Heresy of the special revelation,extended fasting, asceticism and eschatology "The Montanist"
Montanism ([1]Phrygian
heresy)
Mentioned in Eusebius, Church History 5.3.4;5.14-18
Historical information
Dating primarily to the late second and early third
centuries.
[2]The
controversy spread by 177 to Rome.
Leading Teachers
[3]Montanus
(170 AD). He was joined shortly thereafter by two prophetesses, Maximilla (2nd
century) and Priscilla 92nd century). Tertullian (160-220))
Who contributed in the answering of the heresy
[4]Epiphanius,
Panarion 48; Jerome, Letter 41.
[5]Hippolytus
Syntagma (lost in its original form; but in substance in later writers),
Characteristic teachings
[6]Montanist
prophets claimed direct ecstatic revelations from God to support their
teachings on disciplinary questions, especially extended hours of fasting and
asceticism, and on eschatology.
[7]It
lived in expectation of the speedy outpouring of the holy Spirit (the
Paraclete) on the Church, of which it saw the first manifestation in its own
prophets and prophetesses.
[8]It
was peculiar form of these utterances to which other Christians objected: this
kind of ecstatic prophecy was not, like that of the biblical prophets,
delivered in the third person, but was direct speech by the Spirit himself
using the prophet’s mouth as his instrument. The content of the ‘New Prophecy’
was hostile to the Gnostic elimination of eschatological expectation and
insisted on the literal resurrection of the flesh and the nearness of the Lord.
[9]He
(Montanus) began to proclaim to his fellow believers (the New Prophecy) that he
was a prophet-that, indeed, he was the mouthpiece of that Spirit which the Lord
had promised to the church as the one who would “teach…all things” and “guide you into all truth.[10]
[11]The
problem was not that Montanus was a prophet, for prophecy had existed in the
church since its beginnings, and there is no reason to think that it had died
out in the last third of the second century. The problem was that this was a new
prophecy. It was unfamiliar in its form(Montanus uttered the words, “Behold a
man is as a lyre, and I fly over it like a plectrum,”[12]where
the “I” can only refer to the spirit).
[13]The
Montanist prophets also seem to have practiced “charismatic exegesis,” in which
the text of the scripture was actually cited in their oracles in such a way as
to include their eschatological key to the scriptures within the text.
One authentic late Montanist inscription substantiates Epiphanius’s
charge (Haer.49) that the Montanists allowed female clergy.
In order to survive, Montanists may have developed their own
peculiar form of regional bishops to ensure the institutional continuity of the
sect.
Became famous after 208 by the joining of Tertullian of
Carthage, when he included in Book 4 against Marcion , Montanist passages.
[14]Tertullian
also condemned the current penitential disciple for its leniency.
In North Africa , Montanism has long fasts, prohibited
second marriages and flight to avoid martyrdom, and specified the exact length
of veils to be worn by women.
Montanist prophets also announced an eschatological vision
of the heavenly Jerusalem, seen suspended over geographical Jerusalem.
[15]Montanus
himself, who began prophesy wither in 172, or 156-7, proclaimed that the
heavenly Jerusalem would soon descend near Pepuza in Phrygia.
Spiritual psalms, visions, and prayers also played a part in
community life.
Decisions
Were excommunicated in a series of synods of churches in
Asia Minor, the first such regional synods in Christian history as (Eusebius,
H.E. 5.16.10.
[16]In
Rome were excommunicated by bishop Eleutherus
[17]Also
condemned by pope Zephyrinus (199-217).
Abbreviation
Encyclopedia of Early Christianity, 2nd edition (Garland
Reference Library of the Humanities)
|
EEC
|
Dictionary of the Christian Church edited by F.L. Cross & E.A.
livingstone by Hendrickson Publishers. 1997 Oxford university Press.
|
DCC
|
A History of the Christian Church, 4th edition Williston
Walker and Richard A. Norris, David W. lotz, Robert T. Handy
|
HCC
|
[1]
After its place of origin and greatest support.
[2]
EEC, P.779
[3]
EEC, P.778
[4]
EEC, p.779
[5]
DCC, p.1108
[6]
EEC, p.778
[7]
DCC, p.1107
[8]
EC, P.52
[9]
HCC, p.69
[10]
John 14:26, 16:13.
[11]
HCC, p.69
[12]
Stevenson, A New Eusebius, P.113
[13]
EEC, P.778
[14]
DCC, P.1108
[15]
DCC, P.1107
[16]
EEC, P. 779
[17]
DCC, p.1108
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