Heracleon


Heracleon was a Gnostic who flourished about AD 175, probably in the south of Italy. He is described by Clement of Alexandria as the most esteemed
of the school of Valentinus; and, according to Origen, said to have been in personal contact
with Valentinus himself. He is barely mentioned by Irenaeus and by Tertullian
. The common source of Philaster and Pseudo-Tertullian
contained
an article on Heracleon between those on Ptolemaeus and Secundus, and on Marcus
and Colarbasus.
In his system he appears to have regarded the divine nature as a vast abyss in whose Pleroma were Aeons of different orders and degrees, emanations from the source of being. Midway between the supreme God and the material world was the Demiourgos, who created the latter, and under whose jurisdiction the lower, animal soul of man proceeded after death, while his higher, celestial soul returned to the Pleroma whence at first it issued.
He seems to have received the ordinary Christian scriptures; and Origen, who treats him as a notable exegete, has preserved fragments of a commentary by him on the fourth gospel, while Clement of Alexandria quotes from him what appears to be a passage from a commentary on Luke. These writings are remarkable for their intensely mystical and allegorical interpretations of the text.

Life

and Cave have suggested Alexandria
as the place where Heracleon taught; but Clement's language suggests some distance
either of time or of place; for he would scarcely have thought it necessary to explain
that Heracleon was the most in repute of the Valentinians if he were at the time
the head of a rival school in the same city. Hippolytus makes Heracleon one of the
Italian school of Valentinians; but the silence of all the authorities makes it
unlikely that he taught at Rome. It seems, therefore, most likely that he taught
in one of the cities of S. Italy; or "Praedestinatus" may be right in making Sicily
the scene of his inventions about Heracleon.
The date of Heracleon is of interest on account of his use of St. John's Gospel,
which clearly had attained high authority when he wrote. The mere fact, however,
that a book was held in equal honour by the Valentinians and the orthodox seems
to prove that it must have attained its position before the separation of the Valentinians
from the church; and, if so, it is of less importance to determine the exact date
of Heracleon. The decade 170–180 may probably be fixed for the centre of his activity.
This would not be inconsistent with his having been personally instructed by Valentinus,
who continued to teach as late as 160, and would allow time for Heracleon to have
gained celebrity before Clement wrote, one of whose references to Heracleon is in
what was probably one of his earliest works. He had evidently long passed from the
scene when Origen wrote.

Commentary

The chief interest that now attaches to Heracleon is that he is the earliest
commentator on the N.T. of whom we have knowledge. Origen, in the still extant portion
of his commentary on St. John, quotes Heracleon nearly 50 times, usually controverting,
occasionally accepting his expositions. We thus recover large sections of Heracleon's
commentary on cc. i. ii. iv. and viii. of St. John. There is reason to think that
he wrote commentaries on St. Luke also. Clement of Alexandria expressly quotes from Heracleon's exposition of ; and another reference
is in connexion with,
and so probably from an exposition of these verses.

Martyrdom

The first passage quoted by Clement bears on an accusation brought against some
of the Gnostic sects, that they taught that it was no sin to avoid martyrdom by
denying the faith. No exception can be taken to what Heracleon says on this subject.

Exposition

In this exposition every word in the sacred text assumes
significance; and this characteristic runs equally through the fragments of Heracleon's
commentary on St. John, whether the words commented on be Jesus's own or only
those of the Evangelist. Thus he calls attention to the facts that in the statement
"all things were made by Him," the preposition used is
διά; that Jesus is said to have gone down
to Capernaum and gone up to Jerusalem; that He found the buyers and sellers
ἐν τῷ ἱερῷ, not
ἐν τῷ ναῷ; that He said salvation is of
the Jews not in them, and again that Jesus tarried with
the Samaritans, not in them; notice is taken of the point in Jesus's discourse
with the woman of Samaria, where He first emphasizes His assertion with "Woman,
believe Me"; and though Origen occasionally accuses Heracleon of deficient accuracy,
for instance in taking the prophet as meaning no more than a prophet;
"in three days" as meaning no more than "on the third day"; yet on the
whole Heracleon's examination of the words is exceedingly minute. He attempts to
reconcile differences between the Evangelists, e.g. Jesus's ascription
to the Baptist of the titles "Elias" and "prophet" with John's own disclaimer of
these titles. He finds mysteries in the numbers in the narrative—in the 46 years
which the temple was in building, the 6 husbands of the woman of Samaria, the 2 days Jesus abode with the people of the city, the 7th
hour at which the nobleman's son was healed.
He thinks it necessary to reconcile
his own doctrine with that of the sacred writer, even at the cost of some violence
of interpretation. Thus he declares that the Evangelist's assertion that all things
were made by the Logos must be understood only of the things of the visible creation,
his own doctrine being that the higher aeon world was not so made, but that the
lower creation was made by the Logos through the instrumentality of the Demiurge.

Valentinianism

He strives to find Valentinianism in the Gospel by a method of spiritual interpretation.
Thus the nobleman is the
Demiurge, a petty prince, his kingdom being limited and temporary, the servants
are his angels, the son is the man who belongs to the Demiurge. As he finds the
ψυχικοί represented in the nobleman's son,
so again he finds the πνευματικοί in the woman
of Samaria. The water of Jacob's well which she rejected is Judaism; the husband
whom she is to call is no earthly husband, but her spiritual bridegroom from the
Pleroma; the other husbands with whom she previously had committed fornication represent
the matter with which the spiritual have been entangled; that she is no longer to
worship either in "this mountain" or in "Jerusalem" means that she is not, like
the heathen, to worship the visible creation, the Hyle, or kingdom of the devil,
nor like the Jews to worship the creator or Demiurge; her watering-pot is her good
disposition for receiving life from the Saviour.
Heracleon's method is one commonly used by orthodox Fathers,
especially by Origen. Origen even occasionally
blames Heracleon for being too easily content with more obvious interpretations.
Heracleon at first is satisfied to take "whose shoe latchet I am not worthy to loose"
as meaning no more than "for whom I am not worthy to perform menial offices," and
he has Origen's approbation when he tries, however unsuccessfully, to investigate
what the shoe represented. It does not appear that Heracleon used his method of
interpretation controversially to establish Valentinian doctrine, but, being a Valentinian,
readily found those doctrines indicated in the passages on which he commented.

The devil

One other of his interpretations deserves mention. The meaning which the Greek
of
most naturally conveys is that of the pre-Hieronymian
translation "You are from the father of the Devil," and so it is generally understood
by Greek Fathers, though in various ways they escape attributing a father to the
devil. Hilgenfeld, Volkmar, and DeConick consider that the Evangelist shows that he embraced
the opinion of the Valentinians and some earlier Gnostic sects that the father of
the devil was the Demiurge or God of the Jews. But this idea was unknown to Heracleon,
who here interprets the father of the devil as his essentially evil nature; to which
Origen objects that if the devil be evil by the necessity of his nature, he ought
rather to be pitied than blamed.

Redemption

To judge from the fragments we have, Heracleon's bent was rather practical than
speculative. He says nothing of the Gnostic theories as to stages in the origin
of the universe; the prologue of St. John does not tempt him into mention of the
Valentinian Aeonology. In fact he does not use the word aeon in the sense employed
by other Valentinian writers, but rather where according to their use we should
expect the word Pleroma; and this last word he uses in a special sense, describing
the spiritual husband of the Samaritan woman as her Pleroma—that is, the complement
which supplies what was lacking to perfection. We find in his system only two beings
unknown to orthodox theology, the Demiurge, and apparently a second Son of Man;
for on
he distinguishes a higher Son of Man who sows
from the Saviour Who reaps. Heracleon gives as great prominence as any orthodox
writer to Christ and His redeeming work. But all mankind are not alike in a condition
to profit by His redemption. There is a threefold order of creatures:
  1. The Hylic or material, formed of the ὕλη, which is the substance of the devil, incapable of immortality.
  2. The psychic or animal belonging to the kingdom of the Demiurge; their ψυχή is naturally mortal, but capable of being clothed with immortality, and it depends on their disposition whether they become sons of God or children of the devil.
  3. The pneumatic or spiritual, who are by nature of the divine essence, though entangled with matter and needing redemption to be delivered from it.
These are the special creation of
the Logos; they live in Him, and become one with Him. In the second class Heracleon
seems to have had the Jews specially in mind and to have regarded them with a good
deal of tenderness. They are the children of Abraham who, if they do not love God,
at least do not hate Him. Their king, the Demiurge, is represented as not hostile
to the Supreme, and though shortsighted and ignorant, yet as well disposed to faith
and ready to implore the Saviour's help for his subjects whom he had not himself
been able to deliver. When his ignorance is removed, he and his redeemed subjects
will enjoy immortality in a place raised above the material world.
Besides the passages on which he comments Heracleon refers to