Dualism in the pseudo-Clementine Homilies (pCH) I
Adam and Eve play a dualistic role in the Homilies. They are associated with the doctrine of syzygiae, a standard element of gnostic literature. In the Homilies, Peter explains that everything in human history comes in opposed pairs, with the primordial couple determining later syzygiae (2.15–18). Adam represents the line of truth, whereas Eve, that of falsehood and error.
From them every new generation brings forth a pair, of which the first member is inferior and stands in the line of Eve, while the second is superior and stands in the line of Adam. This seems paradoxical, for Adam was created before Eve, but in the Homilies there is a difference between God’s order of creation and the order of human events.
Adam and Eve, as God’s creatures, belong to the first order, but the next generation, Cain and Abel, to the lower, human order. Although each pairing is ascribed to Eve and Adam respectively, they all consist of two men: Cain and Abel, Esau and Jacob, Aaron and Moses, John the Baptist and Jesus, Simon Magus and Peter, and eventually the Antichrist and Christ. This is echoed in the Recognitions – Pharaoh v Abraham, Egyptian wizards v Moses (3.61.1), but the syzygiae receive their own distinct development in the Homilies.
One of the important subjects is Adam’s innocence. Peter states that Adam did not sin (2.52.2). He possesses true foreknowledge, which enabled him rightly to name all the creatures and his sons (3.21.1/Genesis 2:19), and he is, moreover, the first incarnation of the True Prophet immortal by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit of Christ (3.20.2).
This Homilistic figure recurs throughout human history and is linked to characters like Adam and Jesus. Peter ascribes to him foreknowledge and sinlessness (2.6.1). Adam’s full knowledge prevents him from sinning. Peter rejects as false the passages in Genesis that suggest that Adam might
sin. Because God created Adam in his own image, he had foreknowledge and did not need to eat the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil (3.18, 3.21,42 3.42–43). Simon Magus, on the contrary, insists on Adam’s sinfulness, God’s ignorant mistakes, and Adam’s exile from Eden.
Adam and Eve play a dualistic role in the Homilies. They are associated with the doctrine of syzygiae, a standard element of gnostic literature. In the Homilies, Peter explains that everything in human history comes in opposed pairs, with the primordial couple determining later syzygiae (2.15–18). Adam represents the line of truth, whereas Eve, that of falsehood and error.
From them every new generation brings forth a pair, of which the first member is inferior and stands in the line of Eve, while the second is superior and stands in the line of Adam. This seems paradoxical, for Adam was created before Eve, but in the Homilies there is a difference between God’s order of creation and the order of human events.
Adam and Eve, as God’s creatures, belong to the first order, but the next generation, Cain and Abel, to the lower, human order. Although each pairing is ascribed to Eve and Adam respectively, they all consist of two men: Cain and Abel, Esau and Jacob, Aaron and Moses, John the Baptist and Jesus, Simon Magus and Peter, and eventually the Antichrist and Christ. This is echoed in the Recognitions – Pharaoh v Abraham, Egyptian wizards v Moses (3.61.1), but the syzygiae receive their own distinct development in the Homilies.
One of the important subjects is Adam’s innocence. Peter states that Adam did not sin (2.52.2). He possesses true foreknowledge, which enabled him rightly to name all the creatures and his sons (3.21.1/Genesis 2:19), and he is, moreover, the first incarnation of the True Prophet immortal by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit of Christ (3.20.2).
This Homilistic figure recurs throughout human history and is linked to characters like Adam and Jesus. Peter ascribes to him foreknowledge and sinlessness (2.6.1). Adam’s full knowledge prevents him from sinning. Peter rejects as false the passages in Genesis that suggest that Adam might
sin. Because God created Adam in his own image, he had foreknowledge and did not need to eat the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil (3.18, 3.21,42 3.42–43). Simon Magus, on the contrary, insists on Adam’s sinfulness, God’s ignorant mistakes, and Adam’s exile from Eden.