Page:Ante-Nicene Christian Library Vol 5.djvu/45

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
Book i.]
IRENÆUS AGAINST HERESIES.
19

from her tears, and some from her perspiration. And since there are also in the world certain waters which are hot and acrid in their nature, thou must be left to guess their origin, how and whence. Such are some of the results of their hypothesis.

5. They go on to state that, when the mother Achamoth had passed through all sorts of passion, and had with difficulty escaped from them, she turned herself to supplicate the light which had forsaken her, that is, Christ. He, however, having returned to the Pleroma, and being probably unwilling again to descend from it, sent forth to her the Paraclete, that is, the Saviour.[1] This being was endowed with all power by the Father, who placed everything under his authority, the Æons[2] doing so likewise, so that "by him were all things, visible and invisible, created, thrones, divinities, dominions."[3] He then was sent to her along with his contemporary angels. And they relate that Achamoth, filled with reverence, at first veiled herself through modesty, but that by and by, when she had looked upon him with all his endowments, and had acquired strength from his appearance, she ran forward to meet him. He then imparted to her form as respected intelligence, and brought healing to her passions, separating them from her, but not so as to drive them out of thought altogether. For it was not possible that they should be annihilated as in the former case,[4] because they had already taken root and acquired strength [so as to possess an indestructible existence]. All that he could do was to separate them and set them apart, and then commingle and condense them, so as to transmute them from incorporeal passion into unorganized matter.[5]

  1. "Jesus, or Soter, was also called the Paraclete in the sense of Advocate, or one acting as the representative of others."—Harvey.
  2. Both the Father and the other Æons constituting Soter an impersonation of the entire Pleroma.
  3. Col. i. 16.
  4. That is, as in the case of her mother Sophia, who is sometimes called "the Sophia above," Achamoth being "the Sophia below," or "the second Sophia."
  5. Thus Harvey renders ἀσώματον ὕλην; so Baur, Chr. Gnos., as quoted by Stieren. Billius proposes to read ἐνσώματον, corporeal.