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EBIONITES (Heb. ei3'; t, " poor men ") , a name given to the ultra-Jewish party in the early ChristianSee also: church
.
It is first met with in
See also: Irenaeus (Adv
.
Haer
.
26
.
2), who sheds no See also: light on the origin of the Ebionites, but says that while they admit the See also: world to have been made by the true See also: God (in contrast to the Demiurge of the Gnostics), they held Cerinthian views on the See also: person of Christ, used only the Gospel of See also: Matthew (probably the Gospel according to the Hebrews—so See also: Eusebius), and rejected See also: Paul as an apostate from the Mosaic See also: Law, to the customs and ordinances of which, including circumcision, they steadily adhered
.
A similar account is given by See also: Hippolytus (Haer. vii
.
35), who invents a founder named Ebion
.
See also: Origen (Contra Celsum, v
.
61; In Matt. torn. xvi
.
12) divides the Ebionites into two classes according to their acceptance or rejection of the virgin See also: birth of Jesus, but says that all alike reject the Pauline epistles
.
This is confirmed by Eusebius, who adds that even those who admitted the virgin birth did not accept the pre-existence of Jesus as See also: Logos and See also: Sophia
.
They kept both the Jewish See also: Sabbath and the Christian See also: Lord's See also: day, and held extreme millenarian ideas in which Jerusalem figured as the centre of the coming Messianic See also: kingdom
.
See also: Epiphanius with his customary confusion makes two See also: separate sects, Ebionites and See also: Nazarenes
.
Both names, however, refer to the same See also: people'
.
(the Jewish Christians of See also: Syria), the latter going back to the designation of apostolic times (Acts See also: xxiv
.
5), and the former being the See also: term usually applied to them in the ecclesiastical literature of the 2nd and 3rd centuries
.
The origin of the Nazarenes or Ebionites as a distinct See also: sect is very obscure, but may be dated with much likelihood from the edict of See also: Hadrian which in 135 finally scattered the old church of Jerusalem
.
While Christians of the type of See also: Aristo of See also: Pella and Hegesippus, on the snapping of the old ties, were gradually assimilated to the See also: great church outside, the more conservative section became more and more isolated and exclusive
.
" It may have been then that they called themselves the Poor Men, probably as claiming to be the true representatives of those who had been blessed in the See also: Sermon on the See also: Mount, but possibly adding to the name other associations." Out of touch with the See also: main stream of the church they See also: developed a new kind of pharisaism
.
Doctrinally they stood not so much for a See also: theology as for a refusal of theology, and, rejecting the See also: practical liberalism of Paul, became the natural heirs of those early Judaizers who had caused the apostle so much annoyance and trouble
.
Though there is insufficient See also: justification for dividing the Ebionites into two separate and distinct communities, labelled respectively Ebionites and Nazarenes, we have See also: good evidence, not only that there were grades of Christological thought among them, but that a considerable section, at the end of the 2nd century and the beginning of the 3rd, exchanged their See also: simple Judaistic creed for a See also: strange blend of Essenism and See also: Christianity
.
These are known as the Helxaites or Elchasaites, for they accepted as a, See also: revelation the " See also: book of Elchasai," and one See also: Alcibiades of See also: Apamea undertook a See also: mission to See also: Rome about 220 to propagate its teaching
.
It was claimed that Christ, as an See also: angel 96 See also: miles high, accompanied by the See also: Holy Spirit, as a See also: female angel of the same stature, had given the revelation to Elchasai in the 3rd See also: year of Trajan (A.D
.
100), but the book was probably quite new in Alcibiades' See also: time
.
It taught that Christ was an angel See also: born of human parents, and had appeared both before (e.g. in See also: Adam and Moses) and after this birth in Judea
.
His coming did not annul the Law, for he was merely a See also: prophet and teacher; Paul was wrong and circumcision still necessary
.
See also: Baptism must be repeated as a means of See also: purification from sin, and proof against disease; the sinner immerses himself " in the name of the mighty
'
.
So A
.
See also: Harnack, Hist. of Dogma, i
.
301, and F
.
J
.
A
.
Hort, Judaistic Christianity, p
.
199
.
Th
.
Zahn and J
.
B . Lightfoot (" St . Paul and the Three," in Commentary onSee also: Galatians) maintain the distinction
.
and most high God," invoking the " seven witnesses " (sky, See also: water, the holy See also: spirits, the angels of prayer, oil, See also: salt and See also: earth), and pledging himself to amendment
.
Abstinence from flesh was also enjoined, and a good See also: deal of astrological fancy was inter-See also: woven with the doctrinal and practical teaching
.
It is highly probable, too, that from these Essene Ebionites there issued the fantastical and widely read " Clementine " literature (Homilies and Recognitions) of the 3rd century
.
Ebionite views lingered especially in the country See also: east of the See also: Jordan until they were
absorbed by See also: Islam in the 7th century
.
In addition to the literature cited see R
.
C
.
Octley, The See also: Doctrine of the Incarnation, See also: part iii
.
§ ii.; W
.
Moeller, Hist. of the Christian Church, i
.
99; See also: art. in Herzog - Hauck, Realencyklopadie, s.v
.
" Ebioniten also CLEMENTINE LITERATURE
.
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