Heresy: Difference between revisions
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* French protestants, for example, the Huguenots, were persecuted for heresy | * French protestants, for example, the Huguenots, were persecuted for heresy | ||
* various modern Protestant churches may reject core Catholic beliefs of | * various modern Protestant churches may reject core Catholic beliefs of | ||
** Eucharist | ** Sacraments of Confirmation, Priestly Ordination, and the Eucharist | ||
** Saints | ** Saints | ||
** Church tradition | ** Church tradition | ||
== Table of heretical and schismatic movements == | == Table of heretical and schismatic movements == |
Revision as of 14:41, 11 February 2024
Heresy = denial of the orthodox faith
Schism = deviation from orthodoxy without full denial of it
Orthodox = "the right way", what it is accepted, i.e. Catholic belief
This page includes list of Heresies and schisms
Definitions
orthodoxy
- "ortho" (true, straight, right ) + doxa (opinion, praise) = "right opinion
heterodoxy
- "hetero" (another, of the other) + dox = other opion
- note: the suffix -doxy comes from PIE root *dek- "to take, accept"
heterodoxy
- "heresy", which means "against accepted or established standards"
- heresy is from Greek hairesis for "taking for oneself"
Divinity of Christ
most but not all heresies come from misunderstandings or heterodoxic teachings about the nature of Christ
- as all man
- not divine, a prophet, not God
- or all God
- not man, thus only present in appearance not substance of a man
- implicates understanding of Mary
- Mother of God = gave birth to a man
- as a divine "vessel": = carried God not a man
- implicates belief in the Eucharist
- if Christ is all-man, or if Christ is all-God, then the Eucharist cannot be real
- because, either way, the bread and wine are only material and not divine
- if Christ is all-man, or if Christ is all-God, then the Eucharist cannot be real
Heresies and Schisms
Types of heresies and heretical beliefs
asceticism
- requires strict compliance with religious code
- adherence to self-mortification, including
- excessive fasting
- physical pain
- abstinence from pleasure, including
- alcohol
- sex
- material goods
- isolation or monasticism
- Asceticism may be practiced by orthodox believers, especially Saints
- but as a movement that requires strict adherence it becomes heretical
docetism
- believed that Christ was not mortal, did not actually die on the Cross
Gnosticism
- denied the humanity of Christ
- loathed the material world, saw it as corrupt
- believed in a "secret wisdom" that was revealed only to followers
- came of Greek traditional religion mixed with Christianity
modalism
- belief in one God who has different "modes" but not different persons
- strict monotheism
Monarchianism
- denies the Trinity
- claims that God is one person only
- strict monotheism
Mormanism
rigorism
- extremely literal and/or strict adherence to dogma (beliefs, Scripture, etc.)
- does not allow for exceptions or circumstances
- ex. would consider all theft wrong without exception (such as dire need)
- may also ignore contradictory or qualifying dogma
- ex. sin v. forgiveness
see
Heretical religions
Islam
- rejects Christ as God
Judaism
- reject Christ as Messiah and God
Mormonism
- has non-Biblical beliefs such as "saints" (members of the Mormon church) as gods (polytheism)
Protestantism
- especially in the early period of the protestant movement was seen as not merely schismatic but heretical
- French protestants, for example, the Huguenots, were persecuted for heresy
- various modern Protestant churches may reject core Catholic beliefs of
- Sacraments of Confirmation, Priestly Ordination, and the Eucharist
- Saints
- Church tradition
Table of heretical and schismatic movements
>> todo: combine charts (1st one imported from S4S.wiki)
Movement | Christ as God alone | Christ as Man alone | Christ as other | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Adoptionism | Y | believed the Jesus the man was not God but God adopted him at his birth; his spirit was returned to God at the Resurrection and Ascension | ||
Doscetics | Y | N | Christ existed in spirit only | His physical presence was illusionary |
Gnostics | Y | Gnostics had "secret knowledge" from an unknown God | ||
Marcions | Christ was different from the Old Testament God | |||
Montanism | "New Prophesy" movement adhered to Christian orthodoxy but focused on prophesy and revelations from the Holy Spirit | |||
Rigorism | Novatian believed that no sinner should be allowed into a church; forbade remarriage |
Movement | Century | Belief | Category 1 | Category 2 | Heresy | Orthodoxy | Heterodoxy |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Judaisers | 1st | Judaism required for Christians | New Covenant | Belief in Christ | Jewish Law | ||
Manachiasm | Belief in Christ | ||||||
Donatism | Confession of faith required | asceticism | reconciliation impossible | Belief in Christ | Purity of sacramental office | ||
Origenism | |||||||
Pelagianism | asceticism | denied original sin | Belief in Christ | ||||
Marcionism | Christ only divine | gnosticism | rejected the Old Testament | held that Paul was the only true Apostle | |||
Montanism | 2nd | prophetic | |||||
Novationism | 3rd | rigorism | asceticism | denied return of Lapsi (apostates) after the Decian persecution; his followers called themselves the "Church of the Pure" | |||
Arianism | 3rd | Denied divinity of Christ | |||||
Nestorianism | 5th | Christ human only | rejected the Trinity | denied Mary as Mother of God; taught the "prosopic union" of Christ as divine and human as separate entities | |||
Islam | 8th | strict monotheism | prophetic | docetism | Denial of divinity of Christ | ||
Eastern Ortohdox | 9th | ||||||
Manichaean | |||||||
Paulicians | |||||||
Joachimites | 13th | cultish worship of the Holy Spirit | milleniarian | followers of Joachim of Fiore who taught end-of-times millenarism that was to start in 1260 | |||
Lollards | 15th | ||||||
Protestantism | 16th | ||||||
Mormanism | 19th | asceticism | prophetic | ||||
Jehovah's Witness | 19th | ||||||
Modernism | 19th | ||||||
Atheism | 20th |
asdf
Apostolic age
Judaizers
- held that to be a Christian one must first become a Jew and adhere to traditasdfional Jewish law
Early Church age
Marcionism
- denied the Old Testament God
- held that Christ was divine only and only appeared as a Man, was not
Montanism
- or "New Prophesy"
- believed that God spoke to followers who were inspired by the Holy Spirit
- Montanus and his followers were known to "babble" while claiming to be filled with the Holy Spirit
- Montanus had two followers who also claimed gifts of prophesy, Prisca and Maximilla, two women who with Montanus claimed ecstatic visions
- they told followers to fast excessively in order to experience the same visions
- Montanus likely hung himself, as did Maximilla.
- afterwards, Prisca led the movement, which passed along to Quintilla, who claimed that Eve was heroic for having eaten of the Tree of Knowledge and followed the Hebrew prophetess Miriam (sister of Moses) as rationale for female priests
- the movement became a form of Gnosticism
Pelagianism
- Pelagius argued that when born humans are not subject to Original Sin
- and therefore had entire powers of a free will
- sin, therefore, was a choice and avoidable
- the movement fell into asceticism as way of proof of one's purity
Medieval age
Modern age
Modernism
- Pius IX and X warned of the dangers of modernism