Sunday, December 27, 2009

Here's Where Things Get Interesting in the Mimar

Okay, so let's recap the lead up to where we are now. Mark begins with Moses being instructed into the heavenly mysteries by the Glory of God. Then he is suddenly introduced to his 'brother' - Aaron - and the two go down into Egypt being likened to the two angels who come to destroy Sodom.

There are a number of people - both ancient and modern - see parallels between Aaron and Esau - ESPECIALLY IN TERMS OF THE IDEA that both 'secretly' represent an angelic hypostasis. The existing text never EXPLICITLY confirms that Aaron is an angel, but there are enough clues thrown around by Marqe to suggest - at least to me - that he wanted us to think that the pairing of Moses and the glory continued even when only Moses and Aaron are mentioned in the Exodus narrative.

I even suspect that something still remains of the original gnostic identification regarding two powers in heaven - one psychic, one spiritual - which correspond to the truly 'animal' and 'human' beings in the world:

... there are two gods in the universe, one in heaven and another on earth ... we speak of soul and spirit, referring to the soul of body and the spirit to the living. The governing of living human beings is by both soul and spirit; the governing of the dead is sufficiently done by soul. [Mimar Marqe i.8]

Yet as we make our way through the text we arrive at something far more important to the study of early Christianity - the CONTEXT for the many references to the heretical idea of 'redemption.'

I can't tell you how many times I come up against various supposed 'experts' on the Marcionites - Bart Ehrman, R. Joseph Hoffmann, take your pick. All those scholars who can dazzle the masses by memorizing a number of 'New Testament readings' associated with the sect.

I have never once felt that any of these people have been able to reconcile the various statements about the Marcionite 'redemption' ritual - i.e. the repeated mention in various Patristic writers that the followers of Marcion understood Jesus to have come to this word in order to establish a 'redemption' where humanity was 'purchased' from the Creator in order to serve the Father in heaven.

Reading the Mimar Marqe will finally provide a context for those statements. Marcionitism represents a development of Samaritan ideas regarding the Exodus narrative ...


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