The
First Church of "Christian" Gnosticism
by Gary
DeMar
Not long ago, I
received an email from a woman who asked me if I could direct her to
some information that refutes Gnosticism. She said
that she has “friend who claims to be on an extraordinarily intense
spiritual ‘pilgrimage’ of ‘really pressing in to know
God intimately’—but this guy has in effect divorced himself
from the material world and from all relationships (including his wife
and 10 children) which he views as a hindrance to his spiritual growth.”
Gnostics
claim to have special knowledge (gnosis) on how to live the
Christian life that is not revealed to “ordinary Christians.” God’s
revelation in Scripture is not good enough or sufficient to give direction
on how to live the Christian life. Of course, this refutes what the Bible
says when it states that Scripture is “adequate” and equips
the Christian “for every good work” (2 Tim. 3:17). She went
on to say that a “farmer was putting up hay recently and needed
to get it in as they were expecting rain. Before he finished, he
remembered that he had scheduled a Bible study, so he left his hay in
order to keep the ‘spiritual’ duty. The rain came and
the hay was lost, but he felt justified that he had chosen the higher
calling.”
Another
feature of Gnosticism is the belief that there are two separate realms—“one
spiritual, the other material. The spiritual realm, created by God, [is]
all good; the material realm, created by the demiurge, all evil. Man
[needs] to be saved, not from Original Sin, but from enslavement to matter.”1
A
further expression of Gnosticism was expressed by someone who “doesn’t
believe in voting because that is a ‘worldly affair,’ and
he wants only to be engaged in truly spiritual activities.” For
the Gnostic, the material world is on a lower plane. Only “spiritual
things” are useful and profitable. A Gnostic-like belief might
forbid marriage while advocating “abstaining from foods” even
though “God has created these things “to be gratefully shared
in by those who believe and know the truth” (1 Tim. 4:3). Godliness
is defined as a retreat from the world and despising the things of the
world.
[The Gnostics] devised a dualistic cosmology to set against the teachings
of the early Christian Church, which, they claimed, were only common
deceptions, unsuited for the wise. The truth was esoteric. Only the properly
initiated could appreciate it. It belonged to a secret tradition which
had come down through certain mystery schools. The truth was, God could
never become man. The Gnostic secret is that the spirit is trapped in
matter, and to free it, the world must be rejected.2
For the Gnostic,
life “must
be escaped at any cost.”3 But
if there can be no immediate material escape, then a spiritual escape
is a good enough substitute. The Gnostic escapes from the responsibilities
of history. But for the Christian, history is the realm of decision-making,
and, therefore, is anti-Gnostic. If we are not responsible for history,
then we are not responsible for decision-making. But even a casual reading
of the Bible will show that our faith is to be lived out in the world
so that “fruit,” good works, are manifested for the world
to see and for Christians to judge (Matt. 7:15–23). No restrictions
are placed on where this fruit is to mature.
One of the central
issues that divided gnostics and orthodox Christians in the early Church
was their understanding of the relationship between religion and politics.
The Church Fathers accepted the political worldliness of the Jewish
faith, contending that religion and politics are interconnected and
inseparable. The early Puritans and even Jonathan Edwards, following
classical Calvinism, would have been clearly orthodox in this regard.
The world of politics, of human institutions, was for them an essential
locus of God’s redemptive work.4
What is contemporary
Gnosticism like? While it might not manifest itself in ascetic practices
like pole sitting, it does reveal itself in institutional escape. Institutional
escape is not in the Protestant tradition, however. Our nation’s
earliest Christian citizens did not view escape, either eschatologically,
ascetically, or institutionally, as being biblical. Education, publishing,
and politics, to take just three areas, were to be governed by the
Word of God as were ecclesiastical affairs. Modern-day Gnosticism thrives
in a climate of escapism which means retreat from this world and responsibility
to do anything to change any part of it. If this world means nothing,
then I am not responsible for its evils.
1. Dusty Sklar, The Nazis and
the Occult (New York: Dorset Press, [1977] 1989), 140–41.
2. Sklar, The Nazis and the Occult,
147.
3. Philip Lee, Against the Protestant
Gnostics (New York: Oxford University Press, 1987), 122.
4. Lee, Against the Protestant
Gnostics, 123–24.
Gary
DeMar is president of American Vision and the author of more than 20 books. His latest is Myths, Lies, and Half Truths.
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