Wednesday, May 30, 2012

The Third Chapter in My New Book

A lot of things don't make sense in this world.  Take for instance of the stand of the Roman Catholic Church against 'same sex marriage.'  The community actively tells their members that their opposition is not rooted in bigotry.  They say they are forced in to their position to protect the sanctity of marriage.  Now let's think about the irony of this statement for a moment.  An all male priesthood that strictly prohibits its members from ever getting married is actively telling people the marital bond between a man and a woman is 'sacred.'  They might as well say - 'sacred for the rest of you, but not for us.'  

Most people count on their priest or pastor to tell them what it is that Christianity has always believed, what it has always practiced.  So it is generally presumed by most people that 'the Church' has always joined heterosexuals in marriage and condemned same sex unions of any kind.  It seems to be a 'no-brainer' to most people.  Christianity is rooted in Judaism,  Moses gave the Jews laws governing marriage and prohibiting homosexuality.  What could be more straightforward than that?

Of course this is all little more than the folly that American evangelicals have recently thrust onto what is essentially a Christian religion in decline.  We have long since lost track of why our ancestors believed what they did over a thousand years ago.  While it might seem to make sense that because many of the statements related to marriage in the Pentateuch might seem to lend themselves to a mystical understanding within Christianity - most notably Genesis 2:24 "that is why a man leaves his father and mother and is united to his wife, and they become one flesh" - there simply was little or no recognition of heterosexual marriage as something sacred in our earliest Christian sources.  The one exception being of course, the flatters of Demetrius in Alexandria at the turn of the third century.[1]

So how could a most influential religion like Christianity have a hostile attitude toward heterosexuality or at the very best one which exhibited profound indifference?   The arguments connecting Christianity with Judaism can only go so far as the two tradition interpreted common material in very different ways.  Judaism at its most basic, viewed sex as a blessing while earliest Christianity saw it largely as a sin.  Of course there is the ubiquitous claim of modern believers that 'fornication' - that is, sex out of the bonds of marriage - is what was properly objectionable to early Christianity.  Yet this is a gross misrepresentation of the actual situation.

For it is impossible to believe that if early Christianity intended human sexuality to be confined to marriage they would have developed something resembling a marriage 'sacrament.'  As one historian of early Christianity notes "marriage was arranged with the consent of the Church, according to the law of the Land. If the couple were both Christians, they probably received the bishop's or elder's benediction at the Lord's table. Holy, however, and awful (as a mystery, or sacrament) was Marriage itself, not its liturgical solemnization."[2]  Surely, it is impossible to believe that Jesus, the apostles or anyone in the early Church was actually advocating on behalf of the sanctity of the institutions of Roman civil law.  Yet this is exactly what people do when they argue for the 'sex is only bad if its out of wedlock' position.

So it is that we have demolished the most important argument developed by opponents of same sex marriage.  There was no such a thing as 'holy Christian matrimony' at the beginning of Christianity.  People were always getting married and having children.  Nevertheless marriage was seen as a difficulty - an obstacle if you will - with regards to developing your spirituality.  Moreover the Church - even the venerable Roman Catholic tradition - took the position that marriage was best left to the civil authorities.  Indeed for the first several centuries of its existence all marriages - even those between Christian couples - were civil unions.  The Church simply wasn't in the business of marrying heterosexuals.

Demetrius's marriage for instance was certainly done outside of the Egyptian Church.  The same kind of logic was being promoted in north Africa in the writings of Tertullian in the third century - "marriage good, celibacy better."  Yet Tertullian's interpretation seems to also to represent a novelty rather than established tradition.  We have no other early examples of a married bishop anywhere in Africa outside of these two examples (although Athanasius the Patriarch of Alexandria in the fourth century seems to have used Demetrius's example to argue that bishops could marry).  In spite of all of this the very idea of a married presbytery went wholly against the grain in the early Church.  So Jerome makes clear that it was the universal regulation of the East, of Egypt, and of Rome to ordain only those who were unmarried, or who ceased to be husbands.[3]

So now at last we settle upon the Roman Catholic rejection of marriage - a practice that has continued into the modern age.  There are no examples of Popes who ruled the Church with wives at their side.  There were of course a handful of officials who were widowers or put aside their wives in order to enter into the priesthood.  Pope Siricius (384–399) left his wife and children to become Pope.  Pope St. Agatho (678–681) was married for twenty years as a layman and had one daughter. In maturity he followed a call to God. With his wife’s blessing he became a monk at the monastery of Saint Hermes in Palermo. It is thought his wife entered a convent.  Pope Adrian II (867–872) was married before he took Holy Orders, to a woman called Stephania, and had a daughter. His wife and daughter were still living when he was elected Pope and resided with him in the Lateran Palace. They were murdered by Eleutherius, brother of Anastasius Bibliothecarius, the Church's chief librarian.

Nevertheless it has to be said that there is a clear tradition in the Roman Catholic Church - one which was originally shared by the Alexandrian and north African traditions, that priests and Popes were forbidden to be married. As early as the third century we see a Pope being accused of corrupting this celibate tradition.  Yet the charges are wholly overblown and sensationalist in nature.[4]  If women were always kept away from the priests in Rome, it is worth at least investigating the possibility that the tradition may have been open to establishing some sort of ritualized syzygy between men.  Of course such a suggestion sounds scandalous when made in the context of the current debate about same sex partnerships yet it is a line of investigation which has never gained much traction in scholarly research.

It may be proper then to delicately ask the question - where should one begin to look for two men yoked in some sort of union at the beginning of the Roman Catholic tradition?  There are just so many famous figures; the task might seem rather daunting.  After all how much information do we really have about the Church of St Peter?  And then it dawns on us.  While it is commonly referenced as Peter's church, the earliest authorities actually describe Rome as the joint possession of St Peter and St Paul.  Could the twin apostles Peter and Paul be the divinely sanctioned syzygy between male members of the Church totally overlooked by researchers into the early tradition?

What is so astounding when you look at the evidence from antiquity is how consistently they are represented as a mystical couple.  Irenaeus for instance - a man who did more to define 'orthodoxy' than any other human being in the history of Christianity clearly and repeatedly speaks of "Peter and Paul preaching at Rome" rather than merely Peter.  His near contemporary Dionysius of Corinth similarly speaks of those "joined in close union the churches that were planted by Peter and Paul, that of the Romans and that of the Corinthians:  for both of them went to our Corinth, and taught us in the same way as they taught you when they went to Italy; and having taught you, they suffered martyrdom at the same time."[5]  Moreover a group of heretics witnessed in Rome but originally from Alexandria are said to join their disciples souls in union "superior to his disciples Peter and Paul ... and in no respect inferior to Jesus."[6]


The source for story about the so-called 'Carpocratian sect' included a bishops list for the Roman see which began with "Peter and Paul."  The same list was undoubtedly used by Irenaeus when he wrote in his classic work Against Heresies in the last generation of the second century that "the universally known Church founded and organized at Rome by the two most glorious apostles, Peter and Paul; as also the faith preached to men, which comes down to our time by means of the successions of the bishops."  His purpose clearly was to distinguish this tradition which was fully sanctioned by the Roman state with the "perverse opinion [of those who] assemble in unauthorized meetings" - namely those aforementioned Carpocratians but also other sects as well.[7]

It is very significant for us to take notice of the fact that both Roman and Alexandrian traditions took some sort of interest in uniting two men in a mystical syzygy.  The main difference is clearly that the heretics continued to engage in this practice in the present day (and were thus 'heretics' in effect) while the Roman tradition simply venerated one such divine pairing from the distant past - viz. 'Peter and Paul.'  One can see in many ways the same thing happening with respect to Jesus too.  A pathos of distance between 'us' the believers and 'them' the holy men or divine spirits is beginning to set in.

Not withstanding this observation it is worth referencing the fact that the Roman Church was clearly never originally understood to one man's see but rather belonged to a syzygy, that of Peter and Paul.  Indeed it is often overlooked that in the last quote from Irenaeus he goes on to speak of a line of bishops emerging from "Peter and Paul" rather than just Peter.  Irenaeus develops the idea that Linus was the first bishop of Rome but that even this seems to be something of a misunderstanding of the original list.  For the fourth century Church Father Epiphanius seems to infer another pair immediately followed - that of "Linus and Cletus."[8]  Moreover, while Clement appears next all alone in the Roman list his 'pair' seems to have been the imaginary and now unnamed bishop of Corinth (probably Dionysius 17:34) with whom he had a long and utterly fabulous correspondence.[9]

In other words, if we pay careful attention both "Linus and Cletus" and Clement and his partner can be identified as successors the each of the original divine syzygy of the Church of Rome.  For Linus is always identified as the Linus in 2 Timothy 4:21 just as Tertullian says that Cletus rather than Linus was the heir of St Peter.  The only reason people ever started to say that Linus succeeded Peter was because of the attempt to establish a single line of succession in Rome.  Moreover Clement was Peter's well established disciple no less than Dionysius was associated with Paul.

Indeed this idea that there were two bishops associated with each of "Peter and Paul" seems to have continued down into the third century.  When for instance Hippolytus attacked Pope Callistus at the beginning of the third century he did so as a bishop of Rome in his own right.[10] Similarly the equally famous Gaius of Rome writing at about the same time Irenaeus not only speaks of "Peter and Paul" being the founders of the Roman Church - "And I can show the trophies of the apostles. For if you choose to go to the Vatican or to the Ostian Road, you will find the trophies of those who founded this church" - but was himself identified with the title the "bishop of the nations."[11] This is unmistakably a sign that he was the heir of the Pauline chair which looked after all of the church as compared we must presume with Peter having jurisdiction over the churches of Italy.  


The important thing for us to see is that these shrines of Peter and Paul were originally associated with two different Christian groups in two different parts of Rome.[12]  They were ultimately venerated as a cult of twins, a divine syzygy which transcended physical distance.  It is hard not to believe that this Roman cult was developed from an original Alexandrian model identifying Peter and Mark as adoptive 'brothers.'   The original model in Alexandria must have been the pairing of Moses and Aaron in the Book of Exodus or perhaps even the mystical relationship between God and his Word.[13]  It is difficult to now how this idea was transplanted to Rome but the aforementioned Carpocratians are one possibility.  There were also Valentinians in the capitol in the early second century and they are said to have taken a special interest in the pairing of Peter and Paul.[14]   

In any case as we shall demonstrate in our next chapter, the point of origin of this twin doctrine may well have been Alexandria.  Origen similarly likens Peter and Paul to angels and makes a point of saying that both men now have identical 'spiritual natures' - they are one soul in two bodies.[15]  This Alexandrian - or later 'Origenist' - idea diffused into a great many writings of the Church Fathers in the fourth and fifth centuries.  One author who developed this notions was Gregory of Nyssa.[16]  The tradition was also passed along on 'Origenist monks' who settled in the Mar Saba monastery in Palestine in the fifth century.  So John Cassian certainly makes reference to the same interpretation of Peter and Paul participating in one divine nature. 

Nevertheless the mystical doctrine receives its fullest expression in the writings of John of Damascus. John had access to the Mar Saba library's excellent theological library in the eight century and could express those original ideas in ways which were unthinkable centuries earlier (mostly as a result of Islamic rather than Christian governors now keeping the peace).  So it is very interesting to see John make absolutely explicit that the divine pair:

Peter and Paul are not counted as separate individuals in so far as they are one. For since they are one in respect of their essence they cannot be spoken of as two natures, but as they differ in respect of subsistence they are spoken of as two subsistences. So that number deals with differences, and just as the differing objects differ from one another so far they are enumerated.  The natures of the Lord, then, are united without confusion so far as regards subsistence, and they are divided without separation according to the method and manner of difference. And it is not according to the manner in which they are united that they are enumerated, for it is not in respect of subsistence that we hold that there are two natures of Christ: but according to the manner in which they are divided without separation they are enumerated, for it is in respect of the method and manner of difference that there are two natures of Christ. For being united in subsistence and permeating one another, they are united without confusion, each preserving throughout its own peculiar and natural difference ...  For things which differ from each other in no respect cannot be enumerated, but just so far as they differ are they enumerated; for instance, Peter and Paul are not enumerated in those respects in which they are one: for being one in respect of their essence they are not two natures nor are they so spoken of.[17] 

Of course this is an incredibly bold portrait of Peter and Paul.  It makes clear what we only get in bits in pieces from other sources.  Peter and Paul essentially sharing the divine nature of Christ because of their union. Yet John does not make explicit how it was that the two were 'paired' in the first place.  This seems to be a secret than none of the Christian mystics want to give up.  

We can hear lots of the same mystic language from John later in the same work.  At one point he notes for instance that while Peter is seen to be separate from Paul to the uninitiated observer, to those who have undergone a similar experience and been initiated into the divine mysteries "the community and connection and unity are apprehended by reason and thought. For it is by the mind that we perceive that Peter and Paul are of the same nature and have one common nature. For both are living creatures, rational and mortal: and both are flesh, endowed with the spirit of reason and understanding. It is, then, by reason that this community of nature is observed."[18]

As noted earlier, these ideas were clearly not of John's own invention but go back to various 'Origenist' writers since the later second century.  Gregory of Nyssa again notes at one point in his debate with the neo-Arian Eunomius his opponent calls members of his tradition "rash for instancing the unity of nature and difference of persons of Peter and Paul, and says we are guilty of gross recklessness, if we apply our argument to the contemplation of the objects of pure reason by the aid of material examples."[19]  Of course Gregory and members of the tradition always avoided acknowledging that they secretly 'syzygized' their members into same sex pairs.  More specifically we can see from a survey of their literature dating back to Origen that they avoided coming out and admitting that 'syzygized' men like Peter and Paul were co-equals with Christ.  It certainly had a heretical ring to it.  It also seems to echo what we just read in the early report about the practices of the Carpocratians in Rome.  

Indeed as we have already noted, what we begin to see happening over time is the 'safe' veneration of one particular syzygized male couple - that of Peter and Paul - above all others.  There certainly were others outside of Rome - Cyrus and John, Sergius and Bacchus, Philip and Bartholomew, Cosmas and Damian, George and Demetrius, the two Theodores - just to name a few who cult 'caught on' in the later period.  The underlying idea which was being systematically repressed was clearly that syzygized men together became the living embodiment of Christ.  The process of 'being syzygized' helped transform these ordinary individuals into something especially holy.  It was a divine pattern established by Jesus himself.

So it is that Theodoret writing in the fifth century in his Ecclesiastical History explicitly makes reference to the divine pairing of Peter and Paul as brothers or 'yokefellows' (syzygoi).  This language certainly takes us back to the discussions we saw earlier in Clement of Alexandria and related Alexandrian writers with respect to the spiritual equivalent of 'marriage' for men.  The only difference now is that this divine syzygy is said to have been established between Peter and Paul at their meeting at Antioch described in the canonical Acts of the Apostles.  For Theodoret writes that the Antiochenes during the persecutions of the pagan Emperor Julian in the fourth century endured only because they "had received their divine teaching from the glorious syzygoi Peter and Paul, and were full of warm affection for the Master and Saviour of all, persisted in execrating Julian to the end."[20]

The fact that Peter and Paul are described as a 'syzygy' certainly goes back to the second century.  As noted we have already seen how important the idea was to the early Alexandrian tradition.  Yet the notion already made its way to Rome at a very early date.  Not only were there Valentinians in Rome and outside of the capitol influencing Roman Christianity in the early second century, we learn that Tatian, the disciple of Justus the philosopher said that "several divine beings and several invisible aeons; everything is a mixture of good and evil, because everything lives in syzygy." [21]  While there is no direct mention of a Peter and Paul pairing here it is important to note that the veneration of syzygized men certainly predated the cult of these two saints.  Indeed this was instead the one specifically sanctioned example of a phenomena that went back to the beginnings of Christianity.  

Indeed the concept undoubtedly began with the much more primitive notion that one chosen disciple of Jesus was joined with him to become a single divine syzygy.  We see one of the clearest living examples of this original phenomenon being perpetuated into the third century Mesopotamian environment with the rise of Mani the leader of the Manichaean church.  We read over and over again in the early Manichaean writings about Mani associating with divine powers and in particular one described as his 'syzygos' (his Twin, Companion or guardian angel also his 'syzyg'). [22] This power turned out to be Mani’s special protector who granted him a special revelation at the completion of his twenty fourth year. [23] 

The story goes that after Mani became 'syzygized' with his twin he broke with the particular Jewish Christian baptismal sect he grew up in.  This Syzygos figure was ultimately identified as 'Jesus the Splendour' yet scholars are pretty certain that Mani himself was just mining an established apostolic tradition that seems to have been especially popular in the East - that of the Edessan cult of Judas called 'the twin' (= Thomas).  The tradition that Jesus had a special relationship with a twin named Judas survives in the Syriac Acts of Judas Thomas among other texts.  The likelihood is that in the Semitic Christian tradition this disciple Judas, rather than Simon, became the original foundation of the Church.[24]

The point then is that  we have at least two wholly independent traditions demonstrating that the divine syzygy concept was established by Jesus among his apostles.  While the Manichaean texts use different terms for this being - 'the Nous' (= Mind), Paraclete etc - the basic idea in this tradition is always the same.  As noted the Syzygos, Mani's alter ego, was sent to him from heaven:  this Twin brought Mani the revelation by reminding him of his divine nature and mission; and, like his guardian angel, he protected him.[25]  These details were certainly appropriated from the cult of Judas.  In the West by contrast we see the 'passing on' of the ritual syzygizing of pairs of disciples after Jesus but no mention any longer - or at least until relatively recently - of the original act of Jesus pairing with his one beloved disciple.  

It is worth noting that the Pauline Epistles themselves do make reference to the apostle's syzygos in Philippians 4:3 - "I ask you, my true syzygos, help these women since they have contended at my side in the cause of the gospel ... whose names are in the book of life."  Scholars have never agreed who or what this syzygos was.  Some ancient sources argue that this is a reference to Paul's wife.[26]  Nevertheless it is hard not to see this reference was originally taken by at least some sectarians to be a reference to the supernatural Jesus.  In other words, Paul like Mani and Judas before him was 'partnered' in some way with Jesus.[27]

The idea that Paul by making reference to his syzygos was alluding to a female companion derives once again from the third century Alexandrian attempts to flatter Demetrius.  Modern scholarship dismisses the possibility that this syzygos was female.[28]  Nevertheless it points to the desperation among third century Alexandrians to find a precedent for what was happening to their see.  It is worth noting that it was in Alexandria after all that the gnostics blamed the creation of the world on a male-female syzygy.  This idea is reinforced throughout the earliest Catholic reports on the beliefs of the heresies and is reflected in the recently rediscovered gnostic writings at Nag Hammadi, Egypt in such texts as the Sophia of Jesus Christ or the Apocyphon of John.  The latter work, for instance presents the myth that Wisdom wanted to reveal her image out of herself without the assent of her male syzygos. She brought forth because of her wantonness, prounikos. Her work, as a result was corrupt and in need of redemption.

It is impossible to read these fables as anything other than a disguised attack on what we might call 'heterosexualism.'  In other words, it is part of a broader attack of certain men who eschewed members of the opposite sex and actively promoted the same sex unions they took on at baptism.  If women can be saved, the argument was made, they must 'unsex' themselves in the manner of Lady MacBeth's famous soliloquy.  We see for instance the very early Egyptian gospels cited with apparent approval by Clement of Alexandria which idealize the sterilization of women.  Moreover it is also very telling that when Jerome finally turns his back on Origenism he makes specific reference to a very heretical sounding myth which makes reference to both the pairing of 'Peter and Paul' and the unsexing of women.

Jerome declares that his "researches have reached this result, that you must believe and hold the resurrection of the flesh in this sense that men’s bodies will be turned into spirits and their wives into men; and that before the foundation of the world souls existed in heaven, and thence, for reasons known to God alone, were brought down into this valley of tears, and were inserted into this body of death; that, in the end of the ages the whole of nature, being reasonable, will be fashioned again into one body as it was in the beginning, that man will be recalled into Paradise, and the apostate angel will be exalted above Peter and Paul, since they, being but men, must be placed in the lower position of paradise, while he will be restored to be that which he was originally created; and that all shall together make up the Church of the first born in heaven, and, while placed each in his separate office, shall be equally members of Christ: but all of them taken together will be the perfect body of Christ."[29]

It is very important to take note of the fact that Jerome is here revealing for the first time all the secrets he has been hiding during his life as a crypto-Christian.  For years he has hidden the true nature of the Alexandrian doctrine that brought him into the Christian faith.  Yet now, in the midst of the so-called 'Origenist controversies' which raged throughout the fifth century, he was openly exposing what he claimed was the central myth to the tradition which dated at least as far back as the time of Clement.  The reference to the repentant apostate angel being superior to Peter and Paul seems to echo statements made in the second century about the Carpocratian sect by a Roman source.  However by far the most interesting statement is the tradition promised to turn men's bodies into spirit and their wives into men.  In effect this is the clearest statement that 'spiritual men' were understood to be united with other 'spiritual men' in the neo-Alexandrian faith.[30]  

It is clear then that all early Christians agreed that women had to become male to be perfected.  Yet this is only a statement about 'progress' as Philo of Alexandria termed it at the very dawn of the tradition.[31]  If Christians were claiming to embody perfection themselves it would stand to reason that their partners could only be male.  A man and a woman 'marriage' would necessarily represent the repudiation of Christian 'progress' over Judaism.  So it is that we should go back and view the early Roman depiciton of the divine pairing of Peter and Paul as the crystalization of the Alexandrian same sex ideal.  It was not part of the development of the doctrine but rather an officially sanctioned representation of what was by the end of the second century the quintessence of Christian doctrine.

The official understanding was clearly based on the ideas in the canonical Acts of the Apostles (one may even argue that the pairing in Acts was modeled after Alexandrianism).  In essence then, there is a pre-existing notion that Jesus had become the syzygos of Simon Peter.  Peter in turn was supposed to have become 'yoked' to Paul and this pair was essentially hijacked from Antioch to the Roman capitol sometime in the mid to late second century.  By the third century the cult of heavenly twins was the most basic expression of Roman Christianity.  It proved to other traditions outside of Rome that its tradition was the embodiment of Christianity per se given that all Christianities of this time were developments of the sacredness of divinely sanctioned same sex unions.

As already mentioned the only thing new that the Roman tradition added to the mix was the emphasis of the sanctity of the 'Peter and Paul' syzygy rather than any other more ancient apostolic pairing.  In other words, the Edessan claim that Judas had become Jesus's twin, that Simon was the living spokesmen for Jesus after the resurrection and even the traditional Alexandrian pairing of pairing of Peter and Mark were ultimately either destroyed or obscured by this artificial late second century pious fabrication.  It was the most perfect embodiment of the "if you can't beat 'em join 'em" principle. Indeed most of the work which has been done of the alleged 'battle' between the Roman 'orthodoxy' and the heresies beyond the capitol fundamentally mistakes the rooting of Catholicism in gnostic principles.

To this end when we see the idea expressed over and over again that Peter and Paul established as 'one divine nature' it is only a conscious adaptation of pre-existent 'heretical' assumptions about same sex syzygies.  The only transformation now is that rather than Jim and John becoming Christ together, the exemplars of same sex unions are safely tucked away in the distant past.  Indeed a careful examination of the various writings cannot escape the notion that syzygy of Peter and Paul has actually replaced Jesus as the head of the Church.  After all, the Jerusalem Church could claim that Jesus 'founded' something in Jerusalem.  Yet Jesus never visited Rome, never visited Antioch or Alexandria.  There is a reason why heads of companies or important dignitaries lay the foundation stone of a building or smash a bottle of champagne at bow of a ship.  It simply comes down to the principle that being there matters.

To this end it is the primal Peter and Paul syzygy rather than Jesus which is consistently identified as the 'father(s)' of all the believers of the Roman church.  This is certainly why Irenaeus represents the line of Patriarchs of Rome to have come from them.  Yet the underlying sense here goes beyond merely establishing a more perfect recreation of a chain of syzygies.   There is still a wisp of the most primitive understanding that 'Christ' is present wherever two men come together in his name.[32]

So for instance we see in some of the earliest Catholic writings the notion that Peter and Paul 'speak together' and 'work together' as Christ.  Ignatius of Antioch makes reference to concept with respect to the statement "Peter and Paul who issue orders unto" the Church of Rome.[33]  Note of course that one of the cornerstones of the Catholic scriptures - here very distinct from the earlier heretical canon - that Paul somehow became of one mind with Peter.  Indeed many readers simply read through these references to 'becoming of one mind' in the early literature not recognizing that 'mind' (= Gk. nous) was another way of saying God the Father.  

The mystical act of Peter and Paul coming to one mind is yet another way of expressing their communion of spirit - or indeed as the Alexandrians originally had it, one spiritual substance.  Because their flesh was transformed their minds changed too.  What is also commonly misunderstood is that their supposed 'interest' in the dispute between Peter and Paul which precedes their concord was completely the invention of the Church Fathers.  The earlier traditions simply assumed that while Peter and Paul were of one substance, they represented different authorities within the heavenly household. Peter as aforementioned had jurisdiction over the 'psychic' church in Rome while Paul looked beyond to the greater 'spiritual' matters which were of interest to an elite group within all Christian communities spread across the world. 

To this end, with respect to the development of the gospel the original understanding was such that 'Peter and Paul' jointly composed the text.  The third century's Anatolius of Alexandria for instance speaks of "the successors of Peter and Paul, who have taught all the churches in which they sowed the spiritual seeds of the Gospel."[34]  Similarly Pope Leo in the fifth century speaks of the "progenitors" at Rome "who learnt the Gospel of the Cross of Christ from the very mouth of the most blessed Apostles Peter and Paul."[35]  In other words - and this is critical - despite the fact that Peter and Paul labored separately for the most part in their careers, 'the Gospel' as such was developed from the synergy of their working together.  It was not Peter's gospel, it was not Paul's gospel - 'the Gospel' - represents the mixing of their teachings in the same way as the sacramental cup was part water and part wine.[36]

So the slightly earlier third century Latin Church Father Tertullian speaks of "Peter and Paul" mystically establishing the gospel together "from the very beginning" and which "which has been kept as a sacred deposit in the churches of the apostles."[37]  Which Church might you ask?  The answer should by now be obvious - "what utterance also the Romans give, so very near to whom Peter and Paul conjointly bequeathed the gospel even sealed with their own blood."   Most scholarship seems to get sidetracked with respect to understanding this mystical symbiosis between Peter and Paul in the early Church.  This is principally due to the fact that this statement comes in a work directed against a particularly important heretic named Marcion who interestingly enough was profoundly influential in Rome.[38]

It is commonly claimed that followers of Marcion 'hated' Peter and 'only loved' Paul.  Yet there is no credible evidence from the Church Fathers which supports this view.  Instead the Marcionites may well have simply had offensive ideas about the implications of the divine syzygy established between two apostles.  For if we turn to the parallel discussion in another one of Tertullian's treatises the objectionable belief of these heretics is spelled out a little differently.  The heretics claim that Peter and Paul had different roles in the development of the gospel.  Something was lacking in Peter's understanding which was completed by Paul or as Tertullian characterizes it "that a fuller knowledge might afterwards have come to them, such as came to Paul who blamed his predecessors."[39]

In other words, according to the now 'heretical' model, Peter came along and first introduced a gospel which Paul developed more spiritually or as Tertullian again expresses it "another form of Gospel was introduced by Paul beside that which Peter and the rest had previously put forth."  To this end it was not a case of the heretics 'slighting' Peter per se but rather the orthodox taking exception to the view that Peter was somehow only capable of lesser revelation.  The controversy seems in many ways very similar to the debate over the relationship of the Father to the Son in the fourth century - and there is very good reason for this apparent likeness.  This is because the original model for Peter and Paul was that of Moses and Aaron and they in turn were consistently likened by early Alexandrian writers to the relationship between the heavenly powers of Mind and Word (= nous and logos).

We shall develop this concept much more fully in what follows but for the moment it is enough to say that like all relationship, pairing does not mean absolute equality.  In a marriage there is inevitably 'the producer' (i.e. the one who works or makes more money) and the 'nurturer' (i.e. the one who directs where that potential energy is 'actualized').  In the divine household there was God Almighty, the source of everything and his viceroy, the creative Word who had the job of directing his creation.

It is important to note that Peter and Paul are likened to Moses and Aaron in Roman Christian representations as early as the fourth century.  Indeed the earliest identification to this effect appears in the Second Epistle of Clement on Virginity perhaps dating to the close of the second century.  The idea also shows up in later accounts of the apostle's paired martyrdom.  Here Paul is clearly Aaron and after arriving in Rome, he appeals to the Jews who rejected Peter's teachings about the law to be obedient to their new Moses.  As the Blackwell Companion on Paul notes "art historians, noting the apostles' frequent pairing, have suggested possible iconographic prototypes, including Rome's other founding duo, Romulus and Remus."[40]  The motif, usually referred to as the concordia apostolorum, shows them in a tight embrace.  

A fourth-century version of this motif was discovered in the recent excavations of the catacomb of the 'ex-vigna Chiaraviglio,' near the Basilica of San Sebastiano, possibly associated with the memoria to the apostles at that site.  We are told that:

Two palm trees, standing on either side of the apostles, attest to their coming martyrdom as they lock arms in greeting. Another early example of this theme, on an early fifth-century ivory belt buckle discovered beneath the cathedral of Castellammare di Stabia (30 km southeast of Naples), shows the two leaning in toward one another, their cheeks touching and their arms entwined. This particular composition may have been influenced by a painting in Rome's fourth-century basilica of San Paolo fuori le Mura (destroyed  by fire in 1823). Here, Paul and Peter's meeting was the final fresco on the north wall, ending a series of forty episodes on the life of Paul and concluding a biblical cycle that made brotherhood one of its unifying themes by depicting Cain and Abel, Isaac and Ishmael, Jacob and Esau, Joseph and his brothers, and Moses and Aaron. One of the scenes of Moses and Aaron portrayed the two brothers embracing – perhaps an intentional allusion to the concordia apostolorum.[41]

It is also interesting to note that at the very moment the paintings were being completed, the Church Father Gaudentius of Brescia preserved the same ideas in writing.  Gaudentius emphasized the analogous, fraternal relationships, citing the line of Psalm 133:1, “Behold how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity" and as “twins” born from one spiritual womb, “blood brothers,” siblings by a communion of blood.[42]  

Of course in the original model for the Church of Rome in the second century, Peter was the bishop of the Roman Church, the first bishop of the first see.  Paul on the other hand seems to have founded the office of the 'bishop of the nations' whose representative may have had the job of ensuring that all the churches worked together.[43]  Like Moses and Aaron they were likened to the heavenly lights of the sun and the moon who illuminated the day and night and ultimately only 'coming together' (= synodos) at the beginning of the lunar cycle.[44]  Indeed in later literature related to their martyrdom the two twin lights are miraculously understood to have died on the same day but in two different place in Rome to illustrate their mystical symbiosis.[45] 

As we have noted many times in our discussion the Christian cult of the heavenly twins was not rooted in Rome.  There is good reason to believe that the mystical interpretation of Peter and Paul's role in the Roman Church was deliberately cultivated in the second century a specific political purpose.  Given all that we have demonstrated so far it would seem almost certain that the Roman model was highly influenced, or perhaps more accurately - went out of its way to co-opt - the original Alexandrian interpretation of Peter and Mark as contemporary Moses and Aaron figures.  In other words, the pairing of Peter and Paul was a conscious mythical fabrication to remold the primary divine syzygy away from its native soil in Alexandria.[46]  It was above all else a political contrivance developed for the benefit of Roman hegemony.  


This understanding was recognized by the nineteenth century French scholar Ernst Renan described the situation as follows.  "It was admitted that Peter and Paul had been the two chiefs, the two founders of the Church of Rome, and thus they became the two halves of an inseparable couple, two luminaries like the sun and the moon. What one taught, the other taught also; they were always agreed, they combated the same enemies, were both victims of the perfidies of Simon Magus; at Rome, they lived like two brothers, the Church of Rome was their common work. Thus the supremacy of that Church was founded for centuries."[47]  This understanding absolutely fundamental to understand what principles Christianity has always been rooted in.  As noted in our introduction, there is no room for claiming that opposite sex pairing was sacred in any way.  The twin apostles served as a reminder that divinity was only to be found in same sex syzygies.  

In the words of the Acts of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul,"we have believed, and do believe, that as God does not separate the two great lights which He has made, so He is not to part you from each other, that is, neither Peter from Paul, nor Paul from Peter; but we positively believe in our Lord Jesus Christ, into whom we have been baptized, that we have become worthy also of your teaching."

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[1] cf. Clement Stromata 3.6.52
[2]
[3]
[4] The accuser's name was Hippolytus, a famous Church Father.  The accused was Callistus, a figure we saw in our last chapter as an associated with third century Pope decry his allowing "bishops, priests, and deacons, who had been twice married, and thrice married, began to be allowed to retain their place among the clergy" or indeed to allow "any one who is in holy orders should become married ... to continue in holy orders as if he had not sinned."  The critic here is the famous Roman Church Father Hippolytus and his target was the sitting Pope named Callistus.  The argument being made by Hippolytus is that Callistus is becoming too lax with respect to keeping heterosexuality outside of the Church.  There is absolutely no room in the Church of Rome for a presbyter who is currently married.
[5]
[6] For their souls, descending from the same sphere as his, and therefore despising in like manner the creators of the world, are deemed worthy of the same power, and again depart to the same place. But if any one shall have despised the things in this world more than he did, he thus proves himself superior to him.
[7] Indeed Epiphanius struggles to make the numbers work the original list used by Irenaeus.  For he notes that the primitive chronology said that "Linus and Cletus were bishops for twelve years each after the death of Saints Peter and Paul in the twelfth year of Nero."  Yet something was bothering Epiphanius about the original list for he suggests that they might have ruled in Rome while Peter and Paul were ministering and then come back after their deaths.  What may have given Irenaeus, Epiphanius and everyone else that ever tried to establish a single
[8]
[9]
[10]
[11]
[12] The distinction between the Petrine "bishop of Rome" and the Pauline "bishop of the nations" is very significant as it seems to be reflected in the canonical Acts of the Apostles and related Pauline epistles.  Paul is after all "the apostle to the nations" (Romans 1:15, 11:13, Galatians 2:8).  He is portrayed in Acts as establishing churches all over the world while Peter does not.   These was probably some visible sign or memorial to each apostle in the city of Rome to which Gaius is referring.  Some such monuments are known to have existed before Constantine.  The location of these objects were likely only known to the faithful.  Much later these trophies became the tombs of the Apostles Peter and Paul.  Indeed about the middle of the third century, in fact, there appeared two bodies which became venerated as those of the Apostles, and which likely came from the the catacombs of the Appian Way, which was contained many Jewish cemeteries. In the fourth century these corpses reposed in the neighborhood of the “two trophies.” Above these “trophies” were then raised two basilicas of which one had become the present basilica of St. Peter and of which the other, St. Paul-beyond-the-Walls, have kept their essential forms until our day.
[13]
[14] Irenaeus 4::35 on the Valentinians - Therefore let them not any longer assert that Peter and Paul and the other apostles proclaimed the truth, but that it was the scribes and Pharisees, and the others, through whom the law was propounded. But if, at His advent, He sent forth His own apostles in the spirit of truth, and not in that of error, He did the very same also in the case of the prophets; for the Word of God was always the self-same: and if the Spirit from the Pleroma was, according to these men’s system, the Spirit of light, the Spirit of truth, the Spirit of perfection, and the Spirit of knowledge, while that from the Demiurge was the spirit of ignorance, degeneracy, and error, and the offspring of obscurity; how can it be, that in one and the same being there exists perfection and defect, knowledge and ignorance, error and truth, light and darkness?
[15] Origen - so that to one angel the Church of the Ephesians was to be entrusted; to another, that of the Smyrnæans; one angel was to be Peter’s, another Paul’s; and so on through every one of the little ones that are in the Church, for such and such angels as even daily behold the face of God must be assigned to each one of them;2061 and there must also be some angel that encampeth round about them that fear God.2062  All of which things, assuredly, it is to be believed, are not performed by accident or chance, or because they (the angels) were so created, lest on that view the Creator should be accused of partiality; but it is to be believed that they were conferred by God, the just and impartial Ruler of all things, agreeably to the merits and good qualities and mental vigour of each individual spirit.
2.  And now let us say something regarding those who maintain the existence of a diversity of spiritual natures, that we may avoid falling into the silly and impious fables of such as pretend that there is a diversity of spiritual natures both among heavenly existences and human souls, and for that reason allege that they were called into being by different creators; for while it seems, and is really, absurd that to one and the same Creator should be ascribed the creation of different natures of rational beings, they are nevertheless ignorant of the cause of that diversity.  For they say that it seems inconsistent for one and the same Creator, without any existing ground of merit, to confer upon some beings the power of dominion, and to subject others again to authority; to bestow a principality upon some, and to render others subordinate to rulers.  Which opinions indeed, in my judgment, are completely rejected by following out the reasoning explained above, and by which it was shown that the cause of the diversity and variety among these beings is due to their conduct, which has been marked either with greater earnestness or indifference, according to the goodness or badness of their nature, and not to any partiality on the part of the Disposer.  But that this may more easily be shown to be the case with heavenly beings, let us borrow an illustration from what either has been done or is done among men, in order that from visible things we may, by way of consequence, behold also things invisible.
Paul and Peter are undoubtedly proved to have been men of a spiritual nature .. those, viz., who have been made the sons of God, or the children of the resurrection, or who have abandoned the darkness, and have loved the light, and have been made children of the light; or those who, proving victorious in every struggle, and being made men of peace, have been the sons of peace, and the sons of God; or those who, mortifying their members on the earth, and, rising above not only their corporeal nature, but even the uncertain and fragile movements of the soul itself, have united themselves to the Lord, being made altogether spiritual, that they may be for ever one spirit with Him, discerning along with Him each individual thing, until they arrive at a condition of perfect spirituality, and discern all things by their perfect illumination in all holiness through the word and wisdom of God, and are themselves altogether undistinguishable by any one.
[16] A third century forgery in the name of Ignatius speaks of "Clement, a hearer of Peter and Paul."\
[17] Augustine reports the existence of books in Rome written by Jesus which "bore on their front, in the form of epistolary superscription, a designation addressed to Peter and Paul" instructing them on how to perform miracles.
[18]
[19
[20]
[21]
[22] (CMC 13.2; 101.14 and probably—cf. ZPE 58 1985 53—133.12)
[23] (CMC 17.8 ff.; 73.5–6)
[24]
[25]
[26]
[27]
[28]
[29]
[30] “Let us men then cherish our wives, and let our souls cherish our bodies, in such a way as that wives may be turned into men and bodies into spirits, and that there may be no difference of sex, but that, as among the angels there is neither male nor female, so we, who are to be like the angels, may begin to be on earth what it is promised that we shall be in heaven.”
[31]
[32]
[33] And thou who hadst been frightened by the high priest’s maid in the house of Caiaphas, hadst no fear of Rome the mistress of the world.  Was there any less power in Claudius, any less cruelty in Nero than in the judgment of Pilate or the Jews’ savage rage?  So then it was the force of love that conquered the reasons for fear:  and thou didst not think those to be feared whom thou hadst undertaken to love.  But this feeling of fearless affection thou hadst even then surely conceived when the profession of thy love for the Lord was confirmed by the mystery of the thrice-repeated question.  And nothing else was demanded of this thy earnest purpose than that thou shouldst bestow the food wherewith thou hadst thyself been enriched, on feeding His sheep whom thou didst love.
[34]
[35]
[36]
[37] Interestingly Irenaeus never makes the connection between Peter and Paul's preaching in the capitol and the development of the first gospel.  The idea comes forward instead that Matthew emerged first while the two were busy establishing 'the foundation of the Church' (sans gospel apparently) and Peter's preaching became the Gospel of Mark and Paul's the Gospel of Luke.  Yet this was clearly not necessarily the original conception.  What sort of a gospel is this that could be perfectly preached by both Peter and Paul independent of one another?  The Church Father Lactantius writing at the turn of the fourth century speaks of the "gospel" preached by the two apostles in the following terms.  Jesus "opened to them all things which were about to happen, which Peter and Paul preached at Rome; and this preaching being written for the sake of remembrance, became permanent, in which they both declared other wonderful things, and also said that it was about to come to pass that after a short time God would send against them a king who would subdue the Jews, and level their cities to the ground, and besiege the people themselves, worn out with hunger and thirst. Then it should come to pass that they should feed on the bodies of their own children, and consume one another. Lastly, that they should be taken captive, and come into the hands of their enemies, and should see their wives most cruelly harassed before their eyes, their virgins ravished and polluted, their sons torn in pieces, their little ones dashed to the ground; and lastly, everything laid waste with fire and sword, the captives banished for ever from their own lands, because they had exulted over the well-beloved and most approved Son of God. And so, after their decease, when Nero had put them to death, Vespasian destroyed the name and nation of the Jews, and did all  things which they had foretold as about to come to pass."
[38]  Origen (Hom. Luc 25.5) tells is that the followers of a certain Marcion claimed that Paul was the syzygos or Paraclete who sat to the right and their Marcion to the left.  
[39]
[40]
[41]
[42]
[43]  Leo speaks of Paul as one who "was still busied with regulating other churches, didst enter this forest of roaring beasts, this deep, stormy ocean with greater boldness than when thou didst walk upon the sea."  This clearly points to the original twofold division of the Roman episcopal throne between one representative that basically took care of domestic affairs (= Peter) and another figure who was 'bishop of the nations' (= Paul).  So Leo again says later in the same treatise that Paul was "the vessel of election and the special teacher of the nations."
[44] In one sense they were likeFor example, we see that at the beginning of the fifth century again Theodoret Bishop of Cyprus makes reference to the concept of Peter and Paul.  In a letter to Pope Leo of Rome he praises the continuity of the steadfast devotion to the divine pair in the holy city "in her keeping too are the tombs that give light to the souls of the faithful, those of our common fathers and teachers of the truth, Peter and Paul. This thrice blessed and divine pair arose in the region of sunrise, and spread their rays in all directions. Now from the region of sunset, where they willingly welcomed the setting of this life, they illuminate the world. They have rendered your see most glorious; this is the crown and completion of your good things; but in these days their God has adorned their throne by setting on it your holiness, emitting, as you do, the rays of orthodoxy." Pope Leo the Great himself makes reference to the same imagery on the divine couples feast day, describing   Paul as "the partner" of Peter's glory.  Speaking of their sufferings at the beginning of the Roman see he notes that "a progeny have sprung from these two Heaven-sown seeds is shown by the thousands of blessed martyrs, who, rivaling the Apostles’ triumphs, have traversed the city far and wide in purple-clad and ruddy-gleaming throngs, and crowned it, as it were with a single diadem of countless gems.  And over this band, dearly-beloved, whom God has set forth for our example in patience and for our confirmation in the Faith, there must be rejoicing everywhere in the commemoration of all the saints, but of these two Fathers’ excellence we must rightly make our boast in louder joy, for God’s Grace has raised them to so high a place among the members of the Church, that He has set them like the twin light of the eyes in the body, whose Head is Christ.  About their merits and virtues, which pass all power of speech, we must not make distinctions, because they were equal in their election, alike in their toils, undivided in their death."   John Chrysostom speaks of "the imitators of Paul' manifesting his living presence on the earth but the pair of Peter and Paul doing the same in heaven above "where the Cherubim sing the glory, where the Seraphim are flying, there shall we see Paul, with Peter, and as a chief and leader of the choir of the Saints, and shall enjoy his generous love. For if when here he loved men so, that when he had the choice of departing and being with Christ, he chose to be here, much more will he there display a warmer affection."  Chrysostom goes on to confess that he loves the city of Rome above all its other achievements and antiquity for the fact that "both in his lifetime he wrote to them, and loved them so, and talked with them whiles he was with us, and brought his life to a close there.  Wherefore the city is more notable upon this ground, than upon all others together. And as a body great and strong, it hath as two glistening eyes the bodies of these Saints. Not so bright is the heaven, when the sun sends forth his rays, as is the city of Rome, sending out these two lights into all parts of the world. From thence will Paul be caught up, from thence Peter. Just bethink you, and shudder at the thought of what a sight Rome will see, when Paul ariseth suddenly from that deposit, together with Peter, and is lifted up to meet the Lord.  What a rose will Rome send up to Christ!  what two crowns will the city have about it! what golden chains will she be girded with! what fountains possess! Therefore I admire the city, not for the much gold, not for the columns, not for the other display there, but for these pillars of the Church." 
[45] In the thirteenth century the author of the Golden Legend compiled a list of ancient traditions related to the saints and repeatedly makes reference to the mystical significance of Peter and Paul's simultaneous death.  "Some have doubt whether Peter and Paul suffered death in one day, for some say it was the same one day, but one a year after the other."  Yet as the author notes "Jerome and all the Saints that treat of this matter accord that it was on one day and one year, and so is it contained in an epistle of Dionysius, and Leo the pope saith the same in a sermon, saying: 'We suppose but that it was not done without cause that they suffered in one day and in one place the sentence of the tyrant, and they suffered death in one time, to the end that they should go together to Jesus Christ, and both under one persecutor to the end that equal cruelty should strain that one and that other. The day for their merit, the place for their glory, and the persecution overcome by virtue. So Leo.'" Similarly Dionysius the alleged mystical devotee of Paul saw a vision of the twin apostles united in love after their death - "I saw them coming in hand in hand at the gate of the city, clothed in luminous garments and crowned with crowns of brilliance and light.” The angelic character of the saints was understood to have been established 'secretly' while they were alive but only clearly manifest after their death.
[16] Gregory of Nyssa - So far are we from referring to an ordinary man the cause of this great and unspeakable grace, that even if any should refer so great a boon to Peter and Paul, or to an angel from heaven, we should say with Paul, “let him be anathema.” For Paul was not crucified for us, nor were we baptized into a human name
[47]

Saturday, May 26, 2012

The First Draft of the First Two Chapters of My New Book

Chapter One

In the beginning there was Jesus, but who or what is Jesus?  Let's face it, there are more cockamamie theories about this guy than you can shake a stick at.  Everyone seems to have a new angle on the familiar story and so it is that there's a seemingly endless production of books and articles claiming to reveal the 'real Jesus' of history which all seem to inevitably hit bookstores in the lead up to Easter.

It's now almost impossible to keep track of all the sensational theories.  Previous blockbusters include ‘Jesus the Galilean peasant,’ ‘Jesus the rabbi,’ ‘Jesus the revolutionary,’ ‘Jesus the magician,’ ‘Jesus the pacifist,’ ‘Jesus the Cynic,’ ‘Jesus the Jew,’ ‘Jesus the Gentile,’ ‘Jesus the Buddhist,’ ‘Jesus the hermaphrodite,’ ‘Jesus the sage,’ ‘Jesus the Essene,’ ‘Jesus the Pharisee,’ ‘Jesus the king,’ ‘Jesus the socialist’ and of course ‘Jesus Christ.’ Of course the million dollar question is how could all these personalities fit into one historical person?  Even the Sybil didn't have this range or repertoire.

In 2011 an America charismatic pastor named Wendell Smith took matters one step further.  He organized a major media campaign essentially saying Jesus can be whoever you want him to be.  There is no need to worry about whether the evidence supports your wild claims - just do as you please.  As the ‘Jesus is _________’ website spells it out:

Jesus is a lot of things, but the answer is in the Bible. It says that Jesus is the Son of God, who came to earth on a mission to restore mankind to God. By living a perfect life, dying on a cross, and coming back to life, His mission was a success. We can know God because of Jesus. So maybe the reality of who Jesus is remains too big for the blank.

Apparently Jesus can be whoever or whatever you want him to be.  You can turn him into whatever you want - except of course, he can't be allowed to associated with homosexuality.  Mainstream Christianity is incredibly uncomfortable and inflexible about this.  It is 'unthinkable' in America at least to suppose that Jesus might have had anything resembling a positive attitude toward same sex attraction and same sex unions.

The reason we bring this up of course is that it is impossible to really know someone if your understanding of that person is rooted in false assumptions.  There's always that interview with the neighbors of the serial killer - 'he seemed to be a nice, clean cut kid' - or the spouse who can't believe they've just seen their significant other arm in arm with someone else.  We can't claim to know someone until we've considered all the options.  That is why we will begin this investigation by going to the 'unthinkable' notion that Jesus might have been in favor of some form of homosexuality.  Because when it really comes down to it - you just never know.  

For instance can it be determined that Jesus was ever 'in favor' of heterosexual marriages in any way, shape or form?  I don't think it can.  We are just told this because it is a convenient assumption.  There has always been marriage.  The gospel even has Jesus make reference to topics related to marriage for instance his chastising Moses for allowing for divorce.  Yet none of this really proves that Jesus was in favor of heterosexual coupling as described in the writings of the Jews.  It might just be that Jesus wanted married people to stay miserable or at least not to find happiness with someone else.  

I make this point quite seriously.  For there is another argument which frequently comes from the mouths of religious people in many subtle ways which simply holds no water.  Why does God care if we are happy?  If there is a divine power and we are like ants next to his greatness, it would be unthinkable that the emotional well being of otherwise insignificant creatures would matter to the ruler of all things.  Yet for the modern Christian believer in America the idea that God would bend over backwards to make sure that they pay their cable bill comes almost second nature.

The bottom line here is that we can't continue to use what we want to be true or need to be true to guide our understanding of who Jesus was.  As a Jewish person I have something of an advantage in this regard.  I begin with a tabula rasa, a clean slate, as I had no presuppositions about who or what this foreign relic from antiquity should be taken to be.  I was drawn to the study of early Christianity quite by accident - a chance meeting at a bar where I met my future wife who happened to be Catholic.  In order to understand here, I needed to come to terms with this culture that ultimately grounded her.

Since sex is such a powerful force between two young people it was inevitable that at least some of my research into origins of early Christianity would focus on this topic.  After all, the traditional Catholic attitude toward sex is at the very least unnatural, if not downright strange.  How could sex be inherently sinful if indeed each of us were created from this act?  Indeed, wasn't it God himself who said 'be fruitful and multiply'?  What kind of a God changes his mind midstream during his lifespan?

Indeed while my future wife believed in many of the doctrines of her Church she had less than no interest in thinking about what she believed.  Her profound indifference to analyzing her faith was by no means unusual.  This seemed to be the attitude of most 'women of faith.'  I was suddenly struck with a profound realization.  Most guys who were good at something could expect getting laid as a reward for their mastery of that skill.  The victorious athlete, the successful businessman, the popular musician all shared that in common but not the holy man, the theologian or the scholar.  What then was the point in becoming an expert on the Christian religion?

The answer that shines through from the writings - and from the doctrine held by believers - is that there is something better or beyond human sexuality.  This is the whole point of the Christian religion.  Over and over again in the earliest writings of the Church you are told that if you manage to be brought into acquaintance with this amazingly profound understanding, you would lose your interest in getting laid by women.

This is the central argument developed in favor of the Christian faith that existed from the time of Jesus.  Once you know, you won't be interested in heterosexual sex.  It appears in countless ancient writers almost none of whom were married men, so there must be something to it - unless of course these same writers were by nature disinterested in women to begin with and used the religion to cover up their natural inclinations.

Our point of course is not to deride traditional religion only to expose its barest soul.  If we were to ask - where did the idea that something better than sex existed in the world came from? - the answer, at least in the West would be that it came from Jesus.  When he said, "I am the way, the truth and the life" what he was really saying "I am the truth and the life without sex."  Nobody ever seems to make that plain enough.  All the believers in the ancient traditions know this by heart.  Some of course should have put a little asterisk with an explanation for the rest of us who get married into this way of thought.

In any event, to avoid getting trapped in the labyrinth of my own complexity let's ask the more basic question - what kind of a guy comes up with "the way, the truth and the life without sex with women" as the solution to all of life's problems?  It should be noted also that there is nothing about Jesus that screams out 'straight man.'  It wasn't like he went on a few dates and discovered that women were just plain 'bad news.'  He was never married, never had children and grew up without a strong male role model.  Was it something to do with having the classic overbearing Jewish mother that led him to have this low estimation of women?

Indeed it has to said that our existing gospel material actually presents in many ways a 'cleaned up' take on his strange views on sexuality.  Many of our earliest gospels have Jesus go beyond merely attacking marriage and traditionally sanctioned sexual practices but instead have him become the spokesman for transgenderism, ritual castration and repeatedly warn against the 'evils' of heterosexuality.  According to these sources the Devil created marriage which sounds suspiciously like the bumper sticker of a bitter friend of mine who had went through a painful divorce.

These traditions are typically ignored by contemporary scholars yet they certainly point to broader trends within the early tradition.  For instance it must be noted that there is nothing rarer in antiquity than a married saint.  Of course a few examples do exist especially in the earliest period.  Yet by and large earliest Christian saints were unmarried and were celebrated for their impassibility (apathia), their being 'unmoved' by the seductive charm of women.

At the very least it has to be noted that this 'virtue' would come quite easily for a closeted homosexual man.  He would be able to exemplify apathia in the face of even the most beautiful woman.  It would seem to be the easiest thing to claim that all of the saints of earliest Christianity were about as straight as your favorite Hollywood movie stars until one more piece of evidence is brought forward.  Our earliest Christian sources seem especially attached to a third type of human being, rarely even encountered in today's world - that of the eunuch or sexually castrated individual.

It has to be noted that there were apparently two types of eunuchs in antiquity.  There was the 'natural' eunuch who was simply born without sexual organs and those of the 'man-made' variety - i.e. those who removed their virility through a variety of means.  As strange as it may seem to those who have never read the writings of the early Church Fathers, it turns out that Christians liked to think that Jesus introduced this third typology - those made eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven' - into the world.

These 'eunuchs' were said to be imitating Jesus's example insofar as Jesus was himself an angel - i.e. one who did not have sexual organs.  As the third century Greek Church Father Methodius explains that Jesus came to help those:


whom He no longer wills to be excited by procreations to lust, and to be defiled, but henceforth to meditate and to keep the mind upon the transformation of the body to the likeness of angels, when they neither marry nor are given in marriage, according to the infallible words of the Lord; since it is not given to all to attain that undefiled state of being a eunuch for the sake of the kingdom of heaven, but manifestly to those only who are able to preserve the ever-blooming and unfading flower of virginity." [1]  

There are countless other examples of this idea in the early Church.  Even when Christian disagreed about matters - and the literature shows an abundance of dissension - they agree on this fundamental understanding with respect to 'being a eunuch for the sake of the kingdom,' becoming like an angel, being made like Jesus and subsequently being 'saved.'

For those who maintained the beliefs of these early Christian writers Jesus was an angel who was at once the typology of a eunuch.[2]  If we wanted to be saved there was something each of us had to 'take care of' by undergoing some radical procedure.  The Church Father Origen is said to have poured some chemical on his penis in order to make it wither and 'die.'[3]  There are many other examples or comparisons of Christians castrating themselves like beavers' - the analogy of course failing in English because this animal is taken to be a euphemism for the female anatomy.  In Latin however it is a clever play on words - castrator carnis castor.

The point of course is that there appears to be a very unusual gathering of three types of sexual identities in early Christianity with our preferred typology, heterosexuality, certainly getting the worst treatment.  Opposite sex attraction was deemed to be of an animal nature opposed essentially to spiritual love, the love of angels, which was based on likeness.  There is absolutely no way anyone can claim to have read the writings of the earliest Christian sources without walking away with this same impression.  Of course there is one single example which on the surface at least seem to mitigate this radical interpretation -  the odd example of Demetrius the Patriarch of Alexandria at the turn of the third century.  Yet even this case only ends up opening a whole other can of worms for the existing tradition.

According to our earliest sources Pope Demetrius came to the Alexandrian church an already married man through what must have been a civil union (the Church did not preside over marriages in this early period).  Demetrius was an outsider who never learned from the Christian masters of Egypt but somehow - indeed inexplicably - ended up being placed in the highest rank of the church.

The story that is preserved in the History of the Coptic Patriarchs tells us that this choice was met with a lot of popular resistance.  There was a lot of grumbling about a married man sitting on the throne of St Mark in Alexandria.  One of his most famous acts was to chase the eunuch Origen out of town.  Alexandria was apparently a popular destination for transsexual Christians, the city was the place to be for getting a sex change to become like Jesus since at least the early second century.[4]

Tradition holds that Demetrius's status as a married man did not sit well with the congregation.  They were constantly grumbling about his being unfit to sit in the papal throne.  It got so bad that according to legend an angel came down from heaven to help straighten things out.

The angel told Demetrius that he had to gather the leaders of the Christian community to stand around the throne of St Mark.  He would be seated there with his wife at his side and they were to demonstrate that they were still virgins.  How am I to do that, Demetrius asked the angel.  The angel answered that he had to set himself and his wife on fire.  This would demonstrate to the congregation that Demetrius, in spite of being married was really a eunuch.

The story goes that when Demetrius carried out the order of the angel the entire congregation changed its mind about him.  Everyone suddenly 'knew' that he was fit to preside over the church.  They begged his forgiveness and suddenly had all sorts of questions for their new friend.  They asked him how managed to at least resist lusting after his wife as he slept beside her each night?  Demetrius's answer would become a justification for heterosexuality within the ranks of the Coptic Church:

Attend, all of you, to what I say. Know that I have not done this seeking glory from men. My age is now sixty-three years. My wife who stands before you is my cousin ... I said to her : "Listen to what I say. We must of necessity remain together in this chamber without being separated all our lives, but there must be no further connexion between us, until death shall part us; and, if we remain thus in purity, we shall meet in the heavenly Jerusalem, and enjoy one another's company in eternal bliss." And when she heard this, she accepted my proposal; and her body remained inviolate. But my parents knew nothing of our compact. Then the wedding-guests demanded the customary proof of the consummation of the marriage, as you know is done by foolish men; but my mother said to them : "These two are young, and the days before them are many." Thus we kept our purity; and when my parents as well as her parents were dead, we remained orphans together. It is now forty-eight years since I married my wife, and we sleep on one bed and one mattress and beneath one coverlet; and the Lord, who knows and judges the living and the dead, and understands the secrets of all hearts, knows that I have never learnt that she is a woman, nor has she learnt that I am a man; but we see one another's face and no more. We sleep together, but the embraces of this world are unknown to us. And when we fall asleep, we see a form with eagle's wings, which comes flying and alights upon our bed between her and me, and stretches its right wing over me, and its left wing over her, until the morning, when it departs; and we behold it until it goes. Do not think, my brethren and ye people who love God, that I have disclosed this secret to you to gain the glory of this world which passes away, nor that I have told you this of my own will; but it is the command of the Lord, who bade me do it, for he desires the good of all men, and he is Christ our Saviour ... I am a man and have a body like all other men, but I will teach you how to answer the suggestions of the Devil. When my heart was troubled by evil thoughts, I remembered the compact I had made with Christ; and if I broke it, I feared that he would reject me in the kingdom of Heaven, before the Father and his holy angels. Moreover, when I saw the beauty and grace of her form, I thought of the corpses lying in their tombs and the foulness of their odour, so to keep myself from strange words, through fear of the fire that is not quenched, and the worm that sleepeth not, in the other world, where none can open his mouth

Of course this discussion might run the risk of sounding rather silly to our ears.  The comedian in each of us might ask - why set your wife on fire when you can easily get a divorce? - forgetting of course Jesus prohibited divorce, a ban the Coptic Church still has in place to this day with absolutely no exceptions.

Demetrius presents himself as an example of how heterosexual unions could approach the tradition pairing of same sex partnerships modeled after the syzygies of angels in terms of blessedness.  For it was well established that the disciples were sent by Jesus as male pairs.  The saints Peter and Paul were understood by the Roman Church to represent a divine pairing modeled after God in heaven.  Why then couldn't the traditional marriage of man and woman by viewed in a similar manner?  One did not have to imagine that heterosexuals were irrational animals engaging in wanton sexuality.  Demetrius and his wife served as examples that a sort of divine friendship of one soul in two bodies was indeed possible even for heterosexuals.

The idea of heterosexuals being locked a sexless marriage really isn't all that ridiculous.  Forty million Americans admit to being in a sexless marriage and this happens to be one of the most candid, oversexed countries in the world.   As much as the media bombards us with images of the virtues of virility, does anyone really want to have sex with a sixty year old?  Indeed it was Christianity which instilled in heterosexual unions something which was almost inconceivable in antiquity - the modern concept we all take for granted that marriage was a 'partnership' rooted in friendship rather than promiscuity.

What is often not recognized is that this modern Christian ideal originally established between same sex pairings which only trickled down in a later period.  Indeed Demetrius's speech seems jarring to many of us because of its candor.  As George Burns once quipped, marriage is what you do when you get out of bed.  Yet it is worth noting that the story in the History of the Coptic Patriarchs clearly presents even this 'idealized' state of heterosexual matrimony as an aberration of the original paradigm in Alexandria.  The reason Demetrius's fellow co-religionists are scandalized by a married Pope is because it had never been done before.

While we are never told how 'correct belief' was originally defined in the community, it seems difficult not to suppose that it had something to do with the tradition associated with that Origen guy who was run out of town by Demetrius.  It wasn't just that Origen was a eunuch but that there was a strange form of marriage within the eunuch culture of Alexandria which at first rejected Demetrius's authority on the basis of his marriage to a woman.  As noted in the Coptic report, this resistance to heterosexuality was ultimately overcome.  It was likely overcome in part by chasing the representatives of the original 'queer' culture like Origen out of town as much as it was finding apologetic voices who supported Demetrius.

Indeed we are very fortunate to have an 'on the ground' report of what was going on in the Christian community of Egypt at this time.  A contemporary of Demetrius's named Clement of Alexandria wrote a work called the Instructor around the time that the new Pope was being seated on the papal throne. Clement  was a very famous Church Father.  He was far more important to the history of Christianity than Demetrius.  Yet Demetius was in effect Clement's boss.  The tension of having an unqualified superior is already witnessed by the original report behind the material in the History of the Coptic Patriarchs.

As we just noted Clement's Instructor was written while all this conflict was brewing over having a married  Patriarch sitting on the throne of St Mark.  It can fairly be interpreted as Clement's attempt to 'brown nose' his boss - a systematic effort to justify what was clearly seen as being a breach of tradition in the eyes of other leading voices in Alexandria.  The Instructor provides unmistakably clear evidence that heterosexual marriage was not traditionally sanctioned among ecclesiastical officials.  Clement only gets around this objection by a series of attempts to justify opposite sex marriage as a lower, but ultimately acceptable form of the ideal state of being 'married in the Lord.' (1 Cor 7:39)

As Clement acknowledges near the beginning of the work, heterosexual union was not originally understood to be sanctioned by Jesus.  It was traditionally held to be something belonging to irrational animals rather than the truth established by Jesus during his ministry.  It is important to note that not once does Clement cite 'tradition,' 'established opinion' or 'orthodoxy' while arguing that his community should change its traditional rejection of heterosexual union among its members.  Over and over again he prefaces his remarks by acknowledging he is speaking wholly on his own authority in his advocating a revaluation of the tradition rejection of marriage.  This is deeply significant.

Here is an example of the typical manner in which Clement makes his case.  In the fourth chapter of the first of three books of the Instructor Clement declares to his readers:

Let us, then, embracing more and more this good obedience, give ourselves to the Lord; clinging to what is surest, the cable of faith in Him, and understanding that the virtue of man and woman is the same. For if the God of both is one, the master of both is also one; one church, one temperance, one modesty; their food is common, marriage an equal yoke; respiration, sight, hearing, knowledge, hope, obedience, love all alike. And those whose life is common, have common graces and a common salvation; common to them are love and training. "For in this world," he says, "they marry, and are given in marriage," in which alone the female is distinguished from the male; "but in that world it is so no more." There the rewards of this paired and holy life, which is based on syzygies, are laid up, not for male (arreni) and female (theleia), but for man (anthrwpw), the sexual desire which divides into two being removed.

Again we have a remarkable consistency about the low opinion that Jesus had about heterosexual unions.  The established opinion in Alexandria was that they belonged to another God - the Creator - who was established in Jesus image as a kind of 'original accident' which established the mistake that was the present world.  Clement responds to this original idea by saying Jesus really didn't think that heterosexual sex was 'evil.'  In fact the gospel makes clear that he tolerated this 'animal pairing' in the here and now but came to establish a better pairing or syzygy 'in the world to come.'

Of course the obvious question is now - when was the 'world to come' supposed to come?  The very concept of 'the world to come' is Jewish.  The Jews believed that it represented the world that would come with the advent of the messiah.  In other words, it was the messianic age.  This is rather straightforward and corresponds to the gospel terminology - the kingdom of God or heaven.  Yet as obvious as this might seem at first glance later Christians wanted to avoid this original simplicity perhaps owing to the implications that the world to come had on Christian marriage.

For reasons that are never fully explained Jesus is argued to have been the messiah but that the messianic age would come at the end of time, in a final judgement which was completely divorced from Jesus's original coming.  Again, this was not the original understanding of this terminology but a deliberate attempt among the new leadership in Alexandria to justify Demetrius's legitimacy and perhaps at the same time to avoid criticisms that Christianity had 'strange' attitudes towards heterosexuality.

The opponents of Demetrius's marriage - and Clement's superficial attempts to justify its legitimacy - argued that this very same saying of Jesus from the gospel reinforces that a divine syzygy would be introduced immediately "after the resurrection."[5]   The specific context of 'the resurrection' is clear.  It was not the 'resurrection of bodies' in some future age as the Catholics would have it.  Instead the resurrection which Jesus references was the one described in the gospel - i.e. which already happened long ago.  As such, the original orthodox understanding of Alexandria held that the gospel taught that immediately following the resurrection of Christ, a syzygy or pairing would be introduced which would end traditional marriage - i.e. "they will neither marry nor be given in marriage; they will be like the angels in heaven."

At this point we can see another wrinkle in the formulation.  The new syzygy or pairing that was introduced by Jesus the angel was like the union of angels  in heaven.  The angels were not divided into male and female so the humans who followed Jesus after the resurrection were similarly paired in same sex unions.  As Clement noted in the earlier citation - "there the rewards of this paired and holy life, which is based on syzygies, are laid up, not for male and female, but for man (anthrwpw), the sexual desire which divides into two being removed."  In short, the original model for the pairing established by Jesus was a 'heretical' notion of the conjoining of powers in heaven.

The source of Clement's ideas here come from an early generation of Alexandrians - those who lived before Demetrius and his forcing heterosexual unions onto the Church.  Luckily, Clement preserved for us the writings of one such earlier Alexandrian writer - an otherwise unknown figure named Theodotus (150 CE?) where we see many of these same ideas developed in much fuller detail.

Apparently these earlier Alexandrians held that these "syzygies" Jesus established were "brought down from divine emanations above"  (Strom 3.1) the heavenly realm where the angels exist.  Theodotus says that in Pleroma" or spiritual 'fullness' "where unity reigns each of the aeons has its own fullness, that is, the syzygy."  In other words, each of the powers is paired in its own 'pleroma.'  Theodotus adds that "whatever proceeds from a syzygy, they say, is fullness, whereas whatever proceeds from one single, is image” (Ex Theod. 32:1). Again, this distinction between fullness and image is used to introduce a deeper point about the heavenly realm and in turn about the 'union' between individuals who are purified through baptism which ultimately mirrors this situation in heaven.

The only point which Theodotus brings up that concerns us now is the central idea that the Father, the power which is invisibly behind all things is One, while all that proceeds from him is an 'image' or eikones of this hidden unity.  In other words, we can't see the perfection of the highest God only the reflected fullness of the syzygy. (Strom 4:13)  This is the expressed image of his perfection.

The original tradition of Alexandria held that the secret narrative of the gospel told the story of Jesus coming to bring lost individuals into the fullness of the pleroma.[6]  He did this by introducing a new union which would replace marriage.  It was a same sex union developed imitation of the syzygy of powers in heaven.  The angels in heaven were all paired into same sex couple, so too would those imitated them here on earth he likened.

Theodotus tells us that in the original Alexandrian rite after baptism, the initiates enter into something called 'the bridal chamber' which unites their souls were united with another individual of the same sex.  "For as long as we were children of the female only," writes Theodotus, "as if of a base intercourse, incomplete and infants and senseless and weak and without form, brought forth like abortions, we were children of the woman, but when we have received form from the Saviour, we have become children of a husband and a bride chamber." (Ex Theod 68)  Clement mirrors many of the ideas of Theodotus in his own writings, nevertheless he expresses himself in a deliberately obscure manner.  It would seem that Demetrius's sitting on the throne was not an accident.  There was a conscious effort underway to reformulate Christianity in Egypt. The heterosexuals were attempting nothing short of a spiritual coup d'etat.

We shall examine the political intrigues of the age later in this work.  For the moment it is enough to say that in the beginning in Alexandria Jesus was understood to be advocating an obscure and under-reported same-sex union which is ignored in most studies of the age.  This union or syzygy was established through a ritual was certainly known to Clement, yet for centuries we have been forced to sift through his notoriously obscure writings in order to find reference to them.  His greatest masterwork was called 'coverings' or stromata precisely because it was consciously designed to hide the mystic truth at its core.

What was it that Clement was hiding?  A discovery made in the last century made clear that it was the original Alexandrian gospel, used in the community since the time of its composition by the city's patron saint, St Mark.  To be certain, Clement's knew that the winds were shifting.  He must have divined that it would be dangerous to make openly positive references to the original practices of his native community.  So it was that he wove a tapestry of veil and truth, slowly letting the reader into an understanding that could only be revealed through gnostic initiation.

In the course of our present work we will demonstrate that we have decoded this secret understanding.  It was a mystic truth rooted in same sex union, a reflection of the syzygy of angels, and we will demonstrate that this radical understanding of Jesus never entirely disappeared.  In order to survive it had to go underground to a community of famous crypto-Christians whose mission above all else was to pass on the tradition of St Mark down through to the modern age.

We will demonstrate that Jesus is not the man we have come to believe.  He was not a man, but an angel, on a mission to change our nature rather than our habits, to recreate rather than reform.  Jesus may well be many things to many people today, but to those who knew him best in the most distant ancient past, he could only be found in a divinely sanctioned same-sex union.  In the lost words of that original gospel, "see your brother, see your God" ...


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[1]
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7] The question of course is if heterosexual marriage only began to accepted by the authorities of the Alexandrian Church on these rather unusual terms - i.e. Demetrius in effect 'forcing' the issue upon them, it becomes clear that some other form of union (syzygia) - one that involved two males was originally argued to have been the heavenly gift brought to humanity by Jesus.  Clement of course had developed these arguments to help support his master Demetrius's scandalous marriage. They appear throughout his works.  Nevertheless, it is impossible not to read this information as attempts to reinforce an otherwise unknown teaching into Alexandria.  The original idea was that Jesus established some sort of sexless conjugal union between men which was similar to the syzygies of angels in heaven.  In many of Clement's sayings the original understanding still shines through: "For in this world they marry and and are given in marriage." But having done with the works of the flesh, and having been clothed with immortality, the flesh itself being pure, we pursue after that which is according to the measure of the angels. [Instructor 2:10] That is why he says: "Work not for the food which perishes, but for that which abides unto eternal life." Similarly they quote the saying: "The children of the age to come neither marry nor are given in marriage." But if anyone thinks care- fully about this question concerning the resurrection of the dead and those who asked it, he will find that the Lord is not rejecting marriage, but ridding their minds of the expectation that in the resurrection there will be carnal desire. The phrase "the children of this age" is not meant to make a contrast with the children of some other age, but is equivalent to saying "those who are born in this age," who are children because of birth; they beget and are begotten since without birth no one will come into this life.[Stromata 3.12] For souls, themselves by themselves, are equal. Souls are neither male nor female, when they no longer marry nor are given in marriage. And is not woman translated into man, when she is become equally unfeminine, and manly, and perfect? [Stromata 6.12]  Rightly, then, they reckon the number seven motherless and childless, interpreting the Sabbath, and figuratively expressing the nature of the rest, in which "they neither marry nor are given in marriage any more." For neither by taking from one number and adding to another of those within ten is seven produced; nor when added to any number within the ten does it make up any of them.[Stromata 6.16]



Chapter Two

So we leave to the side the question of the real Jesus is and ask something which at first at least seems to be a little easier.  Who is this Demetrius, and how did this straight guy manage to make the traditional Alexandrian less queer?  Unfortunately when we scour the surviving material there is again very little to understand this champion of heterosexuality.  The Coptic Church, the Christian tradition still rooted in Alexandria only makes clear that he was not an educated Alexandrian.  The story they tell is once again quite perplexing.  Another riddle wrapped inside of an enigma.  There is only enough here really to keep a dying flame hoping for more oxygen.

The tenth century History of the Coptic Patriarchs tells us that Demetrius apparently was a stranger to the Alexandria tradition.  He came from from without divinely chosen to replace the earlier Patriarch Julian (179 - 189 CE):

When the patriarch Julian was dying, an angel of the Lord came to him in a dream, on the night before his death, and said to him : "The man who shall visit thee to-morrow with a bunch of grapes shall be patriarch after thee." Accordingly, when it was morning, a peasant came to him, who was married, and could neither read nor write; and his name was Demetrius. This man had gone out to prune his vineyard, and found there a bunch of grapes, although it was not the season of grapes; so he brought it to the patriarch. And the patriarch Julian said to the bystanders : "This man shall be your patriarch: for so the angel of the Lord last night declared to me." So they took him by force, and bound him with iron fetters. And Julian died on that very day; and Demetrius was consecrated patriarch.

Of course we shouldn't need to assure the reader that none of this ever happened.  It is an apocryphal legend and nothing more.  This is not how the Alexandrian tradition established its priesthood let alone its bishop.  Nevertheless the story is so odd that it almost demands an explanation.

The real Demetrius of history could certainly read and write.  This is certainly an embellishment.  However the story, when taken with his status as a married man clearly attest to one basic fact - this unlearned, married man was not originally part of the Alexandrian Church.  There is no discernible reason that the Coptic tradition would make this up such a strange story.  It must be developing the barest factual thread.  Yet the fourth century Church historian Eusebius can provide us with one additional clue to help shine some light on this darkest of historical riddles.

In Book Five of his famous Church History, Eusebius assigns Demetrius's rise to the top of the Alexandrian see to 'the tenth year' of the Emperor Commodus.  He says "In the tenth year of the reign of Commodus, Victor succeeded Eleutherus [in the church of Rome], the latter having held the episcopate for thirteen years. In the same year, after Julian had completed his tenth year, Demetrius received the charge of the parishes at Alexandria."  But at the beginning of Book Six of the same work he writes "It was the tenth year of the reign of Severus, while Lætus was governor of Alexandria and the rest of Egypt, and Demetrius had lately received the episcopate of the parishes there, as successor of Julian."  There is a thirteen year difference between the dating in the two books.

It is impossible that Eusebius could have meant that Demetrius became bishop of Alexandria in 205 CE.  No scholar would accept that.  We know that he means that Dionysius took the throne in 189/190 CE because of the original mention of Victor succeeding Eleutherus.  There is also no evidence that there ever was a Laetus, "governor of Alexandria and the rest of Egypt" in the tenth year of Septimius Severus or any recent Emperor for that matter.  Given that Quintus Aemilius Laetus was an important praefect under Commodus - the prefect of the Roman imperial bodyguard, known as the Praetorian Guard, from 191 until his death in 193 - Eusebius must have garbled an original Roman source which made reference to Demetrius's ascension coinciding with 'the prefect Laetus' and Victor taking over from Eleutherus.[1]

Demetrius's rise to power has always been dated to 189-190 CE because of Eusebius's statement in Book Five.  The interesting fact is that the very same date (189 - 190 CE) is given in official Roman documents for a certain Quintus Tineius Demetrius being given the role of Prefect of Alexandria and the rest of Egypt."  In other words, someone has possibly obscured the fact that it was Demetrius - not Laetus - who held this post by identifying the ascension with the next closest Emperor who had a tenth year to his reign.

There are other reasons for accepting this understanding.  Demetrius is identified over and over again as working closely  working closely - almost as an adjunct of the Imperial government.  Eusebius tells us numerous times that governors of other provinces sent Demetrius requests to send Origen the successor of Clement to visit them.  Given that we know that Quintus Tineius Demetrius only held the post of prefect of Egypt for two years at the most, we must suppose that he was replaced and chose to become 'overseer' of the most important church in the world at that time.

Now at last we can begin to see why an unlearned, married man could have forced his way to the top of the Egyptian Church - he had connections.  We shall examine these a little later.  For the moment at least we should pay attention to the manner in which the surviving letters associated with the bishop were addressed to him and the new governor of Egypt - implying at least that he worked hand and hand with the Imperial government reporting the goings on at the church.  Eusebius writes at one point - "about this time, while [Origen] was still at Alexandria, a soldier came and delivered a letter from the governor of Arabia to Demetrius, bishop of the parish, and to the prefect of Egypt who was in office at that time, requesting that they would with all speed send Origen to him for an interview. Being sent by them, he went to Arabia. And having in a short time accomplished the object of his visit, he returned to Alexandria."  The fifth century Latin Church Father reports much the same thing about the way another Alexandrian scholar who took orders to leave Egypt based on Imperial correspondence with the former prefect.[1]

By assuming that Demetrius was some sort of hold over from the Commodian persecution of Christians we can explain why there is the curious division of the administration of the Alexandrian see between 'bishop' and 'head of the catechetical school.'  A two-fold administration opens up during Demetrius's administration 'because he was unlearned.'  Clement, then Clement's student Origen, then Origen's student Heraclas all occupy this shadow pulpit.  The separation between this chair of catechetical instruction and the bishop was likely geographical as well as spiritual.  The holiest church in Egypt, the Church of St Mark wasn't actually located in the Greek speaking city of Alexandria proper but in the Boucolia, a region just to the east of the walls of the main city.

We see this same geographic division continue up until the so-called 'Arian schism' of the fourth century.  Arius the 'heretic' is said to have been the presbyter of the Church of St Mark.  The orthodox bishops Alexander and Athanasius likely never set foot in this church preferring instead to set up a network of churches behind the safety of the thick walls which protected the Greek speaking population.  At the very point Heraclas 'takes over' from Demetrius, 232 CE, we should notice that we are already at the point where civil unrest had destablized the Empire - the so-called 'Crisis of the Third Century.'  Clement and Origen's banishment from Egypt was part of Demetrius continuing to act as an Imperial administrator rather than a true member of the original Church of Egypt.

Indeed it is amazing to see that despite continuous Imperial persecution of the Egyptian Christian population Demetrius holds on to his job.  The reason for this again is that Demetrius was 'overseeing' the Church in Egypt in order to see who deserved punishing.  This becomes clear from the surviving examples of his periodic correspondences from government officials.  Take the story of Origen's eventual condemnation by Demetrius at a hastily organized synod later in the third century.  Jerome states: "He stands condemned by his bishop, Demetrius, only the bishops of Palestine, Arabia, Phenicia, and Achaia dissenting. Imperial Rome consents to his condemnation, and even convenes a senate to censure him..." [2]  It doesn't get much clearer than that.

Further we get a sense of Origen's dismay at being hounded by this Imperial watchdog during his period in Alexandria from Jerome's Apology Against Rufius Book II.  It is here we hear a description of a letter of Origen, in which Origen complains about being excommunicated "The object of the whole letter is to assail Demetrius the Pontiff of Alexandria, and to inveigh against the bishops throughout the world, and to tell them that their excommunication of him is invalid. ...He is contending, then, against the Bishops of the church generally, because they had judged him unworthy of its communion."  The important thing to see here is that the Alexandrian Church was clearly the most influential ecclesiastic body in the world.

If we accept the idea that Quintus Tineius Demetrius originally went to Alexandria to become prefect of Alexandria and the rest of Egypt and only later became an official 'overseer' of the church perhaps we can finally explain why the this unlearned, married man was accepted as the leader of contemporary Christianity in the region - he simply made them an offer they couldn't refuse.  Indeed we needn't be conspiracy minded about this.  The age of Commodus was filled with uncertainty.  Having a high ranking Commodian official 'safeguard' the flock might seem a sensible solution.  It is after all the principle behind mafia 'protection' throughout the ages.

It is possible of course that Demetrius may even have considered himself a Christian or at least a 'God-fearer' (a term usually used in the period for someone who was sympathetic to the teachings of Christ).  We shall come upon the example of  Marcia Aurelia Ceionia Demetrias, a highly influential concubine who shared his cognomen who was recognized as such in this period even though she was the furthest thing from being woman of virtue.  Indeed the example of Marcia will certainly help explain how Demetrius got pushed on to the Alexandrian Church in the first place.

It is clear that Marcia the Emperor's 'Christian concubine' was doing the very same thing within the ranks of the Roman church.  She rescued a future Pope from the mines.  Marcia provided influence and power to the man who was sitting on the throne of St Peter.  Is it really that unthinkable given Marcia's connection with both Egypt and the Emperor in that craziest period of history she couldn't have influenced this election?  Alexandria was only a 'rock's throw' across the pond.

What kind of argument could the Alexandria have put up against heterosexuality to a whore?  One might expect someone like Clement to over intellectualize the concept of sexuality with a lady of refinement.  These arguments fall on deaf ears when the woman has 'been around' as much as Marcia.

As such it will be impossible to tell the story of how heterosexuality forced its way on to Christianity without at least providing the barest outline of what was going on within the inner circle of Commodus court in the twilight of his reign. Anyone who has ever seen the movie the Gladiator already knows, the story of the age -  one of the best Roman Emperors produced one of the worst Emperors.  The best Emperor was of courseMarcus Aurelius Antoninus.  The 'worst' was Marcus Aurelius Commodus Antoninus otherwise known as 'Commodus.'

Commodus was born on August 31, 161 CE near Rome.  He was acknowledged even by his detractors to have been one of the most beautiful men in the world.  Commodus received extensive tuition at the hands of what Marcus Aurelius called "an abundance of good masters."  Unfortunately Commodus had little interest in learning or following the philosophical path of his father.  By the time Commodus reached his teenage years his father was intent on making him his successor. Marcus Aurelius joint rule over the Empire with his adoptive brother Lucius Verus had just ended with the death of Lucius Verus in 169 CE.  As much as Marcus directed his son to learn virtue, the son could likely only see how much his father detested doing the day to day work of being Emperor.

After the population of Alexandria - and the residents of the Boucolia in particular - supported two insurrection in 172 and 175 CE the Imperial household developed an almost obsessive interest in the stability of Egypt. On 17 March 180 Marcus Aurelius died, leaving the 18-year-old Commodus sole emperor.  He loathed engaging in the business of administrating the Empire and chose to leave the day to day running of the state to an inner circle of favorites.  Dissatisfaction with this state of affairs would lead to a series of conspiracies and attempted coups, which in turn eventually provoked Commodus to take charge of affairs, which he did in an increasingly dictatorial manner. Nevertheless, though the senatorial order came to hate and fear him, the evidence suggests that he remained popular with the army and the common people for much of his reign.

The reason for Commodus's popularity is quite simple - he put on lavish shows and staged and took part in spectacular gladiatorial combats.  In short, it was like Ryan Seacrest becoming President of the United States.  The first great plot against his life was hatched by his eldest sister Lucilla who held the rank of Augusta as the widow of her first husband, Lucius Verus.  She drew in her two lovers Marcus Ummidius Quadratus Annianus (who was also her first cousin) and Appius Claudius Quintianus and attempted to murder Commodus as he entered the theatre.  The operation went horribly wrong and Quadratus and Quintianus were executed while Lucilla was exiled to Capri and later killed. The unexpected consequence of this effort was that Commodus inherited Quadratus's chamberlain Eclectus and his Christian concubine Marcia who as noted would later become the Emperor's most trusted associate.

The existing literature makes clear that Marcia Aurelia Ceionia Demetrias had an incredible hold on Commodus.  Dio Cassius, who lived through the period reports "that she greatly favoured the Christians and rendered them many kindnesses, inasmuch as she could do anything with Commodus."[3]  We see this influence reflected in Christian recollections of the period.  In spite of Commodus and Marcia regularly engaging in the worst sort of depravity, the church historian Eusebius calls the Commodian era something of the first golden age of the Catholic Church.  The contemporary Christian theologian Irenaeus boasts that many Christians sat in the Imperial court at the time.  There were grumblings from other Christians that these men were in the pocket of Caesar, to which Irenaeus replies "think of all the money we give to the poor."[4]

It is unclear who else beside Marcia in the Imperial court was Christian.  The chamberlain Eclectus is the most likely bet given that he and Marcia were lovers.  It is enough to say that Marcia was coming into her own in this period as one of Commodus's most trusted confidants.  She obviously harbored ambitious to have Commodus all to herself and so crafted a plan to eliminate the one man that stood between her and the Emperor.

By the summer of 188 CE, Commodus’ brother-in-law, L. Antistius Burrus was accused in conjunction with C. Arrius Antoninus of ‘aspiring to the throne.' [4]  The accuser was the Commodus's successor Pertinax, a freedman and former grammarian who distinguished himself as a soldier in the Parthian Campaign.  Yet the man masterminding this plot was Marcus Aurelius Cleander, another former slave who rose to praetorian prefect earlier in the year.  Cleander had taken care of Commodus as a child.  Now he had supreme command of the powerful Praetorian guard, the men who protected the Emperor himself,  he became extremely rich selling public offices to the highest bidder as his private business.  This was the man who stood between Marcia and the Emperor.

After the plot was 'discovered' Burrus was summarily executed, along with many of his supporters. Antoninus seems to have been murdered somewhat later in the year.  The executions of Burrus and Antoninus caused widespread discontent including in the city of Rome. We are told that the urban populace in the capitol "organised themselves in theatres and shouted insults at him [Cleander] all together."[5]  Marcia must have hatched a plan that would fan the flames of Cleander's growing unpopularity.  A conspiracy developed between herself, her lover the chamberlain Eclectus, Pertinax, Aemelius Laetus and perhaps Septimius Severus.  All these individuals were involved in Commodus's death on New Years Eve 192 CE.[6]

It was now the middle of summer, 189 CE.  Two important appointments were made which all directly related to Cleander's down fall.  The first was the assignment of our Quintus Tineius Demetrius to replace Marcus Aurelius Papyrius Dionysius as prefect of Egypt.  This appointment was puzzling because Dionysius had only been on the job for a month or so.  We nothing about Demetrius other than the fact that his cognomen was shared by Marcia herself.  The second important appointment was that of assigning the future Emperor Septimius Severus to govern Sicily. The odd thing here was that Severus was replacing his older brother Publius Septimius Geta.  It was very unusual to have two brothers serve in succession as proconsuls there.

Although not a senior or military province, Sicily was still an important command. Alongside Africa and Egypt, the island was a major exporter of grain to the capital. Septimius’ main duty would have been bureaucratic, making sure that the grain ships left harbour on time.  The appointment of Demetrius to govern Egypt left only one major 'breadbasket' province to consider - that of the province of Africa.  It is interesting to note that Pertinax, the urban prefect took his new post after serving as governor of Africa.  His successor in Africa was none other than Didius Julianus, the man who would become his successor on the royal throne after Commodus's assassination.

It is incredible to see how all the future Emperors of the Roman Empire were now involved in the grain plot of 189 CE.   The only notable exception was Demetrius's governing of Egypt.  Egypt of course was the most important position yet the grain from Egypt was so essential that there were safeguards in place to carefully watch for manipulations of the system.  Demetrius's real purpose was merely to act incompetent which his predecessor raced back to Rome.  It should be our assumption then that Marcia must have used her influence to have Dionysius recalled in order to set in motion the famine.  The official explanation seems to have been both that the unpopular and greedy Cleander was deliberately trying to drive up wheat prices and at the same time that Dionysus holding up the wheat supply in order to pin the blame on Cleander.[7]

The only sensible explanation here was that Marcia was orchestrating events so as to both have Cleander removed and replaced by her lover Eclectus and her namesake Demetrius firmly seated in Alexandria.  The two victims in the riots were little more than unfortunate dupes.  Marcia knew that Dionysius would be furious with Cleander whom he presumed the orders had come from.  Soon after his arrival in Rome, the conspiracy was ready to make it appear that Dionysius was preparing to take action against Cleander.  Pertinax was now the urban prefect and the urban prefecture was a very important and influential post.
The prefect presided over his own court, which had jurisdiction within the hundredth milestone of Rome. More importantly, he commanded the urban cohorts, the only armed force, apart from the Praetorian Guard and the imperial horse guard, to be based in the capitol itself.

Even more unlikely is the coincidence of the timing of the sudden grain shortage.  Events seem to have finally reached a climax during the ludi Ceriales, on April 19th. This festival honoured Ceres, the goddess of corn, probably originally in the hope that her favour would protect the grain ships that usually arrived at about this time. On this occasion, the festivities included horse races. However, before the start of the seventh race, a group of children ran out into the Circus and interrupted the proceedings. Dio remarks that the children, who were led ‘by a tall maiden of grim aspect’, ‘shouted in concert many bitter words, which the people took up."[8] These protests quickly stirred up the people, who ‘set up a shout demanding Cleander’s blood" [9]

Rather than dispersing, the increasingly riotous crowd set off to find the emperor, who seems to have been staying at Laurentum just outside the city, ‘invoking many blessings upon him and many curses upon Cleander’ [10]  Learning of the demonstration, Cleander ordered the Praetorians and imperial horse guards to intercept the march, which they did with stark efficiency, ‘charging and cutting down anyone they came across."'[11] This panicked the already excited crowd, who fled back to the city.  Under normal circumstances, such firmness would presumably have ended the affair. However we are repeatedly told that the demonstration regained its momentum when other soldiers came to their aid, prompting some to attack the Guard with roof tiles and stones.

The identity of these soldiers is important. As Cleander, the imperial chamberlain and praetorian prefect, commanded both the Guard and the imperial cavalry these troops must have been the urban cohorts, whose commander was Pertinax, the praefectus urbi. It was the responsibility of the urban cohorts to police the games, which meant that they were already on hand when the disturbance occurred. Pertinax had therefore, either ordered or allowed the soldiers under his command to assist the people. In other words, he was either involved in the conspiracy beforehand or else had let it run its course without interference.

Interestingly also is the fact that when news of the disturbance eventually reached Commodus it makes its way to the Emperor through Marcia.  The official account of what transpired relies almost entirely on Marcia's version of events. The praetorian prefect was blamed for inciting the incident and denounced by the court as a rebel and a traitor, whereupon the emperor, fearing for his own safety, summoned Cleander and had him executed.  This must have been Marcia's suggestion or at least developed from the explanation of 'what the crowd wanted' as she relayed the information on the scene.  Cleander's body was then handed over to the mob, who ‘dragged it away and abused it and carried his head all about the city on a pole."[12] Cleander’s sons, along with many of his close associates, suffered a similar fate.

Although only Dionysius is explicitly credited with Cleander’s overthrow by the sources, a closer examination clearly demonstrates that he could not have acted alone. The organisation needed to successfully execute the plot would have required more than one person. Also, the timing of the incident, at a festival in honour of the corn goddess, would have had a particularly striking effect. It is also important to note the decisive presence of such key figures as Pertinax, whose urban cohorts actually fought the Praetorian Guard, and  Marcia, whose revelations to Commodus were ultimately responsible for Cleander’s death.

We can now finally explain why Demetrius was removed from office only after serving for a little over a year.  Commodus, like all the Emperors before him, must have been petrified of the consequences of losing control of Egypt.  Demetrius's tenure was actually quite standard.  We must imagine however that it was Marcia who arranged for Demetrius transferring posts to that of overseer of the Christians.  He must have obtained special privilege to remain in Alexandria.  Egypt was after all not an ordinary province, but the emperor's personal possession.  A prefect was chosen, a member of the Equestrian class, and the prefectship of Egypt, along with that of the Praetorian Guard, was considered the highest political achievement open to a Roman knight. This was to insure no patrician could take power over the empire and possibly seize the throne.

The reason of this concern is because Egypt could provide up to sixty-percent of the food for the Roman Empire. This food gave an emperor extreme wealth and Augustus' power increased dramatically because of completely controlling this food trade between Aegyptus and Rome. Hence the reason that no patrician was permitted to set foot in Egypt without the permission of an emperor.  That Demetrius had such longevity in Egypt is explained by that inner circle that developed around Marcia.  He was certainly trusted by Pertinax, Septimius Severus and the Severan Dynasty that followed.  To this end, with Demetrius in charge of the most important church in the world at that time, the government managed to have greater control over its policies.  All of which takes us to the growth of the Roman church in the very same period.

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[1] Indeed this makes much more sense given the fact that all of this serves only to provide background for Origen.  By putting Origen in the tenth year of Septimius Severus Eusebius contradicts an earlier statement that there were no persecutions under that Emperor's rule.  Moreover it pushes all of the events in Origen's life by sixteen years.  The persecution that his father Leonides suffered came in the Commodian period, a fact also testified in several documents including the martyrdom of Apollonius.
Jerome states that Pantaenus "was sent by Demetrius ... into India at the request of legates from this people" [J36; FOTC 100 (1999) 59].
[2]  letter to St. Paula (Letter 33) 
[2] (Chrysostom, Homiliae in Genesim 22)
[4] (HA Pert. 3.7-8).
[5] (Her. 1.12.5)
[6] Dio 72 (73). 13.1-3).
[7] [7] (Dio 72 (73). 13.3-4).
[8] (Her. 1.12.5).
[9]  (Dio 72 (73). 13.4).
[10] (Her. 1.12.6)
[11] (Dio 72 (73). 13.6)[184].
 
Stephan Huller's Observations by Stephan Huller
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