Worse
still, what if they weren’t even secret?
What if they lived right out in the open with their heresies, tempting your
Christian brothers and sisters to join them in their profane heterodoxy?
Worst
of all: What if you discovered that you were the heretic?
THE BLOG POST THAT NEVER WAS
I’ve
always had sympathy for the author of the Bible’s epistle of Jude. This past month, though, that sympathy has
evolved into downright empathy. He’d planned, he says early in his letter, to
write about the glorious salvation he shares with the members of his audience. Instead, he was forced to address the threats faced by that audience. He had to change his writing plans. His group,
his audience, probably covered a number of churches under the author’s
influence – churches he knew well, people he knew personally given the outpouring
of wrath Jude directs at those threatening the faith of the believers.
Invaders. Heretics who’d snuck into the church to take
it over from the inside out.
Like
Jude, I sat down with a firm idea of what I’d write about this month. I was going to compose “Jude’s Got ‘Tude,” an
in-depth examination of the nature of heretics.
I mean, Jude gave me so much material to work with there! He goes off on heretics, literally spews
forth condemnation after condemnation, accusation after accusation. In a couple dozen scant verses, he showed me
that heretics:
- Respond to challenges with violent uprising, falling into the error of Cain
- Pursue profit over piety, falling into the error of Baalam
- Tolerate immorality in their own leadership structure, mimicking the error of Gomorrah
- Pollute their bodies, forgetting they're the temples of the Spirit
- Reject any authority God has placed over them
- Say rude, nasty, disparaging things about their betters
- Cause their own destruction, like those fleeing Egypt with no true belief
- See themselves as subject to no laws, like angels fleeing their places in heaven
- Whip up insurrections like the rebels of Korah
- Cause divisions, splintering churches and even nations
Oh, yeah, that
blog post I imagined I would write was going to be a doozy, an exemplar of
exegesis! Half of you would say, “Wait,
is she really writing about Donald Trump?” and the other half would say “She must be writing about Joe Biden!” and the third half would say “No, this is
definitely just about church heretics” and the fourth half would ask “How many
halves are packed in here anyway?” Go
me!
Spoiler
alert: That isn’t happening.
HERESY, AND A LITTLE HISTORY
I
am the heretic. I chose a different path
for the blog.
Let me clarify. The word “heretic” came to us through Middle English, bouncing in from French, where it had wriggled in from Latin as a conduit from the ancient Greek hairetikos. Heretic, hairetikos. Not so different, right? Except that hairetikos did not originally mean “person believing ideas contrary to orthodox Christian doctrine.”
It meant “able to choose.” No more, no less.
In
the early years of the church, there was a lot to choose from. Valentinianism, Marcionism, Montanism,
Adoptionism, Docetism, and every mystical-woo variation of Gnosticism that you can
imagine. Christianity spent several
centuries fine-tuning what would one day be called “orthodoxy.” It was by means of defining orthodoxy that
Christianity invented heresy.
Don’t
be thrown by those last three words. By the new definition it was being given, heresy no longer meant choosing anything In his 1934 book Orthodoxy and Heresy in
Earliest Christianity, Walter Bauer makes a persuasive argument that many
regions’ first establishments of Christianity were founded on ideas that would
now be viewed as heretical, "heterodoxy." Those
churches came around in time, although we shouldn’t forget the vast differences
between western and eastern Christian faiths that remain to this day. Most western hemisphere believers, in fact,
remain mostly unaware of the variety of Christian doctrines found east of Moldova
and north of the Caucasus (and unaware of the locations of Moldova and the
Caucasus, for that matter. ‘Murica.)
Heresy didn't exist in paganism. Prior
to the spread of Christianity’s monotheism, having different doctrines within
the vast expanse of polytheism didn’t mean you were wrong. It meant you decided to follow a different
god. All gods were legit, even if they
didn’t always get along with one another.
If you followed the mystery cults of Isis over the emperor’s preferred, traditional
Jupiter following, you were simply picking differently. Hairetikos. You were able to choose.
Not
so in Rome’s new Christianity. If you
chose a different path, a different god, you were completely off track. That wasn’t a choice you could make any
longer. The church father Irenaeus took
that distinction a step further in the century after Jesus’ death, writing that
even differences of opinion in ideas about Jesus should no longer be a matter
of choice. There were four gospels, no
more, and no other trustworthy sayings of the apostles. The apostles crafted successors by the laying on
of hands, and no earthly authority could claim supremacy over them or claim
alternate facts. As time rolled on, the
lists of doctrines firmed up more, and in 325 C.E. the council of Nicaea—a tool
of the Roman Empire which during the 300s was being taken over from inside by
Christendom—firmed up the basics of orthodoxy in what is still called the
Nicaean (or sometimes the Apostles’) Creed.
There was no longer a need to choose. Being hairetikos was off the
table. In fact, it became dangerous to
choose a variant Christian belief.
Downright deadly, praise the Lord.
THE HISTORY OF HERESY UPENDED
YOUR BLOG?
But it
wasn’t that history that made me veer off course from the blog I intended to
write. It was Jude himself who thwarted
me. I read his epistle. I read it again. I played with a number of the (very
accomplished) Greek phrases he uses. I
read a few commentaries and listened to a couple audio commentaries. I read Jude again.
Then
I read a commentary that used a single word that jammed my gears. The word was “triplet.” It didn’t mean “a child with two siblings of
the same birthing.” It meant “the literary device of tripling a word or concept
to drive the idea home.”
My
next read through Jude made my jaw drop.
Triplets.
When
I teach students how to write argument essays, I impress upon them the idea of
a Rule of Three. Arguments are either
true or false, one thing or another thing – a “couplet” of contention, if you
will, a dichotomy. Are you trying to
convince me of your side of the couplet?
Then go beyond single arguments, beyond couplets, and into
triplets. One example alone won’t sway
me; for all I know, the one lonely fact you provide as your proof could be a fluke,
a quirk, an outlier. You need a second
example of the argument or point you’re making … but even then, a second piece
of verification could just be a coincidence.
When you layer on a third supporting claim, you’re closing the
sale. Now you’ve established a trend,
and you’re making good use of the Rule of Three. I might buy your argument. In threes, it sounds like evidence.
When
I read through the epistle of Jude with the word triplet bouncing in my
brain, I begin to see things I haven’t seen before.
Were
my assumptions about the text right? I
thought his arguments against “heretics” in the congregation were a vitriolic
volleying of vindictives against the enemies within, like an unhinged jeremiad. I perceived them as disconnected, the way
individual mashal sayings in the book of Proverbs are singular and
stand-alone. I assumed his attacks were
a stream of consciousness akin to Qoheleth’s wandering waves of whimsy in Ecclesiastes.
Look how I wrote the above paragraph. I gave you a couplet situation (am I right
about Jude or am I wrong?) Then I gave
you a triplet of verbs (I thought, I perceived, I assumed) with a triplet of Biblical
allusions (Jeremiah, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes) to make it look like I was working
hard, thinking really hard, studying insanely, inordinately hard
to get things right about Jude.
(Geek side note: And I just used a tripled anaphora with
climactic parallelism borrowed from Hebraic style in that last sentence
explaining the previous paragraph. I
also did an apophasis at the start of the post, raising an issue by claiming
not to be mentioning it. I’ll stop
now. But if you’re a blog writer, an
argument maker, or a sermon deliverer (Rule of Three there!), it never hurts to
review rhetorical
techniques. As you’ll see
below, Jude certainly used them.)
THE BRILLIANCE OF JUDE
One-two-three, one-two-three,
Read the Book of Jude with me!
Then we’ll see (thee and me!)
Everything turns triple-y!
There. I dropped my academic pretense by remembering I’m a mom with a tyke who reads Dr. Seuss to me. Let’s take a simple look at Jude. I was wrong. He’s not spewing. He’s not frothing at the mouth. I should have suspected it from the quality of Jude’s Greek, but I missed something in my first few dozen reads: Jude’s letter is a carefully crafted essay whose power comes from its form as much as its content.
I’ll clip back my prose here and let Jude’s format do the talking. Follow his flow, even if the outline form throws you a bit.
Jude opens with a triplet of triplets – three lines of three –
- FROM: Jude’s name, his role in Christ, his tie to James
- TO: those called, those loved, those kept
- HIS PRAYER FOR READERS: mercy, peace, and love
Then a dastardly
couplet: The enemy within (1) perverts grace [by wrong behaviors] and (2) denies
Christ [by wrong belief]. Double trouble.
Next comes a major triplet of triples:
A: THE ANCIENTS ARE A WARNING SIMILAR TO THESE ENEMIES:
- Those destroyed who’d been freed from Egypt (disbelief)
- The now-punished angels who left their place (disobedience)
- Sodom and Gomorrah who lost their cities due to immorality (carnality)
B: LIKEWISE, these enemies within:
- Pollute their bodies
- Reject authority
- Heap abuse on their betters
C: THEY’RE LIKE OTHER BAD EXAMPLES
- Cain’s murderous ways (violence)
- Baalam’s error of pursuing profit (greed)
- Korah's rebels who fell to destruction (anti-authority)
- They divide you
- They follow their own natural desires
- They do not have the Spirit
B: In contrast, you, believer, have this trinity in your
favor:
- You pray in the Holy Spirit
- You have the love of God
- You await the mercy of Jesus
C: As for how to treat this enemy:
- Show mercy to the doubters
- Snatch some from the fire
- Snatch even the worst, but fear them
The letter closes with a second barrage, a final exergasia drum solo of sentiments. It’s Jude’s doxology, without doubt the most famous element of the letter. It’s a graceful step away from the wrathful tone, reminding us point by point by point of how the Lord has saved us and of all the homage God deserves.
I’ll
indulge myself with one final observation.
There are three nonbiblical citations in the Letter of Jude:
- A story of Michael and Satan arguing over Moses’ body (from The Assumption of Moses)
- A prophecy of Enoch, seventh from Adam (from The Book of Enoch)
- A prophecy from the apostles that occurs nowhere else in Scripture (perhaps from a text lost to us)
Obviously, this last triplet is
just an amusing (to me) epilogue to the patterns that so awed me in the text. Jude had no way of knowing whether the Assumption
of Moses or the Book of Enoch would wind up in a canon that would be
hundreds more years in the making, and he couldn't know that his would be the only
letter extant today recording the apostles’ words of prophecy. But it made me smile, nonetheless, to see that the extra-biblical citations turned out this way, a final, parting triplet of pure chance.
SO … HERESY?
It
turns out the word “heretic” doesn’t appear anywhere in Jude. In fact, it shows up only once … maybe … in
the New Testament. Titus 3:10 gives
counsel on how to deal with a “factious” man, our hairetikos, one who
causes splits among the brethren. The
word is an offshoot of hairesis, usually translated as a sect (or
denomination, if you will), and only considered “heresy” fleetingly in scattered Bible translations. The word was still growing
its negative connotation in the era of New Testament writing. It wouldn’t get full muscles for at least a couple more
centuries.
But it’s
obvious Jude opposes those “blemishes on your love feasts” against whom he
rails. He just didn’t have the right
word yet to call them heretics.
I have
to thank you for sticking with me this long and wading through my sheer joy at
finding complexity in a work I always falsely assumed was crafted as angry
chaos. I’ll leave you with a final consideration about Jude’s fury at those who had secretly slipped into
churches, bringing their ungodly ways.
He
attacked them for behaviors. He attacked
the lusts they brought into the fellowship.
He attacked the money grabbing and greed they embodied. He attacked their violent tendencies. He attacked their rejection of God-placed
authority. He attacked their arrogance
and their false sense of superiority. He
attacked them for all these immoralities – and it’s probably rather telling
that in our era of the church, the word “immoralities” usually refers to sexual
behaviors, never immediately conjuring church greed, arrogance, rebelliousness,
or even violence.
Jude attacked them for behaviors, and not for a suite of doctrines they held. For Jude, heresy—admittedly a word still in formation in his day—was not about wrong dogmas and wrong beliefs, the key meaning of the term in our era. It was about wrong behaviors within the church, committed by those who needed to be snatched back and kept in the fold, if possible. We’re to have mercy and grab them back from their bad behaviors.
There was only one doctrinal error for which Jude despised these enemies: “denying the only master and Lord of us, Jesus Christ” (v. 4). Denial of His mastery over us is what leads us to presume on his grace and follow the baser instincts of humanity.
After codifying orthodoxy for post-biblical times, many early Christians turned to the practice of executing heretics, inflicting their own form of persecution on those who chose differently.
Perhaps we need to consider Jude’s recommendation. Angry as he was, he still wanted to snatch them away from their bad behaviors and back into fellowship.
I’ll
think of that the next time I consider someone a heretic. I'll even pause and think of it three times over.
Marana Tha,
Cosmic Parx / YoYo Rez
*standing ovation*
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