God in a manner similar to Gnostic soteriology. Although later Church theologians never, as some of the
heretics had reputedly done, regarded the body and material creation as inherently defiled, or deprived it of any
function in salvation history, few theologians matched the central importance given to the flesh in the unfolding of
the economy as described by Irenaeus.
The time before the resurrection and the coming of the Kingdom is a time of tribulation and martyrdom, separating
the wheat from the chaff. Before Christ returns, the Antichrist will come and establish his kingdom, ruling at
Jerusalem for three years and six months.149 The Antichrist will recapitulate in himself all the diabolical apostasy
and error, and every iniquity and deceit. Summed up in him, the whole apostasy can then be sent altogether to the
eternal furnace.150 This will be accomplished when Christ comes in the glory of the Father, casting the Antichrist into
the lake of fire (cf. Rev. 19: 20) and bringing the just into the Kingdom which is the rest of the seventh day.151
For Irenaeus, the rhythm of the events of the last times is based on the opening verses in Genesis, for this is an
account of what happened, as it happened, as also it is a prophecy of what is to come.152 As God finished his work on
the sixth day and rested on the seventh (Gen. 2: 2), and as a day of the Lord is as 1,000 years,153 so the completion of
creation took 6,000 years. The seventh 1,000-year period will be the Kingdom of (p. 83 ) the Son, in which the just
will reign with him in a renewed earthly Jerusalem. This period is inaugurated by the first resurrection:
John, therefore, foresaw precisely the first resurrection of the just [cf Luke 14: 14; Rev. 20: 56] and the
inheritance of the earth in the Kingdom, and the prophets have also prophesied concerning it in the same
terms. For this is what the Lord also taught, promising to drink the new mingled cup with his disciples in the
Kingdom [cf. Matt. 26: 29], and again when he said, the days are coming when the dead in their tombs will
hear the voice of the Son of Man and those who have done good will rise to the resurrection of life, but those
who have done evil will rise to the resurrection of judgement [cf. John 5: 289], saying that those doing good
will be raised first, going to the rest, and then those who are to be judged will be raised, just as the Book of
Genesis has the completion of this world on the sixth day, that is, the sixth thousand years, and then the
seventh day of rest, of which David says, this is my rest, the just shall enter into it [cf. Pss. 131: 14, 117: 20
LXX], that is, the seventh thousand years of the Kingdom of the just, in which the just shall grow accustomed
to incorruptibility, when the whole of creation will be renewed for those who have been preserved for this.
(AH 5. 36. 3)154
The just who are raised in the first resurrection enjoy the land promised to the patriarchs and drink the fruit of the
vine with Christ as he promised to his disciples (Matt. 26: 29).155 Isaacs blessing on Jacob (Gen. 27: 279), is
extended to the field of the world (cf. Matt. 13: 38), and so the blessing foreshadows the times of the Kingdom, when
the just are raised and reign, and creation, also, having been renovated and set free, shall fructify with an abundance
of all kinds of food, from the Dew of heaven and from the fertility of the earth.156 This earth, in the Kingdom of the
just, provides a banquet at which God himself has promised to serve.157 It is in this renewed creation that man is also
further trained and accustomed to bear God, to partake of incorruptibility, and to receive the glory of the Father.158
(p. 84 ) At the end of the period of the Kingdom, those who are judged are raised and cast into the lake of fire, the
second death, Gehenna or the eternal fire.159 Irenaeus stresses that the meaning of the term judgement is
separation, and that as everyone has been created with free will and understanding, the choice whether to join the
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just or the judged rests with them, not with the God who makes his sun to rise on the evil and on the good (Matt. 5:
45).160 It is not the light that has blinded them, but they who have preferred the darkness, and as such, Gods
judgement is simply a recognition of their own freely chosen separation.161
With death, the last enemy, thus destroyed, the Son will yield up his work to the Father, that he might be all in
all.162 The nature or the substance (, ) of the creation will remain, but the fashion of the world will
pass away (1 Cor. 7: 31): the fashion, that is, in which the apostasy took place and man grew old.163 The fundamental
characteristic of that which will replace the present fashion of the world is its continuing newness:
When this fashion passes away, and man is renewed and flourishing with incorruptibility so that he is no
longer able to become old, there shall be a new heaven and a new earth [Isa. 65: 17], in which the new man
will remain, conversing with God in a manner forever new. (AH 5. 36. 1)
As to what it is that the Father will bestow on man, in a paternal manner (paternaliter) after the completion of the
Kingdom of the Son, Irenaeus does not dare speculate, but reminds his readers that of these things, no eye has seen,
nor ear heard, nor the heart of man conceived.164 Only one, the (p. 85 ) Only Begotten, knows the Father, and only
he has manifested the Father (cf. Matt. 11: 27; Luke 10: 22).
Irenaeus concludes his Against the Heresies by recapitulating his great work, summing up the whole economy in one
sentence:
For there is one Son, who accomplished his Fathers will, and there is one human race, in which the mysteries
of God are wrought, which the angels desire to see [1 Pet. 1: 12], not being able to search out the wisdom of
God, through which his handiwork, conformed and incorporated with the Son, is perfected, [the Fathers will]
that his Offspring, the First-begotten Word, should descend to the creature, that is, to the handiwork, and be
borne by it, and, on the other hand, [that] the creature should bear the Word and ascend to him, passing
beyond the angels and becoming in the image and likeness of God. (AH 5. 36. 3)
This is the economy of God, the fashioning of his handiwork, bringing the creature made of mud to share in his own
life, incorruptibility, and glory, in his incarnate Son, true God and true man. The unfolding of this economy, salvation
history, is centred on, and culminates in, Christ: what has gone before typifies its realization in him, as he realizes
what will be wrought in those who follow him. For Irenaeus, both protology and eschatology are Christocentric: man,
from his initial formation and throughout the pedagogy of the economy, can be understood only in the light of
Christ.
Notes:
(1) On AH 1. 10. 3, see A. Bengsch, Heilsgeschichte und Heilswissen: Eine Untersuchung zur Struktur und
Entfaltung des theologischen Denkens im Werk Adversus Haereses des hl. Irenus von Lyon (Leipzig, 1957), 516,
and W. C. van Unnik, An Interesting Document of Second Century Theological Discussion (Irenaeus, Adv. Haer. 1.
10. 3), VC 31 (1977), 196228.
(2) Elsewhere Irenaeus excludes speculation about what God was doing before the creation of the world (AH 2. 28.
3) and the use of human analogies to explain the indescribable generation of the Word by the Father (AH 2. 28. 46),
subjects which fall outside of what is revealed in Scripture.
(3) Cf. G. May, Creation Ex Nihilo: The Doctrine of Creation out of Nothing in Early Christian Thought, trans. A. S.
Worrall (Edinburgh, 1994), 16478; A. Orbe, San Ireneo y la creacin de la materia, Greg. 59. 1 (1978), 71127; J.
Fantino, La Cration ex nihilo chez saint Irne: Etude historique et thologique, RSPhTh 76. 3 (1992), 42142.
(4) Cf. Noormann: Irenus versteht die Schpfung als Inauguration einer creatio continua, welche gesamte
Heilsgeschichte umfat und erst im Reich des Vaters zu ihrem Ziel kommt (Irenus, 468; cf. 46877).
(5) AH 4. 33. 7: [ ]
. Following the text of the Sacra Parallela, as edited by Holl, TU 20. 2 (Leipzig,
1899), rather than the variant preferred by Rousseau ( , publie en vue des hommes), to preserve
the immediacy of Gods activity in and on the human race in accord with Irenaeuss fundamental axiom: Et hoc
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Deus ab homine differt, quoniam Deus quidem facit, homo autem fit (AH 4. 11. 2).
(6) AH 5. 36. 3.
(7) AH 3. 20. 2.
(8) AH 4. 13. 4.
(9) Cf. Rousseaus note, SC 100, 2334.
(10) AH 4. 14. 1. Irenaeus uses these terms almost as synonyms, always referring them to God himself; cf. AH 2. 13.
9. For a synopsis of the function of these terms in Irenaeus, see Y. de Andia, Homo vivens: Incorruptibilit et
divinisation de lhomme selon Irne de Lyon (Paris, 1986), 1631.
(11) AH 4. 14. 1.
(12) Rousseau, referring to the last lines of AH 4. 11. 1, argues that adjectionem et augmentum should be translated
by une maturit (), as, having received a beginning and a middle, one would a priori expect le point
culminant ou maturit (SC 100, 228). The parallel text in AH 4. 11. 1 (in both the Latin and the Armenian) would in
fact seem to support the Latin version of AH 4. 11. 2. The sense of both AH 4. 11. 1 and AH 4. 11. 2 must, ultimately,
reflect the quotation from Genesis given in 11. 1: Increase and multiply. The context is no less clear: a few lines
later, Irenaeus specifically states that mans perfection is to continue indefinitely progressing towards God, homo in
Deo inventus semper proficiet ad Deum, for while God is uncreated, and so eternally the same, it belongs to the very
nature and existence of man to draw ever closer to his Creator. Cf. Bacq, De lancienne la nouvelle alliance, 96 n. 2.
(13) Basing himself, perhaps, on Pauls use of Isaiah, Rom. 9: 20 citing Isa. 45: 9. For Irenaeuss use of the word
plasma and its cognates, see G. Joppich, Salus Garnis: Eine Untersuchung in der Theologie des hl. Irenaus von Lyon
(Mnsterschwarzach, 1965), 4955.
(14) Cf. Orbe, who characterizes the anthropology of the Gnostics (true man = seed of the divine pneuma) as
pneumatology, that of Origen (true man = human nous) as psychology, and that of Irenaeus as sarcology
(Antropologa de San Ireneo (Madrid, 1969), 5278).
(15) e.g. AH 1. 9. 3; 3. 21. 10; 5. 1. 3.
(16) Cf. AH, esp. 4. 38. 3; 2. 30. 9; 3. 24. 2; 4. 20. 1; Dem. 5; Andia, Homo vivens, 657; Fantino, La Cration ex
nihio, 42838.
(17) Cf. Fantino, La Cration ex nihilo, 429.
(18) AH 5. 1. 3; cf. AH 5. 16. 1, 28. 4.
(19) This is stated in a formula that has the characteristic of a rule of truth in AH 4. 33. 15. For the continuing
presence of the Word, cf. e.g. AH 3. 16. 6, 18. 1, and of the Holy Spirit, AH 4. 33. 1, 7. As it is through Jesus Christ that
God has chosen to make himself manifest, the Old Testament theophanies are proleptic, prophetic events, referring
to the Incarnate Word; cf. Dem. 445 and All 4. 5. 28. 1. A. Orbe (Estudios Valentinianos, 1: Hacia la primera
teologa de la procesin del Verbo (Rome, 1958), 407, 6559), and J Ochagavia (Visibile Patris Filius: A Study of
Irenaeuss Teaching on Revelation and Tradition (Rome, 1964), 69, 8992), have argued that, prior to the
Incarnation, the Word was visible to the mind, an essential visibility or cognoscibility, fundamentally different from
his visibility to the eyes of flesh: two types of visibility corresponding to his two generations, ex Patre Deo and ex
Matre Virgine. Such an interpretation, however, undermines the unity and uniqueness of the revelation of God in
the incarnate Christ, and, furthermore, ignores the realism of Irenaeuss understanding of seeing, while
misunderstanding the nature of prophecy and biblical typology. Cf. A. Houssiau, La Christologie de saint Irne
(Louvain, 1955), 8793, and R. Tremblay, La Manifestation et la vision de Dieu selon saint Irne de Lyon (Mnster,
1978), 6776, 91103.
(20) AH 4 ii 2
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(21) Cf. J. Danilou, S. Irne et les origines de la thologie de lhistoire, RSR 34 (1947), 22731; Markus, Pleroma
and Fulfilment; J. Fantino, La Cration ex nihilo 43842.
(22) AH 2. 34. 3.
(23) Cf. Fantino, La Cration ex nihilo 4389.
(24) Cf. AH 2. 3. 12.
(25) Cf. AH 4. 4. 1: Quaecumque enim temporale initium habent, necesse est ea et finem habere temporalem.
(26) AH 4. 4. 3. Irenaeus is referring to 1 Cor. 7: 31 and to AH 4. 3, where he demonstrated, from Paul, David (Ps. 101:
269 LXX), and Isaiah (51: 6), that though the fashion of the world passes away, God and his servants will remain.
In AH 2. 34. 2 Irenaeus criticizes those who extend the scope of this principle beyond those things created for the
sake of their fruit, as in AH 4. 4, to deny the perpetuity of the soul itself. For Irenaeuss position on the soul, cf. Ch. 2.
(27) This ageing of man in the world in which the transgression occurred is to be distinguished from the growth and
maturing which brings him, as a creature, ever closer to his Creator. The ageing described in AH 5. 36. 1 is thus
contrasted with the renewing of man in a new heaven and a new earth, where he continually holds new converse
with God.
(28) All 4. 4. 2, 19. 2; cf. Bacq, De lancienne la nouvelle alliance, 58 n. 2.
(29) AH 4. 4. 3. Irenaeus is here countering the Valentinian position, in which, as he reports it, some humans are
good by nature and others bad; cf. AH 1. 7. 5. For more recent comparisons of the anthropology of Irenaeus and the
Gnostics, see R. Berthouzoz, Libert et grce suivant la thologie dlrne de Lyon (Fribourg en Suisse and Paris,
1980); Andia, Homo vivens; and the numerous studies by Orbe.
(30) AH 5. 29. 1.
(31) For the first section of All 4, finishing with 5. 1, cf. Bacq, De lancienne la nouvelle alliance, 60.
(32) AH 5. 13. 3, commenting on 1 Cor. 15: 535 and Phil. 3: 201.
(33) AH 4. 38. 3.
(34) Dem. 12. In Dem. 16 Irenaeus explains that the angel became jealous and looked on him [the man] with envy,
and [so] ruined himself and made the man a sinner, persuading him to disobey the commandment of God. Cf. Orbe,
Antropologa, 1345.
(35) For eschatology, cf. AH 5. 36. 3. Cf. Orbe, Antropologa, 2067; idem, Supergrediens angelos: AH V. 36. 1, Greg.
54 (1973), 569; idem, Teologa de San Ireneo: Comentario al libro V del Adversus Haereses, 3 (Madrid, 1988),
65964. The idea of becoming equal to, or like, the angels played a great role in some strands of contemporary
Gnosticism and later Christianity; for the latter, cf. [K.] S. Frank, : Begriffsanalytische und
begriffsgeschichtlichte Untersuchung zum engelgleichen Leben im frhen Mnchtum (Mnster, 1964).
(36) AH 4. 37. . On the place of AH 4. 379, the so-called Treatise on Free Will, in Against the Heresies, see Bacq, De
lancienne la nouvelle alliance, 36388. For a more comprehensive analysis of this section, see Berthouzoz, Libert
et grce, 189243. For Irenaeuss understanding of free will, see Orbe, Antropologa, 16595, and Berthouzoz,
Libert et grce, 1958.
(37) AH 4. 37. 6.
(38) AH 4. 39. 1: Si autem utrorumque eorum cognitionem et duplices sensus cogitationis quis defugiat, latenter
semetipsum occidit hominem. On this passage, see Berthouzoz, Libert et grce, 2348.
(39) Rousseau translates sustinuit by a permis; however, as Berthouzoz observes, such a translation reflects a later
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theological perspective, so he proposes instead a support (Libert et grce, 216 n. 79). AH 5. 2. 3 employs in
a similar context, a verb which in its NT usage (the background for much of Irenaeuss vocabulary) always appears in
the middle voice, generally with the sense of to bear, to enduree.g. Matt. 17: 17, etc. The Armenian of AH 4. 37. 7
seems to be an attempt to explain the middle voice, He took to himself (TU 35. 2, 137. 23, for AH 5. 2. 3, 157. 5). The
idea mentioned in AH 5. 2. 3, that God has borne our death that we might not be ignorant either of God or of
ourselves, echoes Irenaeuss startling words at the end of AH 4. 39. , cited in the previous note.
(40) AH 4. 38. 1.
(41) AH 4. 38. 1. Bacq interprets AH 4. 38. 4 (commenting on Ps. 81: 67 LXX) as stating that God did indeed bestow
the power of his divinity on the human race, but that man, being unable to bear it, lost it, though it can now be
regained through Christs work of recapitulation (De lancienne la nouvelle alliance, 384). However, in AH 4. 379
Irenaeus is speaking not of protology, but of the law of human growth which applies to all. Cf. e.g. AH 4. 39. 2:
Oportet enem te primo quidem ordinem hominis custodire, tune deinde participan gloriae Dei.
(42) On this apparent flaw in Irenaeuss argument, see Minns, Irenaeus, 734.
(43) On the relationship between the vocation of growth and the perfection of the human state of childhood, see esp.
Wingren, Man and the Incarnation, 20, 2635.
(44) AH 4. 38. 3; cf. AH 4. ii. 2. The whole tenor of Irenaeuss thought on this point is strikingly similar to that of
Gregory of Nyssa: e.g. On Perfection, ed. W. Jaeger, in Gregorii Nysseni Opera, 8. 1 (Leiden, 1986), 214; trans. V. W.
Callahan FC 58 (Washington, 1967), 122; cf. J. Danilou, LEtre et le temps chez Grgoire de Nysse (Leiden, 1970),
114.
(45) Cf. 2 Cor. 5: 4; 1 Cor. 15: 53; Gen. 1: 26, 3: 5, 3: 22.
(46) This is not to suggest, however, that these themes are absent from AH 4. 379 or that the theology of growth
described therein is absent from the rest of Irenaeuss work; these themes are two aspects of one and the same
mystery. Cf. Bacq, De lancienne la nouvelle alliance, 382.
(47) AH 3. 20. 1. Cf. 2 Cor. 12: 9.
(48) For a discussion of this passage, see G. Jouassard, Le Signe de Jonas dans le livre IIIe de lAdversus haereses
de saint Irne, in LHomme devant Dieu: Mlanges offerts au Pre Henri de Lubac, 1: Exgse et patristique (Paris,
1963), 23546.
(49) Although the Latin is fuit patiens, Rousseau suggests that the Greek was and again translates this by a
permis; I have preferred bear, see my comments above on AH 4. 37. 7. If the parallel with Jonah is indeed to hold,
God was more actively involved in this event than is suggested by a permis; in Jonah 2: 1, it is said that the Lord
appointed () a great whale to swallow up Jonah.
(50) For a similarly strong assertion, see Maximus the Confessor, who speaks of the first man inclining towards the
senses, rather than following his natural desire for God, (Quaestiones ad Thalassium, 61; PG 90.
628a). For both Irenaeus and Maximus there is no protological age of original perfection: true human perfection is to
be found only in the eschaton, realized by Christ in the last times, and anticipated by Christians in this present age.
(51) Irenaeus does, nevertheless, refer to the pre-lapsarian existence of Adam in occasional comments and
discussion in Against the Heresiese.g. AH 3. 223. The comments here, however, are made within the Pauline
AdamChrist framework. In Dem. 1116, Irenaeus provides a sustained commentary on the creation and
paradisiacal life of Adam and Eve, which will be analysed below, Ch. 2. But it is to be noted that the theology which
Irenaeus develops out of the opening chapters of Genesis is that of the dependence of the human race on God and
the need for grateful obedience, of human infancy and the need for growth: that is, it functions, within the
Demonstration, to establish the framework within which salvation history unfolds, as e.g. AH 4. 14. 1 does with
respect to 14. 2, dealt with in the previous section and the next respectively.
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(52) For the Devils role in mans apostasy, cf. AH 3. 23. 13; 4. pref. 4, 40. 3; Dem. 16.
(53) Dem. 15.
(54) Dem. 15.
(55) AH 3. 23. 5; 4. pref. 4.
(56) Cf. esp. AH 4. 40. 3, where Irenaeus mitigates the disobedience of humans by attributing it to a lack of care and
inexperience, in contrast to the conscious sowing of tares by the Devil. Cf. AH 3. 23. 3.
(57) Cf. AH 5. 2. 3.
(58) With regard to the problem of death in nature, apart from that of man, Irenaeus sometimes seems to consider
death as a natural occurrence, for what comes to be will also cease to be; although it is also possible that he
envisaged the abolition of all death in the Kingdom of the Son. Irenaeus never specifically attempted to tackle this
point, but kept to Scripture, which clearly teaches that man was created for life, and that his death is the result of his
apostasy. Cf. Wingren, Man and the Incarnation, 5560, 1937.
(59) Theophilus of Antioch, To Autolycus, 2. 26. This positive evaluation of death, as putting an end to sin through
the dissolution of man into the earth, recurs in later patristic writings: e.g. Gregory of Nyssa, Catechetical Oration, 8;
cf. P. Nellas, Deification in Christ (New York, 1987), 646. The positive, pedagogical value of death within the whole
economy seems to be peculiar to Irenaeus.
(60) AH 3. 23. 1.
(61) AH 5. 21. 3.
(62) AH 3. 18. 2. Minns is probably right to consider replasmare here as a misreading of rather than a
translation of (Irenaeus, 101 n. 18); the same confusion is evident at AH 4. 24. 1, where for reformasse
the Armenian has to fight and strike (TU 35. 2, 83. 3).
(63) Bacq suggests that the reference is to Gen. 6: 1316, where God describes the plan for the ark to Noah (De
lancienne la nouvelle alliance, 117).
(64) Following Rousseaus translation of primam stolam, which he interprets as a symbole du don de la vie ternelle
aux hommes (SC 100, 234). Others take the adjective prima to mean original and identify the stola with the robe
of holiness from the Spirit (AH 3. 23. 5) with which Adam was clothed in Paradise, before he lost both the Spirit and
the . Cf. Orbe, Antropologa, 21418, esp. n. 126; . J. Jaschke, Der Heilige Geist im Bekenntnis der Kirche
(Mnster, 1976), 2546; and Andia, Homo vivens, 959. The place of the Holy Spirit in Irenaeuss anthropology will
be examined in Ch. 2. Here, in AH 4. 14. 2, the context is clearly an exegesis of the parable of the Prodigal Son (Luke
15: 1132), where the father simply bestows on his repentant son the best that he has, and no reference is made to
what type of clothing he may have worn before his adventures; as Bacq notes, Irenaeus uses donans, not restaurans
or restituens (De lancienne la nouvelle alliance, 118 n. 1).
(65) Here I am following the Armenian, which suggests a musical context for harmonized; cf. Bacq, De lancienne
la nouvelle alliance, 118 n. 2. The symphony is a further reference to the parable of the Prodigal Son, who, as he
approached home, heard music (, Luke 15: 25). The musical metaphor of a symphony and the
corresponding adjective occurs throughout Irenaeuss work. On the accustoming between God and man, see P.
Evieux, La Thologie de laccoutumance chez saint Irne, RSR 55 (1967), 554.
(66) AH 4. 5. 5.
(67) The entry into the good land described in Joshua also plays a typological role, referring to the reign, in the
resurrection of the just, of the patriarchs, to whom the promise was made, and their seed (the Church, through
adoption), together with Christ on the earth into which they never entered. Cf. AH 5. 32. 2.
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(68) The identification of the prodigal son with the Gentiles is made by Bacq, De lancienne la nouvelle alliance,
117. The only other place where Irenaeus refers to this parable is AH 4. 36. 7, to demonstrate that both those called
first, Israel, and those called later, the Gentiles, have one and the same Father. Cf. ibid. 249.
(69) AH 1. 10. 3; Hos. 2: 23; Rom. 9: 25.
(70) Cf. e.g. AH 2. 13.3, 28.5.
(71) The connecting word is the of Rev. 1: 15, which picks up on the , which itself is an allusion to the
parable of the Prodigal Son commented on in the preceding lines; cf. Bacq, De lancienne la nouvelle alliance, 118 n.
2.
(72) Cf. AH 4. 14. 2, 20. II.
(73) AH 4. 20. 7.
(74) Ibid.
(75) AH 4. 20. 5.
(76) Irenaeus had already made the identification of life and the vision of God in AH 4. 20. 5. There is a pervasive
trend in current scholarship to assert that the life that Irenaeus writes about in AH 4. 20. 5 is [E]videntlyother
than physical and is the true life of humans (M. A. Donovan, Alive to the Glory of God, TS 49. 2 (1988), 289).
Although Irenaeus does write about the created life, the breath of life, and uncreated life, the life-giving Spirit, the
contrast between a physical or natural life and a true, supernatural life, which is not physical, is utterly foreign to
Irenaeuss thought and vitiates its dynamism: as man, for Irenaeus, is essentially physical, made from mud, it is
difficult to see how he can possess or live a life in a manner other than physical, unless we spiritualize our notion of
life and our understanding of the true human being in a Gnostic fashion. Cf. AH 5. 3. 3: when God provides life, we
live: , . On the significance and scope of life in Irenaeuss writings, see
below, Ch. 2.
(77) Cf. A. Orbe, Gloria Dei vivens homo: Anlisis de Ireneo, adv. haer. IV. 20. 17, Greg. 73. 2 (1992), 263.
(78) Cf. AH 3. 6. 1, 9. 3, 12. 7, 18. 3; Dem. 40, 41.
(79) AH 3. 17. 1.
(80) On this difficult text see Rousseaus note, SC 210, 3712; J. A. de Aldama, Adam, typus futuri, Sacris Erudiri,
13 (1962), 26680; and Noormann, Irenaus, 1602.
(81) It is important to note the literalism of Irenaeuss understanding of , as an imprint or impression. As a
type of Christ, Adam does not simply prefigure Christ, but bears in his own body the lineaments of the incarnate Son
of God (Minns, Irenaeus, 86). We will see more of this when considering Irenaeuss understanding of the image of
God; see Ch. 2.
(82) Dem. 14; mistranslated by J. P. Smith, St Irenaeus: Proof of the Apostolic Preaching, ACW 16 (New York, 1952),
who justifies his translation by the later distinction between the natural life of the breath and the supernatural life of
the Spirit (ibid. 1512 nn. 823). The relationship between the breath of life and the life-giving Spirit will be dealt
with below, Ch. 2.
(83) Cf. e.g. AH 5. 1. 3; 4. 33. 1, 7, discussed in the section on The Handiwork of God.
(84) DAls (La Doctrine de la rcapitulation en S. Irne, RSR 6 (1916), 1912), thought that he could discern in
Irenaeus the future positions of both Duns Scotus and Thomas Aquinas, and so began a lengthy debate which, as
Wingren observed, might lead one to ask if the main question is really whether Irenaeus followed Thomas or Duns
Scotus! (Man and the Incarnation, 923 n. 37). Orbe continues such speculation in a manner which simply defies
credulity (Antropologa, 495502).
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(109) AH 3. 24. 2.
(110) In Dem. 41, however, both the soul and the body together are described as being cleansed by the baptism of
water and the Holy Spirit.
(111) An explicit connection is made only in Dem. 3, where Irenaeus asserts that the faith handed down to us
reminds us first of all that we have received baptism for the remission of sins, and in AH 3. 12. 7, where he
comments on Acts 10: 43. In a different context, in AH 5. 14. 23, Irenaeus writes about the remission of sins for
those who have been reconciled to the Father by being incorporated into the righteous flesh of Christ, but no explicit
mention is made of baptism. Cf. A. Houssiau, Le Baptme selon Irne de Lyon, ETL 60 (1984), 4559.
(112) Cf. AH 1. 21. 1; 3. 17. 1; Dem. 7.
(113) Cf. AH esp. 4. 33. 4; also 3. 19. 1; 4. 33. 11; 5. 1. 3. On the connection between the nova genetatio of Christ and
that of believers, see Rousseaus notes, SC 100, 26970; 152, 2057.
(114) Cf. AH 5. 15. 1, where Irenaeus refers the second generation to the first resurrection of the just in the Kingdom
of the Son. The connection between the and the Kingdom of the Son is made in Matt. 19: 28. See also
AH 5. 32. 12, 35. 1, 36. 3; and A. Orbe, Teologa de San Ireneo, 2 (Madrid, 1987), 78.
(115) Irenaeus does not inform us who his source was. I have followed Rousseau in giving preference to the
Armenian version of AH 4. 41. 2; see his comments, SC 100, 2835.
(116) Cf. AH 3. 19. 1, cited above; and Minns, Irenaeus, 11012.
(117) AH 3. 6. 1; cf. AH, esp. 4. pref. 4; 3. 6. 2; 4. 1. 1.
(118) AH 4. 16. 5. The whole section AH 4. 916 is an extended discussion of the relationship between the Law and
the Gospel. Cf. M. F. Berrouard, Servitude de la Loi et libert de lEvangile selon saint Irne, LV 61 (1963), 4160.
(119) Cf. AH 4. 13. 1, 13. 4, 15. 1.
(120) Cf. AH 4. 15. 1, 16. 3.
(121) AH 4. 15. 1.
(122) Cf. AH 4. 13. 14, 16. 45; Dem. 96.
(123) As e.g.Berrouard, Servitude de la Loi, 501. Cf. H. J. Jaschke, Pneuma und Moral: Der Grund christlicher
Sittlichkeit aus der Sicht des Irenaus von Lyon, SM 14 (1976), 272. Interiority plays no role within Irenaeuss
understanding of human life in the unfolding of the economy, and it is doubtful that it has any place in his
anthropology.
(124) AH 4. 13. 2.
(125) AH 4. 13. 3. See the interesting article by B. Aland, Fides und Subiectio: Zur Anthropologie des Irenaus, in A.
M. Ritter (ed.), Kerygma und Logos: Beitrge zu den geist es geschichtlichen Beziehung zwischen Antike und
Christentum. Festschrift fr Carl Andresen zum 70. Geburtstag (Gttingen, 1979), 928.
(126) This text, which is preserved in Greek, is presented in parallel columns by P. Gchter, Unsere Einheit mit
Christus nach dem hl. Irenaus, ZKT 58 (1939), 517, and slightly differently by Andia, Homo vivens, 242. For a
summary of modern scholarship on the question of the two things of AH 4. 18. 5, see Andia, Homo vivens, 2545.
(127) The Greek, preserved in the Sacra Parallela, has , while the Latin and Armenian simply
have by wisdom. The context indicates a threefold process: the production of fruits by the Spirit, which are then
made into bread and wine, and which then receive the invocation of the Word. Thus, at the beginning of AH 5. 2. 3,
Irenaeus refers to . The wisdom in question would thus seem to refer to
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that of human art, so Rousseau translates grce au savoir-faire; see his note, SC 152, 21315.
(128) For the Greek text printed in parallel, see Andia, Homo vivens, 244.
(129) That is, it is not a correspondence between a merely natural process and a mystical process. H. D. Simonin
emphasizes that it is ce que lon a appel, faute de mieux, le dynamisme de la sacramentaire grecque, dynamisme
la fois cosmique et mystique (A propos dun texte eucharistique de S. Irne: AH. IV. xviii. 5, RSPhTh 23 (1934),
285). Andias analyses of the different transformations seems somewhat scholastic (Homo vivens, 2457).
(130) Cf. AH 4. 5. 1, discussed in the earlier section The Temporality of the Economy.
(131) Nicholas Cabasilas observes, in his Commentary on the Divine Liturgy, 3. 4, that man is essentially a cooking
animal: We call human that which belongs to man alone. Now the need of baking bread to eat and making wine to
drink is peculiar to man. That is why we offer bread and wine (trans. J. M. Hussey and P. A. McNulty (London,
1960), 32).
(132) Cf. AH 1. 10. 1; 4. 36. 2.
(133) So the Cross is described as the tree of martyrdomby which he draws all to himself and vivifies all (AH 4. 2. 7).
(134) As argued by Nautin, Lettres et crivains chrtiens, 5461.
(135) EH 5. 1. 412.
(136) Referring to Ignatius of Antioch, Romans, 4. 1. The eucharist framework for understanding martyrdom is also
demonstrated in The Martyrdom of Polycarp, where the structure of the narrative closely parallels that of the Last
Supper.
(137) As Orbe points out, commenting on this passage, Irenaeus does not think, as Philo and Origen do, of two
distinct creations, Gen. 1: 267 and 2: 7, but of one creation in two aspects: the initial, forming man from mud, and
the continual, historical fashioning of this creature into the image and likeness of God (Teologa de San Ireneo, 3.
192).
(138) Cf. PO 12. 5, 7389 (frag. 6); TU 36. 3, 1419 (frag. 10).
(139) All 5. 9. 3.
(140) Cf. Jaschke: Das Martyrium is die Grundform christlicher Existenz (Pneuma und Moral, 265); Y. de Andia,
La Rsurrection de la chair selon les Valentiniens et Irne de Lyon, Les Quatre Fleuves, 1516 (1982), 69; R.
Tremblay, Le Martyre selon saint Irne de Lyon, SM 16 (1978), 16789.
(141) Cf. AH 5. 30. 4, 32. 12.
(142) Balthasar, Glory of the Lord, 2. 93.
(143) AH 2. 29. 3.
(144) AH 5. 31. i. Orbe identifies this group with those mentioned in AH 5. 2. 23. As Irenaeus, in AH 5. 1. 22. 3, has
already tackled the Docetists (= Valentinians, cf. AH 5. 1. 2, line 59), the Ebionites, and the Marcionites, the group of
AH 5. 2. 2, who do not deny the earthly reality of Christ, the divinity of his Person, or separate the Creator from the
true God, are a group within the Church who deny the salvation of the flesh. Cf. A. Orbe, Adversarios annimos de la
salus carnis (Iren. adv. haer. V. 2. 2s), Greg. 60. 1 (1979), 953, and idem, Teologa, 1 (Madrid, 1985), 12930.
Similar groups are also mentioned by Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho, 80. 4, and Tertullian, On the
Resurrection, 2.
(145) EH 7. 245. 5.
(146) EH 3 39 12 13 Eusebius inserts an extra generation between the apostle John and Papias (EH 3 39 2)
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DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198270003.003.0003
We have seen how, for Irenaeus, the divine economy is directed towards the becoming truly human of both God and
human beings, first realized in the last times in Jesus Christ, and to be fully realized for the adopted sons of God in
the eschaton. Adam is a type of Christ, and the various events of the economy both typify and prepare the human
race for the fulfilment achieved in Christ. It is a movement from animation to vivification: as Adam was animated by
the breath of life, so the resurrected Christ is vivified by the life-creating Spirit. Yet, as the resurrection still lies in
the future, those baptized into Christ and nourished by his body and blood have received a pledge of the Spirit
which will vivify them fully in the Kingdom, but which even now prepares them for the reception of incorruptibility
and enables them to bear martyrdom as witnesses of the dynamics of salvation being wrought in them.
That Irenaeuss anthropology cannot be detached from this setting cannot be overemphasized: Irenaeuss reading of
the verses in Genesis relating to the creation of man, his protology, just as much as his eschatology, is Christocentric,
centred on Christ, true God and true man. Furthermore, the text we have been principally examining so far, Against
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the Heresies, while polemical, is also exegetical rather than analytical: it demonstrates, from Scripture, that there is
but one God, one Christ, one Spirit, and one human race in which the one economy is enacted, as unfolded in
Scripture, rather than analysing the human constitution in static, philosophical terms. Now that we have explored
the perspective of Irenaeuss theology, the overarching context for his anthropology, we can examine Irenaeuss most
detailed and sustained discussion of the creation and formation of man, given in chapters 1115 of the (p. 87 )
Demonstration, supplemented with details taken from elsewhere.
Unlike Philo and those fathers who followed in his wake, Irenaeus does not distinguish between the two accounts of
the creation of man given in Genesis.1 There was a single creation of man, and Irenaeus cites Genesis 1: 26 and 2: 7
together to support this.2 After having discussed the rule of truth and various matters pertaining to angels, Irenaeus
begins his discussion of protology with the formation of man:
But he fashioned man with his own hands, taking the purest, the finest (and the most delicate) [elements] of
the earth, mixing with the earth, in due measure, his own power; and because he (sketched upon) the
handiwork his own formin order that what would be seen should be godlike, for man was placed upon the
earth fashioned (in) the image of Godand that he might be alive, He breathed into his face a breath of life
[Gen. 2: 7]: so that both according to the inspiration and according to the formation, man was like God.
Accordingly, he was free and master of himself, having been made by God in this way, [in order] that he
should rule over everything upon earth. And this great created world, prepared by God before the fashioning of
man, was given to man as [his] domain, having everything in it. (Dem. 11)3
Irenaeus combines both creation accounts to give a continuous description of the creation of man. Not only is there
no distinction between the making () of Genesis 1: 26 and the fashioning ()of Genesis 2: 7, but
Irenaeus explains how God made man in his image by the action of the Hands of God fashioning the earth.4
That it is from the earth itself that God took the material he used to fashion man was important to Irenaeus. In AH
(p. 88 ) 5. 15. 24 Irenaeus argues against the Valentinians claim that man was not fashioned out of this earth, but
from a fluid and diffused matter.5 According to Irenaeus, the healing of the blind man by Christspitting on the
ground, making mud, and smearing it on his eyesindicates the original fashioning of man, by the same Hand of
God with the same earth. As the work of God is fashioning man, God omitted to form the blind mans eyes in the
womb, so that the work of God might be made manifest in him.6
The act of Christ spitting on the ground is paralleled in Dem. 11 by Irenaeuss introduction of a supplementary action
of God into Genesis 2: 7, the mixing of his power with the dust from the earth, as a preparation for the formation of
man. We have already seen, in connection with baptism, how, for Irenaeus, dry earth, unless it receives the willing
Rain from above, can neither bear fruit nor be made into one body.7 This connection has led various scholars to
assert that the power of God spoken of in Dem. 11 is the Spirit.8 Irenaeus does not, however, write about the Spirit
here. A more fruitful comparison may be made with AH 5. 3. 13, where Irenaeus comments on 2 Corinthians 12: 9:
the power of God which is made perfect in weakness. Irenaeus claims that the flesh which, at the beginning, was
skilfully formed by God into its various parts, will by the same power of God be raised from the dead. Irenaeus
describes with wonder the physical constitution (or economy, AH 5. 3. 2) of man: the eyes, ears, arteries, lungs, and
so on. He concludes:
It is not possible to enumerate all the [melodious] parts of the human organism (;
), which was not made without the great wisdom of God. Whatever participates in the art and
wisdom of God also participates in his power. The flesh, therefore, is not without part in the art, the wisdom
and the power of God, (p. 89 ) but his power, which produces life, is made perfect in weakness, that is, in the
flesh. (AH 5.3. 23)9
Although, as we will see later, it is indeed the Spirit who is life-creating, the idea behind both Dem. 11 and AH 5.3.
13 seems to be that whatever is created receives, and so participates in, the art, the power, and the wisdom of the
Creator.10 This is especially so in the case of the fashioning of man, who is the vessel of the work of God and of all
his wisdom and power.11 It is by receiving this power, or having it mixed in, that the dust taken from the earth
becomes Gods handiwork (). The form in which Irenaeus cites Genesis 2: 7 in AH 5. 3. 2, and God, taking
dust from the earth, fashioned ( 12) man, parallels the description of Gods activity in Dem. 11: God, taking the
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dust, mixed his own power with it, and so produced his handiwork ().
Before going on to Genesis 2: 7b, Irenaeus, in Dem. 11, turns to Genesis 1: 27 in order to explain in what form God
fashioned man: that is, in his own image. Elsewhere Irenaeus explicitly rejected the possibility of locating the image
of God in an immaterial part or quality of man.13 Arguing against the Gnostics, Irenaeus stressed that an image must
have a form, and a form can exist only in matter.14 Consequently, he is emphatic that the image of God in man is
described quite concretely in the flesh.15 An image also has a revelatory function: the image reveals the archetype of
which it is an image. If the image of God is located in the flesh of man, then that very flesh must reveal God. But as
God himself is immaterial, and therefore formless, the archetype of the image of God in man must be the incarnate
Son of God. As Irenaeus puts it:
(p. 90 ) For (I made) man (in) the image of God [Gen. 9: 6 LXX] and the image of God is the Son, according
to whose image was man made; and for this reason, he appeared in the last times, to render the image like
himself. (Dem. 22)16
The Son reveals the true human form through his incarnation, demonstrating at the same time that man is indeed in
the image of God.17 Adam, as the type of the One to come (Rom. 5: 14; AH 3. 22. 3), typifies, in his flesh, the
incarnate Son. Thus the fashioning of the human flesh is intimately connected to Christ, the archetype of man, and
his revelation of the image of God, the manifestation of both God and man.
Alongside this indelible image relationship,18 located in the flesh, man is also like God in his possession of free will.
That man was made free and master of himself is mentioned in Dem. 11, and in AH 4. 37. 4 this fact is brought into
a relationship of similitude with God: Because man is possessed of free will from the beginning, and God is
possessed of free will, in whose similitude man was created, advice is always given to him to keep fast the good,
which is done by means of obedience to God. J. Fantino convincingly argues that we must carefully distinguish
between two uses of the word similitudo, depending upon whether it translates or .19 We will have
to wait until we have finished considering Irenaeuss protology to see what he meant by the latter sense, the
, the likeness man lost in Adam and regained in Christ. In the former sense it refers to mans free will,
which makes him like or similar to the Creator and (p. 91 ) Father.20 It is a freedom which extends beyond actions
to include a freedom of faith,21 and, as the foundation for mans response towards God, it has always been preserved
intact by God.22 To be human is to be in the image of God, and this implies acting and behaving in a manner
appropriate to the image of God, and so necessitates being free.
The final aspect of the fashioning of man as described in Dem. 11 is the animation with the breath of life, which
renders man like to God in inspiration as well as in his bodily formation. It is striking that Irenaeus does not speak
at all of the soul and its role in the formation of man. Irenaeus is not interested so much in the soul itself, as a
principle of interiority, as in its animation of the flesh. In one of his few comments on the soul itself, Irenaeus
describes it as the intellect of man, mind, thought, mental intuition and such like.23 Inasmuch as the soul animates
the body, it is the breath of life to the body. In the context of inquiring what it was that the Apostle described as the
mortal body which will be raised by the Spirit, Irenaeus denies that it refers to the soul, and continues:
But souls are incorporeal when compared to mortal bodies; for God breathed into the face of man a breath of
life, and the man became a living soul [Gen. 2: 7], and the breath of life is incorporeal. But one cannot call it24
mortal, since it is the breath of life. (AH 5. 7. 1)
The soul is the breath of life to the body, whilst itself being the locus of intellectual activity.25 The soul does not
simply (p. 92 ) animate the body, but uses the body as an artist uses an instrument. Although the body may slow
down the speed of the souls own movement, the body enables the soul to operate in the material world.26 When
describing how the soul animates the body, Irenaeus is careful to maintain that the soul does not lose any of the
operations proper to it, such as knowledge or memory: as he puts it: while, as it were, sharing life with the body, it
does not itself cease to live.27 Whilst animating the body, the soul in return assumes the shape of the body, to the
extent that its form can be recognized after the body and soul are separated at death.28
However, whilst taking the role of the breath of life in animating the body, and as such immortal,29 soul does not
possess life by nature. This is stated most explicitly in AH 2. 34. 24, an important passage which shows a marked
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dependency on Justins Dialogue with Trypho.30 Here Irenaeus argues against those who too rigidly apply to the soul
the philosophical principle that what begins in time is subject to corruption and so must also end in time.31 Irenaeus
stresses that only God is without beginning or end, remaining ever the same, and everything else depends on him,
both for its initial coming into being and for its continuance in existence. All things continue as long as God wills
them to be and to continue. Irenaeus then comments on Psalm 20: 5 (LXX):
(p. 93 ) And again, he thus speaks of the man being saved: He asked life of thee, and thou gavest him length
of days for ages and ages, as the Father of all bestowing also continuance for ages of ages on those who are
saved. For life does not arise from us, nor from our own nature; but it is bestowed according to the grace of
God. And therefore, those who will have preserved the gift of life, and have given thanks to him who imparted
it, will also receive length of days for ages of ages. But those who will have rejected it, and will have proved
themselves ungrateful to their Maker, inasmuch as they have been made and will not have recognized the
Bestower, deprive themselves of continuance for ages of ages. And, for this reason, the Lord declared to those
who showed themselves ungrateful towards him: If you have not been faithful in that which is little, who will
give you that which is great? [Luke 16: n] indicating that those who, in this brief temporal life, have shown
themselves ungrateful to him who bestowed it, shall justly not receive from him length of days for ages of
ages. (AH z. 34. 3)
This passage contains many of the themes which we encountered in the study of the divine economy, primarily that
mans existence should be one of thankfulness towards the God who has bestowed life upon him. What man learns
through the economy, his experience of his own weakness and death, that we should not be puffed up as if we had
life from our own nature,32 is here stated as a general principle. God is the source of all life. If a man shows himself
to be thankful, in his use of this gift of life in this brief temporal life, towards him who bestowed it, he will receive
from God length of days for ages of agesthat is, continuance in the life bestowed by God.
Irenaeus concludes AH 2. 34 by bringing the discussion back to Genesis 2: 7:
But as the animated body is certainly not itself the soul, yet participates in the soul as long as God pleases; so
also the soul herself assuredly is not life, but partakes in that life bestowed from God himself. Wherefore also
the prophetic word declares of the first-formed, he became a living soul, teaching us that by participation of
life the soul was made living so that the soul is thought of separately, and separately also the life which is in
her. With God therefore bestowing life and perpetual continuance, it comes to pass that even souls which did
not at first exist should henceforth continue, since God will have both willed them to be and to continue. (AH
2. 34. 4)
(p. 94 )
The soul, created out of nothing, does not in herself possess life, but participates in the life bestowed by God.
Becoming in this way a living soul, the soul can also animate the body, and as such is a breath of life to the
body.33
A. Rousseau, in his desire to maintain the natural immortality of the soul against H. Lassiat, seriously vitiates the
profundity of Irenaeuss thought on this issue of the soul and her life.34 According to Rousseau, Irenaeuss use of the
word life in AH 2. 34. 34 is determined by the mention of salvation introducing the quotation from Psalm 20: 5.35
Rousseau asserts that Irenaeus is not speaking of the physical or biological life of man, but of la vie suprieure
quinstaure en nous 1Esprit Saint par sa presence sanctificatrice et divini-sante.36 It is this life of the Spirit which
the first Adam enjoyed from the instant he left his Creators Hands and, having lost it through his disobedience,
regained it through the obedience of the second Adam.37
However, it is a mistake to isolate this passage from the discussion, which extends throughout AH 2. 34, concerning
how it is that created beings might remain indefinitely in (p. 95 ) existence: all is from God, and all is maintained in
existence by him as long as he wills. If Irenaeus upholds the natural immortality of the soul, this is a point which
must be carefully distinguished from the question of the life and immortality which belong to God alone and which
are participated in by the whole human being, body and soul. According to Irenaeus, the soul certainly endures after
death, as his commentary on the history of Lazarus and the rich man at the beginning of this section demonstrates
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(AH 2. 34. 1); but Irenaeus never describes this continuance, nor that of the damned in the eternal fire, as
immortality: it is possible for the soul to endure without life, just as it is possible, conversely, for the naturally
corruptible body to participate in life, immortality, and incorruptibility. Furthermore, although the question of life,
as we shall see, is connected with the life-creating Spirit, Irenaeus does not speak of the Spirit in this section.
It is similarly mistaken to equate the pre-lapsarian life of Adam with the life of the Spirit manifested by Christ. That
they should be regarded as different modalities of life is demanded by, first, Genesis 2: 7, which speaks only of the
first man becoming a living soul ( ); second, the apostle Paul, who specifies that it is the last Adam who
became a life-creating Spirit ( ), in contrast to the first Adam who was a living soul (1 Cor. 15:
456); third, the whole movement of Irenaeuss theology of the economy, which moves from animation to
vivification: as Adam was animated by the breath of life, so Christ was vivified by the Spirit, as also will be those
who, as adopted sons in him, presently have the pledge of the Spirit.
Most important, however, is Rousseaus assumption that the life in this section is somehow other than the physical
or biological life of man.38 Given Irenaeuss emphasis on the essentially physical, fleshly nature of man, it makes no
sense to speak of man possessing a life which is not lived in the flesh, in a similarly physical and fleshly manner.39
Irenaeus does not (p. 96 ) make any such distinction in this passage. The only qualification concerning life that he
makes, in AH 2. 34. 3, is that the gift of life given by God is presently a brief temporal life, in which man is to
demonstrate his readiness to accept it for length of days for ages and ages.40
In AH 5.3.3 Irenaeus explains further his understanding of the relationship between the present temporal life and
eternal life. In this section, Irenaeus is arguing against those who deny that the flesh can be vivified by God:
But if they now live, and if their whole body partakes of life, how can they dare to say that the flesh is not able
to partake of life, when they do confess that they have life at the present moment?If the present temporal
life, which is much weaker than that eternal life, is nevertheless able to vivify our mortal members, why
should not eternal life, being much more powerful than this, vivify the flesh, already exercised and
accustomed to sustain life? For that the flesh is capable of receiving life is shown from the fact of its being
alive; for it lives as long as God wants it to live. It is manifest, too, that God has the power to confer life upon
it, for when he grants life, we live. (AH 5- 3- 3)
Like AH 2. 34, this passage emphasizes that man lives as long as God wants, or as long as God confers life on his
flesh. It is important to note that although it is God who provides life, it is man who lives. Participating in this life
provided by God, man does not lose his identity; nor does the gift exist apart from him or superadded to him; but,
rather, the gift is personalized by each human being: the gift is life, yet it is the human being who lives this life in
their flesh.
The most significant feature of AH 5. 3. 3, however, is that there is a direct continuity between the life which human
beings (even the Gnostics) presently live and the eternal life which will vivify them in the resurrection. The only
distinction made between the two is that of weaker and stronger, with their correlates temporal and eternal.41
There is no suggestion (p. 97 ) that they are two different types of life: physical/biological and spiritual/the
presence of the Spirit. That the flesh has become accustomed, in this present temporal life, to bear life demonstrates
that it is capable of being vivified by eternal life. If it were a question of two different lives, Irenaeuss argument
would be undermined.
The confusion seems to arise from a reluctance to accept that the Holy Spirit is present with creation, and especially
with man, not only in the protological time of Adams pre-lapsarian existence, but also throughout the apostasy,
preferring instead to associate the presence of the Spirit with the likeness which man lost in Adam and regained in
Christ. This reluctance is combined with a desire to avoid the charge, first made in the sixteenth century by the
Magdeburgian Centuriators, that Irenaeus taught that Adam was not created perfect. The corollary of positing the
full perfection of Adam in his original state was to turn the effect of the Incarnation into Adams return to his
pre-lapsarian state.42 If one holds that the life-creating Spirit was not present to the human race during the course of
the apostasy, then one must also postulate a separate source of life, a breath of life, which is merely physical and has
nothing to do with communion with God. A consequence of this position would be to interpret the demand to deny
oneself and take up the cross, losing ones life in order to find it (Matt. 16: 245), as referring to losing ones merely
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natural life in order to gain true life in communion with God.43 But when looking at the economy, we have seen that
Irenaeus does, in fact, envisage the continual nourishing presence of the Spirit, which, nevertheless, was bestowed in
a new manner in Christ at the end of time, and therefore, in its fullness, remains an eschatological reality, of which
the adopted sons, at present, receive a pledge.44
nature, such as water, light, and grace. All life is of the grace of God, and thus there is no distinction in nature
between the weaker and the stronger.
(p. 98 ) So far, following the sequence suggested by Dem. n, we have considered Irenaeuss comments on the
formation of the body, its animation by the breath of life, and the relationship of the soul to both the body and the
life in which it participates. What, then, does Irenaeus have to say regarding the presence of the Holy Spirit in the
human formation?
Irenaeus knows the philosophical definition of man as an animal composed of soul and body, but never uses it as a
definition of a self-sufficient natural man to whom the Spirit is somehow superadded. For the most part, when
Irenaeus speaks of man as composed of soul and body, it is in the context of exhorting his readers to live
righteously in both soul and body, or, alternatively, of defending the resurrection of both.45 More important is the
fact that only the body and soul, both created out of nothing, can, strictly speaking, be described as man or be called
parts of manthe life in which they participate, although integral to a living man, comes from God. Thus, although
Irenaeus occasionally describes man as a compound being,46 a mixture or union of flesh and soul,47 because the
soul, and through it the body, must participate in life to be a living man, such descriptions are not sufficient
definitions of the living man.
When looking at the significance of martyrdom in the unfolding of the economy, we saw something of the role of the
Spirit in the vivification of man: when the Spirit absorbs the weakness of the flesh, from both of these is formed a
living man, living, indeed, because of the participation of the Spirit, and man because of the substance of the flesh.48
From this perspective, Irenaeus can, in the context of a discussion on the similarity between the formation of Adam
and the birth of Christ, describe man as a body taken from the earth, and a soul receiving the Spirit from God.49
Similarly, Irenaeus asserts that death befalls neither the soul, for it is a breath of life, nor the Spirit, for it is simple
and cannot be decomposed, and is itself the life of those who receive it.50 The Spirit is clearly (p. 99 ) connected to
the life lived by man: the Spirit is indeed life-creating. Yet, in the same way that Irenaeus carefully distinguished, in
AH 2. 34, between man, whose parts are the body and soul, and the life in which he participates, so too the Spirit
must not be thought of as a part of man.
That the Spirit is essential to Irenaeuss understanding of man, yet is not a part of his constitution, is brought out by
two passages, most clearly in AH 5. 6. 1, where Irenaeus is discussing the eschatologically perfect man, made
spiritual by the full bestowal of the Spirit in the manner newly made possible by Christ, and so made in the image
and likeness of God. The passage is long, but its importance merits examining it fully:
Now the soul and the Spirit can be a part of man, but by no means a man; the perfect man is the commingling
and the union of the soul receiving the Spirit of the Father and joined to the flesh which was moulded after
the image of God. For this reason the Apostle says We speak wisdom among them that are perfect [1 Cor. 2:
6], calling those perfect who have received the Spirit of Godthese the Apostle also calls spiritualbeing
spiritual by a participation in the Spirit and not by a deprivation and removal of the flesh [and merely that
itself alone]. For if anyone take away the substance [of the flesh, that is] of the handiwork, and merely
considers only the Spirit itself, such is no longer what is a spiritual man, but the Spirit of a man or the Spirit of
God.51 But when this Spirit, commingled with the soul, is united to the handiwork, because of the outpouring
of the Spirit man is rendered spiritual and perfect, and this is the one who was made in (p. 100 ) the image
and likeness of God. But if the Spirit is lacking from the soul, such a one, remaining indeed animated and
fleshly, will be imperfect, having the image, certainly, in the handiwork, but not receiving the likeness through
the Spirit. Likewise this one is imperfect, in the same manner again, if someone takes away the image and
rejects the handiworkone can no longer contemplate a man, but either some part of man, as we have said, or
something other than the man. For neither is the handiwork of the flesh itself, by itself, a perfect man, but the
body of a man and a part of a man; nor is the soul itself, by itself, a man, but the soul of a man and a part of a
man; nor is the Spirit a man, for it is called Spirit and not man. But the commingling and union of all of these
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56
The perplexity of the Latin scribes at this sentence is clearly shown by the omission of quod est conditionis from
two of the main manuscripts and by the fourfold use of quod est without a preceding neuter substantive. Not
wanting to accept that the Spirit might be present in creation outside Christ, Massuet asserted that the Verbum
praestat spiritum omnibus, quemad-modum vult Pater, sed non eundem,57 and this view has since predominated.
Rousseau explains the use of the neuter relative by suggesting a careless translation from the Greek (in which
is neuter),58 and translates as follows:
et le Verbe, port par le Pre, donne lEsprit (esprit) tous, de la manire que veut le Pre aux uns, en raport
avec leur cration, il donne lesprit appartenant la cration, esprit qui est une chose fait; (p. 103 ) aux
autres, en rapport avec leur adoption, il donne lEsprit provenant du Pre, Esprit qui est la Progniture de
celui-ci.
Rousseaus reading of the text, and the whole of his lengthy note justificative is intended to demonstrate that
Irenaeus is using the word Spiritum to mean two different things: both a created spirit, which Rousseau identifies
with the soul or the breath of life, and the Holy Spirit.59 However, as we have seen, Irenaeus never calls the soul
spirit;60 nor, moreover, does he play with words to this extent. Furthermore, Rousseaus reading necessitates
applying quod est generatio [eius], or
to the Holy Spirit. Rousseau, acknowledging that the
description of the Holy Spirit as Progniture is somewhat unusual in patristic literature, points to AH 5. 36. 3, where
Irenaeus applies the term progenies to the Son, and to AH 4. 7. 4, where, in his interpretation, it is applied to both the
Son and the Spirit.61 Looking further afield, Rousseau can only adduce one passage, from Leontius of Byzantium,
where the term is applied to the Spirit.62
(p. 104 ) The most striking aspect of this reading of AH 5. 18. 2 is its divisive interpretation of the Spirit. The very
structure of the passage demands that it is one and the same Spirit that is given to allin different manners,
certainly, as the Father wills, but the same Spirit nevertheless.63 How then is the passage to be understood?
is used twenty-three times in the Armenian version of Against the Heresies. In the
The Armenian word
majority of cases it conveys the idea of generation or engendering () referring either to our natural birth or
to a rebirth, a new or second birth.64 Much less frequently does it refer to that which is born ().65 As such it
makes sense to read
. as engendering, and so to refer
(which is an engendering)66 back to
(adoption), rather than
from the Father is the only phrase in the clause with the definite object marker, indicating that it is the [Spirit]
from the Father which is being given. Thus, the second clause should be translated: to others, who are according to
adoption, which is an engendering, he gives the Spirit of the Father. As the two clauses are clearly structured in (p.
105 ) parallel, the phrase
(which is made) refers back to the term
(the/this creation),
which, with the definite object marker, refers to that which is given (the [Spirit]
rather than the term
of the/this creation); so the first clause should be: to some, who are according to the creation, which is made, he
gives the Spirit of creation. Thus the sentence as a whole, translated a bit more freely, runs:
For the Father simultaneously bears the creation and his own Word, and the Word borne by the Father
bestowsthe Spirit on all as the Father wills, to some, who are in a created state, which is made, he gives the
Spirit pertaining to creation, to others, who are according to adoption, an engendering, he gives the Spirit of
the Father.
This text, so rendered, affirms what has been evident throughout: that the Spirit of God, who was present with
creation throughout the whole of the economy, was nevertheless bestowed in a special manner on those who have
been adopted as sons of God: as sons, they can receive the Spirit from the Father. Those who have not been adopted
as sons, but who remain in their created state, can receive only the Spirit as the Spirit is present throughout creation.
What, then, is the relationship between the Spirit and the breath of life? Irenaeus describes this relationship in AH 5.
12. 12, an important passage which needs to be described fully. This passage follows Irenaeuss exegesis of 1
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Corinthians 15 that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom, but can, nevertheless be inherited by the Spirit when
vivified by the Spirit (1 Cor. 15: 50; AH 5. 910). Likewise, while working the deeds of the flesh, we have borne the
image of the earthly one, but having been baptized and received the Spirit, we bear the image of the heavenly One,
made alive by the workings of the Spirit (1 Cor. 15: 489; AH 5. 11). As in AH 5. 6. 1, the vivifying presence of the
Spirit is that bestowed in baptism and the resurrection.
In AH 5. 12.2 Irenaeus continues working backwards on the fifteenth chapter of 1 Corinthians, to explain verses
456. Irenaeus asserts that the breath of life, which made man an animated being, is other than the life-creating
Spirit which (p. 106 ) makes him spiritual. He then cites two passages from Isaiah (42: 55 57:16) to demonstrate
that, whilst the breath of life is common to all people upon earth, the Spirit is peculiar to those who tread down their
earthly desires, and, furthermore, is poured out upon the human race in the last times through adoption. Picking up
on Isaiah 57: 16, For the Spirit shall go forth from me, and I have made every breath, and following its terminology,
Irenaeus describes the breath of life as something made, and thus to be differentiated from that which makes. As
something made, the breath is temporal, and in a short time will leave its abode bereft of breath. But when the Spirit
pervades man inside and out, it is permanent, and remains with the man. Irenaeus then cites 1 Corinthians 15: 46 to
demonstrate that as it is the animated which is first, and only then the spiritual, so, he argues, it was necessary
first for man to be fashioned, and having been fashioned to receive the soul, and then to receive communion with the
Spirit. That Irenaeus has changed from speaking of the breath to the soul is because he is now commenting on 1
Corinthians 15: 46, and follows his comments by citing 1 Corinthians 15: 45. He concludes this section thus:
Therefore, just as the one who became a living soul turning to evil, lost life, so again, that same one, in turning to
what is better and receiving the life-creating Spirit, finds life (AH 5. 12. 2). In this whole passage, the relationship
between the breath of life and the Spirit is characterized by the description of the Spirit as life-creating. Those who
have not received the Spirit through adoption possess only the breath of life. Not being adopted sons of God, they can
receive only the Spirit in a manner pertaining to their created state, and so, apropos of Isaiah 57: 16, Irenaeus
describes this as a created breath. Yet that which is created is placed in a direct relationship to the One who creates it.
It would be a mistake to reify the breath of life, to treat it as something which, once created, exists independently of
its source. Man, as we have seen repeatedly, does not have independent life, but depends on God and his
acknowledgement of God as the Source of life.
In AH 5. 12. 2 the breath of life is described not only as temporal, but also as mortal. This is undoubtedly due to the
context, which contrasts life outside Christ with that given by (p. 107 ) the Spirit in Christ. In his most detailed
presentation of protology, the opening section of the Demonstration, Irenaeus asserts that man, animated by the
breath of life, could have remained immortal by continuing to acknowledge God as the Lord of all (that is, as the
source of all life).67 When Adam and Eve transgressed this basic structure, the breath of life lost its strength, and
they eventually died. But this life did not change from being the direct vivification by the Spirit to a mere animation
by the breath, for full vivification is possible only for the man adopted in Christ. In AH 5. 12. 2 Irenaeus similarly
states that by turning aside to evil, the one who was a living soul lost life. But, he continues, when the same one
returns to God, as an adopted son in Christ, he will receive the life-creating Spirit and find life. Those who through
adoption possess the Spirit, either as a pledge in the present or in fullness in the resurrection, are vivified by the very
One who creates life and never ceases from so doing. They are vivified inside and out in a permanent fashion; the
Spirit takes possession of its inheritance, flesh and blood, and the result is a living, rather than an animated, man.
The former life, as Irenaeus says in the last lines of AH 5. 12. 1, is expelled, as it was given through the breath and not
through the Spirit. Unlike those who are animated by the breath of life, created by the presence of the life-creating
Spirit, the adopted sons of God receive the vivifying Spirit itself, communion with the Spirit. Thus there are not two
sources of life, independent from each other; only the Spirit is life-creating. The difference between animation and
vivification turns upon mans receptive capacity, either as a created being or as an adopted son of God, as described
in AH 5. 18. 2.
Despite its inherent limitations, an analogy might be helpful. The created world is illumined and nourished by the
light and warmth of the sun. The light and warmth which the world reflects or absorbs are a created state in the
matter of the world, but are none the less continually dependent upon that source of light and warmth. If they are
overshadowed, breaking that direct relationship between the source and its recipient, the matter will gradually lose
its warmth and then turn cold. But the fading warmth of the matter, whilst overshadowed, is still (p. 108 ) that of
the sun. Similarly, human life depends on God, who sustains and nourishes his creation. If man turns away from
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God, he will continue for a while and then die; the breath of life, with which God animated the human, will have lost
its strength. Nevertheless, the life is still that which has been effected by the presence of God through his
life-creating Spirit: it will have lost its strength, but it has not changed from being a spiritual life to animation. As
the light and warmth of the material world are but a pale reflection of those of the sun itself, so human life, outside
Christ, is but a snatched breath compared to vivification by God himself. Yet, as God has become incarnate, he has
enabled his sons, those adopted in Christ, to be illumined and warmed, or vivified, directly by his own life or
life-creating Spirit.
As those outside Christ only have a breath of life which has lost its strengththat is, a life which has become mortal
Irenaeus occasionally describes such people as being dead. In AH 5. 9. 1, for instance, again in the context of a
comparison between mortal life outside Christ and the possession of the Spirit, Irenaeus describes the soul as
situated between the Spirit, that which saves and fashions, and the flesh, that which is saved and is fashioned:
sometimes the soul follows the Spirit, and at other times it is persuaded to follow the flesh. Those who do not have
the life-creating Spirit in themselves are mere flesh and blood, and it is these that Christ calls dead (Luke 9: 60).
The idea that breath is common to all upon earth, whilst direct vivification by the life-creating Spirit belongs only to
those adopted in Christ, yet there being but one Source of life as presented in AH 5. 12. 2, and the idea of the relative
strengths of life discussed in AH 5. 3. 3, are brought together in AH 4. 20, in Irenaeuss favourite imagery, that of the
vision of God. In AH 4. 20. 5, Irenaeus emphasizes that it is not possible to live without life, and that life is to be
found in communion with God, which is to see God and enjoy his blessings.68 After (p. 109 ) describing the various
prophetic visions of God in the Old Testament, Irenaeus continues:
For the glory of God is a living man, and the life of man consists in beholding God: for if the manifestation of
God affords life to all living upon earth, much more does that revelation of the Father which comes through
the Word give life to those who see God. (AH 4. 20. 7)
Again, there is only one Source of life, though it is bestowed upon man through two modes: all those upon earth live
by seeing the Creator through the creation; while those who see the Father in the Son are vivified in a stronger
fashion. Moreover, there is no suggestion that those who recognize the Creator have a mortal life. They become
subject to death when they no longer acknowledge themselves as created beings, dependent upon God.
Returning to Dem. 11, Irenaeus states that God breathed the breath of life into his handiwork, so that both according
to the inspiration and according to the formation, man was like God. As the formation, the image of God located in
the flesh, typifies Christ, so also the inspiration, the animation by the breath of life, typifies or prefigures the
vivification of Christ, and those adopted in him, by the Spirit. Full vivification by the Spirit is eschatological, though
manifest in the death of the martyrs who bear witness to salvation. Adopted sons now receive the pledge of the Spirit,
possessing a part of the Spirit (AH 5. 8. 1), which prepares them for the fullness to come. The rest of the people
living on earth have received the breath of life, created by the presence of the life-giving Spirit in creation, as a type of
the vivification to come. The whole process, the movement of the economy itself, is one of God and man becoming
accustomed to each other: of man learning, throughout the unfolding of the Old Testament, to acknowledge and
follow God; of the Spirit, in Christ, becoming accustomed to dwell in and to vivify man; and of man, as an adopted
son in Christ, being prepared for vivification by the life-creating Spirit, and so for the incorruptibility and immortality
of God.
Following the description of the creation of man in Dem. 11, and supplementing it with information gained from
more detailed analysis elsewhere in Irenaeuss writings, we have looked so far at Irenaeuss understanding of the
human body, (p. 110 ) fashioned in the image of God, its relationship to the soul, and the relationship between the
breath of life and the life-creating Spirit. We need to follow Irenaeuss protological exegesis of the opening chapters
of Genesis, in the subsequent chapters of the Demonstration, before we conclude this section by looking at
Irenaeuss understanding of the likeness, that which was lost in Adam and regained in Christ.
Irenaeus presents us with a unitary account of the creation of man, combining Genesis 1: 267 and 2: 7 to describe
the creation of a unified being, animated mud. Irenaeus continues, in Dem. 12, by suggesting that, as newly created,
man was but an infant, who needed to grow to reach full perfection.69 It was to nourish this growth, according to
Irenaeus, that God prepared a place better than this present world, a beautiful Garden with a good climate, light and
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full of good things to eat and drink. So beautiful and good was this Garden, that
the Word of God was always walking in it; he would walk and talk with the man, prefiguring the future, which
would come to pass, that he would dwell with him and speak with him and would be with mankind teaching
them righteousness. (Dem. 12)
Irenaeus clearly refers the protological descriptions of the Garden in Genesis to the Church, a Paradise in this world
(AH 5. 20. 2), though located in the Spirit, and its fulfilment in the Kingdom of the Son. His understanding of the
account in Genesis is, again, both Christological and eschatological.
Irenaeus extends the unitary account of the creation of man to the formation of Eve. In Dem. 13, Irenaeus
paraphrases and extends Genesis 2: 1823:
And he decided also to make a helper for the man, for in this manner, God said It is not good for man to be
alone, let us make him a helper fit for him, since among all the other living things no helper was found equal
and like to Adam; and God himself cast a deep sleep upon Adam and put him to sleep, and, that a work might
be accomplished out of a work, sleep not being in Paradise, it came upon Adam by the will of God; and God
took one of Adams ribs and (p. 111 ) filled up flesh in its place, and he built up the rib which he took into a
woman and, in this way, brought [her] before Adam. And he, seeing [her], said, This at last is bone of my
bones, and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called "woman", for she was taken from her man. (Dem. 13)
Irenaeus keeps to the biblical text, and does not refer the formation of woman in any way to Gods foresight of the
apostasy and mortality, or even to the function of procreation. Irenaeus adds to the Genesis account of God putting
Adam to sleep by stating that sleep did not yet exist in Paradise, and he explains this temporary suspension of
Adams existence by the intention of God to accomplish a work from a work.70 This divine initiative reaches its
conclusion in the formation of the woman. Bone from bone, Eve is of the same formation as Adam. The formation of
man as a sexual being thus belongs to the arrangements of God for the growth and maturation of man: God prepares
a helper suitable, like and equal to Adam.
Irenaeus continues, in Dem. 14, by describing the life of Adam and Eve in Paradise:
And Adam and Eve, for this is the name of the woman, were naked and were not ashamed [Gen. 2: 25], since
there was in them an innocent and childlike mind and they thought or understood nothing whatsoever of
those things which are wickedly born in the soul through lust and shameful desires, because, at that time,
they preserved their nature (intact), since that which was breathed into the handiwork was the breath of life;
and while the breath remains in (its) order and strength, it is without comprehension or understanding of
what is evil: and thus they were not ashamed, kissing [and] embracing each other in holiness as children.
(Dem. 14)
(p. 112 ) As long as the breath of life maintained its order and strength, and Adam and Eve retained their integrity
and natural state, they were able to embrace each other in holiness, without the base thoughts which arise through
desires and shameful pleasures. Similarly, in AH 3. 23. 5, Irenaeus describes Adam as having had a natural and
childlike mind (indolent et puerilemsensum) which he lost when also losing the robe of sanctity which I [Adam]
had from the Spirit (ab Spiritu sanctitatis stolam).71 As long as Adam and Eve continued in their orientation towards
God, and the breath of life thus retained its strength and order, they remained in the holiness that is Gods, clothed,
as it were, in a robe of sanctity. Not only is bipolarity as male and female mans created state, but interaction between
the two, in holiness, is clearly envisaged as a dimension of their life, growth, and maturation.
Later, in Dem. 17, Irenaeus follows Genesis, in a non-aetiological manner, by mentioning that Adam knew his wife
Eve after their expulsion from Paradise (cf. Gen. 4: 12). Elsewhere, while describing the parallel between the
disobedient virgin Eve and the obedient virgin Mary, Irenaeus has this to say as an aside:
in paradise they were both naked and were not ashamed, inasmuch as they, having been created a short time
previously, had no understanding of the procreation of children: for it was necessary that they should first
come to the adult age, and then multiply thenceforth. (AH 3. 22. 4)
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It seems that Irenaeus understood the blessing of God in Genesis 1: 28, increase and multiply, in a sequential
manner: grow/increase and (then) multiply. The procreation of children is part of Gods economy for the human
race, which would come into effect when the newly created children have reached a suitable age and maturity.
Accordingly, when they (p. 113 ) attain such maturity, they would be able to conceive children whilst remaining in
holiness, robed in sanctity. Elsewhere, speaking in a post-lapsarian context, Irenaeus asserts that God has
foreordained the number to which the human race should increase. On the completion of this number, they shall
cease from begetting and being begotten, from marrying and giving in marriage, so preserving the harmony formed
by the Father.72 Thus the intention of procreation is the same both in Paradise before the apostasy and after the
apostasy in the human life of mortality. There is no suggestion, as for instance in Athenagoras, that the procreation
of children is the human response to a life of mortality, an attempt to make the mortal immortal.73 Procreation
simply belongs, at the appropriate age, to the growth which God has set before man. Nor does Irenaeus, whilst
speaking of adulthood as the age for procreation, ever restrict human sexuality to the function of procreation.
Procreation shall cease once the foreordained number has been reached; human existence as male and female will
not cease, for it is the condition and framework, as created by God, for the mans never-ending maturation and
growth towards God.
A final aspect of Irenaeuss protology, discussed in Dem. 15, needs to be mentioned. God established man as the lord
of the earth and everything in it (Dem. 12). In order to help man remain in the proper, thankful, attitude towards his
Creator, and not to have thoughts of grandeur or assume an attitude of self-conceited arrogance towards God, he
was given a law by God, that he might know that he had as lord the Lord of all (Dem. 15). It is thus that Irenaeus
understands the function of the commandment of Genesis 2: 1617.74 If man were to keep this commandment,
acknowledging God as his Creator, he would remain immortal; otherwise he would become mortal and return to the
earth. But, being inexperienced children, Adam and Eve were easily misled by the Deceiver and so cast out of the
Garden (Dem. 12, 16). Irenaeus thus places the tree (p. 114 ) of the knowledge of good and evil within the context of
life and death. As we saw when looking at the role of the apostasy within the unfolding of the economy, it is through
the knowledge of both life (the good) and death (the evil) that man comes to be in the image and likeness of God.75
The acknowledgement of the Creator which the law demands is the basic structure of human life, and its
transgression is death.76
Having looked at Irenaeuss protology, the formation of man and woman and the character of their existence in
Paradise, we can now turn to the final category of Irenaeuss theological anthropology, the notion of likeness
(). SO far, we have come across this term only once, in AH 5. 6. 1, where, in distinction to the image, located
in the flesh, the likeness was said to be through the Spirit. Irenaeuss most characteristic statement about the
likeness is that while man lost it in Adam, he has regained it in Christ. The most detailed and important text is AH
5. 16. 2:
For in times long past it was said man was made in the image of God, but it was not shown [to be so]; for the
Word was as yet invisible, after whose image man was created; and because of this he easily lost the likeness.
When, however, the Word of God became flesh, he confirmed both of these: for he both showed forth the
image truly, himself becoming that which was his image, and he re-established the likeness in a sure manner,
by co-assimilating () man to the invisible Father through the Word become visible. (AH 5. 16.
2)
This text demonstrates what we have seen concerning the uniqueness of the manifestation of God in the incarnate
Word, Jesus Christ, at the same time both God and man. The Word becoming incarnate, becoming himself the
image, truly demonstrated what the image of God is: that is, the reality (p. 115 ) of man as the image of God.
According to this passage, it was because this fact had previously been only asserted,77 and not seen, that man lost
the likeness easily. But Christ, being himself God made visible, the visible of the invisible Father (AH 4. 6. 6),
assimilates, in himself, man to the invisible Father, thus re-establishing the likeness in a steadfast manner.
What is this likeness, then, that man lost in Adam and regained, in a sure manner, in Christ? Although in AH 5. 6. 1,
it is said to be through the Spirit, it cannot simply be, as Fantino suggests, the presence of the Spirit, for, as we have
seen, the Spirit is present with creation throughout the unfolding of the economy; nor can it be the gift of the Spirit
as it is received in baptism and adoption, for this was made possible only in Christ.78 That which Adam lost in the
apostasy was the strength of the breath of life which would have kept Adam immortal and his natural and childlike
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mind or the robe of holiness from the Spirit, and both these are the expressions or results of man seeing God
through the creation, recognizing the fact that he is created and therefore dependent upon his Creator, an attitude of
thankfulness and obedience. It is this recognition and disposition that enables man to live, whether animated by the
breath of life or vivified directly by the life-creating Spirit. The truly living man is the glory of God, and this is the one
who was fashioned in the image and likeness of God. Having lost the strength of the breath, mans life is now mortal.
But in Christ man has been given the possibility of living by seeing the Father, by receiving, as an adopted son, a
pledge of the Spirit which prepares him to be fully vivified by the Spirit in a permanent fashion, thus rendering the
likeness secure.
Notes:
(1) Philo had distinguished between Gen. 1: 26, the ideal human, neither male nor female, created in the image, the
true man or , and Gen. 2: 7, the fashioning of mud into the sensible and corruptible body. Cf. Opif., 46, 134. The
terms were changed by Origen into the Pauline contrast between the inner man and the outer man, but the
distinction remained; cf. e.g. Homily 1 on Genesis, 13.
(2) Cf. AH 4. 20. 1; Orbe, Antropologa, 1327, and Andia, Homo vivens, 623.
(3) In quotations from the Demonstration, words in indicate a correction of a probable corruption of the text
printed in PO 12. 5; and words in [ ] are supplementary additions to the text.
(4) AH 4. 20. 1.
(5) AH 5. 15. 4; cf. AH 1. 5. 5; Orbe, Antropologa, 537.
(6) AH 5. 15. 2; referring to John 9: 3.
(7) AH 3. 17. 2; see also the parallel drawn between the formation of Adam from untilled and virgin soil and Christs
formation from Mary (AH 3. 21. 10).
(8) Cf. Fantino, LHomme, 157; Orbe, who takes the power here to refer to the Spirit of God mentioned in Gen. 1: 2,
understood as an anima mundi, rather than a Personal Spirit (Antropologa, 5961); Andia, Homo vivens, 756.
(9) While the context suggests that the primary referent of the very rare word is bodily limbs, the allusion
to melody making can hardly be accidental. See Rousseaus note, SC 152, 218.
(10) Cf. AH 5. 17. 1, 18. 1.
(11) AH 3. 20. 2.
(12) The Sacra Parallela has , but both the Latin and Armenian suggest .
(13) Cf. Fantino, LHomme, 879.
(14) Cf. esp. AH 2. 7, 196.
(15) Stated most explicitly in AH 5. 6. 1: carni quae est plasmata secundum imaginem Dei. Cf. Fantino, LHomme,
94106.
(16) Fantino (LHomme, 14554), points out that there is no other text in which Irenaeus describes the Son as the
image of God or the image of the Father (cf. 2 Cor. 4: 4; Col. 1: 15), and that therefore this text should not be read as
asserting that man was created in the image of the pre-incarnate Son, an invisible image of the invisible Father, but
rather that this phrase should be understood in the light of what followsviz. that man was made in the image of the
incarnate Son. We have repeatedly seen the uniqueness of Gods self- manifestation in the Incarnation, and it is this
fact which makes the incarnate Son the image of the invisible God.
(17) AH 5. 16. 2.
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(18) AH 3. 18. 1 might be taken to suggest that man lost the status of being in the image (cf. Grant, Irenaeus, 52); yet
the context is that what we lost in Adam, being in the image and likeness, we regained in Christ.
(19) Cf. Fantino, LHomme, 11018.
(20) Fantino (ibid. 118), suggests that while the image refers to the Son, the similitude refers to the Father, and
through these is achieved the likeness effected by the Spirit: the first two are anthropological categories, while the
latter is a soteriological notion, the central axis of the relationship between God and man.
(21) AH 4. 37.5.
(22) AH 4. 15.2.
(23) AH 2. 29. 3. Irenaeus makes this comment on the properties and activity of the soul itself only because he is
discussing the Gnostic idea of the separate destinies for each part of man.
(24) To what does this it refer? The Latin has ipsum, referring back to the breath of life. Rousseau (SC 152, 2367),
thinks that this is a misinterpretation on the part of the translator, and that it should be ipsam, referring back to the
soul (the Greek in either case being ). I have left it open. However, an identification between the soul and the
breath of life is made more explicitly a few lines later on, when Irenaeus writes about death: Hoc autem neque
animae evenit, flatus est enim vitae.
(25) The breath of life, bringing man to life, can also be described as showing man to be a rational animal, cf. AH 5. 1.
3.
(26) AH 2. 33.4.
(27) AH 2. 33.4.
(28) Irenaeus never says that souls possess a sui generis body (), as did some Stoics (e.g. SVF 2. 790, 219.
248), but simply that they retain the form of the body. Cf. AH 2. 19. 6, and, apropos of the history of Lazarus and the
rich man (Luke 16: 1931), AH 2. 34. 1.
(29) For the immortality of the soul, see AH 5. 4. 1, 7. 1, 13. 3; and A. Rousseau, Lternit des peines de lenfer et
limmortalit naturelle de 1me selon saint Irne, NRT 99 (1977), 83464.
(30) The similarity is denied by Rousseau on the ground that the term life in each signifies a different reality: for
Irenaeus, the life of the Spirit; for Justin, the natural life of the soul (cf. SC 293, 348). The relationship between
the two passages is upheld by van Winden, An Early Christian Philosopher, and Andia, Homo iens, 2713, who
usefully prints both texts in parallel.
(31) A philosophical commonplace that goes back to Plato, cf. Republic, 8. 546a.
(32) AH 5.2.3.
(33) AH 5. 7. 1. In AH 5. 4. 1, Irenaeus might be suggesting that the soul lives by its own nature, a sua natura adest
vivere. This statement occurs in a sentence in which Irenaeus criticizes the Gnostic idea of a God who does not vivify
the whole person, soul and body, but only the soul. As such, the statement that the soul lives by its own nature
might refer to the Gnostic position; so Irenaeus would be emphasizing that the Christian God vivifies both soul and
body. This was the position taken by H. Lassiat, Promotion de Vhomme en Jsus-Christ daprs Irne de Lyon
(Tours, 1974), 1656; idem, LAnthropologie dIrne, NRT 100 (1978), 41112, and criticized by Rousseau,
LEternit des peines, 8478. If Irenaeus is indeed affirming that it is the nature of souls to live, this is simply
because his interest in the soul is primarily, if not exclusively, as a principle of animation for the body.
(34) Rousseaus article, Lternit des peines, and his notes justificatives pertaining to this passage are directed
against the thesis of H. Lassiat, Pour une thologie de lhomme. CrationLibertIncorruptibilit(Lille, 1972),
published in a shortened form as Promotion de lhomme. Lassiat responded to Rousseau in LAnthropologie
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dIrne.
(35) Cf. SC 293, 3489.
(36) Rousseau, Lternit des peines, 854. Cf. ibid., 8423; SC 293, 346.
(37) Cf. Rousseau, SC 293, 347, commenting on AH 2. 34. 4, and appealing to AH 3. 18. 1, 5. 16. 3 (sic), which,
however, say nothing about what life it was that Adam had; they speak only of the likeness lost by Adam and re
established by Christ.
(38) Cf. SC 293, 346; Lternit des peines, 843. This problem has already been referred to apropos of AH 4. 20. 5
and Donovans comment in Alive to the Glory of God, 289; see p. 56 n. 76.
(39) Lassiat, LAnthropologie dIrne, 405, criticizes Rousseau for gnosifying the thought of Irenaeus.
(40) Cf. Fantino, La Thologie dIrne, 31921, points out that for Irenaeus created life is already a gift of God, a
participation, in a certain (though, according to Fantino, unspecified) manner, in the uncreated life of God.
(41) Cf. Noormann, Irenus, 277, 4867. In AH 4. 9. 2, Irenaeus states that the adjectives more and less can only
be applied to things of the same nature, such as water, light, and grace. All life is of the grace of God, and thus there
is no distinction in nature between the weaker and the stronger.
(42) Cf. Wingrens perceptive comments on the false perspective of the approach which wants to ask of Irenaeus if
Adam was perfect in his original state (Man and the Incarnation, 289). Wingren also repeatedly stresses that all
life is from God, is communion with God (ibid., esp. 14, 54 n. 36, 108, 120).
(43) This would also entail an appropriation of the cross as something other than that which Christ himself
underwent; see Irenaeuss comments on this passage in AH 3. 18. 5, discussed above (see p. 76).
(44) Cf. AH 4. 33. 1,7, 15 (all of which have the character of rules of truth); 5- 1. 3, 28. 4.
(45) Cf. e.g. Dem. 2; AH 5. 20. 1.
(46) AH 2. 28. 4; cf. AH 2. 13. 3.
(47) AH 4. pref. 4; 5. 8. 2.
(48) AH 5. 9. 2.
(49) AH 3. 22. 1.
(50) AH 5. 7. 1.
(51) The words in square brackets are only in the Latin version, and seem to be an attempt to soften Irenaeuss
words; I have followed the Armenian in my interpretation. Rousseaus translation of et nude ipsum solum Spiritum
intellegat as pour ne considrer que ce qui est proprement esprit is misleading, enabling his interpretation of the
following phrase, Spiritus hominis, as the human soul, distinct from the Spiritus Dei. But Irenaeus never refers to
the soul as spiritus, and the whole thrust here is that the Spirit of God is present in men to such an extent that it
can be considered their Spirit, without it being a part of man, as Rousseau notes in his comments on the quotation
of 1 Thess. 5: 23 ( ) in AH 5. 6. 1; cf. SC 152, 2334. Rousseau also interprets the phrase their Spirit[s]
in AH 2. 33. 5 in this way; cf. SC 293, 33942. Only in AH 2. 31.2 might Irenaeus use the term spirit to refer to the
soul, though the choice of words here probably reflects Luke 8: 55, cited earlier, which would thus be consistent
with the interpretation of AH 5. 6. 1 given here and of AH 2. 33. 5 and 5. 18. 2, as we shall see.
(52) Cf. Andia, Homo iens, 845.
(53) In AH 5. 8. 2, in a very similar context, the human substantia is said to be the union of soul and body, which is
perfected by the addition of the Spirit
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(54) The words body, soul, and Spirit are given in the plural in both the Latin and the Greek (from the Sacra
Parallela). I have followed Rousseau in translating these terms in the singular; cf. SC 293, 3412.
(55) Rousseau, however, prefers to restrict the possession of the Spirit to those who have been justified (SC 293,
33940).
(56) The Latin words in square brackets are omitted in two main manuscripts, Claromontanus and Vossianus. The
Armenian is found in TU 35. 2,19735, following the emendation proposed by Mercier.
(57) Massuet, Sancti Irenaei, PG 7. 1173 n. 72.
(58) Cf. SC 152, 287. Rousseau refers to S. Lndstrom, bersetzungstech-nische Untersuchungen auf dem Gebiete
der christlichen Latinitt (Lund, 1955), for a survey of such examples. It is important to note that mistranslations
can occur into any gender, cf. Lndstrom, 24074.
(59) Rousseaus interpretation is followed by both Jaschke, Der Heilige Geist, 2067, and Andia, Homo iens,
33843. Orbe maintains that the created spirit cannot be identified with the soul, but is the Spirit as an anima
mundi, distinct from the personal spirit (Teologa, 2. 21118); but, as with his interpretation of the power of God in
Dem. 11, there is no reason, in Irenaeuss text, to think that this should be so. For a more considered discussion, see
Fantino, La Thologie dIrne, 3679.
(60) The only comparison that Rousseau can adduce is his interpretation of AH 5. 6. 1, discussed above.
(61) However, Rousseaus justification for this interpretation fails to persuade. In AH 4. 7. 4 Irenaeus explains that
God did not need the help of the angels to bring creation into being and to form man: ministrat enim ei ad omnia
sua progenies et figuratio sua, hoc est Filius et Spiritus, Verbum et Sapientia, quibus serviunt et subiecti sunt omnes
angeli. Where the Latin has figuratio sua, the Armenian has
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Human Growth
Chapter: (p. 116 ) Chapter 3 Human GrowthAsceticism and Anthropology in Irenaeus and ClementJohn Behr
Source:
Author(s):
John Behr
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198270003.003.0004
The work of God is the fashioning of man (AH 5. 15. 2): this is the basic structure of Irenaeuss thought. It
determines his theology at all levels: God has revealed himself, uniquely, as man, and, while God is life and
life-creating, it is man who lives in the nature with which God has created himthat is, fleshly and sexual. As
Berthouzoz admirably expressed it: tout est de Dieu, tout nadvient que par lhomme.1 This is not to question the
independence of God, who had no need of the human race but created it for the enjoyment of his goodness and to
come to share in his glory, but simply to state the truth which God has in fact revealed as he has revealed it. It
demonstrates the realism and economic nature of Irenaeuss theology. The manifestation of God in Jesus Christ is
also the revelation of the truth of man; so, to become truly human is to become that as which God has revealed
himself.
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How then, inscribed within this economy, is man to become truly human, to become a god? The answer is contained
in the same structure: God makes, man is made (AH 4. 11. 2). In AH 4. 389 Irenaeus argues against those who
display ingratitude by refusing to accept that they are what God has created them to be, men subject to passions
(homines passionum capaces, AH 4. 38. 4), but want to be even as God. Such people betray, on the one hand, an
ignorance of the divine economy, in which God has revealed himself as man, and, on the other, a lack of confidence
in their Creator. They establish their own agenda for becoming what they want to be. To become truly human, to
become a god, man must allow God to fashion him, and this requires that he be open and responsive. In AH 4. 39.
23, Irenaeus describes this interaction using various themes with which we are already familiar: the artistic (p. 117
) work of the Word of God, the presence of the Spirit, as Water, enabling the formation, and mans trust in God,
letting him work in him:
How then will you be a god, when you are not yet made man? How perfect, when only recently begun? How
immortal, when in mortal nature you did not obey the Creator? It is necessary for you first to hold the rank of
man, and then to participate in the glory of God. For you do not create God, but God creates you. If, then, you
are the work of God, await the Hand of God, who does everything at the appropriate timethe appropriate
time for you, who are being made. Offer to him your heart, soft and pliable, and retain the shape with which
the Fashioner shaped you, having in yourself his Water, lest you turn dry and lose the imprint of his fingers.
By guarding this conformation, you will ascend to perfection; the mud in you will be concealed by the art of
God. His Hand created your substance; it will gild you, inside and out, with pure gold and silver, and so adorn
you that the King himself will desire your beauty. But if, becoming hardened, you reject his art and being
ungrateful towards him, because he made you a man, ungrateful, that is, towards God, you have lost at once
both his art and life. For to create is the characteristic of the goodness of God; to be created is characteristic of
the nature of man. If, therefore, you offer to him what is yours, that is, faith in him and subjection, you will
receive his art and become a perfect work of God. But if you do not believe in him, and flee from his Hands,
the cause of imperfection will be in you who did not obey, and not in him who called you. For he sent
messengers to call people to the feast; but those who did not obey deprived themselves of his royal banquet
[cf. Matt. 22: 3]. (AH 4. 39. 23)
Rather than hardening himself, trying to become what he wants to be, which can only result in death, man must
remain pliable, open, and responsive to the creative activity of God. As Minns puts it, What the earth creature [i.e.
man] needs to learn above all is to relax in the hands of God, to let God be the creator.2 Irenaeus characterizes this
readiness to accept the designs of God for man as faith and subjection, a trusting obedience, and specifies that it is
this which man can and must offer.
Within this perspective, apostasy is a refusal to submit to the creative activity of God. In AH 3. 23. 5, Irenaeus
describes the archetypal and paradigmatic example of such apostasy, that of (p. 118 ) Adam, who hid himself from
God and clothed himself with fig-leaves (Gen. 3: 78). Irenaeus is contrasting the repentance shown by Adam with
the lack of repentance in Cain:
With Adam, however, nothing of this kind happened, but everything was the opposite. For having been
beguiled by another under the pretext of immortality, he is immediately seized with terror, and hides himself;
not as if he were able to escape from God, but confused, since having transgressed his command he is
unworthy to appear before and to hold converse with God. Now, the fear of the Lord is the beginning of
wisdom [Prov. 1: 7 etc.], and the perception of transgression produces repentance, and God bestows his
bounty upon those who are repentant. [Adam] showed his repentance in deed, by means of the girdle,
covering himself with fig-leaves; while there were many other leaves which would have irritated his body to a
lesser degree, he, nevertheless, made a garment conformable to his disobedience, being terrified by the fear of
God: and resisting the lustful propensity of his flesh, since he had lost his natural and childlike mind, and had
come to a knowledge of evil things, he girded a bridle of continence (frenum continentiae) upon himself and
his wife, fearing God and waiting for his coming, and indicating, as it were, some such thing: Inasmuch as, he
says, I have by disobedience lost that robe of sanctity which I had from the Spirit, I do now acknowledge that I
am deserving of a covering of this nature, which affords no pleasure, but which gnaws and frets the body. And
thus he would no doubt have retained this clothing for ever, thus humbling himself, if God, who is merciful,
had not clothed them with garments of skin instead of fig-leaves. (AH 3. 23. 5)
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The state of continence which Adam adopted after his act of disobedience is, according to Irenaeus, one which is
self-imposed. Furthermore, it is one which Adam imposes upon himself and his wife in his state of confusion, in
which, having lost his natural and childlike mind, he feels unworthy to approach and hold converse with God. As
such, one might describe it as an adolescent reaction of the disobedient man to his new situation.3 Yet it is also
Adams attempt to express repentance, to make amends and cover up the mistake he made by conforming himself to
what he supposed to be godlike. In AH 4. 39. 1, when describing why knowledge of both good and (p. 119 ) evil are
necessary for man in apostasy, Irenaeus explains that it is through repentance that man can cast away disobedience
and return to hold more tenaciously to what is good: that is, life in obedience. In AH 3. 23. 5, the knowledge of evil is
not referred to sexual activity, but to transgression of the commandment, which, as we have seen, is the refusal to
acknowledge God as Lord. It is this transgression which results in the loss of the childlike mind and so the lustful
propensity of the flesh, and it is this which the confused Adam, mistaking the symptom for the cause, then tries to
control or negate by adopting a state of continence, one which gnaws and frets the body. In such a state of
repentant, but self-imposed continence, man would not have been able to receive the growth and increase which God
has set before him: he has taken control of himself, no longer allowing God to act in him. Thus the economy of God,
in this instance, is to replace these fig-leaves, the self-imposed continence, with garments of skin. The Gnostics,
according to Irenaeus, taught that the garments of skin, the fleshly, sensible element of man, were added last, as the
most exterior level, in the formation of man.4 Irenaeus does not, himself, mention the garments of skin elsewhere in
his writings, and it is difficult to ascertain exactly what he understood by them in AH 3. 23. 5. Two things, however,
are clear: first, that they refer to the existence of Adam and Eve in apostasy, and second, that they are other than the
bridle of continence. God replaces their self-imposed continence with a garment suited to life in apostasy, in which
they can continue to live according to Gods original plan of growth and increase.
A similar theme is developed in Irenaeuss discussion of the relationship between the Law and the law of bondage.
As God, in Christ, has granted the abrogation of the precepts of the law of bondage, and has restored man to the
ancient law of liberty extended into one suitable for sons, Irenaeus is extremely critical of those who prefer to keep
zealously to the precepts of the law of bondage while neglecting the rationale of those precepts, the salvation realized
in the law of love. Thus, Irenaeus asserts that God has assigned everlasting perdition to those who, as he puts it,
pretend that they themselves (p. 120 ) observe more than what has been prescribed, as if preferring their own zeal
to God himself.5
The same dialectic between the laws of bondage and the original Law, the freedom of which has been re-established
in the New Covenant, is discussed in the Didascalia Apostolorum, probably composed in the early half of the third
century. Those who have become disciples of Christ, through the Gospel yield to the Law and completely abstain
from the second legislation.6 The author is extremely critical of those who then choose to keep to the practices of the
second legislation:
But if there be any who are scrupulous and desire, according to the second legislation, to keep the habits of
nature and fluxes and intercourse, first let them know that, as we have already said, together with the second
legislation they affirm the curse against our Saviour and condemn themselves vainly. And again, let them tell
us, in what days or in what hours they observe to pray and to receive the eucharist, or to reading the
Scripturelet them tell us whether they are devoid of the Holy Spirit. For through baptism they receive the
Holy Spirit who is always with those that work righteousness and does not depart from them by reason of
natural fluxes and the intercourse of marriage, but always perseveres with those who possess him and keeps
them.7
The author is emphatic that neither the workings of the solitary body, such as menstrual fluxes and male fluxes or
issues,8 nor conjugal intercourse, defile the cleansing effected by baptism and as such are not a reason to abstain
from prayer, the eucharist, or the reading of Scripture.
A similar example of self-imposed continence is described in the Letter of the churches of Vienne and Lyons to the
churches of Asia and Phrygia, perhaps drafted by Irenaeus himself.9 As a corollary to remaining open and responsive
to the Creator, Irenaeus, as we have repeatedly seen, exhorts his readers to enjoy Gods bounty and to use his gifts,
the world (p. 121 ) which he has prepared for mans nourishment and growth, with thankfulness. This was the
lesson that one confessor taught another:
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There was among them a certain Alcibiades, who was living a very austere life, and at first was not partaking of
anything at all, but used merely bread and water and was trying to live thus even in the jail. But it was revealed
to Attalus after the first contest which he underwent in the amphitheatre that Alcibiades was not doing well in
not making use of the creations of God, and offering an example of offence to others. Alcibiades was
persuaded and began to partake of everything without restraint and gave thanks to God; for they were not
without help from the grace of God and the Holy Spirit was their counsellor.10
Alcibiades action could have been deemed offensive if it was supposed to stem from a belief that the material world
was tainted with evil. However, this was not the primary charge; it was, rather, that Alcibiades, by not using the
material creation, was not doing well. The proper approach is not to impose restrictions upon oneself, but, as he was
taught by another confessor, both under the counsel of the Holy Spirit, to partake of everything without (selfimposed) restraint and to give thanks to God.
Thus, if man is to grow and be fashioned by the creative activity of God, rather than harden himself in self-imposed
and self-determined continence, he must remain open to God and his blessings. But it is important to note that this
required responsiveness is not merely passive nor docile. Just as man does not have any life other than that which he
receives from partaking in the Spirit, through different modalities, so it is not through his own strength that he
performs the works of God, but the Spirit itself is the stimulus, capable of working out its own suggestions, so
manifesting the strength of God in the weakness of mans flesh.11 The life and the strength are of the Spirit, but it is
quite unambiguously man, who is and remains free, that lives and works. Irenaeus, in AH 3. 17. 3, describes this
relationship in terms of the parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10: 2937):
(p. 122 ) Wherefore, we have need of the Dew of God, that we be not consumed by fire, nor be rendered
unfruitful, and that where we have an accuser, there we may also have an Advocate, the Lord, commending to
the Holy Spirit his own man, who had fallen among thieves, on whom he himself had compassion, and bound
up his wounds, giving two royal denarii, so that we, receiving by the Spirit the image and the superscription
[Matt. 22: 20 etc.] of the Father and the Son, might fructify the denarium entrusted to us, counting out the
increase to the Lord. (AH 3. 17. 3)
Man can only be fruitful, multiplying what God has given him, through the Dew of God, the Spirit. But it is
nevertheless man, thus nourished, who acts, fructifying what God has entrusted to him. Similarly, in another
context, Irenaeus writes: Wherefore, also, those who are in truth his disciples, receiving grace from him, do in his
name act, for the benefit of others, according to the gift which each one has received from him (AH 2. 32. 4). The gift
which each one has received is put into practice for the benefit of others, through the grace received. The grace thus
received finds its natural expression within the horizon of the community, each member using their particular gift
for the welfare of all the others, rather than within the restricted perspective of the individuals own spiritual life or
development.
It is also important to recall that living and acting by the strength of God is an expression of freedom. As God is the
One who fashions man, and the source of his life, the more man remains in subjection to God, the greater will be his
freedom as a living human being. True freedom, and the proper exercise of that freedom, is found in subjection to
God, freely performing the works of the Spirit in the flesh. The only possible alternative to this, the only thing that
man can do of himself, is to perform the works of the flesh, a slavery which leads to death. This opposition is
described repeatedly by Irenaeus in AH 5 in terms of the Pauline opposition between the spiritual and the carnal:
Those, then, who have the pledge of the Spirit, and who are not enslaved by the lusts of the flesh, but subject
themselves to the Spirit and walk reasonably (rationabiliter)12 in all things, does the Apostle (p. 123 )
properly call spiritual, because the Spirit of God dwells in them: for spiritual men will not be incorporeal
spirits, but our substance, that is, the union of the soul and flesh, receiving the Spirit of God, makes up the
spiritual man. But those who reject the Spirits counsel and are the slaves of fleshly lusts, and live
unreasonably, and who, without restraint, plunge into their own desires, having no longing after the Divine
Spirit, do live like swine and dogs; these does the apostle properly call carnal, because they have no thought
of anything else except carnal things. (AH 5. 8. 2)
The opposition is not between works pertaining to mans being as a fleshly creature and spiritual exploits, for he
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lives only in the flesh; rather, the opposition is between living in the flesh by the power of the Spirit and trying to live
by the flesh alone. The first is the action of a truly free and spiritual person, whereas the latter is merely carnal, a
slave to the flesh and its desires, and, as such, mortal. Authentic liberty is only truly realized in subjection to God, a
life, which is participation in God and the presence of the Spirit, lived by man, with the strength of the Spirit
overcoming the weakness of the flesh, and so rendering him spiritual, a truly living man.
The passage from AH 4. 39. 23 cited above also emphasizes that God does everything at the appropriate
timeappropriate, that is, for the man who is being fashioned. The creative activity of God effects and matches the
growth of man. When speaking of growth, Irenaeus emphatically distances himself from the idea of spiritual
development found in various representatives of Gnosticism, the idea that a divine seed was deposited in men as in
a womb, to grow therein until it is ready for perfect gnsis.13 Irenaeus does not even speak of man as possessing a
seed of the Spirit which grows within him until he receives the fullness thereof:14 the Spirit is an eschatological gift,
typified in the breath and given as a pledge to those adopted through baptism. Neither does Irenaeus speak of growth
as becoming male.15 Virtue, for Irenaeus, does not (p. 124 ) have a merely human character, let alone a male
character; so he does not speak of the female becoming male in living a full Christian life. All virtue is of God, who
deploys his strength in the weakness of human flesh, and is thus manifested in human beings when they lead their
lives in obedience to the Spirit, who alone makes them spiritual.
Irenaeus does not speak of the growth of the interior, or spiritual, dimensions of the person.16 From what we have
seen, it is clear that Irenaeus is not interested in such interiority. Rather, when speaking of growth, Irenaeus, more
simply and more realistically, focuses on the fashioning of the handiwork of God into a full human being. And this
activity and growth has a pattern and rhythm:
By this order and such rhythms and such a movement the created and fashioned man becomes in the image
and likeness of the uncreated Godthe Father planning everything well and commanding, the Son executing
and performing, and the Spirit nourishing and increasing, and man making progress day by day and ascending
towards perfection, that is, approaching the Uncreated One. For the Uncreated is perfect, and this is God.
Now, it was first necessary for man to be created;
and having been created, to increase;
and having increased, to become an adult;
and having become an adult, to multiply;
and having multiplied, to strengthen;
and having strengthened, to be glorified;
and being glorified, to see his Master;
for God is he who is yet to be seen, and the vision of God produces incorruptibility, and incorruptibility
renders one close to God [Wisd. 6: 19]. (AH 4. 38. 3)
This is the rhythm and pattern which God has arranged for the growth of man to his full perfection. It is clear that
this arrangement is that of the course of each human life. It is no less clear that its progression unfolds with the
divine economy, as we have traced it. Each human being, like the human race (p. 125 ) itself, comes into being as
an infant, who must grow to adulthood, the age for procreation, and then strengthen into the fullness of human
maturity, before passing into the glory and vision of God. As the economy has unfolded, this includes death, which is
followed by the Kingdom of the Son upon the earth, where we mature in the glory of the Son before everything is
submitted to the Father.
One of the most noteworthy aspects of Irenaeuss historical sense of the unfolding of the economy is how it places a
positive value upon mans experience of evil and his own weakness, which ultimately concludes in death. Within the
framework of the progression of each individual life, this same perspective demands that, to become truly human,
each person must fully engage themselves in their concrete lives and situations. One learns by experience. One
cannot simply abstain, through a self-imposed continence, from anything that carries with it a risk that one might
become ensnared thereby in apostasy.17 Irenaeus does not exalt a state of primal innocence, or exhort his readers to
recapture it through an evasive virginity; for, as the economy has unfolded, it is through a knowledge of good and
evil, and the consequent rejection of evil, that man becomes like God.
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A final point that must be noted is that, as adopted sons in Christ have received only a pledge of the Spirit, so the
fullness of the vivification and liberty is, for them, yet to come. They are still being prepared and accustomed to bear
the Spirit in full authentic liberty. Although Christ has abrogated the laws of bondage, this does not mean that
everyone is already prepared to embrace fully the liberty which Christ has brought; those who are weak still need to
be trained, that they too may come to know the fullness of liberty in life granted by God to his adopted sons. In AH 4.
15. 2, while discussing the dialectic between the ancient law of liberty and the new, extended law of liberty, in which
the laws of bondage (p. 126 ) are cancelled, Irenaeus demonstrates the unity of intent between the original law of
God and the precepts of Moses, by pointing out how Christ explained that Moses had adapted the initial Law of God
(that he who made them from the beginning made them male and female, so that the two might be one flesh, not to
be put asunder, Matt. 19: 46), to the hardness of the Israelites hearts (allowing divorce, Matt. 19: 79), so that they
might be trained with what they could bear, and so turn from their disobedience towards obedience to God and his
Law. Irenaeus points out that the same compassion is also shown in the New Covenant, when Paul makes his
concessions, advice given from himself to the Corinthians. Such concessions were written with regard to human
weakness and incontinence, lest those who could not as yet bear the freedom given in Christ should become
hardened, and despairing of their salvation, should become apostates from God.18 As such, when seen within the
context of the whole economy, these concessions are not a true expression of the fullness of liberty granted by
Christ. Just as Paul places these concessions within the context of the imminence of the parousia (cf. 1 Cor. 7: 29), so
Irenaeus interprets these concessions as a preparation for the full perfection and liberty which adopted sons have yet
to receive.
We can now see the significance of the eschatological dimension of Irenaeuss protological descriptions, reiterated by
Christ himself: He who made them from the beginning made them male and female, and said: For this reason shall
a man leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall be one flesh [Matt. 19: 45].
Irenaeuss description of Adam and Eve kissing and embracing each other in holiness (Dem. 14) is not simply a
quaint mythological picture, but that towards which man is being trained: it does not refer to a protological
innocence, but to mans existence in (p. 127 ) Christ and the law of love and freedom established by him. This is
something to which, due to human weakness and incontinence, salvific concessions still need to be made, whilst
man is trained by the pledge of the Spirit.
Irenaeuss anthropology and asceticism are both fundamentally theocentric and theophanic. Mans very body is
fashioned in the image of the incarnate God, who, in the last times, has revealed both God and the truth of man to
us, enabling man, through adoption, to be prepared by the pledge of the Spirit for the full vivification by the Spirit in
the last times. Mans life, from the first breath to the last vivification by the Spirit, is a participation, in different
modalities, in the very life of God. This particular understanding of mans being and life determines the outward
expression of that life, its asceticism. Rather than subjecting himself to a self-imposed continence, undertaken either
to conform himself to what he supposes to be pure, innocent, and godlike, or to avoid the demands that arise from
his passionate nature, or to escape from the apparent annihilation of death, man is to engage fully with the concrete
circumstances of his life, for it is only through his own experience, and ultimately through his own death, that he
learns to hold ever more firmly to God. Man is still being trained by the pledge of the Spirit, and by salvific
concessions, for the fullness realized by Christ, which for those adopted as sons is yet to come, the fullness of the
authentic liberty, realized in full subjection to God, enabling the direct vivification of man, in the totality of his
God-given, fleshly, and sexual existence, by the Spirit. This will be the truly living manthe glory of God.
Notes:
(1) Berthouzoz, Libert et grce, 240.
(2) Minns, Irenaeus, 64.
(3) Cf. J. Behr, Irenaeus AH 3. 23. 5 and the Asectic Ideal, SVTQ 37. 4 (1993), 30513; Minns, Irenaeus, 64.
(4) AH 1. 5. 5. On the use of the garments of skin by later Greek patristic writers, see Nellas, Deification in Christ,
4391.
(5) AH 4. 11. 4.
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(6) Didascalia Apostolorum, 26, ed. and trans. A. Vbus, CSCO 402, 408; Scriptores Syri, 176, 180 (Louvain, 1979),
CSCO 408, 237.
(7) Ibid. 238.
(8) Cf.ibid. 242. On this whole issue cf. D. Brakke, The Problem of Nocturnal Emissions in Early Christian Syria,
Egypt, and Gaul, JECS 3. 4 (1995), 41960.
(9) Cf. P. Nautin, Lettres et crivains chrtiens, 5461.
(10) EH 5.3. 23, following the translation of K. Lake, LCL (Cambridge, Mass., 1980).
(11) AH 5. 9. 2, a passage, discussed earlier, describing the spiritual strength of the martyrs.
(12) This is the nearest Irenaeus comes to the dictum that one should live ar v ov. The word rationabiliter
occurs only in three other places (AH 4. 37. 7; 5. 1. 1, 18. 3). It would perhaps be reasonable to translate the phrase as
according to the Word, as Rousseau does in AH 5. 1. 1 (see his note, SC 152, 199201), and contrary to the Word
later on in AH 5. 8. 2.
(13) Cf. e.g. AH 1. 5. 6.
(14) As Andia, Homo vivens, 336.
(15) As e.g. The Gospel according to Thomas, log. 114, 99. 1826, ed. and trans. A. Guillaumont [et al.] (Leiden,
1959), 57. We will see this theme taken up by Clement of Alexandria in Part II; it later becomes a recurrent theme in
Christian literature.
(16) Cf. Wingren, Man and the Incarnation, 325. On the whole question of growth in Irenaeus, cf. Noormann,
Irenus, 46877.
(17) Well put by Berthouzoz: En consquence, lhumanisation de lhomme demande un engagement de sa part, ce
qui est vident 1exprience, et comporte lacceptation corrlative dun risque, en particulier celui de se tromper.
Par l se trouvent exclues lthique de labstention prventive, toute valorisation de linnocence originelle et
indiffrencie et, surtout, lhtronomie comme instance de conduite moral, adulte (Libert et grce, 236).
(18) AH 4. 15. 2. Although Irenaeus cites many of Pauls concessionary statements from 1 Cor. 7, he does not indicate
whether he understood e.g. 1 Cor. 7: 5 as a concession to separate for prayer or as a concession to come together
again; but given that he begins this discussion by citing Christs word, that God made man from the beginning male
and female so that they might become one flesh, which no one shall divide, and that Moses concession is a
weakening of this basic principle, the second alternative seems improbable.
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Anthropology
Chapter: (p. 135 ) Chapter 4 AnthropologyAsceticism and Anthropology in Irenaeus and ClementJohn Behr
Source:
Author(s):
John Behr
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198270003.003.0005
Before looking at Clements description of Christian life and the character of asceticism involved in the growth from
faith to gnsis, it will be useful to consider his description of Adam and Eve, their life in Paradise, and their Fall,
together with his general anthropological framework.1 Although Clement does not develop any sustained treatment
of Adam and the character of his life, his comments will help us to understand the fundamental orientation of his
anthropology. In common with Theophilus and Irenaeus, Clement represents Adam and Eve as children together in
Paradise.2 As a child of God, Adam played freely in Paradise, and, by reason of his simplicity, he was free from
passions and their pleasures.3 According to Clement, Adam enjoyed an immortal life in Paradise.4 Man is a heavenly
plant, constituted by nature so as to have fellowship with God.5 Clement speaks of the innate original communion
between men and heaven obscured through ignorance but which now shines clearly again 6 There is no natural or
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ontological kinship between God and man, yet man is dear to God, since, unlike the other works of creation, man is
(p. 136 ) the work of his own hands.7 More than this, however, God breathed into man what was peculiar to
himself, and this works as a love charm in man.8
Although perfect as regards his formation, as a child Adam needed to grow in order to acquire full perfection:
We say that Adam was perfect as regards his formation, for he lacked none of the characteristics of the idea
and form of man. Coming into being he received perfection, and he was justified by obedience, and this was
growing to adulthood, which depended upon him. (Strom. 4. 23. 150. 3 4)
Thus Clement can answer the predicament posed by the Gnostics when they ask whether God created man perfect or
imperfect:
They shall hear from us that he was not perfect in his creation, but adapted for the acquisition of virtue, for it
is of great importance in regard to virtue to be made fit for its attainment, and it is intended that we should be
saved of ourselves ( ). (Strom. 6. 12. 96. 2)9
This stress on the perfect imperfection of the child Adam, the created man, and the need for growth as an active
obedience in freedom to realize the fullness of mans potential, to become an adult, and achieve his own salvation,
is Clements response to the Gnostics ontological differentiation of the human race into distinct groups. Whilst man,
considered generically, is perfectly formed for the acquisition of virtue and full perfection, the responsibility for this
fulfilment lies with each person individually, his individual character being determined by the impression that his
choices make on his soul.10
In his descriptions of the constitution of man, Clements statements vary considerably, using different Schemas,
biblical, Platonic, and Stoic, in different contexts.11 In one of his most important descriptions, Clement, allegorizing
the Decalogue, (p. 137 ) begins in a Stoic fashion, perhaps following Philo, by differentiating the twofold spirit in
man, the guiding principle (the ) and its subject (the ), corresponding to the two tablets of
the Law.12 Clement then goes on to analyse man in terms of a decad corresponding to the Decalogue:
And there is a ten in man himself: the five senses, and the power of speech, and that of reproduction, and the
eighth is the spiritual principle received at his creation ( ) and the ninth is the
guiding principle () of his soul; and tenth, there is the distinctive characteristic of the Holy Spirit,
which comes to him through faith. (Strom. 6. 16. 134. 2)
Clement goes on to specify that the rational and ruling power is the cause of the constitution of man, animating and
incorporating the irrational.13 The vital energy ( ), the power of nutrition, growth, and motion, is
assigned to the carnal spirit ( ), while the power of choice ( ;), the ability to
investigate, to study, and to know, belongs to the guiding principle.14 All the faculties are, in the final analysis, placed
in a Platonic hierarchical relation to the guiding principle, and it is through this that man lives, and has, moreover,
the ability to live in a particular way.15 This close affinity between the guiding principle and the power of choice is
emphasized by Clement in a different passage, where he maintains that the determining element in mans
constitution is volition. Echoing Christs recurring question, Clement writes: Volition takes precedence over all, for
the intellectual powers are the servants of the will. Will it is said, and you shall be able. 16 The emphasis on
freedom as the determinative aspect in the constitution of man is distinctive to Clement,17 and it determines, as we
shall see, his discussion of Christian life and asceticism.
(p. 138 ) The specific manner of life that Clement has in mind is living in obedience to the divine Logos, which, for
Clement, is identical to living according to reason and to nature. Clement explicitly points to the similarity of his
position to the Stoic doctrine of living according to nature, in which he claims that the term nature has been
impiously substituted for the term God.18 He describes an anthropocentric universe, in which Whatever in human
actions is right and regular is the result of the inspiration of its rectitude and order, a description similar to that of
Philo.19
In Strom. 6. 16. 134. 2 the Holy Spirit is counted as an element in the constitution of man. Elsewhere, in Strom. 2. 11.
50 4 when analysing man into a decad Clement enumerates the body the soul the five senses and the
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reproductive and intellectual or spiritual faculties. Here the body has replaced the Holy Spirit as a constitutive
element of man. This emphasizes the fact, mentioned in Strom. 6. 16. 134. 2, that the Holy Spirit is an addition by
faith to created, natural man.20 This is further stressed by Clement when he distinguishes the possession of the
Spirit from the divine breath breathed into man at his creation. According to Clement, the man, who, it is written in
Genesis, received the breath, is far from destitute of a divine idea, partaking of a substance purer than that of other
creatures.21 The breath here refers to the rational soul ( ) or the guiding principle ()
breathed by God into mans earthly formation, which differentiates man from other creatures.22 Clement then
continues, distancing himself from the Greek (p. 139 ) philosophical tradition, by distinguishing this divine portion
from the gift of the Holy Spirit granted to believers: Hence the Pythagoreans say that the mind comes to man as a
divine portion, as Plato and Aristotle also agree; but we say that Holy Spirit is additionally breathed into the believer
(Strom. 5. 13. 88. 1 2). Clement asserts that the Spirit is not present in us as a part of God, but does not specify the
mode of its presence, promising instead to develop this theme in other works.23 For Clement, therefore, unlike
Irenaeus, the Holy Spirit is not present in man from the beginning; this belongs, rather, to the mature adult,
perfected, justified by obedience (Strom. 4. 23. 150. 4) and saved of himself (Strom. 6. 12. 96. 2). Such a gift is
different from the intellect () breathed into man by God at his creation, a possession common to all mankind
and itself divine. It seems from the passages cited above that possession of the Spirit would follow, in due course, for
man on his attainment of full perfection.
Although Clement does not refer to the words of Genesis, that man was made in the image and likeness of God (Gen.
1: 26 7), in connection with his comments on Adam, it is this declaration that is the guiding motif for Clements
anthropology, and it is in his use of these words, image ( ) and likeness (), that Clements
vocabulary is especially unstable.24 Clement uses these terms with different meanings on different occasions. For
instance, image by itself may denote man in his perfection, his complete assimilation to God: thus, the perfect
inheritance belongs to those who attain to a perfect man, according to the image of the Lord.25 When it is used by
itself, however, image most frequently has a strongly Philonic sense. In a polemic against the pagan cult of images
in chapter 10 of the Protrepticus, Clement carefully defines what he means by image:
The image of God is his Word, the genuine Son of Intellect, the Divine Word, the archetypal light of light; and
the image of the Word is the true man, the intellect which is in man, who is therefore said to (p. 140 ) have
been made in the image and likeness of God, assimilated to the Divine Word in the affections of the heart
and therefore rational (). (Prot. 10. 98. 4)
Here image refers specifically to mans resemblance to God by virtue of his rational character, his intellect ()
which is then conversely used as the definition of the essential nature of man.26 In this Clement is especially close to
Philo, for whom the Logos is the true image of God and also the archetype for the true man, the intellect, which is
thus the image of the image.27 Clement also speaks quite distinctly of the Christian Gnostic as being a third image
made as far as possible like the second cause,28 and on one occasion he even extends the Platonic Philonic
perspective of the earthly reflecting its intellectual archetype to include the whole of creation.29
It is important to note, however, that Clements use of the word image in this sense does not denote a static,
ontological given which itself makes man the image of God. It refers, rather, to a way of viewing man, which at the
same time requires assimilation to the Divine Word in the affections of the heart (Prot. 10. 98. 4). This essentially
modifies the meaning of the word intellect: rather than being the rational faculty of man, as in the Platonic
tradition, intellect, at least in this context, is now used as a term to describe the whole man considered in his
relation to the Divine Word. Hence Clement can explain the scriptural saying that man was made in the image and
likeness thus: For the image of God is the divine and royal Word, the impassible Man; and the image of the image is
the human intellect.30 As the human intellect has for its archetype the impassible Man, the word intellect refers to
the whole man, rather than just his intellectual capacities, whilst the image relation has an ethical dimension,
demanding apatheia, a divine property, for man to be fully the image of God.31
Whilst the term intellect is used to refer to the whole man (p. 141 ) in his existence as the image, Clement is
nevertheless quite definite that the scope of the image does not extend to the body: For conformity with the image
and likeness is not meant of the body (for it were wrong for what is mortal to be made like what is immortal).32 As
the debate with Cassian in the third book of the Stromateis shows, Clement by no means disparages the body. He
often speaks of the body and the flesh as being sanctified clothed in immortality and even itself receiving the Holy
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Spirit.33 Yet, whilst the body, by virtue of the Incarnation, becomes conformed to the Lord (
),34 it essentially remains outside Clements theology of the image.
It is, however, the use of the term image in conjunction with likeness that reveals the dynamic of Clements
anthropology. When they are so used, image refers either to the final state of likeness to God, as described above, or
to the basic starting point for man, his created nature, whilst likeness refers to the final perfected likeness of the
Christian to God and includes the dynamic process by which man attains this end.35 Clement explicitly identifies the
biblical basis of this dynamic process, that of following God (e.g. Deut. 14: 3), with the Platonic idea of assimilation
and the Stoic idea of living according to nature.36 Clements clearest statement of (p. 142 ) the relation between the
image and the likeness is given in the first book of the Paedagogus:
It seems to me that he himself formed man of the dust, and regenerated him by water; and made him grow by
his Spirit; and trained him by his Word to adoption and salvation, directing him by sacred precepts; in order
that, progressively transforming the earth born man into a holy and heavenly being, he might fulfil to the
utmost that divine utterance Let us make man in our own image and likeness. And in truth Christ became
the perfect realization of what God spoke, and the rest of mankind is only in the image. (Paed. 1. 12. 98. 2 3)
Christ is thus the first and perfect realization of Genesis 1: 26, and opens the way, through rebirth and adoption, by
the gift of the Spirit, and training under sacred precepts, for all men to acquire perfection and full likeness to God.
Here, as we saw earlier when discussing the constitution of man, possession of the Spirit is the fulfilment and
perfection of man as man. But, rather than being considered as a possession which follows naturally when man
reaches maturity, possession of the Spirit is now clearly seen as a gift consequent upon the incarnation of Christ and
mans subsequent rebirth and adoption.37 Clement now also speaks of this maturation as a transformation of the
earth born man into a holy and heavenly being.
Although Clement describes Adam as perfectly created for growth towards full perfection, as we have seen, he does
not connect this dynamic to the process of developing the image into the likeness. Clement does not speculate
whether Adam was only in the image, or whether he had the capability, of himself, to become the likeness. It is
important, however, to note that in Paed. 1. 12. 98. 2 3 there are two aspects at work: the gift of the Spirit and the
regeneration by water, and, corresponding to both of these, the reciprocal action of man, guided and trained by the
Word. Whilst in his original state Adam was perfectly adapted for the increase of virtues and the acquisition of the
Holy Spirit, the misuse of his freedom made this impossible. The Fall thus intervenes in what should have been the
natural development of man from his original created state to his perfection in the possession of the Spirit, making
(p. 143 ) the historical economy of Christ a necessity. The gift of the Spirit is now intimately connected with
regeneration in Christ; but, whilst it is not to be separated from such regeneration, it is, in itself, distinct from it, in
that possession of the Spirit was within the scope of man as he was first created. Thus, it would seem that likeness
is granted to man only through rebirth, made possible by the economy of Christ, whether man had fallen or not. This
also suggests that, for Clement, Christs incarnation is not determined solely by the Fall.
Although Clement seldom discusses the Fall, his work is dominated by the problems caused as a result of the Fall:
mans weakness in the exercise of virtue and his ignorance of truth, and the corresponding need for training and
instruction. It is, however, in his discussion of the Fall, that Clement describes the relationship between Adam and
Eve prior to the Fall. In the third book of the Stromateis Clement is concerned to counter the Gnostic views which
would connect the institution of marriage to the original sin. Clement is quite unambiguous about the pre lapsarian
state of Adam and Eve and the scope of their relationship:
And if the serpent took the use of intercourse from the irrational animals and persuaded Adam to agree to
have sexual union with Eve, as though the couple first created did not have such union by nature, as some
think, this again is blasphemy against creation; for it makes human nature weaker than that of brute beasts if
in this matter those who were first created by God copied them. (Strom. 3.17. 102. 4)
Such union was, therefore, natural to Adam and Eve. However, the sexual interpretation of the Fall, common to both
his Gnostic opponents and to Philo, also had its influence on Clement.38 All action is prompted by knowledge and
impulse, and contrary to these are ignorance and weakness.39 Adam, as a child, was vulnerable on both accounts:
But if nature led them, like the irrational animals, to procreation, yet they were impelled to do it earlier than was
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proper because they were still young and had been led away by deceit (Strom. (p. 144 ) 3. 17. 103. 1). Clement thus
pictures the fall of Adam as consisting in premature engagement in sexual activity. The idea of the right time, the
proper kairos, for sexual activity, both on the horizon of the individuals life and within that of the day, was a
dominating determinant in cultural mores of the time, and also in Clements own description of the right place and
time for sexual activity.40 It seems that Clement was convinced that the Fall must have had some connection with
sexual activity, but that, not wanting to locate the misdeed in sexual activity itself, he had recourse to current
assumptions about the right time for an explanation which would safeguard both the naturalness of sexual activity
and the link between such activity and the Fall.
Clement occasionally describes Eve as being tempted by the serpent, but does not suggest that it was Eve who led
Adam into sexual activity.41 Rather, Clement describes the incentive for the transgression in this way: the first
formed of our [race] did not bide his time, desired the favour () of marriage before the proper hour and fell
into sinnot waiting for the time of [Gods] will (Strom. 3. 14. 94. 3). It was the desire for the grace of marriage
that tempted Adam to anticipate the proper time ordained by God. Clement does not explain what he means by this
grace. It seems dubious, given Clements strong insistence that sexual union should take place only for the sake of
procreation,42 to conclude from this passage, as Floyd does, that Adam and Eve were already enjoying sexual activity
and that the serpent tempted the first parents with the joys of having a family.43 It would appear more likely that this
grace of marriage is a euphemistic expression for Clements opinion, which, as we have already seen, is that it was
the immature desire for sexual activity which both prompted and, in its enactment, constituted the Fall (Strom. 3. 17.
103. 1).
This act effected a radical transformation both in the relation between man and God and also in mans own
existence. Just as (p. 145 ) obedience had characterized Adams original state of fellowship with God, so
disobedience meant estrangement from God.44 Consequent upon this is death, the mortal life which Adam
exchanged for his immortal one.45 For Clement, the overriding meaning of death is the state of the soul separated
from the truth and its communion with the body in a state of sin.46
It is, however, in his interpretation of the Lords answer to Salomes question, given in the Gospel according to the
Egyptians, Until when shall men die?, that Clement makes his most interesting comments concerning death.47 The
aim of these passages is to counter the radical eschatology of the Encratites, who took the Lords answer, As long as
women bear children, as grounds for the rejection of marriage and procreation. Clement attempts to counter their
argument by spiritualizing the words involved: woman, man, birth, corruption, and death. Clement points out
that the word man has two meanings: the outward man and the soul. It is the latter that the Lord refers to in his
reply As long as women bear children, allegorizing women as desire and children as the various vices that spring
from desire.48 In this sense sin is the death of the soul. But Clement goes on to speak of how death applies to the
outward man: By natural necessity in the divine plan death follows birth, and the coming together of soul and body
is followed by their dissolution.49 Clement thus (p. 146 ) accepts the Encratites premiss, that the connection
between birth, and hence marriage, and corruption or death is natural and necessary; but, contra the Encratites, for
Clement this connection is ordained by God, and as such there is no necessary reason to halt the process. There is,
therefore, a disconcerting elision in Clements thought. We have seen above that Clement described Adams paradisal
state as immortal, and that it encompassed marriage and procreation without, however, any inherent connection to
death. Yet Clement now describes the connection between birth, marriage, and death as a divine arrangement.50
Undoubtedly Clement, when speaking of the connection between birth and death, is referring to mans fallen
condition and Gods economical arrangement for mans fallen state of mortality. But Clement had no reason to
accept the premiss itself: for Clement, marriage and procreation existed before the appearance of death.
Alongside death, the Fall effected the disordering of mans existential constitution:
As soon as the first man fell and disobeyed God, it is said that he became likened to the beasts [Ps. 48: 13, 21
LXX]. As man sinned against the Word, it is natural that he should be considered as irrational and likened to
the beasts. (Paed. 1. 13. 101. 3)
By asserting that man became irrational () after the Fall, Clement does not mean to imply that he lost all
capacity for rational thought. This statement must be understood in terms of Clements hierarchical picture of the
soul, as it was described above. All the lower powers and faculties of the soul should be subordinated to the guiding
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principle, or the intellect, for the right, or rational, functioning of man. If this order is upset or unbalanced, then the
guiding principle of the soul is in danger of being dominated by the souls irrational, animal part, and man thus
becomes like the animals to whose nature he has succumbed.
No longer following the rule of nature and disobedient to the divine Logos, the passions take their rise in man.
According to Clement,
(p. 147 ) Appetite ) is the movement of the mind () to or from something. Passion () is an
excessive appetite, exceeding the measures of the Word ( ), or appetite unbridled and disobedient to
reason (). Passions then are a movement of the soul contrary to nature in disobedience to the Word.
(Strom. 2. 13. 59. 6)51
For Clement it is the fleshly spirit ( ), which is intimately connected with the body and its
sensations, and comprehends in itself all the irrational functions of the soul, including the capacities for desire
(), pleasure (), and anger (), which is the seat of the corresponding passions in man.52
It would be mistaken to conclude from this, however, that the passions, desire (), pleasure () and
anger (), are the natural functions of the biological being of man. These passions are the manifestation of the
natural appetites () when they exceed their natural and proper measure. Elsewhere, perhaps following
Chrysippus, Clement refers to a similar differentiation between the impulses necessary for the functioning of man
and desire:
Those skilled in such matters distinguish impulse () from desire and assign the latter, as being
irrational, to pleasures and licentiousness; and impulse, as being a rational movement, they assign to the
necessities of nature. (Strom. 4. 18. 117. 5)
Here the impulses of the soul, which, as they relate to the necessities of nature, clearly refer to the functions of the
fleshly spirit, are described as being rational, whilst desire is now a purely irrational movement bound up with
pleasure. Thus, while they have their origins in the fleshly spirit and its natural functions and impulses, it is their
excessive use (p. 148 ) contrary to reason, brought about by pleasure and disobedience, that characterize the
passions.53
Due to the role played by pleasure in the rise of the passions, Clement, in typically Stoic fashion, is severely critical of
any pleasure attached to an action which is not governed by some natural need.54 It is by keeping the pleasures
under control that man can prevent desire.55 Clement speaks of the unnecessary passion of pleasure that
accompanies certain natural needs, such as eating, drinking, and marriage. If it were possible to eat, drink, or beget
children without it, then, Clement is convinced, there would be no need for the passion of pleasure.56 Clement seems
to suggest that it is only for the pleasure involved, a pleasure from which one should refrain, that man engages in
such activities at all. This harsh strain produces an uncomfortable tension in Clements thought, for he also wants to
maintain that pleasure is good, as it was given by God. Whilst pleasure is to be given no admittance, it is nevertheless
given by God for the necessity of procreation.57
It is through the senses that the passions have access to the intellect, producing evil fantasies which disturb mans
peace even in dreams.58 Such fantasies affect mans capacity for right judgement, and thus demand constant
vigilance and discernment. Whilst this idea was common to both the Stoics and Philo, Clement adds a new twist by
seeing behind this disruptive activity the work of the demons.59
Having succumbed to the passions and overturned the right ordering of his constitution, man nevertheless retains
his intellectual capacities and his freedom, and is, therefore, still capable of grasping the truth and of moral effort.
Clements warm appreciation of Greek philosophy is well known. He describes the origin of philosophy in various
ways, either as plagiarism from the Old Testament60 or as being transmitted to men by an inferior angel61 or, most
importantly, as due to the (p. 149 ) divine inspiration present or sown in each man.62 Clement did not feel these to
be self contradictory or mutually exclusive, for they essentially demonstrate the same fact: the fundamental
harmony between philosophy and Scripture.63 Ultimately for Clement, philosophy constitutes a gift of God to the
Greeks, acting as a preparation for the Christian faith, a .64 As a covenant equivalent to the Law,
Clement can speak of those who have been justified (or made righteous) by philosophy.65 Both these covenants lead
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to the Christian faith; it is faith which is the essential lacking in the righteous both of the Old Testament and of
philosophy, although the latter must also learn to abandon idolatry:
For to those who were righteous according to the Law, faith was wanting. Wherefore the Lord, in healing
them, said Your faith has saved you. But to those who were righteous according to philosophy, not only faith
in the Lord, but also the abandonment of idolatry was necessary. (Strom. 6. 6. 44. 4)66
It is this call to abandon idolatry and to turn to faith in the Lord that is the great theme of the Protrepticus.
When speaking of faith, Clement has three issues to tackle: first, the sceptical attitude of Greek philosophers towards
Christian faith; second, the stance of the so called Gnostics, especially the Valentinians, who sharply distinguished
between the faith of the common believers and the gnsis of the spiritual elect; and third, the unreflective attitude of
some Christians towards their own faith.67 In answer to the first, Clement (p. 150 ) points out that there is no
knowledge of any kind without an acceptance, on faith, of the first principles of knowledge: demonstrations must,
ultimately, rest upon undemonstrated principles.68 Closely connected with this understanding of faith is the Stoic
epistemological idea of assent () and the corresponding Epicurean and Stoic idea of preconception
().69 For the Stoics, assent referred to the acceptance by the mind of sense perception as the first step to
knowledge, and had already been associated with faith by Antiochus.70 For the Epicureans, faith was a
preconception of the mind in its acceptance of sense perception, a preconception or anticipation based on the
memory of previous sense experience.71 Clement combines the two ideas to define faith as a voluntary
preconception, the assent of piety.72 As faith is now a matter of the will, it becomes the basis not only of knowledge,
but also of action.73
As faith refers to the acceptance of the first principles of knowledge, so too it is the acceptance of the conclusions
arrived at by sure demonstration (that is, scientific demonstration, , as opposed to those of
opinion, ).74 And it is with this distinction that Clement responds to the so-called Gnostics and to the
simple Christians. Clement (p. 151 ) connects the two senses of faith by identifying the principle of demonstration
with what is received in Scripture:
Therefore, as is reasonable, grasping by faith the indemonstrable first principle, and receiving in abundance,
from the first principle itself, demonstrations in reference to the first principle, we are by the voice of the Lord
trained to the knowledge of truth. (Strom. 7. 16. 95. 6)75
Thus the demonstration that Clement has in mind is the study and interpretation of Scripture. Since faith can refer
to the conclusions of such demonstration it is essentially also gnsis. 76 As faith now refers to both the acceptance
of the principle of demonstration and the demonstration itself, Clement can speak of faith as the foundation of
gnsis, and also maintain their inseparability.77 Thus Clement can insist on the intrinsic connection between faith
and gnosis, to counter the philosophers and Gnostics, on the one hand, whilst also insisting on the natural
development of faith into gnsis, by its own internal dynamic, to encourage the simple Christians, on the other. The
twofold character of this faith, containing within itself the principles of its growth into gnsis, which is not
essentially different from it, clearly parallels Clements description of Adam, whose initial imperfect perfection was
aimed at his growth to full perfection.
It is to this faith, the free assent of the will, that Clement calls the pagans in the Protrepticus: You, then, have Gods
promise, you have his love, become partakers of his grace.78 Clement stresses repeatedly that this requires only the
exertion of mans will.79 The motif running throughout the Protrepticus is that of the harmony to which man is
called, when, having been tuned by the Holy Spirit, he becomes an instrument of many tones.80 Having seen the
fundamental characteristics of Clements anthropology and the dynamic conception of faith by which man is led to
Christianity, we can now turn to this new harmony to investigate the character of Clements asceticism.
Notes:
(1) Clements thought about Adam is the subject of a monograph by T. Rther, Die Lehre von der Erbsunde bei
Klemens von Alexandrien (Freiburg im Breisgau, 1922), which is useful for the details it accumulates, but is
somewhat anachronistic in its perspective.
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(47) Strom. 3. 6. 45. 3, 9. 637. For an analysis of these passages, and the same theme as it was developed by other
writers from Plato to Gregory of Nyssa, see, van Eijk, Marriage and Virginity.
(48) Strom. 3. 9. 63 4. Clement in fact adopts the Encratite interpretation of female and woman as desire (cf.
Strom. 3. 9. 63. 2), but extends the scope of the works or children that spring from desire to include, e.g. love of
money and gluttony, so modifying the Encratites exclusively sexual understanding of desire. Cf. D. G. Hunter, The
Language of Desire: Clement of Alexandrias Transformation of Ascetic Discourse, Semeia, 57 (1992), 989.
(49) Strom. 3. 9. 64. 2. Cf. Strom. 7. 4. 25. 2, where Clement links the naturalness of mans death to that of the
animals.
(50) Cf. Strom. 4. 25. 160. 3.
(51) Although I have translated the word with an article, as the Word, and without an article, as reason, such
a distinction must not be taken as absolute; Marrous comments on the Paedagogus are equally appropriate here:
Toute le Pdagogue joue, page aprs page, sur lambiguit du mot grec (Humanisme et christianisme
chez Clment dAlexandrie daprs le Pdagogue, Fondation Hardt, Entretiens sur lAntiquit Classique, 3
(1955),192) For similar Stoic formulations of the definition of passion, see Diogenes Laertius, 7. 110 (SVF 1. 205, 50.
22 3).
(52) Cf. Strom. 6. 16. 136. 1 and 135. 3. For the similarity of Clements position to that of Middle Platonism and Philo,
see Lilla, Clement of Alexandria, 8492.
(53) Cf. Hunter, Language of Desire, 99 105.
(54) e.g. Paed. 2. 1. 5. 1, 8. 68. 1, 4; 3. 9. 46. 1; Strom. 2. 20. 106. 2.
(55) Paed. 2. 1.9. 1.
(56) Strom. 2. 20. 118. 7 119. 1.
(57) Strom. 2. 20. 107. 3.
(58) Strom. 2. 20. 120. 3.
(59) Cf. esp. Strom. 2. 20. no. 13; Vlker, Der wahre Gnostiker, 12743.
(60) Prot. 6. 70. 1; Paed. 2. 1. 18. 2; Strom. 1. 22. 150. 2 4.
(61) Strom. 1. 17. 81. 4; 5. 1. 10. 2; 7. 2. 6. 4.
(62) Prot. 6. 72. 5, 7. 74. 7; Strom. 1. 7. 37. 1 2; 5. 13. 87. 2 4.
(63) For the origin of these views of Clement, and the similarity to ideas in contemporary philosophy and Philo, see
Lilla, Clement of Alexandria, 959.
(64) Strom. 1. 5. 28. 1 3; 6. 5. 41. 7 42. 3.
(65) Strom. 1. 4. 27. 3. Only once, in Strom. 2. 2. 7. 1, does Clement suggest, in passing, that the righteousness taught
by the Greeks is not according to truth. And here it seems that this comment is determined by the context, in which
Clement is trying to explain the of Prov. 1:3.
(66) Cf. Strom. 5. 13. 87. 1, where Clement insists that even those skilled in Greek philosophy must still learn the
truth about Christ.
(67) For a good discussion of Clements ideas about faith and its similarities especially with Middle Platonism, see
Lilla, Clement of Alexandria, 118 42, to which the following paragraphs are indebted. T. Camelot, Foi et Gnose:
Introduction ltude de la connaissance mystique chez Clment dAlexandrie (Paris, 1945), remains useful.
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(68) Cf. Strom. 2. 4. 13. 4; 8. 3. 6. 77. 2. The idea of the absolute ultimately goes back to Plato (Republic, 6.
511b67), was developed by Aristotle (Posterior Analytics, 1. 2, 71b, 203, 72a710; 1. 3, 72b 1925; 1. 22,
84a2984b3), and became a part of the school tradition of Middle Platonism (cf. Alcinous, Didaskalikos, 5).
(69) For the use of these terms in Epicurean and Stoic epistemology, cf. A. A. Long and D. N. Sedley (eds.), The
Hellenistic Philosophers (Cambridge, 1987),1.8890, 24953, respectively.
(70) Cf. Lilla, Clement of Alexandria, 128.
(71) Clement even refers for support to Epicurus (Strom. 2. 4. 16. 3), about whom he is otherwise severely critical,
though he disagrees with him on the exact nature of this for Epicurus is itself knowledge (cf.
Vita Epic, in Epicurea, ed. by H. Usener (Leipzig, 1887), 372. 67), but for Clement it is to be made into knowledge by
instruction; cf. Strom. 2. 4. 17. 1.
(72) Strom. 2. 2. 8. 4. For faith as , cf. Strom. 2. 12. 54. 555. 1 (which shows that Clement knew the
Stoic doctrine) and 5. 13. 86. 1; for faith as , cf. Strom. 2. 4. 16. 3 (referring to Epicurus), 2. 6. 28. 1.
(73) Strom. 2. 2. 9. 2.
(74) For this distinction and the corresponding two kinds of faith, see Strom. 2. 11. 48. 2.
(75) Cf. Strom. 2. 11. 48. 3; 7. 16. 93. 1, 96. 1.
(76) Strom. 2. 11. 49. 3.
(77) For as see Strom. 5. 1.2. 5, 4. 26. 1; 7. 10. 55. 5. For their inseparability, see Strom. 5. 1. 1. 3. Cf.
below, Ch. 6.
(78) Prot. 1. 6. 3.
(79) Prot. 9. 86. 1; 10. 106. 35; esp. 12. 118. 4.
(80) Prot. 1. 5. 3. Cf. Paed. 2. 4. 41. 5.
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The new life, entered by faith, to which man is called, is the subject of the Paedagogus. Two great themes stand out
in this work: first, the significance of rebirth and the childhood of the new people of God, and, second, the divine
paideia, or character formation ( ) consequent upon this.1 The abundance of images which Clement
uses to describe the Christians new state of spiritual infancychildren, chicks, infants, colts, lambs, etc.2is in stark
contrast to a culture which had no real appreciation of the state of infancy.3 The work certainly stands as an
anti-Gnostic polemic, emphasizing the perfection of baptism and opposing the Gnostic division of men into separate
categories. But the exuberance of Clements words and the depth of his thought testify to much more than a
polemical zeal; it is a warmth found also in the New Testament and later in the Epistle of Barnabas and The
Shepherd of Hermas to mention two works which Clement had to hand 4
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Clements predilection in the Paedagogus for images of infancy reflects the reality of regeneration: This is the one
grace of the illumination, that we are no longer the same as we were before the washing.5 We have seen how
Clement connects the gift of the Spirit, after Christs incarnation, to baptism.6 Clement also describes the
regeneration as the work of the Father by the Spirit.7 The water of baptism (p. 153 ) becomes a mother for
Christians who are reborn by the Father, or is alternatively described as the rational water which purifies them from
the habits of custom.8
Clements description of the effects of baptism is unreservedly categoric:
Being baptized, we are illumined; illumined, we become sons; being made sons, we are made perfect; being
made perfect, we are made immortal. I have said, he says, that you are gods, sons of the Most High [Ps. 81:6
LXX]. This work is variously called grace, illumination, perfection and washing: washing, by which we cleanse
away our sins; grace, by which the penalties accruing to transgressions are remitted; and illumination, by
which that holy light of salvation is beheld, that is, by which we see the divine clearly. We call that perfect
which wants nothing. For what is yet wanting to him who knows God? (Paed. 1. 6. 26. 13)
There are two remarkable features of this vivid description: first, that the newly baptized is unambiguously
attributed with all the characteristics of perfection: illumined, adopted, perfected, and immortal. Clement, a little
later, also speaks of baptism as granting gnsis, the end of which, the final object of desire, is rest ().9 The
second striking point, consequent upon the first, is the immediacy of this perfection: it is a perfection which is
granted here and now. Elsewhere in the same chapter, Clement stresses this even more strongly: Straightaway
() upon our regeneration we attain that perfection after which we aspired. 10 Christians are already (
) practising the heavenly life, by which they are deified.11
We have already seen how Clement uses the term perfect to refer to various states of perfection: Adam was created
perfectly formed, yet called to grow to perfection; faith in itself is perfect, yet develops into gnsis. It is in this sense
that most scholars have interpreted Clements comments on the perfection of the newly baptized: the neophyte
possesses perfection in a seminal form, and is called to develop this seed into its full perfection, which will be
achieved only after this life in the (p. 154 ) resurrection.12 Alternatively, these claims are understood within the
framework of a natural/supernatural distinction: the neophyte is granted eternal life here on earth, and thus
possesses a twofold life, his natural life and a supernatural life in Christ.13 Although Clement later, especially in the
Stromateis, emphasizes the need for development and growth in the Christian life, his stress here on the complete
perfection of the baptismal grace cannot, as is usually assumed, be reduced to an anti-Gnostic polemic. But neither
does Clement, in these passages, speak of the perfection of the baptismal grace as seedlike, or as a supernatural life
somehow added to the natural man. He does, however, explain how we are to understand this perfection of the
neophyte, in terms which reverse such a perspective.
Clement provides an answer specifically for those who do not understand how one can speak of the neophyte as
being already perfect:
But, say they, he has not yet received the perfect gift. I also assent to this: except he is in the light, and the
darkness comprehends him not. There is nothing intermediate between light and darkness. But the end
() is reserved till the resurrection of those who believe, and it is not the reception of some other thing,
but the obtaining of the promise previously made. For we do not say that both take place at the same
timeboth the arrival at the end and the anticipation () of that arrival. For eternity and time are not
the same, neither is the attempt () and the final result (); but both have reference to the same thing,
and one and the same person is concerned in both. Faith, so to speak, is the attempt generated in time; the
final result is the attainment of the promise secured for eternity. (Paed. 1.6. 28. 35)
The neophyte has not received the perfect gift as a present reality, but he has it by anticipation or in prior reception
(). Yet there is nothing intermediary between the light and the darkness, and the neophyte is
unambiguously in the light.14 The most important aspect of this passage is that it (p. 155 ) considers the neophyte
from the point of view of what he will be, his final end (). In this eschatological existence, the neophyte is fully
perfect. However, this state is not yet fully realized as a present reality; but neither is it solely a futural reality: it is in
anticipation () that the neophyte already exists as what he will be after the resurrection. After his
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regeneration in baptism, this eschatological existence in the light is his true being. It is faith which characterizes this
eschatological existence generated or manifested in time.
In the Stromateis, Clement speaks repeatedly of such anticipation in terms of the Christian Gnostics attainment of
his futural reality in the present by gnsis, by prayer, and by love.15 In his discussion of baptism in the Paedagogus,
Clement makes two further references to prolpsis or, rather, to the corresponding verb:
Being perfect, he consequently bestows perfect gifts. As at his command all things were made, so on his bare
wish to bestow grace ensues the perfecting of his grace. For the future of time is anticipated (
at) by the power of his volition. (Paed. 1. 6. 26. 3)
If, then, those who have believed have life, what remains beyond the possession of eternal life? For nothing is
lacking to faith, which is perfect and complete of itself. If anything were lacking to it, it would not be
complete; lame regarding something, it would not even be faith. Nor after the departure from this world is
there anything else waiting for the believers, those who have received here without distinction the pledge; but
already having anticipated () by faith that which is future, after the resurrection we receive it as
present. (Paed. 1. 6. 29. 23)
In the first quotation Clement attributes the effective power of this anticipation to God, connecting it to the
perfection of his (p. 156 ) grace. In the second, the anticipation is described as the effect of faith, by which the
neophypte receives here and now in faith what essentially belongs to the future and will be received as a present
reality after the resurrection. In this way Clements more abstract definitions of faith, which were considered earlier,
are given substance as a living reality. Here Clements understanding of faith clearly corresponds to that given in the
Epistle to the Hebrews, as the substance of things hoped for (I I: I); faith is a concrete substance, not simply an
intellectual assent. It is also important to note that here the baptismal grace is considered as the bestowal of life
(, , ), granted equally to all believers, to which nothing more can be added. This life as a present reality
belongs to the future, but by anticipation in faith it is already () lived here and now ( 7/S77) by the
baptized Christian.16 It is this life which is the true existence of the Christian, and the Christian may therefore be
said to live proleptically. Clement thus transposes the term prolpsis from an epistemological context, in which,
following Epicurus, he used it to define faith in terms of preconception, to an eschatological context, in which he
uses it to describe the paradoxical state of the Christian whose true existence belongs to the eschaton, yet which is
already lived in this world.17 Clements eschatology is therefore best characterized, at least in these passages, as a
proleptic eschatology.18 To describe this dynamic as the (p. 157 ) bestowal of a seminal perfection at baptism, which
must then be developed into full perfection, reverses the perspective of Clements own explanation, and thereby
overlooks the eschatological nature of the Christians existence.
Although, in connection with baptism, Clement described Christ as being an example (),19 baptismal
rebirth is not simply a matter of repeating the actions of Christ. Rather, baptism effects a grafting on to the body of
Christ, bringing the Christian into union with him. Clement describes this in a passage in which he brings together
the ideas of regeneration, incorporation, and nourishment:
For if we have been regenerated unto Christ, he who has regenerated us nourishes us with his own milk, the
Word; for it is proper that what has begotten should forthwith supply nourishment to that which has been
begotten. And as the regeneration, so analogously the food of man became spiritual. In all respects, therefore,
and in all things, we are brought into union with Christ, and into relationship through his blood, by which we
are redeemed; and into sympathy, in consequence of the nourishment which flows from the Word; and into
immortality, through his guidance. (Paed. 1. 6. 49. 34)20
Here Clement was attempting to reconcile the words of St Paul, that adults are fed with solid food rather than the
milk appropriate for children (1 Cor. 3: 2), to the image of the Promised Land as one running with milk and honey
(Exod. 3:8). For Clement, childhood in Christ is maturity compared to the Law.21 As mans relationship to God will
always be that of a child, so too, the food of Christians, Christ himself, is milk to them, yet inedible solid food to
those outside Christ.22 Clements stress on baptism as the beginning of the Christian life and on the nourishment
which sustains such life clearly shows the sacramental dimension of this life for Clement.23 In (p. 158 ) this
context, Clement also speaks of the Church as the locus of nourishment and life.24 The Church is a virgin mother,
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who, before Christs incarnation, was alone and not fully a woman, and so had no milk; but now, having brought
forth her child, the milk, as virgin and mother, she calls all her children to her and nurses them with this holy milk.25
Through rebirth in Christ, Christians become a new race with new blessings and a new, eternally youthful life:
In contradistinction therefore to the older people, the new people are called young, having learned the new
blessings; and we have the exuberance of lifes morning prime in this youth which knows no old age, in which
we are always maturing in understanding, are always young, always gentle, always new: for those must
necessarily be new, who have become partakers of the new Word. And that which participates in eternity is
wont to be assimilated to the incorruptible: so that to us appertains the designation of the age of childhood, a
lifelong spring-time, because the truth that is in us, and our habits saturated with the truth, cannot be touched
by old age. (Paed. 1. 5. 20. 34)26
Participating in eternity, partaking of the eternal Word who has newly appeared, the new existence of Christians as
children is untouched by time, an eternal springtime. Although they mature in understanding, they remain eternally
young and eternally new; their childlike state in Christ is an eternal truth, their true existence.27 In this state they
live, as Clement puts it, on the boundaries of this life, already separated from death.28
Thus Clement, at least on a theoretical level, recognizes the profound ontological significance of baptism. Yet, as we
noticed earlier, despite sharing certain premisses with the Encratites, Clement also felt himself obliged to counter
their radical conclusions: in particular, the claim that such rebirth effectively brings to a halt the course of everyday
life, and especially marriage as the means through which this life holds sway. For Clement, although baptism
transfers the ground of (p. 159 ) mans being, his ontology, to the eschaton, it does not imply such instantaneous
mutation. Clement is deeply convinced that this eternal life, by which the Christian lives proleptically, is not to be
thought of as separate or distinct from his or her day-to-day life: this can be manifested only within a o.29
Clement visualizes this new existence within the terms of an art of living ( ), an idea common to the
popular philosophical and medical thought of his day.30 Casting off the old man and abandoning the old forms of
nourishment, Christians receive in exchange another new regimen, that of Christ.31 As a regimen, the Christian life
is a long and rigorous process of training, required of each believer.32 In this perspective, baptism is now the entry
into Christs training: Having now accomplished those things, it is a fitting sequel that our pedagogue Jesus should
sketch out for us the model of the true life, and train humanity in Christ (Paed. 1. 12. 98. 1). It is the painstaking and
compendious description of the manner in which the Christian should live that forms the bulk of the Paedagogus.
As there are two causes of sin, weakness and ignorance, so the life of the Christian has two aspects, training and
instruction. In the Paedagogus, Clement is concerned almost solely with the first aspect, the ceaseless exhortation of
the Logos-Paedagogos urging the newly baptized to the energetic practice of our duties.33 The activity of the Logos
as Teacher comes later, instructing those who have already been trained and disciplined.34
The essential characteristic of the life of the newly baptized Christian is obedience to the Logos, who, as a pedagogue,
uses all his resources to encourage and exhort:
(p. 160 ) With all his power then the Pedagogue of humanity, the divine Logos, using the resources of
wisdom, devotes himself to the saving of the children, admonishing, upbraiding, blaming, chiding, reproving,
threatening, healing, promising, favouring; and, as it were, by many reins, curbing the irrational impulses of
humanity. To speak briefly, therefore, the Lord acts towards us as we do towards our children. (Paed. 1. 9. 75.
12)35
As passions took their rise from disobedience to the Logos, so, conversely, their defeat takes place through obedience
to the Logos-Paedagogos. Alongside the Platonic image of the charioteer controlling the irrational impulses by means
of reins,36 the Logos-Paedagogos is also represented as a skilful doctor, who, with our co-operation, will heal our
passions.37 Clement also follows Plato in distinguishing two types of fear: one of reverence, which children show
towards their parents, and the other of hatred, which slaves show towards cruel masters.38 It is the first type of fear
which should characterize our relationship to the Pedagogue, and prompt us to turn away from sin. Such fear is
therefore described as salvific.39 Closely connected, in Clements thought, to this fear is the hope inspired by the
Pedagogues promises, which is alternatively described as the reason for obedience, parallel to fear, and as the step
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succeeding fear.40
Playing on the multitude of possible meanings of the word logos, Clement extends this life of obedience to the
Logos-Paedagogos to encompass both the correct reason in man and (p. 161 ) the natural ordering of the universe.41
The idea of the correct reason ( ) as the standard for human morality occurs repeatedly throughout the
Paedagogus.42 The Stoic background of this thought has been pointed out many times, and it is within a Stoic
framework that Clement elaborates the theoretical aspects of his thought.43 Thus, following a Stoic definition,
Clement writes: Virtue is a disposition of the soul harmonious with the L/logos throughout the whole of life.44 This
definition is augmented by a reference, in the Stromateis, to the Platonic idea of virtue as the harmony of the soul,
the governing of her irrational parts by the reason, through which it is possible to lead an upright life.45 The need for
the rational part of the soul to be dominant, for the whole soul and life to be harmonious, also requires the ability to
discern the fantasies conjured up by the passions. Thus Clement describes Christian conduct as being an operation
of the rational soul in accordance with a correct judgement and desire for truth.46 Considered from this perspective,
Clement can characterize the new Christian regimen in the following terms: The Christian life, in which we are now
trained, is a system of rational actions, that is, of those things taught by the Logos, an unfailing energy which we
have called faith (Paed. 1. 13. 102. 4). Clement goes on to reduce the intellectualist tenor of this system of rational
actions by identifying it with the commandments of the Lord, written and adapted for mankind and for obedience.47
In the Paedagogus, Clement connects the idea of virtue as harmony with the correct reason to the Aristotelian
doctrine of virtue as moderation:
(p. 162 ) The medium is good in all thingssince the extremes are dangerous, the middle courses are good.
For to be in no want of necessaries is the medium, and the desires which are in accordance with nature are
bounded by sufficiency. (Paed. 2. 1. 16. 4)48
As with most of his philosophical statements, this combination of Stoic and Aristotelian ideas is not original to
Clement, but has its parallels in Middle Platonism and Philo.49 The demand for self-sufficiency is also characteristic
of the new regimen: Clement interprets the words Take no thought for the morrow to demand that those dedicated
to Christ should be self-sufficient, their own storehouse; for, requiring as few things as possible, they are assimilated
to God, who alone is in need of nothing.50 In the Paedagogus, at least, the aim of asceticism is therefore a
moderation and harmony bounded by natural necessity: In a word, whatever things are natural to men we must not
eradicate from them, but rather impose on them limits and suitable times. 51 The most apt term to characterize this
state, although Clement does not in fact use it in the Paedagogus, is moderation ().52
Clement elaborates the practical details of this new regimen with an exacting strictness. Each of our acts is governed
by a relentless concern for its modality, accordance with the correct logos (as the divine Logos, human reason and
the natural order), and its finality, the limitation imposed by necessity. Although Clement does not mention
Musonius by name, in the Paedagogus he treats the same subjects as Musonius, and frequently employs the same
expressions.53 At the beginning (p. 163 ) of the second book of the Paedagogus, Clement appropriates the old
maxim that, whilst others may live in order to eat, the Pedagogue demands that we eat in order to live.54 Every aspect
of our nourishment is then systematically worked out from this principle, resulting in a clear preference for the most
simple and frugal types of food, which are also, as a matter of principle, the foods most suitable for the body and
which produce the strongest and noblest of men.55 The same rationale is used to deduce what type of clothes
Christians are permitted to wear, what objects they may have in their homes, and so on. Clement also spares us few
details about the manner in which Christians ought to live their lives. For example, when discussing behaviour at the
table, Clement enjoins his readers:
We must abstain from all slavish manners and excess, and touch what is set before us in a decorous way,
keeping the hand and the couch and the chin free of stains, preserving the grace of the countenance
undisturbed, and commit no indecorum in the act of swallowing. (Paed. 2. 1. 13. 1)56
The Paedagogus is full of such advice for every aspect of lifehow to get up, walk, talk, laugh, go to bed, and sleep.
The overall aim, according to Clement, was to fashion Christians so that they would be characterized by composure,
tranquillity, calmness and peace.57
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A parallel problem emerges from an analysis of the relation between God and man in the asceticism that Clement
describes. There is a continual oscillation in this relation throughout Clements works. Corresponding to the
emphasis which, as we have seen, he places on freedom as the determinative element in the constitution of man,
Clement stresses that the practice of this asceticism, the acquisition of virtue, falls within mans own ability. Man is
by nature adapted for the acquisition of virtue;76 if it were not so, the possession of virtue would be neither voluntary
nor praiseworthy.77 Clement repeatedly and expressly states that it is within mans power to train himself and to
obey the commandments, for virtue is supremely a matter of mans own volition.78 This significance and scope of
human volition and ability is the result of Gods plan for man: God adapted Adam for the acquisition of virtue, for
God intended him to be saved of himself.79 Taken in isolation, the immense role ascribed to human volition would
(p. 167 ) seem to make Clement a forerunner of Pelagianism. But it seems to be balanced by an equal stress on the
inadequacy of mans own ascetic labours:
For a man training and working for apatheia achieves nothing. But if he plainly shows himself very desirous
and earnest about this, he attains it by the addition of the power of God. For God conspires () with
willing souls. But if they abandon their eagerness, the Spirit which is bestowed by God is also restrained. (QDS
21. 12)
Man cannot attain the heights of apatheia without the aid of this power of God. God and man co-operate, enabling
man to achieve the state of apatheia. However, this state of apatheia is not demanded of the simple Christians, who,
for their salvation, are exhorted to remain in a state of moderation and self-sufficiency. As we will see, when looking
at the life of the true Christian Gnostic, the goal of apatheia is for those who do not want simply to be saved, but to
be saved in a fitting and becoming manner.80
With regard to salvation, it is frequently asserted that the relationship between human asceticism and the grace or
power of God, as Clement describes it, is one of synergy.81 As Jaeger noted, Clement is the first Christian writer to
develop a fairly sophisticated vocabulary and theology of synergy.82 According to Jaeger, Clements use of this term
differs from that of Gregory of Nyssa and the later Greek patristic tradition, in that Clement never speaks of God,
Christ, or the Spirit co-operating with man; it is, rather, man who is said to co-operate, who, when he feels that the
grace of God is given him, seizes the opportunity to yield to it.83 In the eighth Stromata, Clement systematically
analyses the various types of causes and provides a formal definition of what he means by synergy, by
distinguishing the co-operative cause ( ) from the related concept of a joint cause ( ):
(p. 168 ) The joint cause is conceived of in conjunction with another, which is not capable of producing the
effect by itself, being a cause along with a cause. The co-operative cause differs from the joint cause in this
particular, that the joint cause produces the effect with the other, which by itself does not act. But the
co-operative cause, while effecting nothing by itself, yet by its accession to that which acts by itself,
co-operates with it, for the production of the effect in the intensest degree. (Strom. 8. 9. 33. 89)84
In this formal schema, the co-operative cause, which by itself is unable to act, co-operates with that which is capable
of acting by itself, making the effect better and stronger. If one were to transfer this schema to the relationship
between man and God, it would seem to imply that man is not able to achieve anything working by himself, but must
accede to the power or grace of God.
However, Clement is less rigid in his application of this definition than Jaeger supposes. According to Clement, all
causes, even co-operative causes, must effect something, of which they are then wholly () the cause;
otherwise they would not even be called a cause.85 As such, Clement can also speak of co-operative causes as
providing power towards the desired effect.86
More specifically, in the context of Clements descriptions of the relationship between man and God, it is not correct
simply to assert that man co-operates with the grace or power of God, or the Spirit. Clement is convinced that purity
of soul is a prerequisite for the reception of the grace or the power of God.87 For Clement, man is saved by his
co-operation, not with the grace or power of God, but with the paideia of the commandments enjoined by God, which
are always within his own capacity. In the seventh Stromata Clement provides a more detailed description of this
relationship:
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Nor shall he who is being saved be saved against his will, for he is not inanimate; but he will above all
voluntarily and of free choice hasten to salvation. For man received the commandments so as to be
self-impelled, (p. 169 ) to whatever he might wish of things to be chosen and things to be avoided.
Wherefore God does not do good by necessity, but from his free choice he benefits those who turn to him of
themselves. (Strom. 7. 7. 42. 46)
Man has been given the commandments that he might be self-impelled. Through his own free choice he has the
possibility of choosing salvation and turning to God. His freely chosen application is then matched by Gods grace,
enabling the perfecting of his choice and the saving of those who by their own choice and application are already
moving towards salvation. It is thus that Clement understands the Incarnation in terms of pedagogy: Christ came to
show man what was possible through obedience to the commandments.88 In the fifth Stromata Clement describes
the dynamic of this relationship in a similar fashion: Wisdom, the power of the Father, is given by God; it rouses our
free will, and then repays the application of the elect with crowns of fellowship.89
This synergetic relationship is seen particularly clearly in the image of the Logos as a physician who, with our
co-operation, heals our diseases, the passions:
As the physician provides health for those who co-operate with him towards health, so also God provides
eternal salvation for those who co-operate with him for knowledge and right action; and the moment that we
do any one of the things in our capacity, which are enjoined by the commandments, the promise also is also
fulfilled ( , . . . ). (Strom. 7. 7. 48. 4)
The fulfilment of the commandments, which are within mans capability, is simultaneously the fulfilment of the
promise and the bestowal of salvation. It is in this sense that man is said to co-operate with God, helping him achieve
his designs for mankind. Similarly, when Clement refers to Ephesians (2: 5) in Stromata 5, he makes his own
characteristic addition: By grace we are saved, but not without good works. 90 Likewise, (p. 170 ) when Clement
reads your faith has saved you (Mark 5: 34), he specifies that this does not simply mean faith, for it was spoken to
the Jewsthat is, to those who already kept the Law and lived blamelessly, lacking only faith.91 The performance of
these good works is thus not dependent upon, nor derived from, faith. This freely chosen ascetic labour is a
prerequisite for the grace of salvation or the gift of apatheia (as in QDS 21. 1), rather than being the effect or
manifestation of mans salvation.92
The relationship between mans efforts and the grace of God is, in Clements thought, one of synergy. But it is a
synergy which remains a purely external collaboration between two distinct actors. Man is created for the acquisition
of virtue; he is aroused to this task by the God-given commandments or wisdom, and continually prompted to action
by the threats and promises of the Pedagogue; yet the task remains one within the scope of mans free will and
capacity, and it is his application to this task that is rewarded by the grace of God. There is no sense, in Clements
descriptions of the asceticism of the neophyte, of that asceticism being the application of the newness of life freely
granted to those who turn to God in faith. The eschatological tension of the Christian proleptically living the life of
the resurrection, which Clement described so vividly in the first book of the Paedagogus, has not penetrated into his
description of the asceticism of Christian life. Clements synergism describes a relationship between God and man
in which they co-operate to achieve mans salvation, rather than to enflesh mans freely given eschatological
salvation in the present. It is, therefore, a synergy which does not result from our new relationship with God granted
in baptism.
By his thoroughgoing analysis of the Christian life in terms of a system of rational actions, a life in which each act
has a God-given importance, Clement, as Brown suggests, defends the value of every aspect of everyday human life
against the born-again Encratites. But his method of doing this involved changing the basis of the defence: the style
of asceticism which (p. 171 ) he proposes, as we have seen, no longer has its motivation in Christ; nor does it stem
from the new life granted by him. Rather, it is an ascsis undertaken for its own sake,93 which finds its limitation in
Christ. Rendered secure, by a self-sufficient, self-assured composure and tranquillity, from attack by the Encratites,
Clements prescribed regimen for Christian life is also impregnable both to the newness of life granted in baptism
and, as we will see when looking at his thought on marriage, to a full engagement with our concrete and
interpersonal life.94 Clement provides a particularly suitable image for the style of this asceticism: rather than a new
life which penetrates every aspect of mans existence and his world, Clements Christian pursues wisdom by inwardly
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stretching upwards; separated from the world and from sin, he touches the world on tiptoe only in order to appear to
be in the world.95
The effects of this style of asceticism are seen, as I suggested, especially clearly in Clements discussion of marriage.
Clement is frequently praised for his warm appreciation of marriage.96 He stresses, against the Encratites, that
marriage is a matter of choice, for those who are suited for it and who are at the appropriate age.97 In the final
chapter of the second Stromata, a prelude to the celebrated third book, Clement presents a brief doxographical
survey of the opinions of the philosophers about (p. 172 ) marriage. He cites Plato, without comment, as
maintaining that marriage contrives immortality for the human race through the succession of children.98 He refers
to Democritus and Epicurus, who disparage marriage because of the many troubles that it brings. The Stoics regard
marriage and the rearing of children as indifferent, whilst the Peripatetics believe it is a good.99 He then refers to
others, perhaps Hierocles and Antipatros, again without comment, for whom the childless man fails in the
perfection which is according to nature, not having substituted his proper successor in his place.100 Finally Clement
states his own position: Therefore we must by all means marry, both for our countrys sake, for the succession of
children, and as far as we are able, for the completion of the world (Strom. 2. 23. 140. 1). This reference to the
completion (), does not seem to refer to the eschatological idea of the completion of the number of the
elect, but rather to the continuity of the world as it is.101 Clement then goes on to speak of the necessity of marriage,
in a very self-centred manner, as being especially shown by the diseases of the body, for a wifes care far exceeds that
of friends.102 Likewise, marriage is shown to be necessary due to the help that a spouse and children can provide in
old age.103
The emphasis of these stock themes is quite clearly on procreation, and that is, in fact, how Clement defines the
content of marriage:
The goal of marriage is procreation, and its end is fair children. (Paed. 2. 10. 83. 1)
Marriage is the first coming together according to law of a man and a woman for the procreation of legitimate
children. (Strom, 2. 23. 137. 1)
Every aspect of marital sexual activity is rigorously deduced from this principle; everything which does not conform
to this (p. 173 ) finality is severely condemned. Even the conjugal rights which St Paul had defended against the
Corinthians (1 Cor. 7: 3, 5), are restricted by Clement to the finality of procreation, something never mentioned by
the Apostle.104 In this context Clement speaks extensively about the need to follow nature, established as it is by
divine providence.105 Clement even cites with approval Epicuruss maxim that sexual intercourse does no one any
good; one must be content if it does no harm, and adds that even lawful intercourse is perilous except in so far as it
is undertaken for procreation.106 Clement also aims to outdo Stoic morality in his rigorism: If, as the Stoics believe,
reason recommends that the Sage does not even move a finger by chance, how much more necessary is it for those
who seek wisdom to control the organ of intercourse. 107
Contrary to the Encratites, Clement extends the virtues of continence () and temperance () to
marriage.108 A man who marries for the sake of procreation must abstain from desire for his wife, and practise
continence in order to beget with a sober and temperate will.109 Whereas the Encratites practise continence because
of their pessimistic attitude towards the world,110 and athletes have practised continence so as to keep their bodies in
training,111 Clement emphasizes that Christian continence, which sanctifies the shrine of the Spirit, should arise
from a love of the Lord.112 In defining continence as an ignoring of the body in accordance with the confession of
faith in God, he also extends the range of continence, to include every aspect of mans relation to the world, limiting
his use to the necessary.113 That the virtue of continence describes mans inward disposition in his use of the world
means that, in contrast to the Encratites, Clement views continence as an interior virtue, hidden in the soul.114 (p.
174 ) For Clement, the virtue of continence is intimately linked with that of temperance, and both are invoked to
describe a temperate use of sexual dealings within marriage. Frequently the two terms are used indistinguishably by
Clement; but when they are distinguished, temperance seems to lack the combative dimension of continence:
temperance is concerned with the positive regulation of sexual activity towards its proper goal, while continence
struggles against any impassioned activity, and so desensualizes marriage.115
There is the same synergetic ambivalence in Clements description of the virtues of continence and temperance as we
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saw in his description of asceticism in general. In the third Stromata Clement stresses, against the Encratites and the
athletes, that true continence and temperance are divine gifts.116 Elsewhere, however, he maintains that the virtue of
temperance is within the capacity of anyone who chooses it, and also compares licentiousness, which is to be thought
of as the evil of the one who is licentious, with temperance, which is the good of the one capable of practising it.117
Similarly, Clement exhorts his readers to cultivate temperance that there might be not only work, but also the grace
of God.118 Likewise, continence is defined as the state which does not overstep the boundaries of the correct reason
( ), and the one who exercises continence is described as curbing his desires, or curbing himself, so as not
to indulge in desires contrary to the correct reason.119 This ambivalence is clearly expressed in a statement in which
Clement relates the two virtues: continence does not only teach us how to exercise temperance (), rather
it supplies temperance to us, being a divine power and grace.120 Continence is here described as a divine power,
which teaches us how to practise and achieve the virtue of temperance: we attain or receive temperance by exercising
that which is a divine gift.
(p. 175 ) Clement bases his procreative definition of marriage, something not heard of in the New Testament, on
the divine command recorded in Genesis, Multiply! (Gen. 1: 28). Thus, for Clement, the identification of marriage
with procreation is not a restriction, but the fulfilment of Gods designs. Clement even speaks of man becoming like
God through his co-operation in the birth of another human being, while marriage is described as co-operation with
the work of nature.121
But, besides directing (in passing) the husband to love his wife,122 Clement emphasized procreation to such an extent
that he very rarely speaks of the mutual relationship between husband and wife. This stands out in sharp contrast to
the description of marriage given by Musonius, an author otherwise extensively used by Clement. According to
Musonius:
The husband and wifeshould come together for the purpose of making a life in common and of procreating
children, and furthermore of regarding all things in common between them, and nothing peculiar or private to
one or the other, not even their own bodies. The birth of a human being which results from such a union is
certainly something marvellous, but it is not yet enough for the relation of husband and wife, inasmuch as
quite apart from marriage it could result from any other sexual union, just as in the case of animals. But in
marriage there must be above all perfect companionship () and mutual love of husband and wife.
Where, then, this love for each other is perfect and the two share it completely, each striving to outdo the
other in devotion, the marriage is ideal and worthy of envy, for such a union is beautiful.123
There is certainly no equivalent description in Clement.124 Yet Clement undoubtedly had a high regard for the style
of (p. 176 ) marriage he prescribes. He describes marriage as a sacred image which must be kept pure from
defilement, in which we are to rise from sleep with the Lord and go to sleep with thanksgiving and prayer,
confessing the Lord in our whole life.125 It is the greatest bond of temperance which breathes pure pleasures.126 He
expresses his admiration for monogamy, and proclaims the nobility () of the single marriage.127 Clement
has such regard for the holiness of marriage, that on the rare occasions when he speaks of the espousal of Christ and
the Church (cf. Eph. 5: 2333), the value of this image arises, for him, from the given sanctity of marriage, a reversal
of the usual perspective.128 By the three gathered in the Lords name (Matt. 18: 20), Clement understands the
husband, wife, and child, the Christian household; for, as he explains, the wife is joined to her husband by the
Lord.129 Furthermore, a marriage which is not given over to pleasure produces a harmony according to the Logos.130
Such marriage does not, according to Clement, hinder one from later attaining the heights of the true Christian
Gnostic. Indeed, the discipline of marriage enables the married man to prove himself superior to the single man:
True manhood is not shown in the choice of a celibate life; rather, the prize in the contest of men is won by
him who has trained himself by the discharge of the duties of marriage and procreation and by the supervision
of a household, regardless of pleasure and pain, by him who in the midst of his solicitude for his family shows
himself inseparable from the love of God and rises superior to every temptation which assails him through
children and wife and servants and possessions. (Strom. 7. 12. 70. 7)
However, Clements thoughts about the relative merits of marriage and the single life are not straightforward. For he
continues by asserting that:
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(p. 177 ) On the other hand, he who has no family is in most respects untried. Taking care for himself alone,
he is inferior to the one who falls short of him as regards his own salvation (
), but who has the advantage in the conduct of life, as he truly preserves a faint
image of providence. (Strom. 7. 12. 70. 8)
For Clement, the married man cannot dedicate himself to the service of God to the same extent as the single man,
and so is inferior to the celibate as regards his own salvation. But, on a purely human level, through his married
state, the husband can develop possibilities, which are not open to the single man: his oversight of the family and
household reflects, however faintly, Gods providence within creation.131
As for the wife, Clement speaks of her as an aid in the faith.132 If she is married to an intemperate man, she must,
according to Clement, persuade him to become her companion in virtue. If such persuasion fails, she should then
strive for virtue by herself, not doing anything against his will except for what contributes to virtue and salvation.133
Commenting on the words of St Paul, that the single woman is free to care for the things of the Lord, while the
married woman is burdened by her care for her husband (1 Cor. 7: 34), Clement rejects the Encratite interpretation,
which would use this as grounds for the rejection of marriage:
Is it not permissible for both the married man and his wife to care for the things of the Lord together? But just
as the unmarried woman cares in the Lord for the things of the Lord, that she may be holy in body and spirit,
so also the married woman cares for both the things of her husband and the things of the Lord in the Lord,
that she may be holy in body and spirit; both are holy in the Lord, the one as a wife, the other as a virgin.
(Strom. 3. 12. 88. 23)134
Thus, although Clement does not value the conjugal bond itself as highly as does Musonius, he does see marriage as
a mode of (p. 178 ) life which serves the Lord. This religious dimension of marriage indicates a certain originality in
Clements thought compared with his pagan contemporaries.135
However, Clement does not really integrate this religious dimension into his description of marriage; it is as a
manner of each individual spouse serving the Lord that marriage is valued, rather than through the conjugal bond
itself.136 This is seen particularly clearly in Strom. 7. 12. 70. 7, where the married man is described as training himself
in the duties pertaining to marriage, procreation, and the management of a household, yet falling short of the
celibate in matters pertaining to salvation, and in Strom. 4. 19. 123. 2 and 4. 20. 127. 12, where the woman married
to an intemperate husband is exhorted to strive after virtue and her own salvation. Similarly, in the first book of the
Paedagogus, Clement maintains that as virtue belongs equally to men and women, so marriage is a common yoke
(), and those who have a common () life have a common grace and a common salvation.137 The
common grace and salvation are a result not of a common, conjugal life, but of each spouse separately attaining
virtue. The adjective common does not denote any mutual relation between the two within the grace of God; rather,
it denotes their simultaneous, yet individual, participation in the gifts of God.138 The style of marriage Clement
proposes is, despite or, rather, by virtue of his praise, one in which the conjugal bond is consistently subordinated to
the finality of procreation.139
(p. 179 ) This emphasis in Clements thought on the goal of marriage as procreation leads inexorably to the same
attitude with regard to the sexual nature of man. Although Clement criticizes the Encratites for their use of Matthew
20: 30 and Luke 20: 345,140 it is not so much their interpretation of this passage that he objects to, but its setting
within an eschatology that sharply divides this world from the next.141 In fact, Clement shares their interpretation:
For in this world he says they marry and are given in marriage, in which alone the female is distinguished
from the male; but in that world it is so no more. There the rewards of this social and holy life, which is
based on conjugal union are laid up, not for male () and female (), but for man (), the
desire which divides him being removed. (Paed. 1. 4. 10. 3)142
It is desire () that divides mankind into male and female, a division which is limited to this present world.
It is again within a discussion about virtue being identical for men and women that Clement, in the fourth book of
the Stromateis, expounds his thought on sexual difference further:
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As far as respects human nature, then, the woman ( ) does not possess one nature and the man ( )
exhibit another, but the same: so also with virtue. If, perhaps, temperance and righteousness, and whatever
qualities are regarded as following them, are the virtue of the man, does it belongs to the man alone to be
virtuous, and to the woman to be licentious and unjust? But it is indecent even to say this. Accordingly, the
woman is to practice temperance and righteousness, and every other virtue, as well as the man, both free and
bond, since it follows that one and the same virtue be of the same nature. (Strom. 4. 8. 59. 13)
As the same virtue is to be expected of the woman as of the man, due to the identity of the human nature of each, the
(p. 180 ) difference between the two must be located elsewhere. Clement continues:
Therefore, we do not say that the same nature ( ) is of the female ( ) as [compared]
to the male ( ), inasmuch as she is female. For it is certainly fitting that some difference exist between
each of them, by which one of them is female and the other male. Pregnancy and parturition, accordingly, we
say, belong to the woman ( ), inasmuch as she is female (), and not inasmuch as she is a
human being (). For if there were no difference between the man () and the woman
(), both of them would do and suffer the same things. (Strom. 4. 8. 59. 45)
The identity of human nature in men and women requires of them the acquisition of identical virtue, whilst the
bodily differences between the male and the female destines women to child bearing and housekeeping; as he
explains in what follows: As, then, there is the same as regards the soul, by this sameness she will attain to the same
virtue; but the difference with regard to the particularities of the body is towards child bearing and housekeeping
(Strom. 4. 8. 60. 1). Although Clement continually stresses the equality of virtue between men and women, he is
ambiguous about a similar equality of gender. A few lines later he states that while women are to philosophizethat
is, practise virtuealongside men, males are nevertheless superior at everything, unless they have become
effeminate.143 Here Clement is clearly using the idea of the masculine character of virtue. That virtue, by its virile
character, produces both virile men and women, while its absence results in effeminate men and women, was a
standard theme in Greek philosophical morality, which exerted a considerable influence in early Christian
thought.144 However, (p. 181 ) Clement goes further to state that, despite the fact that souls are neither male nor
female, and that the sexual difference is removed in the resurrection, the woman, when perfected in virtue, becomes
a man:
For souls, by themselves equally souls, are not different, neither male nor female, when they no longer marry
nor are given in marriage. And is not the woman translated into man ( ), when she is
become equally unfeminine (), and manly and perfect ( )? (Strom. 6. 12. 100. 3)145
Interesting as such speculation might be, the important point about these comments on the sexual nature of men
and women for our purposes, is that the finality of procreation, in terms of which marriage is understood, is, along
with housekeeping, unreservedly applied by Clement to sexual difference itself.
As mentioned above, Clement shares the Encratite interpretation of Luke 20: 345, but, in the Paedagogus and
Stromata 3, he refers the redundancy of marriage to the life hereafter. There is, however, one passage in Stromata 6
where he describes the married Christian Gnostic as already anticipating that state:
To such a one, his wife, after child bearing, is as a sister, and is judged as if of the same father, calling to mind
her husband only when she looks on the children, as she will be a sister in reality after putting off the flesh,
which separates and limits the knowledge of those who are spiritual by the peculiar forms (of the sexes).
(Strom. 6. 12. 100. 3)146
(p. 182 ) This passage is reminiscent of the proleptic character of Christian existence which Clement describes in
the context of baptism: after child bearing, husband and wife should be as brother and sister, for that is what they
will be in reality after shedding the flesh with its sexual characteristics. It is clear, however, that this prolpsis is
active only after child bearing, and not, as earlier, after baptism. Thus we see the same problem as we saw in the
discussion of his asceticism: the proleptic character of baptismal life does not actually influence Clements
description of Christian marriage. The newness of life granted in baptism does not have any effect on marriage, in
which the spouses remain engaged in the pursuit of their own virtue.
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Clements description of Christian marriage is not, in fact, different from that which was prescribed by the Law, as
Clement himself understands it. Countering those who, following Marcion, would separate the Old from the New
Revelation and reject what belongs to the Old, Clement repeatedly emphasizes that the Law intended husbands to
cohabit with their wives temperately () and only for the purpose of begetting children.147 Likewise,
Clement explains the fact that we are no longer ordered to wash after sexual intercourse, by pointing to baptism,
which encompasses the many washings of the Law. Clement is at pains to point out that it was not the emission of
the generative seed that dictated the need to wash, for the seed of the holy is itself sanctified, but rather that the
washings demanded by the Law prophesied our future regeneration.148 Clement wanted to maintain a continuity of
revelation between the New Covenant and the Old, and also with the ideals of Greek paideia. However, in doing so,
he severely limited the effect of our regeneration in Christ. It is only to the extent that Clement defends the necessity
of procreation that he defends marriage and differs from the Encratites.
Moreover, not even the necessity of procreation is absolute for Clement. In the Protrepticus he claims that men
would not make love, nor beget children, nor sleep, if they were immortal and had no wants and never grew old.149
Similarly, amongst (p. 183 ) the reasons why Christ did not marry, according to Clement, was that, being immortal,
he did not need to beget children.150 Granted immortality in baptism, Christians should have no need for marriage
and procreation; they would be in Adams pre-lapsarian state, which encompassed both marriage and procreation,
without any inherent connection between these activities and death. The elision between Clements descriptions of
the pre-lapsarian and post-lapsarian states of Adam, and his tacit acceptance of the Encratite connection between
birth, marriage, and death, thus result in a view of marriage governed by the finality of death, and hence the need for
procreation, in which the conjugal bond itself plays no significant role.
Clements characterization of the Christian life as tiptoeing on the earth thus extends to his treatment of marriage
and the relation between the sexes. Wanting, at all costs, to maintain the cultivated ideal which he establishes for the
Christian, Clement advises:
Above all, it seems necessary that we turn away from the sight of women. For it is possible for one who
looks to slip; but it is impossible for one who looks not, to lust. (Paed. 3. 11. 82. 583. 1)
It is this self-imposed restraint, motivated by the desire for a life in accord with the ideal which he establishes for
himself, that dominates the asceticism which Clement prescribes for those who have newly entered the Christian
life. This style of asceticism, in its articulation, and especially in the ambivalent theology of synergy which it
describes, severely curtails the effective power of the new life granted in baptism, which he nevertheless felt so
keenly and described so vividly.151 The problematics inherent in Clements theology of synergetic asceticism
inevitably led to the idealization of a style of asceticism as a form of self-control, in which the virtues of continence
and temperance are reduced to self-fashioning (p. 184 ) techniques, and which ultimately results in the positing of
a sexless (or exclusively male) existence, definitively in the age to come and by anticipation through this style of
asceticism in this present worldunexpectedly, perhaps, given the unaffected warmth of Clements praise for
marriage.
Notes:
(1) Paed. 1. 1. 2. 1.
(2) Paed. 1. 5. 14. 116. 3.
(3) Cf. H. I. Marrou, Histoire de leducation dans lantiquit, 6th edn. (Paris, 1965), 325.
(4) Barnabas, 6. 11, 17; Hermas, The Shepherd, Mandate, 2. 1; Similitude, 9. 29. 1, 31. 3.
(5) Paed 1. 6. 30. 1.
(6) Paed.1. 12. 98. 23.
(7) Paed.1. 5. 21. 2.
(8) Cf. Strom. 4. 25. 160. 2; Prot. 10. 99. 3.
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(78) e.g. Strom. 2. 15. 62. 4; 4. 19. 124. 1; 4. 24. 153. 2; 7. 2. 8. 6; 7. 7. 48. 7. Vlker, commenting on QDS 18. 1, states
that die Tugen fllt unter die Rubrik des to ec r^itv (Der wahre Gnostiker, 457). See also J. Wytzes, The Twofold
Way: Platonic Influences in the Work of Clement of Alexandria, VC 11 (1957), 22648; 14 (1960), 12953.
(79) Strom. 6. 12. 96. 2; cf. Strom. 7. 2. 6. 3.
(80) Strom. 6. 14. 111. 3; cited and discussed below, Ch. 6.
(81) Cf. Vlker, Der wahre Gnostiker, 121, 2546, 45860; T. Rther, Die sittliche Forderung der Apatheia in den
beiden ersten christlichen Jahrhunderten und bei Klemens von Alexandrien (Freiburg im Breisgau, 1949), 85; and
Tollinton, Clement of Alexandria, 2. 82.
(82) Cf. W. Jaeger, Two Rediscovered Works of Ancient Christian Literature (Leiden, 1954), 1036.
(83) Ibid. 103.
(84) See also the whole of Strom. 8. 9 and 1. 20, esp. 99.
(85) Strom. 8. 9. 33. 4. Clement here uses the same verb () which he uses to contrast the and the
in Strom. 8. 9. 33. 89.
(86) Strom. 1. 20. 99. 4.
(87) Cf. QDS 16. 2; Strom. 3. 5. 42. 6.
(88) Strom. 7. 2. 8. 6. It must be stressed that this pedagogic function does not exhaust Clements understanding of
the Incarnation. Cf. C. Bigg: For Clements idea of the Saviour is larger and noblermay we say less
conventional?than that of any other doctor of the Church (The Christian Platonists of Alexandria (Oxford, 1886),
72).
(89) Strom. 5. 13. 83. 5.
(90) Strom. 5. 1. 7. 2.
(91) Strom. 6. 14. 108. 45.
(92) Cf. Wytzes: In Clement the moral effort is a condition of salvation, in St. Paul moral effort proceeds from
salvation as a task (Twofold Way, 237). See also Vlker, Der wahre Gnostiker, 254.
(93) Cf. Strom. 7. 6. 33. 6, where Clement describes abstention from meat as being for the sake of ascsis.
(94) Marrou speaks of linspiration profondment chretinne de la sxpiritualit du Pdagogue, ce que jai appel son
caractre extatique: lirruption de la transcendance divine dans notre vie la plus quotidienne (SC 70, 3940),
referring to his article Morale et spiritualit chrtiennes, 544. Such divine irruption is certainly expressed by
Clement in his description of the effects of baptism, but does not extend to his proposed framework for the Christian
life.
(95) Paed. 1. 5. 16. 3; both Sthlin and Marrou, in their respective editions, regard as
an unattributed quotation. Given that Clement believed that mens ideas about God correspond to their own
character (Strom. 6. 17. 149. 4; 7. 4. 22. 2), it is perhaps no surprise that Clement on one occasion depicts Christ in
somewhat docetic terms (Strom. 6. 9. 71. 2): a docetic Saviour is a suitable model for a docetic asceticism.
(96) Most recently by J. P. Broudhoux, Mariage et Famille chez Clment dAlexandrie (Paris, 1970) and M. Mees,
Clemens von Alexandrien ber Ehe und Familie, Augustinianum, 17 (1977), 11331; see also Quatember, Die
christliche Lebenshaltung.
(97) Strom. 2. 23. 137. 34; 3. 9. 66. 3.
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(98) Strom. 2. 23. 138. 2; cf. Plato, Laws, 6. 773e; Symposium, 207d.
(99) Strom. 2. 23. 138. 36. See Sthlins apparatus for suggested references.
(100) Strom. 2. 23. 139. 5; it is Sthlin who identifies these as Hierocles and Antipatros, referring to Stobaeus, Flor.
67. 21. 25.
(101) Thus Clement refers to Platos belief that those who do not marry dissolve the states and the world which is
constituted by marriage: Strom.2. 23. 141. 5; Plato, Laws, 6. 773e4c. Cf. Paed. 2. 10. 83. 2; van Eijk, Marriage and
Virginity, 220.
(102) Strom. 2. 23. 140. 2.
(103) Strom. 2. 23. 141. 1.
(104) Strom. 3. 17. 107. 5. Cf. Broudhoux, Mariage et famille, 174.
(105) Cf. Paed. 2. 10 passim, esp. 87. 3, 90. 34, 95. 3.
(106) Paed. 2. 10. 98. 2; cf. Epicurus, Frag. 62, ed. Usener, 118. 22.
(107) Paed. 2. 10. 90. 2.
(108) Cf. Hunter, Language of Desire.
(109) Strom. 3. 7. 58. 2.
(110) Cf. Strom. 3 passim, esp. 5. 40. 2 and 6. 45. 1.
(111) Strom. 3. 6. 50. 4.
(112) Strom. 3. 7. 59. 4.
(113) Strom. 3. 1. 4. 1.
(114) Strom. 3. 6. 48. 3.
(115) Cf. Broudhoux, Manage et famille, 1223. This manner of using these terms seems to go back to Aristotle,
Nicomachean Ethics, 3. 11. 8, 1119a (on the temperate person who keeps to the middle course), and 7. 7.4, 1150a (on
restraint which requires mastery). Cf. Foucault, LUsage des plaisirs, 7490; trans. 6377.
(116) Strom. 3. 1. 4. 2, 7. 57. 2.
(117) Strom. 4. 8. 58. 4, 19. 124. 3
(118) Prot. 11. 117. 5.
(119) Strom. 2. 18. 80. 4.
(120) Strom. 3. 1.4. 2.
(121) Paed. 2. 10. 83. 2. For the description of co-operation, see Paed.2. 10. 93. 1; Strom. 3. 9. 66. 3. In Strom. 3. 12.
87. 4, Clement considers the relation to be one of a joint cause or a servant.
(122) Strom. 3. 7. 58. 2.
(123) Musonius Rufus, 13a, ed. Hense 678; trans. C. Lutz, Musonius Rufus, Yale Classical Studies, 10 (1947), 89.
(124) Cf. Broudhoux, Mariage et famille, 174. On the dangers which Gregory of Nyssa perceived in such
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companionship, when it becomes a passionate attempt to find permanence and security in another, rather than in
God; cf. M. D. Hart, Reconciliation of Body and Soul: Gregory of Nyssas Deeper Theology of Marriage, TS 51 (1990),
45078.
(125) Strom. 2. 23. 145. 1.
(126) Paed. 3. 12. 84. 1.
(127) Strom. 3. 1. 4. 3; 4. 20. 126. 1.
(128) Strom. 3. 12. 84. 2. Cf. Broudhoux, Mariage et famille, 867.
(129) Strom. 3. 10. 68. 1. Broudhoux sees in this passage une sorte de pressentiment de ce que la thologie
postrieure appellera la grce sacramentelle du mariage (Mariage et famille, 84).
(130) Strom. 2. 23. 143. 1.
(131) So Broudhoux, Mariage et famille, 11213. Clement here echoes the philosophical position he mentioned in
the doxographical survey; cf. Strom.2. 23. 139. 5.
(132) Strom. 3. 18. 108. 1.
(133) Strom. 4. 19. 123. 2; cf. 4. 20. 127. 12.
(134) Cf. Strom. 3.12. 79. 5, where celibacy and marriage, both as service to the Lord, are described from the
husbands perspective.
(135) Cf. Broudhoux, Mariage et famille, 177.
(136) The most that even Broudhoux can speak of is une communion aumme idal spirituel (Mariage et famille,
154), or une communaute religieuse (ibid. 197); lamenting, on the other hand, that ni lamour, ni la sexualit ne
sont rellement intgrs sa vision du mariage (ibid. 198).
(137) Paed. 1. 4. 10. 12; the identity of virtue between men and women was a Stoic theme; cf. SVF 1. 481, 107. 36.
(138) Given the overall discussion in Strom. 4. 19. 123. 220. 129. 5, it is difficult to see how, from Strom. 4. 20. 126.
1127. 1, Mees can justly conclude: Daher sind bereinstimmung und Leibe zu einander nicht nur Notwendigkeiten
fr ein glckliches Leben, sondern Gabe des Schpfers und Gnade des Erlsers (Clemens von Alexandrien, 121).
Broudhoux, more realistically, speaks of une sorte de sublimation capable de compenser largement ses lacunes
(Mariage et famille, 153).
(139) Cf. Brown: As for the charis, the graciousness created by intercoursethat indefinable quality of mutual
trust and affection gained through the pleasure of the bed itselfwhich even the dignified Plutarch took for granted:
Clements stark insistence that intercourse should take place only for the begetting of children caused the delicate
bloom of such a notion to vanish forever from late antique Christian thought (Body and Society, 133). Clement
speaks only once of a grace of marriage, Strom. 3.14. 94. 3, in the context of discussing the Fall.
(140) Cf. Strom. 3. 6. 478.
(141) Cf. Broudhoux, Mariage et famille, 50.
(142) Cf. Paed. 2. 10. 100. 3.
(143) Strom. 4. 8. 62. 4. For Clements ambiguous attitude towards women, see D. Kinder, Clement of Alexandria:
Conflicting Views on Women, Second Century, 7. 4 (1990), 21320.
(144) For the virile character of virtue, see Foucault, LUsage des plaisirs, esp. 969; trans. 826. For the second
century, including Clement, see M. W. Gleason, The Semiotics of Gender: Physiognomy and Self-Fashioning in the
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Second Century C.E., in D. M. Halperin, J. J. Winkler, and F. I. Zeitlin (eds.), Before Sexuality: The Construction of
Erotic Experience in the Ancient Greek World (Princeton, 1990), 389415. The influence of this idea on early
Christian thought has been discussed extensively in recent years; see the recent posthumous book of K. Aspegren,
The Male Woman: A Feminine Ideal in the Early Church (Uppsala 1990). Clement, nevertheless, gives a positive
value to femininity in his somewhat unusual attribution of femininity to God in QDS 37. 2: In his ineffable essence
he is Father; in his compassion to us he became Mother. The Father by loving became feminine (
). Here femininity is associated with compassion, which was not, however, counted amongst the virile
virtues to be attained through asceticism. This dimension of Gods dealings towards us does not seem to have had
any noticeable effect on the asceticism proposed by Clementnot, at least, as regards human sexuality.
(145) Cf. Exc. Th. 21. 3.
(146) The context makes it clear that the forms in question are those of the male and female. That Clement still
refers to the woman as a sister is probably to be taken as a necessity of style, rather than as an indication of
continuing sexual difference.
(147) Strom. 3. 11. 71. 4; cf. Strom. 3. 6. 52. 1.
(148) Cf. Strom. 3. 12. 82. 683. 1; 3. 6. 46. 5; Broudhoux, Mariage et famille, 47.
(149) Prot. 2. 36. 4.
(150) Strom. 3. 6. 49. 3.
(151) A similar attitude can be seen in the assumption behind Clements rhetorical question to those Gnostics who
understood Christianity as permitting a licentious life, any act being morally indifferent: If it is lawful to live any
sort of life one likes, obviously one may live in continence; or if any kind of life has no dangers for the elect,
obviously one of virtue and self-control is far less dangerous (Strom. 3.5. 40. 3).
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DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198270003.003.0007
We have already seen how Clement defined the relation between faith and gnsis in such a way that he could
maintain their close dependence on one another whilst also insisting on the need to develop the common faith
( ) into a fully mature Christian gnsis. The motivation for this twofold emphasis is usually seen in
Clements desire, on the one hand, to defend the integrity of faith against the scornful attitude of the philosophers,
and the perfection of baptism and the sufficiency of faith against the disparagement, by so-called Gnosticism, of faith
as an inferior form of Christianity, and, on the other hand, to maintain the need for growth and development in
theological understanding and the ethical life.1 So far we have considered the ambiguities and tensions between
Clements defence of the perfection of baptism and the corresponding style of asceticism which he prescribes for the
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neophyte, as described especially in the Paedagogus, together with the Protrepticus and various passages of the
Stromateis (especially in Book 3). It is in the Stromateis that Clement develops his thought about gnsis and
describes the character of the Gnostics life, and it is to this that we must now turn to complete our study of Clement.
Whereas the primary contrast in the Paedagogus was between the maturity of the new children of God and the
immaturity of those outside Christ, one of the main themes of the Stromateis is the maturity of the true Gnostic
compared with the immaturity of the simple believer. The milk of faith, which appeared (p. 186 ) as inedible meat
to those outside the Church, is now seen to be only milk compared with the Gnostic meat: The apostle, in
contradistinction to gnostic perfection, calls the common faith at times the foundation and other times milk. 2
Clement interprets Pauls words that the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith ( ,
Rom. 1: 17) as admitting a twofold faith, or rather one which admits of growth and perfection, in which the
common faith lies beneath as a foundation.3 It is as a superstructure that gnsis is built upon faith.4 Whilst the
Christian must progress in faith towards gnsis, he never really leaves faith behind; although faith is more
elementary than gnsis, it is as necessary to the Gnostic as respiration.5 Despite giving many passing definitions of
gnsis, Clement never really defines the content of gnsis in a systematic and clear fashion;6 what is more important
for him, and us, is the style of the Gnostics life, the ideal of the true Gnostic, and the means whereby this zenith is
attained.
There are, fundamentally, two aspects of the ascent to gnsis: ascsis and instruction () or investigation
(): As, then, the virtues follow one another,faith hopes on repentance, and fear on faith; and patience in
these, along with ascsis and instruction, culminate in love which is perfected by gnsis. 7 This emphasis on the
need for ascsis in the attainment of virtue was a common theme in both Stoicism and Philo.8 We have already seen
how Clement regards ascsis, following the commandments and the acquisition of virtue, as within mans own
capacity, and the ambivalent synergetic relationship between God and man inherent in this. This (p. 187 )
problematic continues into Clements description of the acquisition of gnsis in the Stromateis. In the above
quotation gnsis is considered as the final perfecting of our labours in ascsis and instruction. Clement is convinced
that the perfection bestowed in gnsis is a gift, but he maintains that it is given only to those who have made
themselves worthy of it: after his departure from this life, the Gnostic hastens, by reason of his good conscience, to
give thanks; and there with Christ, he shows himself worthy, through his own purity, to possess the power of God
communicated by Christ.9 A good conscience and purity are requisite for the dying if they are to depart with hope and
confidence.10 They are also essential, within the present life, for the reception of the grace or power of God.11 Such
asceticism makes the Gnostic worthy () of receiving the titles son and friend.12 This stance is clearly revealed
when Clement relates an old story with evident approval:
And what follows seems to me to be excellently said by the Greeks. An athlete of no mean reputation among
those of old, having for a long time subjected his body to thorough ascsis towards manly strength, on going
up to the Olympic Games, looked upon the statue of the Pisaean Zeus, and said: O Zeus, if all the requisite
preparations for the contest have been made by me, come, give me the victory, as is right. For so in the case of
the Gnostic, who has unblamably and with a good conscience fulfilled all that depends on him, in the direction
of instruction and training () and beneficence, and pleasing to God, the whole contributes to the
most perfect salvation ( ). (Strom. 7. 7. 48. 56)
In this line of Clements thought, then, the ascsis of the Gnostic produces a boldness, a , with which he
can approach God and demand his due, for by himself he has made (p. 188 ) himself worthy of receiving it.13 It is
important to note, however, that this merit does not compel God to comply:
For, universally, God knows those who are and those who are not worthy of good things; whence he gives to
each what is suitable. Thus to those that are unworthy, though they ask often, he will not give; but he will give
to those who are worthy. And even if good things are given without claim, petition is not superfluous. (Strom.
7. 7. 41. 56)
The Gnostics merit is therefore not sufficient for the gifts of God, but it is, none the less, necessary.
The framework for this line of thought is indicated by the concluding remark of the comparison between the Gnostic
and the Olympic athlete: this ascsis culminates in the most perfect salvation. The implications of this are stated
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bluntly by Clement in a passage in which he distinguishes the salvation of the common believer from the more
perfect salvation effected by the Gnostics asceticism: Now to know is more than to believe, as to be dignified with
the highest honour after being saved is a greater thing than being saved. 14 These two different levels of merit are
dependent upon two manners or styles of life. In a hypothetical speculation, Clement even suggests that if the gnsis
of God were distinguishable from eternal salvation, then the Gnostic would prefer such gnsis over salvation itself.15
Whilst Paul had classified everything that does not proceed from faith as sin (Rom. 14: 23), Clement refines the
classification by dividing the actions of the faithful into two levels:
As, then, simply to be saved is the result of intermediate actions, but to be saved rightly and becomingly
( ) is of right action (), so also every action of the Gnostic may be called right
action; that of the simple believer, intermediate action, not yet performed according to reason ( ),
nor yet made right according to knowledge; whilst every action of the heathen is sinful. (Strom. 6. 14. 111. 3)16
(p. 189 ) Simply to be saved, the result of medium actions, is not enough for the Gnostic; he aims to perfect his life
rightly and becomingly. Whilst God has called all equally, he has nevertheless, according to Clement, assigned
special honours for those who have believed in a specially excellent manner.17 Thus Clement understands the
perfection offered in Christs question If thou will be perfect (Matt. 19: 21) to demand an exceeding eagerness of
those who so choose, which in turn makes the gift of salvation their own ().18 This zeal shows itself in an
intensification of the righteousness according to the Law.19 According to Clement, all things which are created for
mans use, such as marriage and procreation, are good, when used with moderation; yet it is better than good to
become free from passion (). So the Gnostic does not reject such things as bad, but aims to do things that are
better than good, which, not being essential, are also more difficult.20
Before examining further the state effected by this intensified ascsis, we must consider the parallel demand for
instruction required of those who would ascend to gnsis. The instruction that Clement has in mind is primarily
instruction in the inner, veiled meaning of the Scriptures. It is a knowledge which is naturally esoteric, limiting itself
to those who show themselves worthy of it through their manner of life and diligence in study.21 Clement refers to a
number of philosophical schools to show how they also kept the most important aspects of their teachings hidden
from the uninstructed.22 Although Clement had, from evangelical motives, portrayed Christianity as a mystery
religion in the Protrepticus, he now uses the same vocabulary in the Stromateis to heighten the sense of secrecy
surrounding gnsis. 23 Such hidden teaching is (p. 190 ) most appropriately transmitted through oral teaching, and
Clement makes several references to such secret gnostic traditions.24 However, as Vlker notes, it is important not
to misinterpret the idea of the gnostic tradition by contrasting it with the ecclesiastical canon of which Clement
also speaks,25 for the essential content of both is the same.26 Clement is emphatic that all true gnsis originates from
the incarnate Christ: Christ is both the beginning and the end, the foundation and the superstructure.27
The content of this gnostic tradition is essentially the allegorical method of understanding the true sense of the
Scriptures, as it was taught, according to Clement, by Christ and transmitted by the apostles. Through it the Gnostic
is able to understand the Scriptures in the same manner as Christ, who gave it to the apostles.28 In contrast to the
Gnostic, simple believers have insufficient understanding to comprehend the Scriptures; not admitted to the secrets
of the gnostic tradition, they have as little chance of understanding Scripture as an ass has of playing a lyre.29
Furthermore, their possible misunderstanding of the true meaning of Scripture is potentially harmful, and must,
therefore, be avoided by veiling the salvific content in parables.30
Whilst the Logos was the inspiration for both Greek philosophy and the Old Testament prophecies, both of which
prepared the way for Christianity, it is the full comprehension of the Scriptures as taught by Christ that enables true
gnsis. Clements high appreciation of Greek philosophy, as a preparation (p. 191 ) for Christianity in a historical
perspective, has already been noted. In the Stromateis Clement transfers the propaedeutic function of Greek
philosophy, or, more precisely, the encyclical disciplines of the period (especially geometry, astronomy, and
dialectics), to the instruction, which, if not absolutely necessary, is nevertheless very useful in achieving the
necessary separation and abstraction from the material world required of the Christian before he can pass to true
gnsis. 31 Thus, for example, man is led to contemplate the heavens by his upright formation, and, through the
contemplation of the harmony of the heavens, he raises his mind above the earth and approaches the power of the
Creator.32
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similar effect to the abstraction involved in the allegorical interpretation of Scripture and that effected by the
disciplines of philosophy. Thus Clement writes:
So also we raise the head and lift the hands to heaven, and stand on tiptoe at the closing utterance of the
prayer, following the eagerness of the spirit directed towards the intellectual essence; and endeavouring to
detach the body from the earth, by lifting it upwards along with the uttered words, constraining the soul,
winged with the desire of better things, to ascend into the holy place, magnanimously despising
() the fetters of the flesh. For we know well that the Gnostic willingly departs from the
whole world, just as the Jews did from Egypt, showing clearly, above all, that he will be as near as possible to
God. (Strom. 7. 7. 40. 12)48
The abstraction effected in prayer is not simply that of an intellectual ascent or purification, but an endeavour to
loosen the body itself from the earth, magnanimously despising the flesh and the world, in an attempt to be as close
to God as possible. It is in this sense that Clement interprets the words of Christ, Unless you hate your father and
mother and your own life (Luke 14: 26), to mean a hatred of the inordinate affections of the flesh, which possess
the powerful spell of pleasure and a magnanimous contempt for all that belongs to the creation and nutriment of
the flesh.49
This function of prayer, to abstract the soul from the world, and its consequent magnanimous contempt for the
flesh, is paralleled by the demand for a detached but none the less thankful use of the world. Prayer encompasses the
whole life of man, making it into a continual festival, whilst the need for detachment is matched by a sober or noble
enjoyment:
Holding festival, then, in our whole life, persuaded that God is altogether on every side present, we cultivate
our fields praising; we sail the sea, hymning; in all the rest of our conversation we conduct ourselves
according to the rule. The Gnostic is then very closely allied to God, being at once sober and cheerful in all
thingssober, on (p. 195 ) account of the bent of his soul towards the Divinity, and cheerful on account of
his consideration of the blessings of humanity which God has given us. (Strom. 7. 7. 35. 67)50
Clement stresses, throughout the Strotnateis, that the Gnostic is characterized by his giving thanks to God for all
things, for such (eucharistie) souls can never be separated from God.51 This cheerfulness is in fact the reverse side
of the sober detachment of the Gnostic; it is his detachment from the gifts that enables the Gnostic to ascribe thanks
to God in his use of them. Thus Clement combines these two descriptions, and writes that the Gnostic offers to God
a sober enjoyment ( ) of all thingsusing the speech () which was bestowed on him in
acknowledging thanks for the gift and for the use of it.52 Ultimately, however, the magnanimous contempt, which
Clement ascribes to the Gnostic, extends beyond the chains of the flesh to typify his attitude to all the good things
of the world.53 His true pleasure does not consist in the sober enjoyment of all things, for gnsis itself supplies
harmless pleasures and exaltation ( ), and as such gnsis is worth pursuing for its
own sake.54
Such gnsis not only effects a detachment and a noble contempt, but its acquisition by instruction corresponds to
an ethical effort, for from it right conduct can never be separated.55 Clement repeatedly stresses the two aspects or
pathsworks () or ascsis and instructionwhich lead to the perfection of salvation.56 These two paths are
not unrelated, for fundamentally gnsis is also an activity, a purification (p. 196 ) of the guiding principle
().57 Their interrelation becomes more apparent in Clements descriptions of the ideal state in which both
ascsis and instruction culminate. The intensification of ascsis, which we considered earlier, corresponds to the
surpassing of the aim of moderation (), demanded of the Christian in the Paedagogus, by the ideal of
apatheia which dominates the Strornateis. 58 Clement is unambiguous that the cessation of all desire, rather than
moderation, is required in order to reach perfection, and this is achieved through both gnsis and ascsis or training:
We must therefore raise the gnostic and perfect man from all passion of soul; for gnsis produces training
() and training habit or disposition, and such a state as this produces apatheia, not moderation. For
complete eradication of desire ( ) reaps as its fruit apatheia. (Strom. 6. 9. 74. 1)
Here gnsis is described as producing training, whilst, as we saw earlier, Clement also regards gnsis as the
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perfection of ascsis. 59 This ambivalence simply reinforces the fact that the two are interrelated, and lead to
perfection in apatheia. It must be noted that, on one occasion, Clement categorically asserts that ascsis will not of
itself produce apatheia; for this is attained only by the addition of the power of God.60 Following Clements own
intimation, most scholars have pointed to the Stoic provenance of the term apatheia, whilst disagreeing widely on
the extent of the influence of this Stoic ideal on Clements thought.61 Clement sometimes suggests that the (p. 197
) Gnostic remains subject to those passions that are necessary for the maintenance of the body.62 A little later,
however, we are given as an example the apostles, who gnostically mastered even those passible movements which
seem to be good, such as courage, zeal, and joy.63 Moreover, the Gnostic, Clement believes, will no longer need even
such virtues as temperance (), as he will no longer need to control desire.64
The ambivalence in Clements descriptions of apatheia points to the fact that apatheia is not to be equated simply
with a deadened sensitivity. As we have seen, Clement thinks of passion as an excessive appetite, exceeding the
measures of the Logos ( ) or an appetite unbridled and disobedient to reason ().65 Thus ascsis aims
not so much at removing the natural movements of man, but at subjecting them to a strict obedience to the L/logos
and dissociating them from pleasure (); the Gnostic who has intensified his ascsis, and no longer has to
struggle with the passions, the disobedient movements of the soul under the sway of pleasure, has attained apatheia,
a state in which the body can function naturally without interfering with the Gnostics true desires. For this reason,
the Gnostic is in a state of immutability or peace.66 For Clement the struggle for apatheia is, moreover, connected to
the desire to perfect the image with the likeness, for just as God is impassible (), so must man be if he is to be
fully assimilated to God.67 Separating himself from the passions, the Gnostic becomes already fleshless ()
and lives above the world.68
(p. 198 ) As a consequence of divesting himself of the passions, the Gnostic also becomes sinless.69 However, as we
have noted, the most important characteristic of Clements description of apatheia is that it is not simply a negative
state; abstention from evil or sin is not enough.70 Both gnsis and apatheia culminate, and find their completion, in
beneficence or doing good (). Thus Clement writes that, whilst the first purification, the perfection of the
common believer, is abstention () from evil things,
In the case of the Gnostic, after that which is reckoned perfection in others, his righteousness advances to
activity in beneficence. And in whoever the intensification of righteousness advances to the doing of good, in
his case perfection abides in the unchanging habit of beneficence after the likeness of God. (Strom. 6. 7. 60. 3)
The one who has passed from moderation to apatheia and is then perfected by beneficence becomes, according to
Clement, equal to the angels, and radiates in his exercise of beneficence, hastening, by gnsis, to the abode of the
apostles.71 Such people also become true presbyters and deacons of the Church, not by being ordained by men, but by
being truly righteous.72 The true Gnostic can never, according to Clement, be totally withdrawn from the world and
from concern for others; rather, his perfection lies in beneficence, or, as he once terms it, lordly beneficence
( ).73 In the same way, an essential aspect of the Gnostics prayer is prayer for the salvation of others,
and this makes the Gnostic, being thus assimilated to the Saviour, salvific ().74 Likewise, an important
task of the Gnostic is the instruction of others, even if there is only one listener.75 The characteristics of apatheia,
beneficence, and assimilation are brought together by Clement in a striking passage:
(p. 199 ) This is the activity of the perfected Gnostic, to have converse with God through the great High
Priest, being made like the Lord, as far as may be, by means of the whole service () towards God, [a
service] which tends to the salvation of men, through care of the goodness towards us, and on the other side,
through liturgy, through teaching and through beneficence in deeds. Being assimilated to God, the Gnostic
even forms and creates himself ( ), and adorns those who hear him; assimilating,
as far as possible, by an ascsis which tends to apatheia, to him who is by nature impassible; and this is
uninterrupted converse and communion with the Lord. (Strom. 7. 2. 13. 23)
Clements strong language in this passage (the Gnostic, likened to God, forms and creates himself and adorns
others) is balanced by emphasis on the service of God, on prayer, on teaching, on the culmination of ascsis in an
apatheia characterized by beneficence, all of which assimilate him to God.
Alongside these themes of gnsis, apatheia, and beneficence, lies the dynamic of love (). Although Clement
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describes love as the culmination of the process beginning with fear and progressing through faith,76 in the life of the
perfect Gnostic love functions as both cause and effect. Thus in describing the relation between love and gnsis,
Clement maintains both that gnsis culminates in love77 and that love is perfected by gnsis.78 This ambivalence
again reinforces the fact that, for Clement, love and gnsis can never be separated, and, ultimately, are one and the
same.79 Likewise, love is portrayed as blossoming into beneficence, while it is through love that the Gnostic does
good, for love is the only true motive.80 Similarly, the perfect one ought therefore to practise love, and thence to
hasten to divine friendship, fulfilling the commandments from love.81 Love, the cause and form of the Gnostics life,
renders him a son and friend of God.82 Possessed by this love, the Gnostic no longer feels affection () for
anyone (p. 200 ) with a common affection ( ), but loves () the Creator through the creatures.83
For Clement, such love for God is a reciprocating love (), just as the holiness and the benevolence of the
Gnostic are a kind of corresponding movement of providence.84 Finally, by loving God to the utmost of ones
abilities, one acquires incorruptibility; for the more one loves, the more one enters into God.85
There is a particularly striking feature of Clements portrayal of the ideal Gnostic state that must be noted. Clement
frequently utilizes the Aristotelian-Stoic term habit or disposition () to describe the Gnostics apatheia or
beneficence.86 Again using Stoic terminology, Clement specifies that this habit is unchangeable or unshakeable
(, , ): the Gnostics perfection lies in the unchanging habit of beneficence,
according to the likeness of the Lord.87 Christ set the pattern for man, when he assumed passible flesh, and trained
it to a habit of apatheia. 88 It is, for Clement, through love and gnsis, which perfects ascsis, that the Gnostics
disposition is rendered infallible. This is well expressed in the following passage:
As gnsis is not born with men, but is acquired, and the learning of it in its elements demands application,
training and growth; and then from incessant practice it passes into a habit; so, when perfected in the mystic
habit, it abides, being made infallible through love. (Strom. 6. 9. 78. 4)
Clement even suggests that in the one who has acquired unshakeable virtue by gnostic ascsis habit becomes
nature.89 It is from this position that we can understand (p. 201 ) Clements assertion that every action of the
Gnostic is a right action compared to the medium actions of simple believers and the sinful activity of pagans.90 It
is not simply that each particular action of the Gnostic is good, but rather that all his activity stems from a good
disposition.91 In this disposition there is no conflict between the will, the judgement, and the corresponding
activity.92 So Clement can describe the Gnostics imitation of God as achieved in performing good actions by the
faculty of reason.93 More specifically, it is the Gnostics disposition of beneficence that makes the energy exerted in
every act good, so that the Gnostic passes his life as the image and likeness of God.94
We have noted in passing how Clement associates each of the characteristics of the Gnostic with assimilation to God,
perfecting the image by the likeness.95 This theme runs throughout Clements work, determining his asceticism.96
For Clement this is ultimately a processes of deification. As those who devote themselves to Isomachus become
farmers, and the disciples of Plato become philosophers, so those who listen to the Lord, and follow the prophecy
given by him, will be formed perfectly in the image of the teacher, and made a god walking about in the flesh.97 This
was the reason for the Incarnation itself, that God having become man, man might learn from man how to become
god.98 The life of the Gnostic finds its completion in this goal, and therefore he studies to become god.99
(p. 202 ) Clements vivid descriptions of the Gnostic as having achieved, through ascsis and instruction, a
permanent and unshakeable state of apatheia and beneficence perfected in love, have received varied evaluations by
scholars. Some are tempted to see in them an attainable mystical condition,100 whilst others, including Vlker,
consider it to be an idealized picture, which aims to surpass the Stoics descriptions of their own sages.101 Despite his
more categorical claims, which we have considered above, there is nevertheless an ambivalence in Clements
thought. The infallible state of the Gnostic is one which must be maintained by prayer and co-operation: He will
pray that he may never fall from virtue, co-operating () strenuously in order that he may continue
infallible.102 The infallible disposition of the perfect Gnostic is therefore one which he has and simultaneously prays
for: .103 The life of the Gnostic can perhaps be described, in Vlkers words, as eine
Doppelstimmung.104
However, this tension in the Gnostics life is not simply one of maintaining an ideal state, of having and praying for
its permanence, within the same horizon of the present. It is, rather, the eschatological tension of already but not
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yet, and it is this which produces the ambivalence in Clements portrait of the perfect Gnostic. His bold assertions
about the Gnostics perfected state take their place within equally striking statements describing a vivid proleptic
eschatology. For Clement one of the principle functions of gnsis and love is to render the future already present.
That this is so is because ultimately both gnsis and love are eschatological realities.105 Thus he writes that the
Gnostic, being persuaded by gnsis how each future thing shall be, possesses it.106 Similarly, through love (p. 203
) the future is already present ( ) for him.107 This is possible because of the trustworthiness of
the One in whom he believes. Thus he continues:
For he has believed, through prophecy and the parousia, on God who lies not. And what he believes he
possesses, and he keeps hold of the promise (for he who has promised is Truth). And through the
trustworthiness of him who has promised, he has firmly laid hold of the end of the promise by knowledge.
(Strom. 6. 9. 77. 1)
This anticipation is also effected through prayer,108 and is closely associated with the joy that makes the Gnostics
life a continual holy festival: the Gnostic rejoices in things present and is glad on account of those things promised
as if they were present, for he knows them by anticipation.109 Finally, bringing gnsis and love together, Clement
specifically connects this proleptic anticipation with the Gnostics unchangeable state:
The one who by love is already in the midst of that which will be, anticipating () hope by gnsis,
does not desire anything, having as far as possible, the very thing desired. Accordingly, then, he continues in
the exercise of gnostic love in the one unvarying state. (Strom. 6. 9. 73. 45)
It is in his anticipation of his true eschatological state that the Gnostic remains, after a long ascent through ascsis
and instruction, in an unvarying state of love and gnsis. The Gnostics true existence, his perfected state in love and
gnsis, is therefore a proleptic realization of what is already his final existence.
This dynamic proleptic tension in which the Gnostic lives certainly parallels Clements descriptions of the proleptic
existence of the neophyte which we considered earlier. However, it is of the utmost importance to note that this
proleptic existence of the Gnostic is not the result of baptism, but the culmination of a long process of ascsis and
instruction, the result of a thorough paedeia. Despite the fact that in the Stromateis Clement very rarely refers to the
sacramental life or to the Church, Mayer and Vlker are no doubt right when they (p. 204 ) claim that for Clement
the ascent to gnostic perfection is dependent upon the grace bestowed in baptism.110 This is true to the extent that
Clement speaks of this gnostic perfection as being achieved only by Christians. But it is not correct to infer from this
that it is the grace of baptism, and specifically the eschatological life bestowed proleptically therein, that determines
the form of the Gnostics perfection and the particular modality of his ascsis. With regard to the Gnostics form of
anticipation (), Clement not only ascribes it to the effect of ascsis rather than baptism, but, in distinction
to baptism, characterizes it as a second saving change:
And, in my view, the first saving change is that from heathenism to faith, as I have said before; and the
second, that from faith to gnsis. And the latter culminating in love, here and now gives the loving to the
loved, that which knows to that which is known. (Strom. 7. 10. 57. 4)
Clement likewise speaks of initiation into greater mysteries after passing through the lesser mysteries.111 Clement
also describes the initiation into these hidden mysteries as an illumination (), transposing a term which
was closely associated with the sacrament of baptism into the context of a mystical, gnostic initiation and the
imparting of a spiritual grace.112 This is further demonstrated in the passage we have already considered, where
Clement distinguishes between the salvation of the common believer and the fitting and becoming salvation of the
Gnostic.113
We have noted throughout this study the deeply ambivalent nature of Clements synergism. The ascsis that
Clement demands from the Christian, and the intensification of this ascsis for those who would achieve gnostic
perfection, is within mans own capacity, and, at least on the lower ethical level, determined by his own ideas and
ideals.114 The Gnostics (p. 205 ) intensified ascsis is perfected by the dynamic experience of anticipation,
culminating in apatheia and beneficence permeated by gnsis and love. But, coming at the end of the process of
ascsis and instruction, its form is already determined by that process. Thus, for example, as we have already noted
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when considering the place of marriage in the Gnostics life, Clement specifies that this anticipation takes place once
the married Christian Gnostics have already borne children and become as brother and sister, which they will be in
reality after putting off the flesh.115 Similarly, we have noted Clements ambivalent descriptions of the Gnostics
attitude to the good things of this world. Whilst the Gnostic will use everything thankfully, his attitude towards them
is fundamentally one of magnanimous contempt, for his joys and harmless pleasures lie elsewhere. And this
magnanimous contempt of the Gnostic is, for Clement, ultimately determined by the anticipation itself. Thus he
writes:
For it is impossible that the one who has once been made perfect by love, and feasts eternally and insatiably
on the boundless joys of contemplation should delight in small and grovelling things. For what rational cause
remains any more to this one, who has gained the light inaccessible [1 Tim. 6: 16], for reverting to the worldly
goods? Although not yet according to time and place, but by that gnostic love through which the inheritance
and perfect restitution follow, the Giver of the reward confirms through deeds what the Gnostic, by choosing
gnostically, has anticipated beforehand by love. (Strom. 6. 9. 75. 12)
Clements ambivalence regarding the status, for the Gnostic, the true Christian, of the good things of this world is
thus grounded in the Gnostics anticipation, which, in turn, is founded not on baptism, but on the intensified ascsis
demanded of those seeking perfection. It is because of the attraction of their own hope, as Clement asserts
elsewhere, that the Gnostic magnanimously despises all the good things of this world and life in it.116
The asceticism proposed by Clement produces a Christian who is characterized by composure, tranquillity, calmness
and (p. 206 ) peace.117 The asceticism required of newly converted Christians, who hope for salvation through
moderation (), is dominated by the demand of living according to the L/logos and the suspicious
abstention from pleasures. The intensified asceticism of the true Gnostic, who desires to be saved rightly and
becomingly and, beyond salvation itself, to be dignified with the highest honours, culminates in a state of apatheia.
No longer subject to the disordered movements of the passions, the Gnostic exercises beneficence and works for the
salvation of others. However, with the passible movements set in rational order, and dissociated from pleasure, the
Gnostic has no need of even those movements which might seem to be good, such as courage, zeal, and joy. The
Gnostic magnanimously despises the good things of this world, whilst enjoying his own harmless pleasures and
exaltation.
On both levels, the proposed asceticism attempts to protect the rational dimension of the Christian, the intellect
(vovs)that which is distinctively human and in the image of Godin a secure self-sufficiency, against any possible
threats that might arise both through pleasures, especially those of the body, even the God-given pleasures that
accompany the bodys natural functions, and from the uncertainty that is a corollary of dependency. The only
pleasures to be enjoyed are those that are non-threatening. Other forms of joyfor instance, that experienced in the
vulnerability of loveare too dangerous. Hence, the style of asceticism which Clement advocates leads to praise
marriage in which there is no significance or value ascribed to its interpersonal dimensions, nor, consequently, to
human sexuality beyond that of procreation. More fundamentally, the self-sufficiency created by this asceticism,
which, it is claimed, imitates the self-sufficiency of God, does not even depend upon God. Although it is stated that
man cannot achieve apatheia without the help of God, the asceticism by which he makes himself worthy to receive
this gift is one which is within his own capacity, and one whose ideal, and every detail, is established by Clement
himself, attempting to surpass the cultivated ideal of his day. In this style of asceticism there is no real engagement
with mans bodily reality, as created by Godhis concrete, societal (p. 207 ) existencenor, ultimately, with his
dependence upon God. Clement directs his readers attention inwards, to focus on what is most properly their own,
under their own control.118 Inwardly aspiring to their own ideals, Christians remain, for Clement, tiptoeing on the
earth.
Notes:
(1) For a clear summary of the various tacks in Clements thought, see H. Chadwick, Early Christian Thought and
the Classical Tradition (Oxford, 1987), 514.
(2) Strom. 5. 4. 26. 1, referring to 1 Cor. 3: 11 and 13.
(3) Strom. 5. 1. 2. 45.
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(51) Strom. 6. 14. 113. 3. Thus the Gnostic martyr thankfully sheds blood (Strom. 4. 21. 130. 5); the body of the
Gnostic, as one on a distant pilgrimage, gives thanks for its sojourn on its departure (Strom. 4. 24. 166. 1), for
thanksgiving is not only for the soul but for the body (Strom. 5. 10. 61. 5; 6. 14. 113. 3). A similar emphasis on joy is
found in the Stoics, but again the more direct influence is likely to be Philo; cf. Vlker, Der wahre Gnostiker, 518.
(52) Strom. 7. 7. 36. 4.
(53) Strom. 7. 12. 78. 3.
(54) Strom. 6. 12. 99. 3.
(55) Strom. 2. 10. 47. 4.
(56) Strom. 4. 6. 39. 1. Cf. Vlker, Der wahre Gnostiker, 254; Wytzes, Twofold Way.
(57) Strom. 4. 6. 39. 2.
(58) Strom. 6. 13. 105. 1.
(59) Strom. 2. 9. 45. 1, cited above; cf. Strom. 6. 8. 68. 3, 9. 78. 4. That Clement does not uniformly qualify the ascsis
resulting from gnsis with the prefix ovv is shown by Strom. 7. 7. 48. 6, concerning the Olympic athlete and the
Gnostic, where the depends upon him.
(60) QDS 21. 1, cited and discussed above.
(61) In Strom. 7. 14. 84. 2, Clement suggests that he could find many other more biblical testimonies for the apatheia
of the Gnostic, but that, for brevity, he will leave the task for others. Similarly, at Strom. 7. 1. 1. 4, Clement
acknowledges that his expressions may seem to differ from those of Scripture; but, he asserts, they have the same
source and the same meaning. For E. de Faye, the identification between Clements understanding of apatheia and
that of the Stoics was absolute (Clment dAlexandrie: Etude sur les rapports du Christianisme et de la Philosophie
grecque au lie sicle, 2nd edn. (Paris, 1906),295); so too P. Guilloux, LAscetisme de Clment dAlexandrie, RAM 3
(1922), 296. Lilla suggests that the more direct influence was Neoplatonism and especially Philo (Clement of
Alexandria, 1036). On the other hand, Vlker points to the integral position of apatheia within Clements Christian
asceticism, and claims to see eine Umdeutung der stoischen Konzeption der Apathie (Der wahre Gnostiker, 530).
(62) Strom. 6. 9. 71. 1.
(63) Strom. 6. 9. 71. 34. On what feelings and movements are left to the Stoics in their state of apatheia, see
Nussbaum, Therapy of Desire, 398401.
(64) Strom. 6. 9. 76. 2.
(65) Strom. 2. 13. 59. 6.
(66) For Clements connection between and , see e.g. Strom. 4. 7. 55. 4; as , esp. Strom. 2.
11. 51. 652. 3; for this passage, cf. Philo, Post. Cain, 9. 27; and for the connection to , esp. Strom. 4. 6. 40. 3.
(67) Cf. Strom. 2. 18. 81. 1; 7. 3. 13. 3, 12. 72. 1.
(68) Strom. 7. 14. 86. 7; cf. Strom. 7. 3. 18. 2, 12. 79. 3.
(69) Strom. 7. 3. 14. 2; see also Strom. 7. 12. 80. 2.
(70) Strom. 4. 6. 29. 2; 6. 12. 103. 24.
(71) Strom. 6. 13. 105. 1. The idea of becoming , taken from Luke 20: 36, is also found in Paed. 2. 9. 79. 2,
82. 3, 10. 100. 3; Strom. 7. 10. 57. 5, 14. 84. 2. Cf. Frank, , 1305.
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(98) Prot. 1. 8. 4.
(99) Strom. 6. 14. 113. 3.
(100) So F. Buri, Clemens Alexandrinus und der paulinische Freiheitsbegriff (Zurich, 1939), 47.
(101) Cf. Vlker, Der wahre Gnostiker, 455 n. 2; also T. Rther, Das sittliche Forderung der Apatheia, 81, and
Pohlenz, Klemens von Alexandrien, 167. Casey attempts to mediate between the two positions (Clement of
Alexandria, 63).
(102) Strom. 7. 7. 46. 5.
(103) Strom. 7. 7. 44. 5.
(104) Vlker, Der wahre Gnostiker, 504.
(105) Cf. Mhat, tude sur les Stromates 475.
(106) Strom. 7. 7. 47. 5.
(107) Strom. 6. 9. 77. 1.
(108) Cf. Strom. 7. 7. 43. 1, 12. 79. 2.
(109) Strom. 7. 7. 47. 4.
(110) Cf. Mayer, Das Gottesbild, 8, 479; Vlker, Der wahre Gnostiker, 147, 601. Cf. Mees, Jetzt und Dann, 134.
(111) Cf. Strom. 1. 1. 15. 3; 4. 1. 3. 1; 5. 11. 71. 1. Cf. Marsh, Use of
(112) Strom. 5. 10. 64. 45, referring to Rom. 1: 11. Cf. Camelot, Foi et Gnose, 99.
(113) Strom. 6. 14. 111. 3.
(114) It is an ascsis that finds its limits, rather than its motivation, in Christ; see the discussion above in Ch. 5.
(115) Strom. 6. 12. 100. 3.
(116) Strom. 7. 12. 78. 3.
(117) Paed. 2. 7. 60. 5.
(118) Nussbaums characterization of the changes involved in reaching the Stoic state of apatheia would also apply to
Clement: It is the change from suspense and elation to solid self-absorption; from surprise and spontaneity to
measured watchfulness; from wonder at the separate and external to security in that which is oneself and ones own.
To follow Senecas sexual metaphors, it is the change from passionate intercourse, giving birth, and child-rearing to
parthenogenic conception, followed by the retention of the conceived child forever inside the womb (Therapy of
Desire, 401).
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Conclusion
Chapter: (p. 208 ) (p. 209 ) ConclusionAsceticism and Anthropology in Irenaeus and ClementJohn Behr
Source:
Author(s):
John Behr
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198270003.003.0008
From a close reading, on their own terms, of the texts of Irenaeus of Lyons and Clement of Alexandria, this study has
delineated two very different theologies of the existence and nature of the human being, two contrasting styles of
asceticism and anthropology: for Irenaeus, asceticism is the expression of man living the life of God in all
dimensions of the bodythat which is most characteristically human and in the image of God; for Clement, it is
mans attempt at a divine, godlike life, protecting the rational elementthat which is peculiarly human and in the
image of Godfrom any possible disturbance or threat from without, especially from or through the body, or from
the vulnerability of dependency. These two perspectives have significant implications for their view of human
sexuality: for Irenaeus, sexuality is a fundamental characteristic of human existence as a fleshly being, a permanent
part of the framework within which men and women grow towards God; Clement on the other hand is led by the
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internal dynamics of his style of asceticism to limit human sexuality strictly by the finality of procreation, and thence
to postulate its redundancy in the resurrection, and, proleptically, for all married Christians after having children.
Perhaps the most striking aspect of Irenaeuss theology is the intimate link between theology proper and
anthropology: the truth of man is revealed in the Incarnation, which at the same time is the primary, if not the sole,
revelation of God. Adam was created as the type of the One to come, and the manifestations of God in the Old
Testament were always prophetic revelations of the incarnate Son. Adam was animated by the breath of life, which
prefigured the future vivification of the sons of God by the Spirit: initially, of the incarnate Son, and subsequently,
through the grace of baptism, of those adopted (p. 210 ) as sons in him. Christ revealed the full truth of what it is to
be human, vivified by the Spirit; in the present, adopted sons possess a pledge, or part, of the Spirit, preparing them
for their full vivification in the resurrection. Thus the life of the Christian still lies hidden with Christ in God (Col.
3: 3): it is an eschatological reality, which is anticipated in Christian life here and now, and revealed most fully in the
confession of martyrdom. Irenaeus does not spiritualize the reality of martyrdom. The fact of death itself, in all its
dimensions (pedagogical and remedial), is too important, as is the reality, and pedagogical value, of mans apostasy.
Christians learn, and thereby become truly human, by experiencing both their own weakness and the power of God.
Thus to become fully human demands their engagement with the concrete situations in which they find themselves
in life: there is no room, as Berthouzoz put it, for lethique de 1abstention preventive.1
The second striking aspect of Irenaeuss theology is that it emphasizes the body, fashioned in the image of God,
almost to the extent of ignoring human interiority. In itself, the life of the soul is nothing; all the souls activities
depend upon the body with which it is inseparably bound. Whilst the importance of the body was a key feature in
Irenaeuss anti-Gnostic polemic, that importance is derived from the whole matrix of Irenaeuss theology: it is that in
which God has chosen to reveal both himself and the truth of mans being; so it may be considered the most
essential characteristic of the human being. Without denying the reality of the Pauline notion of the flesh, man
estranged from God in sin, Irenaeus sees the human body as primarily flesh. It is, furthermore, a flesh which is
either male or femalethat is, sexualand this is the basis and framework for mans growth towards God.
A third important dimension of Irenaeuss theology is the emphasis on mans basic dependence on God, a
dependence in which lies mans true freedom. The Spirit, bestowed on Adam and Eve according to their created state,
as a breath of life, and bestowed on those adopted as sons in a manner befitting such dignity, as the Spirit from the
Father, is an essential component of the human constitution. However, whilst being their Spirit, it is, nevertheless,
not a part of man, since the Spirit is (p. 211 ) of God. Irenaeus elaborates this same interplay in terms of life: God
is the source of life, and when he provides life, man lives. Freedom is never impaired by this dependence. Indeed, as
we have seen, an increasing dependence or subjection is the mark of a greater measure of true freedom: an increased
subjection implies a greater receptivity to the creative activity of God, enabling man to partake of the life of God, his
only life, in an ever fuller measure.
It is the complex woven by these three dimensions that forms Irenaeuss characteristic understanding of asceticism
and anthropology: human beings living the life of God in their flesh. It is the Spirit that absorbs the weakness of the
flesh and manifests living human beings: living, because of the Spirit, their Spirit; and human, because of the flesh.
Christians do not so much develop and exercise virtues, as manifest the virtue of God in their bodies. In this
asceticism, the relationship between God and man cannot strictly be called synergynot, at least, as Clement
employs the term. Irenaeus himself variously attempts to explain this relationship in terms of participation or vision,
which itself implies participation. Yet, while receiving life from God, it is nevertheless man who lives, and does so as
the glory of God.
Finally, with his insistence on the reality of the flesh, and his articulation of asceticism in terms of the strength of
the Spirit overcoming the weakness of the flesh, rather than as the development of virile virtues, Irenaeus is never
tempted to suggest that both men and women become male in the exercise of such virtues, or that they outgrow or
shed their sexual existence. Whilst procreation is proper to humans at the appropriate age, it does not exhaust the
significance of their existence as male and female. Just as the truth of human nature still lies in the eschaton, when
man will be fully vivified by the Spirit, so is the full significance of human sexuality is eschatological. For Irenaeus,
Christs words, He who made them from the beginning made them male and female, and said, For this reason shall
a man leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall be one flesh (Matt. 19: 46),
expresses a truth about human existence which actual human beings because of their weakness and incontinence
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are still being prepared to attain by salvific concessions. However, (p. 212 ) the fullness of the liberty of the sons of
God is not characterized by such concessions, but, I have suggested, by Irenaeuss portrayal of Adam and Eve kissing
and embracing each other in holiness (Dem. 14), taken not as a mythical picture of protological innocence, but as a
description of true, eschatological, human existence.2
The asceticism and anthropology of Clement, on the other hand, are governed by Clements conviction that it is not
the body but the intellect which is in the image of God, and by the scope and capability he ascribes to free will. He by
no means disparages the body; his polemic against the Gnostics would not have permitted him to do so. In fact, he
praises the body as capable, when suitably purified, of being a shrine of the Spirit. Clement also develops a very
interesting analysis of the nature of the baptizeds new existence in terms of a proleptic eschatology: the anticipatory
possession of the new eschatological life, here and now, in which the baptized is already perfect, sanctified, and
illumined. Moreover, Clement is genuinely concerned to maintain, at length, the dignity and the sanctity of marriage,
something which sets him apart from the more usual patristic concern to defend the loftiness of virginity.
However, as we have seen, the manner in which Clement develops a theology of asceticism makes the picture much
more problematic. The numerous precepts and ideals, advising a life lived according to logos, which Clement
borrowed from contemporary philosophy, were indeed transformed by being placed within the context of the Logos
incarnate. But the example of the incarnate Logos actually curtails, rather than inspires, Clements ascetic
tendencies. Clement clung to an ideal of inner tranquillity and serenity which was to be attained and maintained by
buttressing the intellect, through the exercise of virtue (understood in terms of self-control and self-restraint),
against anything which might disturb or ensnare (p. 213 ) it, in particular the (God-given) pleasures which are
associated with the bodys natural needs. Thus, not only are Christians to limit their activity to whatever is strictly
natural and necessary; they are to dissociate themselves from whatever natural pleasures might accompany their
actions. Clements proposed asceticism is characterized by a suspicious abstention. Christians are to tiptoe on the
earth, inwardly aspiring to higher things, rather than fully engaged in their bodily lives.
These tendencies are heightened when Clement describes his ideal for the higher Christian life of the true Gnostic.
Such Gnostics form and create themselves, desiring not simply to be saved, but also to perfect their lives through an
intensified asceticism and instruction, that they might be saved rightly and becomingly. Achieving this state, the
Gnostics attain to an angelic, fleshless condition, in which they live above the world, magnanimously despising the
good things of the world, enjoying instead their own harmless pleasures, while practising unceasing interior prayer
and holding a continual festival. Although the infallible, mystical habit of gnsis, apatheia, love, and beneficence is a
proleptic anticipation, it is an anticipation based upon the Gnostics intensified asceticism rather than on the grace of
baptism. Indeed, Clement characterizes it as a second saving change beyond that of baptism.
The influence of Clements proposed style of asceticism upon his appreciation of human sexuality is immense. His
attitude towards the dynamics of human sexuality is summed up in his advice, to men, that it is better not to look at
women, because if they do so, they risk falling into desire: existence as male and female is a danger and a threat to
his ideal of inner tranquillity, rather than a possible horizon for manifesting the life and love of God. Indeed, when
discussing marriage, he very seldom speaks of love between the spouses. As sexual intercourse is natural, but
necessary only to the extent that it enables the continuation of the race, Clements overriding concern is that
marriage should be governed by the finality of procreation, which Clement nevertheless praises as co-operation with
the work of creation. As this is the only function he concedes to human sexuality, he is inevitably led to suggest that
in the resurrection, when there is no longer marriage and procreation, the sexual character of human flesh will be
shed.
(p. 214 ) This state is to be anticipated once married couples have ceased to have children, through the practice of
continence understood as self-control. Again it is an anticipation brought about by a particular style of asceticism
rather than through the grace bestowed in baptism.
It is especially interesting to note how Clement articulates his theology of asceticism in terms of synergy. Within
the context of an abstract definition of synergy, Clement asserts that a co-operative cause offers nothing of itself, but
merely intensifies the activity of that which acts by itself. But, as we have also seen, Clement, in an equally formal
context, specifies that a co-operative cause does contribute some power of its own. More importantly, however, when
it comes to speaking of Christian asceticism, the style that Clement proposes is definitely one in which two agents
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work from themselves towards the same goal, a goal which is not so much that of salvation as the desire to maintain
Clements cultivated ideal, to be saved rightly and becomingly. Christians are to acquire and practise the virtues by
following the pedagogy of Christ, the practice of the commandments as expounded and expanded by Clement, and
through this exercise be prepared for the reception of grace. The synergy which Clement proposes is merely external;
it is the pedagogy of the commandments of Christ (or rather, of Clements ascetic ideals), which Christians fulfil,
thus achieving the desired goal of being saved in a right and becoming fashion.
These two very different elaborations of asceticism and anthropology clearly correspond to two different narratives
inscribing man.3 The narrative for Irenaeus is the economy unfolded in Scripturecreation and animation by a
breath, apostasy, preparation, adoption, and finally life through deathas the pattern for the whole human race and
for each human being. With his emphasis on the fleshly existence of man, Irenaeus is committed to taking seriously
mans contingent, particular, and limited existence, together with the risks and conflicts of life, and ultimately death,
as intrinsic to the maturation of man and his growth towards God. It is this (p. 215 ) particularity and diversity of
human life which is the theatre of Gods saving work,4 rather than the cosmic dramas of the Gnostic myths in
which the particular man, with his own history, plays no role. Finally, to bring man to the perfection for which he
was originally intended, God acts in history, no longer as an external Creator, but as a particular man. While the basic
distinction between Creator and created (rather than spirit and matter) remains, a communion between the two is
now effected. In his own life and death the Son realizes the image and likeness of God, yet does so as man, thereby
enabling man, as man, also to manifest Gods likeness.
For Clement, on the other hand, the narrative into which man is inscribed is a paideia, which, through progressive
training and instruction, leads, beyond salvation, to the heights of Gnostic perfection. In this scheme, the activity of
the Word of God is arranged according to the three stages of mans journey towards God: first, through exhortation;
second, through the Pedagogue Jesus; and finally, through the teaching Word. This is the pattern of the spiritual life,
of mans ascent to God. For Clement, the work of Christ is essentially instruction: whereas simple Christians remain
at the fleshly letter, the Gnostic knows how to penetrate this veil to attain the spiritual truth. Aiming to transcend
the flesh, the Gnostic is not concerned with its particulars, with their risks and dangers. He may use the good things
of the world, but for him they have no value; his harmless pleasures lie elsewhere.
By exploring the topics of asceticism and anthropology within the overall theological context of the writings of
Irenaeus and Clement, these analyses have challenged many aspects of the traditional interpretations of their work,
such as the role of the apostasy or of the Spirit for Irenaeus, and the proleptic dimension in Clements analysis of
baptismal life. But, beyond such particular details of interpretation, is the broader issue of the significance of such
analyses, both for the historiographical task of understanding these and similar texts, and, subsequently, of
sketching the larger history of Christian asceticism, and also for the task of attempting to understand ourselves as
human.
For the historiographical issue of understanding early (p. 216 ) Christian texts, these analyses have shown the
necessity of understanding what a particular writer has to say within the whole context in which that writer develops
his thought. As E. A. Clark observed, in the concluding reflections to the International Conference on Asceticism,
what vision of asceticism we come to advance depends greatly upon the context in which scholars put the evidence.5
Yet we can only put the evidence in a context other than its own, and so make it relevant for ourselves, once we have
understood it as it is, within its own context. The evidence, at least in the case of such theological texts as have been
discussed, does not exist simply as a store of facts from which we could pretend to write an objective history or, more
subtly, to rewrite such history while openly stating our methodological presuppositions. The evidence is already in an
interpreted state, embedded within a framework which may not be commensurable with our own. It is doubtful
whether Foucaults horizontal analysis of different styles of subjectivity or Browns socio-historical analysis in their
projects of tracing the genealogy of the modern sexual subject can adequately comprehend the properly theological
dimensions either of Irenaeuss asceticism and anthropologyman living, or incarnating, the life and strength of
God in his bodyor, to a lesser extent, of the proleptic dimension in Clements analysis of baptismal life.
The objection might be raised, as it was against Foucaults work,6 that the analyses presented here are not located in
the real social and political world. It is true that this study has limited itself to particular texts, and to the reflections
elaborated within these texts themselves, considered within the context of their explicit polemic against Gnosticism.
The analyses have little if anything to say about the daily life of Irenaeuss or Clements married Christians or the
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actual existence of Clements ideal Gnostic. For this, use must be made of many other types of evidence, such as
economic, legal, or artistic, each requiring an appropriate hermeneutic. Such historiography would give a broader
social and political context for (p. 217 ) considering early Christian texts, but one, it must be remembered, which is
not necessarily that of the text being studied. Neither can one assume that issues in the real world, typically
meaning the world of our own concerns, are even addressed by any given text. Certainly all historical interpretation
takes place, as is commonly recognized, within a hermeneutic circle that embraces the text itself, the tradition which
has handed it down to us, and our own context. Yet the legitimate concern to locate such theological texts within the
real world of social, political, and economic circumstances must not become a selective filter for seeing only our
own concerns and preoccupations, blinding us to the concerns of the texts themselves. Moreover, the hermeneutic
circularity of historical interpretation entails that we allow ourselves to be challenged by our material, for our
preconceptions to be revised, to think otherwise than we previously thought. One cannot bypass the task of
attempting to understand such texts as they present themselves by focusing solely on the broader context read in
terms of our own concerns. Patristic scholarship must be able to benefit from work done within other disciplines, to
respond to the challenge of looking afresh and in new ways at history, yet must, nevertheless, remain faithful to its
texts themselves. With regard to the larger history of Christian asceticism, the analyses presented here, different as
they are, must be taken as an attempt not to determine dogmatically what Christian asceticism is or should be, but
to investigate the forms that Christian asceticism, and its anthropology, took before the emergence of its classical
form in monasticism. There is a striking similarity, at least in their outward aspect, between Clements ideal of
apatheiatranquillity, detachment, and perpetual interior prayerand much of what was to emerge later as the
monastic ideal. Clements works were certainly known in the desert,7 and it is possible that Antony came from a
background influenced by Alexandrian thought such as that of Clement,8 but actual influences are, as ever, elusive.
On the (p. 218 ) other hand, the state of Irenaeuss text indicates that his work was primarily used by later
heresiologists, rather than as the inspiration for later patristic writers.9 Irenaeuss emphasis on the flesh and his
teaching that the body was in the image of God were soon marginalized by the pervasive influence of Origens
theology, and were never retrieved thereafter.10 Yet, looking beyond the outward aspect to the style involved, it is
possible that Clements ideals underwent a more significant transformation in their monastic manifestation, perhaps
along Irenaean lines,11 than the Stoic ideals had undergone at the hands of Clement.
Besides the question of a possible influence of Clements works on early monasticism, his elaboration of a theology
of asceticism in terms of synergy, the internal coherence that this has with the ideal of self-control, and the
suggestion that humans will shed their sexual characteristics in the resurrection, begs comparison with the later
theorist of the ascetic life, Gregory of Nyssa. The Greek fathers, outside the parameters of the debate between
Augustine and Pelagius, have typically been represented as having taught a synergy between God and man. This is
especially true of Gregory of (p. 219 ) Nyssa.12 Moreover, Gregory, it is held, taught the protological and
eschatological sexless existence of human beings, elaborated through the idea of a double creation, in which
sexuality was added in foresight of the Fall.13 As such, sexuality, for Gregory, is basically remedial, permitting the
increase of the human race to the number originally foreseen by God. Within this framework, marriage has an
important role to play in increasing the human race to the foreordained number, but it is essentially secondary, an
economic state conditioned by the fallen world, to be transcended in the higher states of virtue, fully realized in
virginity and celibacy, which re-establish mans original paradisal state in anticipation of the resurrection.14
However, the question needs to be raised whether the style of the synergy proposed by Gregory is the same as that of
the synergy developed by Clement.15 If so, is there a necessary correlation between a synergetic asceticism, with the
emphasis on self-control, and the exaltation of a sexless state of virginity or continence? Alternatively, should
Gregorys synergy be explained within the framework of participation, perhaps along the lines developed by
Irenaeus?16 If so, is there then room for a more positive appreciation of human sexuality in Gregory of Nyssas
writings, such as the reading of De virginitate proposed by M. D. Hart, who argues that for Gregory the highest (p.
220 ) embodiment of virtue is to be found in the life which combines leitourgia and contemplation either in
marriage or in celibacy?17
Lastly, within the horizon of the task of understanding ourselves as human beings, the contrast drawn in this study
between the position of Irenaeus, which demands that we live openly in dependence upon God, in the fullness of our
created fleshly, sexual being, and that of Clement, which exhorts us to rise above the vulnerability of our fleshly
being in a self-controlled self-sufficiency, has interesting parallels with the two conflicting tendencies discerned by
Nussbaum in ancient Greek thought.18 In her essay Transcending Humanity, Nussbaum presents these conflicting
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tendencies in terms of the choice that Odysseus had to make between staying with Calypso, to live the untroubled,
immortal life of a god with a god, and so transcend his human nature, or returning to Penelope, to live as a human in
human society, with all the vulnerability, tribulations, and certainty of death that this entails.
The life of a god is indeed a desirable and intelligible choice, for such a life is not subject to any of the constraints
which make human life transitory, limited, precarious, and often miserable. And alongside such negative motivation
is the positive attraction of transcendence itself. Following a philosophical tradition at least as old as Xenophanes,
which held that the sole activity of a divine being was thinking, Plato and those who followed him maintained that
the highest, and most proper, activity for human beings was philosophical contemplation. Although we might
resemble the lower forms of life, (p. 221 ) and seem to live in subjection to nature and fate, there is part of us, Plato
insisted, that is divine, immortal, intellectual, unitary, indissoluble, ever unchanging;19 and it is this rational
element that must govern the rest of our being, thereby securing us from the vicissitudes of fate and bodily life.
Similarly, the later philosophical schools of the Hellenistic period, with the possible exception of Scepticism, offered
various techniques, based on the domination of reason, for the formation and shaping of the self. Their claim to be
the art of life asserts that they can do more than any other source of logos in healing and governing the soul. In
contrast to superstition and popular philosophy, where the outcome is always uncertain, true philosophy claims to
remove that element of darkness and uncontrol from human life, making tuch subordinate to an intelligent and
intelligible techn,20 thereby offering its adherents the possibility of a godlike life.21
However, Odysseus did not stay with Calypso, but rather chose to return to his mortal bride. To have remained with
Calypso would have brought Odysseuss story to an end: he would no longer have had the opportunity to
demonstrate those virtues and achievements which are characteristically human, or indeed be truly in love, for when
even the gods fall in love, it is with mortal humans.22 The Greek poets, according to Nussbaum, had understood the
fact that part of the peculiar beauty of human excellence just is its vulnerability.23 Human beings are not gods,
neither the transcendently anthropomorphized Olympians nor the purely intellectual divinity of the philosophical
tradition. Accordingly, the truly good life for human beings is not the immortal life of the Olympians, nor one of
contemplation (an acceptable activity when subordinated to other specifically human ends), but one which
recognizes and accepts the full range of human values. Nussbaum finds such a position elaborated most
comprehensively and (p. 222 ) consistently in Aristotle. Philosophizing within the confines of the appearances of
things, Aristotle acknowledged that central human values, such as courage, moderation, generosity, and friendship,
can be found only in a life which is subject to risk, need, and limitation. As Nussbaum puts it, Their nature and their
goodness are constituted by the fragile nature of human life.24
There is an evident similarity between the tendency discerned by Nussbaum in Greek philosophy, to attempt to live a
godlike life through the hegemonic exercise of reason, and the position of Clement, as analysed in this study. This is
perhaps not surprising given Clements philosophical background and orientation. What is particularly interesting,
however, is the similarity between the other tendency delineated by Nussbaum, which emphasizes the fragility and
dependence of human nature, and the position of Irenaeus as presented here. It is possible that this is in part due to
a similar methodology. According to Nussbaum, for Aristotle the philosophical method is committed to and limited
by the phainomena, the way things appear, so that the order which philosophy discerns is the order that is in our
language and the world around us as we see and experience it.25 Likewise, Irenaeus insists that we must found our
theology upon what actually exists, so that we might never wander from the true comprehension of things as they
are, regarding both God and ourselves.26
What is unique to Irenaeus and the Christian tradition he represents, however, is the affirmation that this life is also
the life of God. Although her work is not concerned with Christian theology, this is a point which is recognized, in
passing, by Nussbaum:
(p. 223 ) For Christianity seems to grant that in order to imagine a god who is truly superior, truly worthy of
worship, truly and fully just, we must imagine a god who is human as well as divine, a god who has actually
lived out the non transcendent life and understands it in the only way that it can be understood, by suffering
and death.27
The life and death of Christ within this world not only endorse the value of the human situation, but refocus and
hold our attention on the world in which we live. What is involved here is more than, in Nussbaums words, the
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thought experiment which concluded that a perfect being would perform intellectual contemplation.28 What is
only imagined by Nussbaum is a key conviction for Irenaeus, that through a death witnessing to Christ, Christians
attain to the full status of human beings as sons of God in the crucified and risen Son of God.
Finally, if the style of asceticism as self-control, ultimately culminating in the exaltation of abstinence and virginity,
is indeed a more universal phenomenon, as the work of Foucault and Nussbaum suggests, either as the stylization of
ones life as an uvre or as the attempt to protect the dignity of reason against the vicissitudes of fate and nature, or,
more generally, as the human attempt at a divine, godlike life, can this be given a theological explanation in terms of
Irenaeuss interpretation of the fig-leaves used by Adam? According to Irenaeus, Adams response to his fallen
situation was to impose upon himself, and Eve, a state of continence, which gnaws and frets the body. It was a
confused, adolescent reaction to his new, fallen situation, in which he felt unworthy to approach God. It is as if Adam
wanted to make amends, to cover up the mistake he had made, and to conform himself, by his self-imposed
continence, to what he considered to be divine. Although Adam expressed repentance through this action, this style
of continence, as with any self-imposed state or attitude, limits human openness towards God, thereby perpetuating
the Fall and the failure to be truly human, the glory of God.
Such, then, are some of the issues arising from this work. The extent to which they are real issues for us, as we
attempt to understand our own history and our own selves, as human (p. 224 ) beings, depends greatly upon the
degree to which we allow ourselves to be challenged by voices from the past. To do this requires an openness,
together with its own ascsis, a disciplined reading. But this is not an option: Only when we turn thoughtfully
toward what has already been thought, will we be turned to use for what must still be thought. 29
Notes:
(1) Berthouzoz, Libert et grce, 236.
(2) There is an interesting similarity between Irenaeuss theology, so presented, and L. Irigarays attempts to explain
sexual difference within the terms of a parousia of God who, rather than remaining in an inaccessible transcendence,
is present here and now, in and through the body. From this perspective, the horizon of sexual difference offers the
possibility of an enduring transfiguration of the world, which she describes as the third era, the time of the Spirit
and the Bride. Cf. An Ethics of Sexual Difference, trans. C. Burke and G. C. Gill (London, 1993), esp. 14750.
(3) See R. Williams, The Wound of Knowledge, 2nd rev. edn. (London, 1990), 2439, for an insightful analysis of the
narratives unfolded by the Gnostics, Irenaeus, and Clement.
(4) Ibid. 25, perhaps alluding to AH 4. 33. 7.
(5) E. A. Clark, The Ascetic Impulse in Religious Life, in Wimbush and Valantasis (eds.), Asceticism, 510.
(6) Cf. Lloyd, Mind on Sex, review of Foucault, The Use of Pleasure; see also the response to Lloyd by Cameron,
Redrawing the Map, 267.
(7) Palladius mentions that a certain female desert dweller, Collythus, possessed works of Clement; cf. Lausiac
History, 60. Given the paucity of such information, this statement is significant.
(8) Cf. S. Rubenson, The Letters of St. Antony: Monasticism and the Making of a Saint, rev. edn. (Philadelphia,
1995); see also the critical response of G. Gould to the ist edn., Recent Work on Monastic Origins: A Consideration
of the Questions Raised by Samuel Rubensons The Letters of St. Antony, St. Patr. 25 (Leuven, 1993), 40516.
(9) For a full analysis, see Fantino, LHomme, 18890, and, for a more optimistic assessment, O. Reimherr, Irenaeus
Lugdunensis, 1625.
(10) Florovsky argues that the so-called anthropomorphites retained the same primitive theology as Irenaeus, but
were persuaded otherwise by Origenist/Evagrian monks, causing much distress. After being persuaded to read
Scripture mystically, rather than in an allegedly anthropomorphite manner, Abba Serapion is reported to have said,
while weeping and groaning on the ground, They have taken my God from me, and I have now none to behold, and
whom to worship and address I know not (John Cassian, Conferences, 10. 3). Cf. G. Florovsky, The
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Anthropomorphites in the Egyptian Desert, in idem, Aspects of Church History (Belmont, Mass., 1976), 8996.
(11) Cf. D. Burton-Christie, The Word in the Desert (Oxford, 1993), esp. ch. 7. His description of Poemens advice as
that the single most important act for surviving in the desert is the act of trustto place oneself completely in the
hands of God (p. 224), is reminiscent of Minnss characterization of Irenaeuss position, that man needs to learn
above all to relax in the hands of God (Irenaeus, 64); both are diametrically opposed to the self-control shown by
Clements Gnostic in forming and creating himself.
(12) Cf. E. Mhlenberg, synergism in Gregory of Nyssa, ZNTW 68 (1977), 93122; and, more recently, V. E. F.
Harrison, Grace and Human Freedom according to St. Gregory of Nyssa (Lewiston, NY, 1993).
(13) Cf. esp. On the Making of Man, 1617, 22.
(14) Elaborated, with much more nuance, by H. U. von Balthasar, Prsence et Pense (Paris, 1942), and J. Danilou,
Platonisme et thologie mystique, 2nd edn. (Paris, 1954). See also F. Flori, Le Sens de la division des sexes chez
Grgoire de Nysse, RSR 27 (1953), 10511; P. Pisi, Genesis e Phthor: Le motivazioni protologiche delia virginit in
Gregrio di Nissa e nella tradizione dellenkrateia (Rome, 1981); V. E. F. Harrison, Male and Female in Cappadocian
Theology, JTS ns 41. 2 (1990), 44171.
(15) Jaeger suggests a sharp contrast between the two: Gregory speaks of the co-operation of the Spirit (or of God or
Christ), while Clement describes man as the one who co-operates; cf. Two Rediscovered Works, 103. My analysis of
synergy in Clement, however, has led to a different under standing: two agents, acting individually, towards the
same goal.
(16) Cf. D. L. Balas, METOYIA EOY: Mans Participation in Gods Perfections according to Saint Gregory of
Nyssa (Rome, 1966), who notes, in passing (89; 94 n. 136; 95 n. 139), the similarity between Gregorys and
Irenaeuss description of life in terms of participation.
(17) Cf. M. D. Hart, Marriage, Celibacy and the Life of Virtue: An Interpretation of Gregory of Nyssas De Virginitate
(Ph.D. diss., Boston College, 1987); idem, Reconciliation of Body and Soul; idem, Gregory of Nyssas Ironic Praise
of the Celibate Life, HJ 33 (1992), 119. For a re examination of Gregorys On the Making of Man, see my article,
The Rational Animal: A Rereading of Gregory of Nyssas De hominis opificio, JECS 7. 2 (1999), 21947.
(18) Cf. M. C. Nussbaum, The Fragility of Goodness: Luck and Ethics in Greek Tragedy and Philosophy (Cambridge,
1986, repr. 1989); idem, Trans cending Humanity, in Loves Knowledge (Oxford, 1990), 36591; idem, Therapy of
Desire. See also the various articles on Nussbaums work, and her response, in R. V. Norman and C. H. Reynolds
(eds.), Symposium on The Fragility of Goodness, Soundings, 72. 4 (1989).
(19) Plato, Phaedo, 8ob.
(20) Nussbaum, Therapy of Desire, 50.
(21) Ibid. 497.
(22) Note, however, C. Osbornes criticism of Nussbaums analysis of the role of love in Hellenistic philosophy, in
Loves Bitter Fruits: Martha C. Nussbaum The Therapy of Desire: Theory and Practice in Hellenistic Ethics,
Philosophical Investigations, 19. 4 (1996), 31828.
(23) Nussbaum, Fragility of Goodness, 2.
(24) Nussbaum, Fragility of Goodness, 341.
(25) Ibid. 240, 262. One must note, however, that this aspect of Nussbaums interpretation of Aristotle has been
subjected to severe criticism; see e.g. J. M. Coopers review of Fragility of Goodness in Philosophical Review, 97. 4
(1988), 54364.
(26) Cf. AH 2. 25. 1; 5. 2. 3; Dem. 3. As von Balthasar puts it, for Irenaeus, Theology begins by seeing what isIt is
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either realistic or it is not theology at all. The primary aim is not to think, to impose Platonic intellectual or even
mythical categories on things, but simply to see what is (Glory of the Lord, 2. 45).
(27) Nussbaum, Transcending Humanity, 375.
(28) Ibid. 383.
(29) M. Heidegger, Identity and Difference, trans. J. Stambaugh (New York, 1969), 41.
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Biology
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Physics
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Religion
Social Work
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2. 2 1645
2. 5. 46. 1 162
2. 7. 60. 5 163, 206
2. 10. 83. 1 172
2. 10. 83. 2 175
2. 10. 90. 2 173
2. 10. 98. 2 173
3. 3. 20. 5 141
3. 11. 82. 583. 1 183
Stromata
1. 1. 2. 2 190
1. 4. 27. 3 149
1. 20. 99. 4 168
2. 2. 7. 1 149 n.
2. 6. 31. 3 186
2. 9. 45. 1 186, 196, 199
2. 10. 47. 4 192, 195
2. 11. 50. 4 138
2. 13. 59. 6 147, 197
2. 17. 77. 5 137, 201
2. 19. 102. 6 141
2. 22. 131. 2136. 6 155 n.
2. 22. 131. 6 141 n.
2. 23. 137147 1712
3. 1. 4. 1 173
3. 5. 40. 3 183 n.
3. 5. 42. 6 168, 187
3. 6. 45. 3 145
3. 9. 637 1456
3. 10. 68. 1 176
3. 12. 79. 5 177 n.
3. 12. 84. 2 176
3. 12. 88. 23 177
3. 14. 94. 3 144, 179 n.
3. 17. 102. 4 143
3. 17. 103. 1 1434
3. 17. 107. 5 173
4. 114 192
4. 6. 39. 12 1956
4. 8. 59. 162. 4 17980
4. 13. 93. 2 199
4. 18. 117. 5 147
4. 19. 123. 2 1778
4. 20. 126. 112. 2 1778
(p. 256 ) 4. 23. 147. 1149. 8 189
4. 23. 150. 2 136
4. 23. 150. 34 136, 139
5. 1. 2. 45 186
5. 1. 7. 2 169
5. 4. 26. 14 186
5. 13. 83. 5 169
5. 13. 87. 4 138
5. 13. 88. 14 139
5. 14. 93. 494. 5 140
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1. 22. 1 40
2. 7 89
2. 19. 6 89, 92 n.
2. 22. 4 63
2. 25. 1 222
2. 28. 36 34 n.
2. 28. 4 98
2. 29. 3 80, 91
2. 31. 2 99 n.
2. 32. 4 122
2. 33. 4 92
2. 33. 5 99 n., 101, 113
2. 34. 1 92 n., 95
2. 34. 24 926, 101
2. 34. 2 41 n.
3. 15 31
3. 6. 1 70
3. 17. 1 57, 67, 76
3. 17. 2 678, 88
3. 17. 3 1212
3. 18. 1 90 n.
3. 18. 2 52 n.
3. 18. 5 76, 97 n.
3. 18. 6 61
(p. 257 ) 3. 18. 7 61 n.
3. 19. 1 601
3. 20. 12 4751
3. 20. 2 89
3. 21. 10 63, 88 n.
3. 22. 1 98
3. 22. 3 589, 63 n., 90
3. 22. 4 64 n., 112
3. 23. 5 53 n., 112, 11719
3. 23. 6 51, 76
3. 24. 1 667
4 28
4. Pref. 4 98
4. 2. 7 76 n.
4. 4. 15. 1 412
4. 5. 4 64
4. 5. 5 54
4. 6. 6 115
4. 7. 4 103
4. 9. 2 96 n.
4. 1l. 12 37 n.
4. 1l. 2 37, 3940, 116
4. 11. 4 120
4. 1316 7071
4. 14. 12 49 n.
4. 14. 1 367
4. 14. 2 5255
4. 14. 3 54
4. 15. 2 1256
4. 18. 5 712, 74
4. 20. 1 87
4. 20. 2 645
4. 20. 5 33, 56, 56 n., 85 n., 108
4. 20. 7 557, 109
4. 22. 12 66
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4. 24. 1 52 n.
4. 33. 1 104 n.
4. 33. 4 689
4. 33. 7 35 n.
4. 33. 15 39 n., 104 n.
4. 36. 7 55 n.
4. 3739 447
4. 37. 4 90
4. 37. 7 123 n
4. 38. 3 42, 124
4. 38. 4 114, 116
4. 39. 1 11819
4. 39. 23 11617
4. 40. 3 50 n.
4. 41. 23 69
5. 1. 1 62, 123 n.
5. 1. 22. 3 80 n.
5. 1. 3 389, 59, 92 n.
5. 2. 3 45 n., 724, 76, 93, 222
5. 3. 13 8889
5. 3. 3 57 n., 967, 101, 108
5. 4. 1 94 n.
5. 6. 1 89 n., 99101, 11415
5. 7. 1 91, 94, 98
5. 8. 1 75, 78, 109
5. 8. 2 98, 100 n., 1223
5. 9. 1 108
5. 9. 2 79, 98
5. 9. 3 79
5. 12. 12 1058
5. 13. 3 42
5. 15. 1 69 n.
5. 15. 2 88, 116
5. 15. 4 88
5. 16. 2 90, 114
5. 18. 2 1025, 107
5. 18. 3 65, 123 n.
5. 20. 2 656, 110, 113
5. 21. 2 64
5. 23 113
5. 27. 12 84
5. 28. 3 82
5. 28. 4 778
5. 31. 1 80
5. 3334 83
5. 33. 4 81
5. 35. 12 81
5. 36. 13 835
5. 36. 1 41, 41 n.
5. 36. 3 103
Demonstrat1on
3 68, 68 n., 222
6. 7 32 n., 104 n.
8 6970
1116 49 n.
11 8791, 109
12 43, 110, 113
13 11011
14 59 n., 11112, 1267, 212
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Biology
Classical Studies
History
Law
Linguistics
Mathematics
Music
Neuroscience
Philosophy
Physics
Political Science
Religion
Social Work
General Index
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Boyarin, D. 11 n.
Broudhoux, J. P. 176 n., 178 n.
Brown, P. 67, 1014, 1634, 178 n., 216
Burton-Christie, D. 218 n.
Cabasilas, Nicholas 74
celibacy 1767
Christ 43, 49 n., 578, 615, 85, 86, 90, 116, 1423, 166, 171 n., 183, 190
see also Adam; Incarnation; logos
Church 31, 456, 657, 745, 110, 158, 176
Clark, E. A. 216
Clement of Alexandria 1722, 1313, 209, 21214, 217
works 1334
commandment, of God in paradise 49, 113, 114 n.
continence 14, 114 n., 1189, 126, 1734, 183, 223
see also temperance
creation 35, 3840
cross 76, 97
death 45, 502, 734, 769, 125, 1456, 192, 210
of Christ 62, 645
Didascalia Apostolorum 120
disposition () 2001
Dodds, E. R. 2 n.
Donovan, M. A. 56 n., 95 n.
dreams 148
economy 21, 33, 35, 39, 62, 73, 1334, 21415
Elm, S. 16
Encratites 13, 1456, 1589, 1634, 165, 170, 171, 173, 177, 179, 182
enjoyment 108, 110, 116, 164
see also thankfulness
Epistle to Diognetus 3, 15
eschatology 1113, 43, 578, 805, 86, 110, 127, 1557, 2025
eucharist, 714, 778
(p. 260 ) Eve 11012, 144
see also Adam
faith 138, 14951, 156, 170, 1856
Fall 1435
see also apostasy
Fantino, J. 90, 91 n., 96 n.
flesh 20, 38, 62, 79, 802, 889, 956, 100, 1223, 164, 194
see also body
Florovsky, G. 218 n.
Floyd, W. E. G. 144
Foucault, M. 4, 610, 145, 216
Fox, R. L. 4 n.
Francis, J. A. 4 n.
freedom 42, 44, 701, 84, 901, 122, 1257, 137, 1667
Galen 34
glory, of God 367, 42, 47, 567
gnosis 18, 14951, 1856, 188, 18993, 1956, 2023
Gnosticism 1721
Gregory of Nyssa 47 n., 51 n., 175 n., 21820
guiding principle () 1378, 146
see also intellect; soul
Harpham, G. 1 n.
Holy Spirit 35, 389, 57, 97
and baptism 678
and Church 667
and eucharist 723
as life-creating 56 n., 5860, 79, 945, 989, 1057, 1213
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Orbe, A. 38 n., 39 n., 60 n., 78 n., 80 n., 84 n., 88 n., 103 n., 111 n., 114 n.
Origen 81 n.
paideia 21, 1334, 168, 215
passion 116, 135, 1468
as disease 160, 169
Ptrement, S. 1819
philosophy 19, 21, 1489, 164, 1901
pleasure 135, 148, 206
harmless 195, 205, 206
prayer 1934
procreation 11113, 1434, 148, 1723, 175, 1823, 211, 213
prolepsis 150, 1547, 1812, 2025
protology 11, 1213, 43, 46 n., 49 n., 578, 85, 86, 110, 126
recapitulation 625, 82
regeneration 689, 1423, 157
see also baptism
Rousseau, A. 32 n., 37 n., 45 n., 48 n., 53 n., 91 n., 92 n., 945, 99 n., 1023
Rousselle, A. 4, 7 n., 165 n.
salvation 501, 53, 55, 136, 1667, 16870, 1778, 1879
Scripture 2833, 65, 86, 149, 151, 18992
self-sufficiency 162, 206
Smith, J. P. 59 n.
Soranus 4
soul 912, 98101, 138, 181
immortality of 945
and life 924
see also guiding principle; intellect
Stoicism 1368, 161, 164, 173, 196
Swete, H. B. 25
synergy 16770, 1745, 204, 211, 214, 21819
temporality 33, 403
temperance 174
see also continence
thankfulness 20, 3940, 51, 74, 93, 1201, 132, 164, 1945
see also enjoyment
Theophilus of Antioch 51, 110
tradition 31, 190
Treadgold, W. 14
Veyne, P. 2 n.
virginity 12, 4, 125
virtue 1234, 136, 161, 166, 211
virile character of 180
vision, of God 33, 37, 46, 557, 845, 1089, 1923
Ware, K. 16 n.
Williams, M. A. 18 n., 19 n., 21 n.
Wingren, G. 28, 60 n., 62 n., 97 n.
Word see logos
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