Friday, March 6, 2026

My Forthcoming Book "Stolen From Africa: How Europeans Stole, Raped and Enslaved Christianity."

Chapter 6: The Birth of the "Catholic" New Testament

The history of Christianity is usually told as a story of faithful transmission. According to the traditional narrative, the teachings of Jesus passed from the apostles to the Church Fathers and then to later generations without major distortion. The Church preserved the gospels, defended them against heresy, and protected the truth of the faith. In this telling, figures like Irenaeus and Tertullian appear as guardians of orthodoxy who fought against corrupt teachers such as Marcion.

But what if that story is incomplete?

This volume begins with a different possibility: that the history of early Christianity is not simply the story of preservation but also the story of appropriation, redirection, and sometimes outright theft. The earliest Christian traditions were not born in Europe. They developed in the eastern Mediterranean and North Africa, in places such as Egypt, Syria, and Palestine. These regions were home to diverse intellectual traditions, vibrant religious communities, and forms of Christianity that later European writers would often reshape or suppress. The process by which Christianity became a European religion involved not only translation and interpretation but also the rewriting of earlier traditions.

One of the most important examples of this process may be found in the relationship between Papias, Irenaeus, and Tertullian. Papias, writing in the early second century, preserved traditions about the origins of the gospels and the sayings of Jesus. His work emphasized the importance of dominical traditions and the proper ordering of gospel material. Papias appears to have valued the connection between the teachings of Jesus and the Jewish scriptures. For him, the gospel was inseparable from the prophetic tradition that preceded it.

Later writers inherited Papias’s ideas but did not always preserve them faithfully. Irenaeus, writing toward the end of the second century, used Papias in support of his own project: the defense of a fourfold gospel and the suppression of competing Christian traditions. In doing so, he appears to have reshaped Papias’s testimony so that it supported a different argument. Instead of simply preserving Papias’s observations about Matthew and Mark, Irenaeus incorporated those ideas into a broader theological campaign against groups he regarded as heretical.

This transformation becomes especially important when we turn to the controversy surrounding Marcion. Marcion was accused by his opponents of mutilating the Gospel of Luke and rejecting parts of the Christian scriptures. According to the Church Fathers, Marcion removed passages from the gospel in order to promote his belief in a God different from the Creator of the Jewish scriptures. The accusation became one of the central claims used by the early Church to discredit Marcion and his followers.

Yet the way this accusation is argued in the surviving texts raises serious questions.

Tertullian’s massive five-book treatise Adversus Marcionem claims to prosecute Marcion for falsifying the Gospel of Luke. But when the work is examined closely, the argument does not proceed in the straightforward way we might expect from a genuine prosecution of textual theft. Instead of beginning with clear textual comparisons between the supposed original and the alleged forgery, Tertullian spends large sections of the work discussing theology, prophecy, and the relationship between the law of Moses and the gospel.

Even more striking is the structure of Book IV. From chapters 9 to 43, the text reads almost like a running commentary on the Gospel of Luke. Tertullian works through passages in sequence and explains their meaning. Yet this commentary is not used primarily to demonstrate where Marcion altered the text. Rather, it is used to argue that the passages Marcion supposedly retained still testify to the Creator and remain consistent with the Jewish scriptures.

This approach reflects a strategy already described by Irenaeus. In Adversus Haereses 3.12.12, Irenaeus states that he intends to refute Marcion not mainly by reconstructing the passages Marcion removed but by arguing from the passages Marcion retained. In other words, the argument would not be based primarily on proving textual mutilation. Instead, it would attempt to show that the surviving material in Marcion’s gospel contradicts Marcion’s theology.

This method explains why Tertullian’s treatise looks so strange if it is read as a legal case about stolen property. A prosecutor trying to prove that a text had been altered would normally present the original and the altered version side by side and demonstrate the differences. Tertullian does not do this. Instead, he proceeds as though he had inherited an earlier theological project whose purpose was not to demonstrate the act of textual theft but to reinterpret the gospel in a way that affirmed the continuity of Christianity with the Jewish scriptures.

The oddities do not end there. At the beginning of Adversus Marcionem, Tertullian makes a remarkable admission about the history of his own text. He explains that the treatise had gone through several versions. An earlier draft had been replaced by a fuller composition. That composition was then copied and circulated in a corrupted form by a man who later became an apostate. Tertullian claims that he has now rewritten the work again and expanded it further.

The irony is striking. The author who accuses Marcion of falsifying scripture begins his own work by acknowledging that the treatise itself exists only after multiple stages of revision, loss, and reconstruction. The book we possess is not the original composition but a later recension assembled after earlier manuscripts had been altered or lost.

These details raise an important possibility. Rather than representing an entirely original work by Tertullian, Adversus Marcionem may preserve material derived from an earlier Greek treatise against Marcion—one that may have been written by Irenaeus himself. Tertullian may have translated, adapted, and expanded that earlier work for a Latin-speaking audience.

If that is correct, then the strange argumentative structure of the treatise becomes easier to understand. Tertullian would not be inventing a flawed method of prosecution. He would be inheriting a project already designed by another writer. The claim that Marcion mutilated Luke would function as the starting point of the argument, while the main body of the work would interpret the passages Marcion supposedly retained in order to show that they still testify to the Creator.

Seen in this light, the relationship between Papias, Irenaeus, and Tertullian takes on new significance. Papias’s ideas about the ordering of gospel traditions may have been repurposed by Irenaeus in his campaign to defend the emerging orthodox canon. That repurposed framework may then have been incorporated into the anti-Marcionite project that Tertullian later adapted in Latin.

The result is a layered text whose structure preserves traces of several earlier debates. Behind Tertullian stands Irenaeus. Behind Irenaeus stands Papias. And behind Papias stand the earliest traditions about the sayings and narratives of Jesus.

Understanding how these layers interact may help us understand not only the origins of Adversus Marcionem but also the larger process by which early Christian texts were reshaped as Christianity moved from its eastern and African contexts into the intellectual world of the Roman Empire.

This study therefore begins with a simple question: why is Adversus Marcionem such a strange book? The answer may reveal much more than the intentions of Tertullian alone. It may illuminate the deeper process by which early Christian traditions were appropriated, reorganized, and ultimately transformed as Christianity became the religion of Europe.

A good way to begin is with Papias. If we can understand how Irenaeus used Papias, reshaped him, and possibly redirected his ideas, then we are in a much better position to understand what may have happened later with the gospels themselves, especially Mark. The issue is not just whether one author quoted another. The issue is whether an earlier set of ideas was taken over, adjusted, and made to serve a new purpose. That matters because once we see that kind of repurposing at work in Irenaeus, it becomes easier to imagine that similar repurposing happened again at another level, not only in anti-heretical writing but also in the way gospel traditions were framed, interpreted, and even rewritten.

This is why Papias matters so much. Papias appears to have cared deeply about order, memory, and the relation between written narratives and dominical sayings. He is known especially for remarks about Mark and Matthew. In the surviving reports about him, Matthew is treated as having a kind of priority in structure or order because it is linked to dominical logia, that is, to the sayings or teachings of the Lord. Mark, by contrast, is often described as accurate but not arranged “in order” in the same way. Whether Papias really meant exactly what later writers say he meant is a separate issue. What matters here is that later Christians took Papias to stand for a certain logic: one gospel could be judged by how it preserved, arranged, and connected the traditions of Jesus.

Now if Irenaeus took over this logic and redirected it, that would be very important. It would mean that he was not only preserving Papias but also reshaping him. Francis Watson and others have argued that Irenaeus does not simply pass Papias on unchanged. He uses him for his own larger project. That larger project is to defend a fourfold gospel, to establish an orthodox line of transmission, and to push back against rival versions of Christian tradition. In that setting, Papias becomes useful evidence. But once Papias becomes useful evidence, he also becomes material that can be reworked.

That possibility matters because it gives us a model. If Irenaeus could take Papias and make him serve a new anti-heretical and pro-canonical purpose, then maybe he could do something similar elsewhere. Maybe he could take arguments first developed in relation to Matthew and Mark and redirect them toward Luke. Maybe he could take a method that once explained why Matthew had a superior order and use it instead to argue that Marcion’s gospel was a mutilated version of Luke. And if that happened, then what we see in Tertullian may not be a fresh invention at all. It may be the Latin afterlife of a Greek project already reshaped by Irenaeus.

This is where Book IV of Adversus Marcionem becomes so important. From chapters 9 to 43, does Book IV read essentially as a commentary on our Gospel of Luke? The answer is yes. That is one undeniable feature of the text. Tertullian moves through material that corresponds closely to Luke and comments on it section by section. He is not just naming Luke. He is working through a Luke-like sequence and interpreting it in detail. That is one of the clearest things about this part of the book.

At the same time, the logic of the argument feels older than Tertullian. The reasoning does not look like the work of a writer simply comparing two texts in a straightforward way. It looks like a writer trying to prove that the surviving material in a disputed gospel still points back to the Creator, still agrees with the Jewish scriptures, and still makes sense only inside an orthodox framework. That is not just commentary. It is commentary used as argument. And the style of the argument, especially its concern for how the gospel is connected to prophecy, law, and previous revelation, feels close to the kind of logic that later Christians linked with Papias.

Someone might answer: that is not a problem. Tertullian may simply have borrowed Papias-like logic and applied it to Marcion’s gospel. Since Marcion’s gospel resembled Luke, Tertullian’s work ended up looking like a commentary on Luke. On that view, there is nothing mysterious here. Tertullian is just using inherited methods to interpret the Marcionite gospel, which he believes was stolen from Luke.

But there is a problem with that answer. In Adversus Marcionem, Tertullian often accuses Marcion not only of falsifying Luke but also of falsifying Matthew. In fact, the charge that Marcion falsified Matthew appears so often that it creates a major tension in the argument. If the center of the case is that Marcion stole Luke, why does Matthew keep returning to the scene? Why is Matthew so important in a work that officially treats Luke as the stolen gospel?

This is not a small detail. It is one of the strangest features of the book. If Tertullian were simply writing a commentary on Marcion’s gospel because it resembled Luke, then one might expect Luke to dominate almost completely. But instead Matthew constantly appears, sometimes almost as though it were the deeper frame behind the argument. That suggests that something more complicated is going on. The argument may have started somewhere else. It may have had an earlier shape before it became a case about Luke.

That brings us to Tertullian’s preface, which is one of the oddest parts of the whole work. Tertullian says that he had earlier written a shorter work against Marcion. Then he says he replaced it with a fuller composition. Then that fuller composition was copied badly and circulated by a “brother” who later became an apostate. After that, Tertullian says, he had to revise the work yet again. He even says that what was once second became third, and what was once third now becomes first in the present form.

This is a very strange thing to say. If Tertullian were simply the original author and master of his own text, why not say something direct and simple? Why not say: “Someone circulated a corrupt copy of my work. Ignore that and read this corrected original.” That would be the natural thing to do. But Tertullian does not speak that way. Instead, he almost sounds like a man working over an already existing manuscript, adopting it, correcting it, adding to it, and reissuing it. He sounds less like a writer guarding a single original and more like an editor inheriting and reworking unstable material.

That editorial voice appears again and again at the beginnings of the books. It is especially noticeable in Book III, where material is reused from Against the Jews. That matters because it shows Tertullian was willing to incorporate earlier written material into a new setting. He was not above reusing texts. In Book III we can watch him doing it in Latin. So when we come to Book IV and sense that he may be hovering over another source, this time Greek, that is not an absurd guess. It fits a pattern already visible in the larger work.

This is where Irenaeus enters the picture in a serious way. Irenaeus tells us in Adversus Haereses 3.12.12 that Marcion and his followers mutilated the scriptures, especially the Gospel according to Luke and the letters of Paul, and that in another work he intends to refute them from the texts they still retain. That statement is extremely important. It lays out a program. First, claim that Marcion mutilated Luke and Paul. Second, promise to refute Marcion not mainly by reconstructing every lost line, but by arguing from what remains.

This is the exact kind of strategy we find in Tertullian. He says Marcion stole and altered a gospel, but then instead of spending all his energy proving the theft by a detailed textual prosecution, he spends much of his energy showing that the surviving passages still testify to the Creator. In other words, the method is: use what Marcion retained against Marcion himself.

That is a very unusual method if the main goal is to prove theft. But it makes perfect sense if Tertullian inherited a project already shaped that way by Irenaeus. Suddenly the irregularity is no longer random. It is inherited.

The larger context of Adversus Haereses 3.12.12 makes this even clearer. Irenaeus says that people like Marcion set the Mosaic law against the gospel because they think the two covenants are dissimilar or contrary. He says they imagine themselves purer and wiser than the apostles. They claim to have found another god and a purer doctrine. That sounds very close to the central issue in Tertullian’s argument. Again and again in Adversus Marcionem, Tertullian’s deepest concern is not merely that Marcion edited a text. His concern is that Marcion teaches a false opposition between the Creator and the gospel, between the law and grace, between the old covenant and the new.

That means the real heart of the argument is theological, not textual. The textual accusation is the doorway. The deeper case is about continuity. Can the gospel be shown to belong to the same God who gave the law and spoke through the prophets? That is what Tertullian keeps trying to prove. And that is exactly what Irenaeus says he intends to prove from the texts Marcion still accepts.

So the strange shape of Tertullian’s Book IV may not be Tertullian’s invention at all. It may reflect the shape of Irenaeus’s lost anti-Marcionite treatise. That would explain why Book IV begins with a strong claim about Marcion’s theft of Luke and then turns into a running interpretation of Luke-like passages designed to show harmony with the Creator and the Jewish scriptures.

At this point we can state the key point clearly. Irenaeus’s planned anti-Marcionite work was probably not, in its main body, a simple demonstration that Marcion falsified Luke. Rather, it was likely a work that accepted the passages Marcion retained and argued from them that the gospel still testified to the Creator and harmonized with the law and prophets. The claim that Marcion mutilated Luke was the rhetorical starting point. The main labor of the work was to show that the surviving gospel material still betrayed its true origin.

This explains why chapters 9 to 43 of Book IV read like commentary. They are commentary. But they are commentary with a purpose. They are trying to prove the “DNA” of the text, so to speak. Tertullian is trying to show that the gospel Marcion uses still carries the marks of its true family. Its patterns, prophecies, and theological assumptions still point back to the Creator. The argument is not mainly, “Here is the stolen object, and here are the cuts.” The argument is, “Even this damaged object still reveals where it came from.”

That is a much stranger way to prosecute a case of theft. And that is exactly why one hesitates to believe this method originated with Tertullian himself as a clean, original design. No prosecutor trying to win a simple case of theft would proceed this way. If the audience already believes that Luke is authentic, the easiest path is obvious: show the places where Marcion’s gospel differs from Luke, then declare those differences to be evidence of mutilation. That would be simple. It would be memorable. It would be effective.

Instead, Tertullian proceeds in a far more indirect way. He gives long arguments about theology, law, prophecy, the Creator, and continuity. He moves through passages the way a commentator does, not the way a prosecutor in a simple forgery case would. That does not mean the work is confused. It means it may belong to a different kind of project than the one it claims on the surface to be.

The preface becomes even more suspicious when read in this light. Tertullian is prosecuting Marcion for tampering with a text. Yet he begins by telling readers that his own work has a tangled history of rewriting, loss, corruption, and republication. The irony is hard to miss. The accuser of falsification opens by admitting that his own text has gone through several unstable stages.

Why would he do that? A reasonable answer is that he had to. The repurposing must have been visible enough that he could not simply hide it. If the work he was adapting was already known, then a story had to be told to explain why the present form differed from earlier circulating forms. The easiest story was one about corrupt copying, apostasy, and restoration.

If that is right, then the “apostate” in the preface becomes more than a random villain. He becomes part of Tertullian’s explanation for why the work in people’s hands is unstable. Tertullian is effectively telling his readers that they may encounter different versions, but they should trust this present recension. That is exactly the sort of thing an editor says when dealing with inherited textual material.

This is one reason Irenaeus fits so well as the likely deeper source. He was a major Greek writer. He was widely read. His anti-heretical material circulated. We already know that Tertullian used Irenaeus in Adversus Valentinianos. There Tertullian clearly preserves the general sense of Irenaeus’s discussion of the Valentinians in a Latin form. If he did that once, why not again? Why could Adversus Marcionem be another Latin repurposing, this time of Irenaeus’s lost treatise against Marcion?

That does not mean Tertullian mechanically translated Irenaeus word for word. He may have translated loosely. He may have shortened, expanded, and reworked. But the larger shape could still be inherited. The beginning of Book IV, the Luke-like commentary in 9 to 43, the repeated argument from what remains, and the concern with proving continuity with the Creator all fit Irenaeus’s announced plan very well.

This also helps explain why the argument in Book V, where Tertullian discusses Paul, feels strongly Irenaean in method. Again and again the argument is based on the material Marcion still accepts. Tertullian takes the letters Marcion retains and tries to prove from within them that they do not support Marcion’s theology. This is exactly the logic Irenaeus had announced: refute them from what they still retain.

So the oddity is not just in Book IV. The whole anti-Marcionite project may already have been shaped by Irenaeus’s plan. Tertullian did not invent the weakness. He inherited it.

And it really is, from a prosecutorial point of view, a weakness. Imagine a prosecutor in a theft case. The prosecutor says the defendant stole a book, cut pieces out, and circulated a damaged version. What should the prosecutor do? He should place the authentic book and the damaged one side by side. He should point to the cuts. He should show the jury the physical evidence. He should make the crime visible.

Tertullian does not do that. He never plainly says, “Here is the Marcionite manuscript in my possession.” He never stages the drama of physical evidence. That absence matters. A prosecutor usually wants the audience to feel the reality of the crime by seeing the object itself. Tertullian does not do that because, very likely, he does not have that kind of direct physical evidence. His source may have had access to something like it, or to reports about it. But Tertullian himself does not present it that way.

This makes better sense if Tertullian is working from Irenaeus rather than from an actual Marcionite codex in front of him. He is inheriting a line of argument, not conducting a fresh forensic investigation.

Now we can return to Papias. Once we see Irenaeus as the likely architect of the underlying anti-Marcionite project, the frequent appearance of Matthew becomes much easier to explain. It may be a trace of an earlier stage of argument. If Irenaeus had already repurposed Papias, then the anti-Marcionite project may have carried over Papian ways of thinking that originally belonged to discussions of Matthew and Mark.

Papias seems to have preferred Matthew’s ordered presentation, especially in relation to dominical sayings. Mark, though respected, could be described as lacking the same kind of ordered arrangement. Suppose Irenaeus took this Matthew-based way of arguing and shifted it toward Luke. In that case, Luke could become the new “ordered” witness against Marcion. The argument would no longer be, “Matthew is better ordered than Mark.” It would become, “The gospel Marcion uses must be judged by an orthodox standard of order, continuity, and relation to prophecy, and that orthodox standard is now represented by Luke.”

That would explain why Matthew remains so visible inside Adversus Marcionem. The work may preserve echoes of an earlier Matthew-centered structure even while officially prosecuting a case about Luke. The system has been redirected, but not perfectly. The seams still show.

This leads to a larger possibility. Maybe what happened to anti-Marcionite writing also happened at the level of gospel formation. If Papias’s scriptural and dominical-logia approach was taken over by Irenaeus and embedded more deeply into gospel argument, then perhaps some of the scriptural appeals now found in Luke are part of that development. In other words, instead of a Church Father standing outside the gospel and saying, “This passage fits that prophecy,” the gospel narrative itself may have been shaped so that Jesus or the narrator builds those scriptural links into the story.

That would be a significant step in the falsification of Mark. If earlier gospel tradition, perhaps closer to Mark, was less explicit in making certain prophetic connections, and if later redactors or authors built those same connections into a new or reshaped narrative, then the gospel itself would begin to do the exegetical work that earlier teachers like Papias once did from outside the text.

Luke is especially interesting here. Right at the start, Luke acknowledges that many have already undertaken to write narratives. That is unusual among the gospels. Luke presents himself as writing in awareness of previous accounts. This gives Luke a special position. Luke becomes not just another gospel but a reflective, self-aware witness to gospel tradition. That makes Luke the ideal tool for someone who wants to present an apostolic but non-apostolic witness to what the earlier gospels “really meant” or “really looked like.”

If so, Luke becomes a kind of corrective lens. Through Luke, one can claim to know the proper order, the proper connection to scripture, and the proper theological meaning of earlier traditions. In that case, Marcion’s gospel can be attacked not just because it differs from Luke, but because it lacks the very scriptural and theological features that Luke now embeds into the story. Then the absence of those features can be treated as evidence that Marcion cut them out.

This would be a powerful move. It would turn Luke into evidence for a previous gospel tradition while also allowing Luke to define that tradition. Luke would be both witness and standard. And once that happens, the charge that Marcion mutilated Luke becomes almost impossible to escape, because Luke itself has been built to display the scriptural logic that the anti-Marcionite writer wants to defend.

This helps explain why Adversus Marcionem is so weird and yet so coherent at the same time. It is weird if we think of it as a simple prosecution of theft. It is coherent if we think of it as the Latin continuation of an inherited Greek project whose deeper goal is to prove continuity between gospel and Creator by arguing from retained passages and embedded scriptural logic.

That also explains why the preface matters so much. Tertullian’s three versions are not just a side issue. They are a clue. He says there was an earlier, shorter work. Then a fuller work. Then a corrupted circulation. Then a new recension with additions. Even if the earliest “original” is partly a story told to justify later editing, the preface still tells us something real: the text before us is layered.

Once that is admitted, the possibility that Irenaeus stood behind part of it becomes much stronger. The first version may have been Greek. The later Latin version may have incorporated that Greek material. Book III already shows Tertullian reusing earlier text. Book IV may show him doing something similar with a Greek anti-Marcionite source.

And once we grant that, the Matthew problem no longer looks accidental. It may be a fossil from an older stage of the argument, one closer to Papias, closer to debates about order, and closer to the relationship between Matthew and Mark. Irenaeus may have taken that older material and bent it toward Luke. Tertullian may then have taken Irenaeus’s work and bent it again into a Latin five-book structure.

So to come back to the main question: from chapters 9 to 43, is Book IV basically a commentary on our Gospel of Luke? Yes. That is undeniable. But that is not the whole story. The logic of the commentary seems older than Tertullian. It resembles a method already visible in Irenaeus’s announced anti-Marcionite plans and, deeper still, a mode of argument associated with Papias.

That is why knowing how Irenaeus falsified, redirected, or repurposed Papias helps us understand how Mark may have been falsified in the end. If Papias once stood for a Matthew-centered logic of order and dominical tradition, and if Irenaeus could redirect that logic toward Luke in order to create an anti-Marcionite argument, then the final gospel landscape may already reflect those acts of redirection. Luke may not just preserve earlier tradition. It may embody a rewritten interpretation of earlier tradition. And if so, Mark was not simply left behind. Mark was surpassed, reframed, and effectively falsified by the very processes that turned Papias into a witness for a later orthodoxy.

That, in the end, is why one should hesitate before saying that Tertullian merely wrote a strange book with a strange logic. The book is strange, yes. But its strangeness has a history. It looks less like a single author’s odd design and more like the visible surface of several layers of reuse, translation, and theological repurposing. Tertullian’s text is strange because it is carrying the remains of earlier arguments inside it.

The strongest conclusion, then, is not that Tertullian invented a bizarre anti-Marcionite method from scratch. The stronger conclusion is that he inherited an already awkward project from Irenaeus, translated or repurposed it in Latin, and issued it in a revised form while admitting, almost against his will, that the work itself had been reworked. Once that is seen, the oddities of Adversus Marcionem become evidence, not embarrassment. They point backward to Irenaeus. And behind Irenaeus, they point backward again to Papias.

That is the chain: Papias provides a logic about order and dominical tradition. Irenaeus takes that logic and redirects it into an anti-heretical, pro-canonical argument. Tertullian then receives that project in Latin and reissues it as Adversus Marcionem. The result is a text that begins like a prosecution of Luke theft but soon turns into a running theological commentary on Luke-like material. That is not how a simple prosecutor works. It is how a later editor works when he inherits an earlier theological dossier and tries to make it serve his own audience.

And that is why the weirdness matters. It is not a flaw to be ignored. It is the evidence.

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

My Mashugana Family Part 2

An investigative journalist has delved into the twisted background of my mother's family: 

Part 1 

Part 2

Part 3 

Part 4

Part 5

Addendum

Yvonne was my mother's aunt whom I knew through various anecdotes (including most famously that my mother was so scared by Yvonne's son Edgar's forcing her to watch Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy that if she didn't leave the theatre she would "jump out the window" - I never understood what movie theatres had windows but that was the story). Edgar, my mom used to say, had strong sadistic tendencies. Seems like things never changed. I wish my mom was alive to learn all this information. She was too young and history moved too quickly during the war and after, that she didn't get a chance to reason it all out. 

Monday, February 16, 2026

Tertullian's Copying of Irenaeus 2: Adv. Val. ch. VIII (p.34–35) → direct borrow from AH 1.1.2–3

 

IRENAEUS (actual wording you supplied)TERTULLIAN (Adv. Val. VIII Latin)Translation of LatinTransformation Pattern
“Logos and Zoe… produced Anthropos and Ecclesia” (earlier description of the aeonic generations; structure presupposed in the system summarized in Ch. II–III)ecce enim secunda tetras, Sermo et Vita, Homo et Ecclesia“Behold the second tetrad: Word and Life, Man and Church.”Direct structural equivalence. Logos→Sermo, Zoe→Vita, Anthropos→Homo.
“The AEons… produced by conjunction… conjugal pairs” (implicit throughout Irenaeus’ system)coniugales per copulam utriusque naturae“conjugal [pairs] through the coupling of each nature.”Conceptual condensation; Valentinian syzygy translated into Latin formula.
Structure of grouped aeons (tetrads, decad, duodecad; numerical organization of pleroma — implied in discussion of duodecad and aeonic generations)Sermo et Vita decuriam Aeonum simul fundunt“Word and Life together produce a decad of Aeons.”Narrative explanation reduced to schematic statement.
“Sophia… the youngest of the Duodecad which sprang from Anthropos and Ecclesia”Theletus et Sophia (last pair in list)Proper name listStructural retention — Sophia remains final member of duodecad.
Lists of aeons within the pleroma (Irenaeus recounts their names as part of Valentinian teaching)Bythios et Mixis… Monogenes et MacariaProper names retainedDirect reuse of aeon catalogue tradition.
Further aeon list forming duodecadParacletus et Pistis… Ecclesiasticus et Macariotes… Theletus et SophiaProper names retainedSame order preserved; only Latinized spelling.
“the whole Pleroma of the AEons”hoc erit Pleroma illud arcanum, divinitatis tricenariae plenitudo“this will be that secret Pleroma, the thirtyfold fullness of divinity.”Concept retained; tone shifts to irony/polemic.
Numerical structures emphasized (duodecad; structured aeonic system)quaternarii et octonarii et duodenarii“the fourfold, eightfold, and twelvefold.”Mathematical shorthand replacing explanatory prose.

What emerges from comparing Irenaeus’ exposition with Tertullian Adv. Valentinianos VIII is not independent description but systematic compression of a pre-existing schematic tradition. Tertullian preserves the structural backbone of the Valentinian system exactly: the sequence of generative pairs (Logos/Zoe → Anthropos/Ecclesia), the organization into tetrad, decad, and duodecad, the full thirty-aeon pleroma, and—most decisively—the ordered lists of aeon names. The agreement is too specific to be coincidental. Rather than retelling the narrative as Irenaeus does, Tertullian extracts the formal framework (pairings, numbers, genealogical structure) and translates it into concise Latin formulae (“Sermo et Vita decuriam Aeonum simul fundunt”). This indicates dependence on a common dossier or descriptive template of Valentinian cosmology, probably already systematized before either author’s polemical adaptation. The methodological transformation is therefore reduction plus rhetorical reframing. Irenaeus presents explanatory prose: motivations of aeons, metaphysical logic, theological narrative (e.g., Sophia’s drama, the function of Horos). Tertullian strips away the explanatory layer and retains only the schematic elements—names, numerical groupings, generative sequences—turning them into a quasi-diagrammatic catalogue. Once reduced to bare structure, he overlays satire: numerical fixation becomes absurd arithmetic, name lists become rhetorical caricature, and the pleroma becomes “divinitatis tricenariae plenitudo” framed ironically. The shift is not textual invention but polemic through condensation, where fidelity to structure enables sharper ridicule. In methodological terms, the process can be described as: (1) preservation of technical terminology and ordered lists; (2) compression of narrative units into formulaic clauses; (3) replacement of explanatory exposition with evaluative commentary. This pattern strongly suggests that Tertullian is not reconstructing Valentinianism from scratch but working from an already structured anti-heretical presentation similar to that reflected in Irenaeus. The polemical force of his Latin depends precisely on retaining recognizable structural markers from that earlier exposition while recontextualizing them as evidence of doctrinal excess or artificial systematization.

Tertullan's Copying of Irenaeus 1 = Adv. Val. ch. VII (p.31–33) → direct borrow from AH 1.1.1

Irenaeus (Conceptual Source)Tertullian (Latin Text)Translation of LatinReuse / Transformation Pattern
“There exists a certain perfect, pre-existent Æon … Proarche, Propator, and Bythus … invisible and incomprehensible … eternal and unbegotten.”hunc … aiōna teleion appellant; personaliter vero propatorem et proarchēn etiam Bython … innatum immensum infinitum invisibilem aeternumque definiunt.“They call him a perfect aeon; personally they also call him Propator and Proarche, even Bythus … they define him as unbegotten, immense, infinite, invisible, and eternal.”Lexical retention. Same titles and attributes preserved; Tertullian adds ironic commentary undermining definition-as-proof.
“He remained throughout innumerable cycles of ages in profound serenity and quiescence.”Bythos iste infinitis retro aevis in maxima et altissima quiete, in otio plurimo placidae…“This Bythus, for infinite ages in the past, existed in the greatest and highest quiet, in very abundant peaceful leisure.”Direct conceptual translation. Same semantic units: infinite ages + primordial stillness.
“There existed along with him Ennœa, whom they also call Charis and Sige.”dant ei secundam … personam, Ennonian, quam et Charin et Sigen insuper nominant.“They assign to him a second person, Ennœa, whom they furthermore call Charis and Sige.”Sentence structure preserved; identical naming sequence.
“Bythus determined to send forth from himself the beginning of all things, depositing it in Sige like seed in the womb.”movere eum de proferendo tandem initio rerum a semetipso … hoc vice seminis in Sige sua … collocat.“They say he was moved at last to bring forth from himself the beginning of things … and, like seed, he places it into his Sige.”Structural reuse; reproductive metaphor intensified but inherited.
“She gave birth to Nous, similar and equal to the Father, alone capable of comprehending him.”parit Nus … simillimum Patri et parem per omnia … solus hic capere sufficit immensam illam … magnitudinem Patris.“She gives birth to Nous … most similar to the Father and equal in every respect … he alone is sufficient to grasp that immense greatness of the Father.”Near-direct translation; equality and exclusive comprehension retained.
“This Nous they call Monogenes, Father, and Beginning of all Things; along with him was produced Aletheia.”ita et ipse Pater dicitur et initium omnium et proprie Monogenes … cum illo processit et femina cui Veritas nomen.“And so he himself is called Father and the beginning of all things and properly Monogenes … and with him proceeded a female whose name is Truth.”Sequential reuse; titles and pairing preserved.
“These four formed the first-begotten tetrad: Bythus and Sige, Nous and Aletheia.”Bythos et Sige, Nus et Veritas prima quadriga … matrix et origo cunctorum.“Bythus and Sige, Nous and Truth — the first quadriga … the womb and origin of all things.”Structural identity; ‘tetrad’ recast rhetorically as quadriga.
“Monogenes sent forth Logos and Zoe; from them came Anthropos and Ecclesia; thus the Ogdoad was formed.”emittit … Sermonem et Vitam … facit fructum: Hominem et Ecclesiam procreat … habes ogdoadem.“He sends forth the Word and Life … produces fruit: he begets Man and Church … you have the Ogdoad.”Narrative sequence preserved; Greek terms Latinized (Logos→Sermo, Zoe→Vita).
“Each aeon is masculo-feminine through conjunction.”tetradem duplicem ex coniugationibus masculorum et feminarum.“A double tetrad from the unions of males and females.”Concept condensed but identical conceptual structure.

Tertullian's use of Scripture in IV.1 makes it Highly Probable the work as a whole derives from Irenaeus's lost Adversus Marcionem.

A close comparative analysis of Tertullian’s Adversus Marcionem (Book IV, ch.1) and the relevant Irenaean texts reveals striking, non‐coincidental parallels. Both authors deploy an identical prophetic catena — Jeremiah 31 followed immediately by Isaiah 43 (and then reinforced by Malachi 1:10–11) — to argue that the “new covenant” and “new things” of Christ were foretold by the one Creator-God. The same verses appear in the same order, joined by the same transitional cues (et alibi vs. “and again”), and interpreted for the same polemical purpose (refuting Marcion’s dualism). Tertullian even echoes Irenaeus’s distinctive interpretive moves: e.g. Tertullian’s “nothing changed without becoming different; nothing different without being contrary” mirrors Irenaean arguments that apparent scriptural oppositions (peace/evil, law/gospel) are reconciled by one God. 

These structural and verbal correspondences — from verbatim quotations to theological logic — are highly unlikely to be independent. Instead they indicate that Tertullian is effectively preserving and reworking an earlier anti-Marcionite dossier, almost certainly derived from Irenaeus’s now-lost Adversus Marcionem. The table below catalogs these parallels. It compares specific passages from Tertullian (Latin) with their counterparts in Irenaeus (Greek/English), showing exact wording, contextual function, and significance. Together with the surrounding argumentation, the overlap suggests not merely a shared tradition of prooftexting but the survival of an Irenaean exegetical structure within Tertullian’s text.

Passage (Tertullian IV.1.5–11)Parallel (Irenaeus)Exact Wording (translated/quoted)FunctionSignificance
Jeremiah 31:31–32 (Latin): “Ecce venient dies… disponam domui Iacob et domui Iudae testamentum novum… non secundum testamentum … in die qua arripui dispositionem eorum ad educendos eos de terra Aegypti.”Adv. Haer. IV.33.14 (Jeremiah 31); Demonstratio 90“Behold, days are coming… I will make a new covenant… not according to the covenant… when I brought them out of Egypt.”Announces new covenant as promise of the CreatorSame prophetic proof-text and polemical aim: continuity of God’s plan; Tertullian’s Latin sequencing mirrors Irenaeus’s prophetic catena structure
Isaiah 43:18–19 (Latin): “Ne rememineritis priorum… vetera transierunt… ecce facio nova… quae nunc orientur.”Adv. Haer. IV.33.14 (Isa 43 renewal passage)“Remember not former things… behold, I make new things… I will make a way in the desert…”Declares divine renewal inaugurating Christian eraSame interpretive move: Isaiah explains nature of the new covenant foretold by Creator; both link immediately after Jeremiah (catena logic)
Isaiah 43:19–21 (desert imagery continuation)Adv. Haer. IV.33.14 continuation“I will make a way in the wilderness… streams in the desert… give drink to My chosen people.”Symbol of new life and graceShared symbolic interpretation: renewal imagery applied to Church/Spirit; similar exegetical framing
Malachi 1:10–11 (Latin): “Non est voluntas mea in vobis… a solis ortu usque ad occasum glorificatum est in nationibus nomen meum… sacrificium mundum…”Adv. Haer. IV.17.5–6“From the rising of the sun to its setting… a pure offering is presented among the nations.”Creator foretells new universal worshipDirect textual and theological parallel; both interpret “pure sacrifice” spiritually (prayer/church offering); near-identical polemical use
Theological move (“Creator-originated renewal”)Irenaeus across AH IV and DemonstratioJeremiah → Isaiah → Malachi prophetic chainArgues change of covenant predicted by same GodShared anti-Marcionite structure; prophetic catena functions as unified proof of continuity
Philosophical argument: “nihil mutatum quod non diversum; nihil diversum quod non contrarium…”Irenaean anti-dualistic logic (one Father preparing kingdom and judgment)Tertullian: innovation/contradiction logic; Irenaeus: one Judge dividing sheep/goatsRefutes dualism via unity behind oppositesStrong structural echo: scriptural oppositions reabsorbed into single divine economy, undermining Marcionite antitheses
Key Structural Parallels: Both authors assemble the same sequence of OT passages, with nearly identical transitional markers (“et alibi” in Tertullian vs. “again” in Irenaeus) between verses. In Tertullian’s text, Jeremiah 31 is immediately succeeded by Isaiah 43 (without any intervening commentary) — exactly as Irenaeus does in AH IV.33.14 . The order is crucial: Jer 31’s promise of a new covenant is followed by Isa 43’s proclamation of “new things”. This ordering (“Jer 31 → Isa 43 → Mal 1”) forms an interpretive unit: the “new covenant” culminates in the “new things” and “pure sacrifice” prepared by God. 

After Malachi, Tertullian continues with philosophical formulae of his own (“nihil mutatum… nihil diversum” etc.) , but these exactly mirror Irenaeus’s conclusion that differences (variation of law and faith) are consistent with one God. For example, Irenaeus had argued that one Father sends the “sheep” to the kingdom and the “goats” to fire as revealed by Christ’s parable ; Tertullian phrases the same truth more abstractly. Both contend that God is “jealous, making peace and creating evil” (the Jeremiah 32:40-41 formula) to show divine unity through antitheses. 

Context and Placement: In both works, this prophetic chain appears as a programmatic opening of a polemic. Irenaeus includes Jer 31–Isa 43–Mal 1 in AH (and in the Demonstratio) precisely to establish God’s prior announcement of gospel renewal. Tertullian begins Book IV with the same catena, after explaining Marcion’s Antitheses and before commenting on Luke’s Gospel. The argumentative intent is identical: to answer Marcion’s charge that God the Creator contradicts the gospel. 

Given these overlaps — identical texts, sequence, wording, and logic — the simplest explanation is literary dependence. Tertullian does not merely happen to quote the same popular OT verses; he quotes them in the same arrangement and employs the same argument. This strongly implies that Tertullian’s Adversus Marcionem preserved material from a prior Irenaean anti-Marcionite dossier (quite possibly Irenaeus’s own lost treatise Contra Marcionem).

Detailed Comparison

  1. Shared Citations (verbatim and sequence): The passage “Ecce venient dies…testamentum novum” in Tertullian is word‐for‐word the Latin Jeremiah 31:31–32. Immediately after, he adds “Vetera transierunt… ecce facio nova” (Isaiah 43:18–19), forming a tight pair introduced by “Et alibi”. Irenaeus does exactly the same: in AH IV.33.14 he quotes Jeremiah 31:31–32 (“new covenant… not such as…”) followed by Isaiah 43:18–19 (“new things… rivers in desert”). The New Testament reference markers (“Jer 31:31–32” and “Isa 43:19–21”) even appear in Irenaeus’s text at the same point. In both texts these citations serve the same function: to show God’s promise of covenant renewal.

  2. Malachi 1:10–11 (Pure Sacrifice): Tertullian continues, “dicente Malachia, Non est voluntas mea in vobis… in omni loco sacrificium nomini meo offertur, et sacrificium mundum”. This is Malachi 1:10–11, literally the same as in Irenaeus AH IV.17.5–6 (“I will not accept sacrifice… My name is great… in every place incense… a pure sacrifice”). Notably, both authors interpret this verse identically: as predicting a new, pure worship (Tertullian says “pure prayer from a pure conscience” for sacrificium mundum; Irenaeus calls it “the Church’s pure sacrifice” through Christ). Both cite Malachi to show that the Creator destined Israel’s former sacrifices to end and a universal offering to begin. The verbal overlap is exact (e.g. “My name is glorified among the Gentiles, and in every place incense… a pure sacrifice” appears in both).

  3. Hermeneutical Moves: In each case the citations are embedded in the same hermeneutical move: the Creator‐origin of Christian novelty. Tertullian explicitly frames them as prophecies foretold by “the same Creator”. So does Irenaeus: in AH IV.33 and the Demonstratio he uses these prophecies to insist that “the same God” made both covenants. For example, Irenaeus AH IV.33.15 interprets Isa 43 as announcing the “faith in Christ” and new Spirit given by God, just as Tertullian uses it to argue Christian law comes from the Creator, not a foreign god.

  4. Philosophical/Logical Parallels (antitheses): After the catena, Tertullian launches a formal refutation of Marcion’s dualism (“Quid differentiam rerum… ? Quid antitheses exemplorum distorques adversus creatorem?”). He even cites Jeremiah 32:40 (“Ego percutiam et ego sanabo, condens mala et faciens pacem”) in his defense. This echoes Irenaeus’s approach that oppositions in Scripture do not imply two gods. In AH IV.33.14–15 Irenaeus similarly argues that one Father prepares both joys and judgments (citing Jesus’ sheep/goats parable and tares allegory), though in narrative form. Tertullian simply abstracts it: “nil mutatum … non diversum, nihil diversum… non contrarium”. The identical intent – to collapse dualism into divine unity – is unmistakable. Even the tricky phrasing ("diversum… contrarium") is a Latin rendering of Irenaean anti-dualist logic.

  5. Placement in the Works: In Irenaeus the Jeremiah–Isaiah–Malachi sequence appears in Against Heresies IV.33.14–15 (the culminating section on prophecy) and again in the shorter Demonstratio (c.90). In Tertullian it sits right at the start of Book IV (Chapter 1 paragraphs 5–8) as his “expeditam” response to Marcion’s antitheses. In both cases it is programmatic: the author uses these scriptures to set the tone that Christian revelation was long ago foreshadowed by the Creator. Notably, Irenaeus has elsewhere announced that he planned a separate treatise “Contra Marcionem” based on the texts Marcion accepted, and Book IV of Tertullian (though styled as Luke commentary) reads exactly like such a treatise.

  6. Probability Assessment: The probability that Tertullian independently composed the exact same pairings in the exact same order is very low. Jeremiah 31, Isaiah 43 and Malachi were common proof-texts, but the combination and arrangement – Jeremiah 31 immediately followed by Isaiah 43, then Malachi – is highly distinctive. The shared transitional markers (“et alibi… dicente Malachia”) and the same motive (to defend the Creator’s unity against Marcion) make it even more unlikely to be coincidental. A random overlap of one or two citations could be chance; but an entire structural “fingerprint” of argumentation strongly suggests textual borrowing.

  7. Alternative Explanations: One might argue both were drawing from a common tradition of anti-Marcionite exegesis rather than direct copying. However, the consistency of phrasing and context tips the balance. For instance, the phrase “Non est voluntas mea… et sacrificium mundum” appears only in Malachi and is too precise to guess. Similarly, Tertullian’s unique construction (“nihil mutatum… nihil diversum”) has no clear parallel outside this debate. We also considered the possibility of a shared oral tradition or unrecorded source, but given that Irenaeus explicitly mentions a written refutation of Marcion and that Tertullian’s work systematically mirrors Irenaeus’s themes, direct dependence is a more parsimonious fit.

  8. Scholarly Context: Modern scholars have noted Tertullian’s extensive reuse of Irenaean material. One recent survey observes that “Tertullian derives from Irenaeus… the idea that the goodness of the alien God is defective…”, and that much of Tertullian’s anti-Marcion polemic “is not significantly greater than… contained in Irenaeus’ scattered references.” This aligns with our finding: Tertullian’s Book IV is largely an expanded Latin reworking of an Irenaean polemic, rather than an entirely new argument. (Some have even proposed lost Irenaean treatises like a “Prescriptions Against Heresies” used by later writers.)

Conclusion 

The textual and structural evidence strongly supports the conclusion that Tertullian’s Adversus Marcionem (Book IV) is essentially a copy or reworking of Irenaeus’s earlier anti-Marcionite arguments. The most telling indicator is the identical prophetic catena (Jer 31 → Isa 43 → Mal 1) used as a single exegetical unit, complete with matching wording and interpretive twists. Coupled with the mirrored logical refutation of dualism (the Creator institutes both covenant and judgment), the overlaps point to literary dependence. In sum, it is far more plausible that Tertullian drew on an Irenaean source—very likely Irenaeus’s lost Contra Marcionem—than that he coincidentally reinvented the same citations and arguments.

Adversus Marcionem IV.1.10 - 11 and Irenaeus

Argument StructureIrenaeus (AH IV.40.1 - 1)Tertullian (Adv. Marc. IV.1.10 - 11)Structural Significance
Polemic target: dualist separation of godsRejects idea of two different Fathers (one saving, one punishing).Quid differentiam rerum ad distantiam interpretaris potestatum? (“Why do you interpret differences of things as differences of powers?”)Same anti-Marcionite thesis: diversity ≠ different deity.
Unity of divine agencyOne Father prepares both kingdom and eternal fire.Creator performs opposite actions: percutiam… sanabo… occidam… vivificabo… faciens pacem… condens mala.Identical logic: opposites belong to one God.
Scriptural paradox (peace vs evil)“I am a jealous God… making peace and creating evil things.”Explicit citation: condens mala et faciens pacem.Same prophetic prooftext used to argue unity through opposites.
Judgment imagery supporting unitySheep vs goats; tares vs wheat — one judge divides humanity.Creator’s nature expressed through antitheses inherent in creation.Shared logic: divine differentiation occurs within single authority.
Antithesis as theological methodSame God produces contrary outcomes (reward/punishment).antitheses exemplorum… in ipsis sensibus et affectionibus eius recognoscere.Tertullian uses explicit philosophical language for same idea.
Creator as source of apparent contradictionCreator prepares both peace and punishment.Creator characterized by natural oppositions: contrarii sibi semper creatoris.Same conceptual explanation for biblical tensions.
Cosmological analogyUnified divine governance of diverse outcomes.World structured by opposing substances (diversitatibus structum).Parallel reasoning: unity through structured oppositions.
Conclusion against Marcionite dualismSame Father behind law and gospel.Prius debueras alium deum luminis… alium legis, alium evangelii… (refutation of dualistic split).Same argumentative climax.
The parallel between Irenaeus and Tertullian here is not simply that both cite similar scriptural themes, but that they deploy an identical logical structure to refute Marcionite dualism. In Irenaeus’s argument the central claim is that the same God who prepares salvation also prepares judgment; therefore the apparent oppositions within Scripture — peace and punishment, mercy and severity — do not imply two different divine powers but rather the single, consistent activity of the Creator. He illustrates this by invoking prophetic paradox (“making peace and creating evil things”), by appealing to judgment imagery (sheep and goats, tares and wheat), and by insisting that diversity of outcomes arises from one divine will. Tertullian reproduces this reasoning almost step for step. His question, quid differentiam rerum ad distantiam interpretaris potestatum? directly echoes the Irenaean premise that difference in effects does not imply difference in gods. He then invokes the same paradoxical divine actions (ego percutiam et ego sanabo… condens mala et faciens pacem), framing them as examples of “antitheses” inherent in the Creator’s own nature. The argument unfolds along the same trajectory: opposites belong to one divine agent; diversity presupposes unity; therefore Marcion’s division between law and gospel collapses. What is especially significant is that the parallel lies in the structure of reasoning, not merely in shared prooftexts. Both authors move from prophetic paradox → unity of divine agency → reinterpretation of scriptural oppositions → rejection of dualist theology. Tertullian’s version reads like a rhetorical reworking that translates Irenaeus’s theological synthesis into a more formal dialectical register, emphasizing “antitheses” and philosophical categories while preserving the same argumentative skeleton. This strongly suggests that Tertullian is not independently arriving at the same conclusions but is reworking a pre-existing anti-Marcionite tradition — plausibly the lost Irenaean Adversus Marcionem — whose characteristic method was to demonstrate that the Creator Himself announced both continuity and transformation, thereby neutralizing Marcion’s claim that contradiction in Scripture requires two gods.

Adversus Marcionem IV.1.9 and Irenaeus Adversus Haereses IV.17 - 18 (Identical Follow Up to Malachi 1.10,11)

 

Structural ElementTertullian — Adv. Marc. IV.1.5–10Irenaeus — Adv. Haer. IV.33.14Irenaeus — Adv. Haer. IV.17–18 / Demonstratio
Jeremiah 31 — New CovenantEcce venient dies… perficiam domui Iacob et domui Iudae testamentum novum…“God would make a new covenant… not such as that made with the fathers…”New covenant foretold by prophets; fulfillment in Christ
Immediate transition formulaEt alibi… introduces next prophecy“and again…” introducing IsaiahSame prophetic chaining method
Isaiah 43 — New things prophecyNe rememineritis priorum… vetera transierunt… ecce facio nova…“Remember not the things of old… behold I make new things…”Same Isaianic renewal motif used for new covenant theology
Hermeneutical functionCreator foretold innovation → anti-Marcionite proofNew covenant predicted by Creator → continuityRenewal comes from same God; law fulfilled not replaced by alien deity
Malachi 1:10–11 — Pure sacrificeNon est voluntas mea in vobis… a solis ortu usque ad occasum… sacrificium mundum…(not in IV.33 but same logic present elsewhere)Explicitly quoted: universal pure offering replacing former sacrifices
Meaning of MalachiNew sacrifice among nations predicted by CreatorSame prophetic renewal argumentChurch’s universal oblation foretold
Sequence of prophetic catenaIsaiah shortened word → Isaiah new things → Jeremiah new covenant → Malachi pure sacrificeJeremiah + Isaiah pairedMalachi added to same renewal framework
Follow-up philosophical reasoningInnovation ⇒ diversity ⇒ apparent contrariety; contrariety ≠ different godTransformation interpreted as unity of salvation historyChange of sacrificial form without change of divine identity
Polemic targetMarcion’s dualism (“difference of powers”)Heretical rejection of Creator continuitySame anti-dualistic aim
Conceptual coreCreator Himself predicted changeCreator announces renewalSame Creator institutes new oblation

Adversus Marcionem IV.1.8 More Proof of Borrowing from Irenaeus (and thus from Irenaeus's Lost Adversus Marcionem)

 

Tertullian — Adversus Marcionem IV.1.8 (Latin)Irenaeus — Adversus Haereses IV.17.5–18.1 (English translation of Greek original)
Prophetic introductionIgitur si alias leges aliosque sermones et novas testamentorum dispositiones a creatore dixit futuras…“He taught the new oblation of the new covenant; which the Church receiving from the apostles offers to God throughout all the world…”
Malachi quotationdicente Malachia, Non est voluntas mea in vobis, inquit dominus, et sacrificia vestra non excipiam de manibus vestris, quoniam a solis ortu usque ad occasum glorificatum est in nationibus nomen meum, et in omni loco sacrificium nomini meo offertur, et sacrificium mundum…“I have no pleasure in you, saith the Lord… from the rising of the sun unto the going down [of the same], My name is glorified among the Gentiles, and in every place incense is offered to My name, and a pure sacrifice…”
Immediate interpretationscilicet simplex oratio de conscientia pura (“namely pure prayer from a pure conscience”)“…the Church offers… a pure sacrifice… Now John… declares that the ‘incense’ is ‘the prayers of the saints.’”
Argument drawnCreator predicted new sacrificial practice among nations replacing earlier offeringsCreator foretold universal Christian offering replacing earlier sacrificial system
Polemic contextAnti-Marcionite: innovation originates from CreatorAnti-dualist continuity: same Creator predicted Christian worship
Structural roleAppears inside opening prophetic catena establishing renewal from CreatorAppears within structured prophetic chain proving unity of covenants

The parallel use of Malachi 1:10–11 in Irenaeus (Adv. Haer. IV.17.5–18.1) and Tertullian (Adv. Marc. IV.1.8) argues strongly for literary dependence because the resemblance extends beyond the mere citation of a popular prooftext to the reproduction of a distinctive exegetical move. In both authors the Malachi passage is introduced within an argument about the Creator’s foretelling of a transformed sacrificial system; the text is then cited almost verbatim (“Non est voluntas mea in vobis… a solis ortu usque ad occasum… sacrificium mundum”) and immediately interpreted as referring not to Jewish cult but to a new, universal form of Christian worship — specifically spiritualized sacrifice understood as prayer or ecclesial oblation. The sequence of thought is essentially identical: prophetic rejection of former sacrifices → prediction of a pure sacrifice among the nations → reinterpretation as the Church’s offering, thereby proving continuity between Creator and Christian practice against dualist or Marcionite claims. Because Malachi 1:10–11 was not universally handled in this precise argumentative configuration, the convergence of wording, placement, and theological function strongly suggests that Tertullian is reproducing an already formulated anti-Marcionite exegetical unit rather than independently constructing the same interpretation. Given that Irenaeus explicitly refers elsewhere to a planned refutation of Marcion and that his surviving works already preserve this exact deployment of Malachi, the most economical explanation is that Tertullian’s Adversus Marcionem preserves and reworks material derived from Irenaeus’s lost treatise of the same name.

Adv Marc IV.1.5 - 6 and Irenaeus (Strong Proof Tertullian's Adversus Marcionem Comes from Irenaeus's Adversus Marcionem)

Tertullian — Adversus Marcionem IV.1.5–6Irenaeus — Adversus Haereses IV.33.14Irenaeus — Demonstratio Apostolica 89
Scriptural SequenceJeremiah 31 (new covenant)Isaiah 43 (new things)Jeremiah 31 → Isaiah 43Isaiah 43 embedded within new-covenant framework
Jeremiah 31 — New Covenant citationEcce venient dies, dicit dominus, et perficiam domui Iacob et domui Iudae testamentum novum, non secundum testamentum quod disposui patribus eorum in die qua arripui dispositionem eorum ad educendos eos de terra Aegypti.“God would make a new covenant… not such as that which He made with the fathers at Mount Horeb…”New covenant theology presupposed; renewal beyond Mosaic legislation
Immediate transition markerEt alibi — second prophecy introduced immediately after Jeremiah“and again…” — explicit sequential linkageSame interpretive movement from covenant renewal to Isaianic prophecy
Isaiah 43 — New things citationNe rememineritis priorum… vetera transierunt… ecce facio nova…“Remember ye not the things of old: behold I make new things… I will make a way in the desert…”“Remember not the former things… behold I make new things which shall now spring up…”
Expanded citation contextShortened formulation but same conceptual structureFull expansion including desert/river imagery and theological expositionSame Isaianic interpretation tied to faith and new life
Exegetical PurposeCreator predicted renewal; anti-Marcionite proof of continuityNew covenant foretold by Creator; unity of salvation historyLaw fulfilled; believers live in newness
Hermeneutical StructureProphetic catena establishing renewal from CreatorIdentical prophetic catenaSame Isaianic reading embedded in same argument
Key Conceptual LinkRenewal originates from Creator, not alien deityRenewal = liberty of new covenantRenewal = life through faith and love
Distinctive FeatureSame two OT texts used consecutively at programmatic opening of Book IVSame pairing and orderSame Isaianic component integrated into identical theological framework

What is striking in the comparison between Adversus Marcionem IV.1.5–6 and Irenaeus (Adversus Haereses IV.33.14; Demonstratio Apostolica 89) is not merely the reuse of familiar prophetic prooftexts but the preservation of a specific structural pattern: Jeremiah 31 (new covenant) immediately followed by Isaiah 43 (new things). In all three witnesses the sequence functions as a tightly linked prophetic catena designed to demonstrate that the renewal proclaimed in Christ was foretold by the Creator Himself. The structure is identical. First comes Jeremiah’s promise of a “new covenant… not like that made with the fathers,” establishing continuity of salvation history within the Creator’s plan. Immediately thereafter, introduced by a transition marker (“et alibi” in Tertullian; “and again” in Irenaeus), Isaiah 43 is cited: “Remember not the former things… behold I make new things.” This second citation provides the interpretive climax, reframing Christian novelty as prophetic fulfillment rather than rupture. The fact that the same two passages appear consecutively, joined by the same rhetorical bridge and deployed for the same theological conclusion, suggests the reuse of a pre-formed exegetical unit rather than independent selection. This pattern matters because prophetic testimonia were not randomly assembled; they were typically transmitted as stable catenae within anti-heretical argumentation. The Jeremiah 31 → Isaiah 43 pairing behaves precisely like such a fixed dossier. In Irenaeus the sequence undergirds the claim that the new covenant and the “new things” of Isaiah belong to the Creator and therefore refute dualist interpretations. Tertullian reproduces the same pairing at the programmatic opening of his Lukan commentary in Book IV, with minimal variation in structure or function. The probability that two authors independently assembled the same consecutive prooftexts, connected by the same transition formula and serving the same anti-Marcionite polemical purpose, is comparatively low. Instead, the evidence points toward literary dependence: Tertullian appears to inherit an already established prophetic catena, most plausibly deriving from Irenaeus’s anti-Marcionite tradition — perhaps even from the lost Adversus Marcionem that Irenaeus himself announces elsewhere. In this light, the Jeremiah 31 + Isaiah 43 sequence functions as a fingerprint of transmission, revealing how Tertullian’s work preserves the structural scaffolding of an earlier Irenaean argument.

Adversus Marcionem IV.1.5 and Irenaeus

Tertullian — Adversus Marcionem IV.1.5–6Irenaeus — Demonstratio Apostolica 87
Isaiah Citation (variant form)Hic erit et sermo, de quo idem Esaias: Quoniam decisum sermonem faciet dominus in terra.“A word brief and short in righteousness; for a short word will God make in the whole world.” (Isa 10:23 variant)
Key Terminologydecisum sermonem (“a cut/abridged word”)“short word,” “brief word”
Underlying Scriptural BasisIsaiah 10:22–23 (LXX tradition: λόγον συντετμημένον / shortened word)Same Isaianic tradition emphasizing brevity/abridgement
Immediate InterpretationNew covenant is compendiated: Compendiatum est enim novum testamentum — reduced, streamlinedSalvation comes through brevity of faith and love, not lengthy legal discourse
Law vs. New EconomyNew testament freed from “laciniosis oneribus legis” (fragmented burdens of law)Law fulfilled through love; salvation not by extensive legal speech
Exegetical PurposeAnti-Marcionite argument: Creator foretold simplification of covenantal economyCatechetical/apologetic argument: prophecy anticipates concise salvation through Christ
Conceptual FunctionShortened divine word = compressed new covenant revelationShortened divine word = salvific principle summarized in faith/love
Structural Role in ArgumentOpening methodological statement for Book IV (Luke commentary framework)Demonstration of prophetic anticipation of Christian salvation economy

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Adversus Marcionem 4.1.6 and parallels

Adversus Marcionem 1.20.7Adversus Iudaeos 3.7Adversus Marcionem 4.1.6
Vetera transierunt, inquit, ecce nova quae ego nunc facio; et alibi, Et disponam testamentum, non quale disposui ad patres vestros cum illos eduxissem de terra Aegypti.
Sic et per Hieremiam,…dicente Hieremia:Item per Hieremiam:
Renovate vobis novamen novum,Innovate vobis novitatemNovate vobis novamen novum,
et ne seminaveritis in spinis;et ne severitis in spinas,
et circumcidimini deo vestro,circumcidimini deo
et circumcidimini praeputia cordis vestri.et circumcidite praeputium cordis vestri.et circumcidimini praeputio cordis vestri.
Et alio loco dicit: Ecce enim dies veniunt, dicit dominus, et disponam domui Iudae et domui Iacob testamentum novum, non tale quale dedi patribus eorum in die quo eos eduxi de terra Aegypti.Et alibi: Ecce venient dies, dicit dominus, et perficiam domui Iacob et domui Iudae testamentum novum, non secundum testamentum quod disposui patribus eorum in die qua arripui dispositionem eorum ad educendos eos de terra Aegypti
 
Stephan Huller's Observations by Stephan Huller
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