[[@page.5.2.23]]5.2.23 - Gnostic
"Early Christian writers already used the term as a general name for various social groups which were not content with orthodox practices and beliefs otherwise widely accepted. The first certain early Christian reference to the term, and this in an orthodox text, is 1Ti. [[6:20|bible.75.6.20]]. In reflecting on the theological problem of the origin, development, and continued existence of evil, these gnostic groups were at odds with developing orthodoxy."1 "Gnosticism, a name indicating the assumption of superior capacity for knowledge (Gk. gnosis, 'knowledge'). Gnosticism in its diverse forms received its impulse, and in the main its guidance, from pagan philosophy. In different ways it denied the humanity of Christ, even to the extent of denying the reality of His human body."2 "For the Gnostics, the nature of that which is truly man is spiritual, and the essential principle in the saved person is the spiritual seed or nature planted in him."3
Notes
1 Kurt Rudolph, "Gnosticism," in David Noel Freeman, ed., The Anchor Bible Dictionary (New York, NY: Doubleday, 1996, c1992), 2:1033.
2 Merrill K. Unger, R. Harrison, Frederic F Vos, and Cyril J. Barber, The New Unger's Bible Dictionary (Chicago, IL: Moody Press, 1988), s.v. "Gnosticism."
3 Everett Ferguson, "Irenaeus: Adversary of the Gnostics," in John D. Woodbridge, ed., Great Leaders of the Christian Church (Chicago, IL: Houghton Mifflin, 1993), 45.
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