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I question the spelling as "Valentianism" Shouldn't this be "Valentinianism"? Followers of Valentinus are Valentinian.
The line in the first paragraph stating that Valentinus "defied" orthodoxy is not totally accurate.
Orthodoxy is a dangerous word to use in this context, and should be applied I think to doctrines of the fourth century and after. Early Christian writers used words like universal or apostolic.
Authors like Frances Young (Biblical Exegesis and the Formation of Christian Culture) and Manlio Simonetti (Biblical Interpretation in the Early Church) point out that the main line separating universal and heretical teaching in this period was the relationship of Christianity to Israel. According to Justin, Irenaeus, and Tertullian, those who believed the God of Jesus Christ to be the same as the God of Israel were "apostolic" and believed in the "universal faith." Those who saw Christ as a being who liberated us from oppression by the (false) god of Israel were considered heretics by the same authors. Marcionites and Valentinians fell into the later category, as did many other types of Gnostics.
The belief that Christians worshipped the God of Israel was indeed a near universal belief among the first generations of Christians. It could hardly be avoided, as most early Christians were Jews. The Pauline synthesis of Christianity that many Gentiles inherited included this belief. Second century gnostic authors (all of them non-Jews) challenged this belief on cultural, rational, and spiritual grounds, but in doing so they did indeed propose a different synthesis of Christianity than the one inherited from the earliest Christians.
I agree that we should avoid simple characterizations of Orthodox = Good, Gnostic = Bad. On the other hand, it is incorrect I think to characterize first and second century Christianity as a mere amalgam of disparate belief that only later was sorted into orthodoxy and heresy. There were widely held tenets of belief and worship even among first century Christians, and the arc of those beliefs can be traced through the controversies of the third, fourth, and fifth centuries. The "gnostics" were those who proposed new syntheses of belief regarding Christ and the Law, Christ and the Cosmos, Christ and the human person. In many cases, these new teachings had strong philosophical grounds and they were proposed as "correctives" to an inherited tradition. In general, patristic authors reject these beliefs, and refer to Apostolic tradition as the authentic Christian doctrine.
And what the majority of illiterate Christians made of all these controversies as they went about their business is anyone's guess.
Johnbod 17:41, 9 November 2006 (UTC)
is it worth mentioning that author phillip k dick followed a valentinian theology? FaustX 20:12, 18 January 2007 (UTC)
"Sophia is what is known as a demiurge, an imperfect and flawed creator, which is identified with the deficient God of the Old Testament." I don't quite understand what this line means, is this saying that Valentine theology identified God as deficient and refers to God as Sophia, or is it trying to state as fact that God is deficient? Because the latter really isn't neutral, and I don't think its currently written to precisely mean the former. Homestarmy 16:04, 2 April 2007 (UTC)
When the expansion was done, all of the books were added into a further reading section, but it looks like since there's Harvard Citation in the article, these were meant to be references. However, I can't be sure what's what, were all of the books meant to be references? Further Reading generally contains things that aren't actually utilized by the article at all, but would likely be helpful to a reader on the topic at hand. Homestarmy 02:11, 3 April 2007 (UTC)
I've put the 9 I can see actuals refs to in refs, & the other 2 in further reading. Johnbod 02:40, 3 April 2007 (UTC)
The references should be fixed by <ref name="this_or_that"></ref> markups. I'll do it myself later, if nobody else does it before me... Rursus 21:00, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
They are, i think, in accordance with Wikipedia:Harvard referencing, but do them as notes if you like. Johnbod 22:00, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
Evilly (?) enough I marked the section The Valentinian System factually disputed, because Sophia is a zyzygy of Christ/Logos. That must mean that they're Aeons of the same dignity, and I can't understand that she created Christ/Logos if they are. Besides the Demiurge was a defect spawn of Sophia, so they are not the same. Said: Rursus 21:13, 26 May 2007 (UTC)
I also take exception to the comment:
"On the other hand, it is incorrect I think to characterize first and second century Christianity as a mere amalgam of disparate belief that only later was sorted into orthodoxy and heresy."
Elaine Pagels,' in her book, Beyond Belief, makes a very good argument for this happening.
In addition, the early Christians may more than likely have had a near universal belief in the God of Israel, but to say that their belief in the God of Israel meant that they also believed that Jesus Christ was God incarnate, and the same God of the Old Testament, is just an unsupportable inference.
I think the article is now in good order, mayhap some experts from around Stephan Hoeller the Valentinian have been active on the page. Nevertheless it is readable and comprehensive, could anyone that have some insight in the matter take a look at Sethianism that claims the existence of "Thomasine Gnostics". Never ever heard of it. About Valentinianism and Basilideans I remember from Irenaeus and from the gnostic library at www.gnosis.org. ... said: Rursus ( mbork³) 19:09, 26 September 2009 (UTC)
there is a proposal for the creation of Wikiproject:Gnosticism. Its scope will include all gnostic faiths and will serve as a nexus for the improvement of Gnosticism related articles on Wikipedia, If any one would like to join or comment it is located here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Council/Proposals/Gnosticism -- Zaharous ( talk) 01:41, 17 June 2010 (UTC)
In section Bridal Chamber statement
looks like someones creative imagination, please take a look in history and see if added by anon IP, it looks like a hoax. Rursus dixit. ( mbork3!) 17:11, 23 October 2010 (UTC)
I do not think that "sin" is a correct word to refer to Sophia's (flawed) creation of the world. I am no expert with Valentinianism, though, but from all I know about Gnosticism in general, this can hardly be called a "sin" (and from my understanding, it definitely should not). Also refer to the recent discussion on BBC ( http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01s4rhz), where, IIRC, Caroline Humfress corrects the host when he also used words like "sin". -- 83.228.215.119 ( talk) 22:41, 2 June 2013 (UTC)
The edited quote believed to refer to the bridal chamber ritual is at I. XIII. 3. 64.90.143.2 ( talk) 00:26, 9 June 2015 (UTC)Samgwan Spiess
In the section "The Valentinian System," the line "The theology that Irenaeus attributed to Valentinus is extremely complicated and difficult to follow." This seems subjective. Perhaps "The theology that Irenaeus attributed to Valentinus is complex."
Mtbusler ( talk) 18:17, 28 March 2017 (UTC)mtbusler
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I question the spelling as "Valentianism" Shouldn't this be "Valentinianism"? Followers of Valentinus are Valentinian.
The line in the first paragraph stating that Valentinus "defied" orthodoxy is not totally accurate.
Orthodoxy is a dangerous word to use in this context, and should be applied I think to doctrines of the fourth century and after. Early Christian writers used words like universal or apostolic.
Authors like Frances Young (Biblical Exegesis and the Formation of Christian Culture) and Manlio Simonetti (Biblical Interpretation in the Early Church) point out that the main line separating universal and heretical teaching in this period was the relationship of Christianity to Israel. According to Justin, Irenaeus, and Tertullian, those who believed the God of Jesus Christ to be the same as the God of Israel were "apostolic" and believed in the "universal faith." Those who saw Christ as a being who liberated us from oppression by the (false) god of Israel were considered heretics by the same authors. Marcionites and Valentinians fell into the later category, as did many other types of Gnostics.
The belief that Christians worshipped the God of Israel was indeed a near universal belief among the first generations of Christians. It could hardly be avoided, as most early Christians were Jews. The Pauline synthesis of Christianity that many Gentiles inherited included this belief. Second century gnostic authors (all of them non-Jews) challenged this belief on cultural, rational, and spiritual grounds, but in doing so they did indeed propose a different synthesis of Christianity than the one inherited from the earliest Christians.
I agree that we should avoid simple characterizations of Orthodox = Good, Gnostic = Bad. On the other hand, it is incorrect I think to characterize first and second century Christianity as a mere amalgam of disparate belief that only later was sorted into orthodoxy and heresy. There were widely held tenets of belief and worship even among first century Christians, and the arc of those beliefs can be traced through the controversies of the third, fourth, and fifth centuries. The "gnostics" were those who proposed new syntheses of belief regarding Christ and the Law, Christ and the Cosmos, Christ and the human person. In many cases, these new teachings had strong philosophical grounds and they were proposed as "correctives" to an inherited tradition. In general, patristic authors reject these beliefs, and refer to Apostolic tradition as the authentic Christian doctrine.
And what the majority of illiterate Christians made of all these controversies as they went about their business is anyone's guess.
Johnbod 17:41, 9 November 2006 (UTC)
is it worth mentioning that author phillip k dick followed a valentinian theology? FaustX 20:12, 18 January 2007 (UTC)
"Sophia is what is known as a demiurge, an imperfect and flawed creator, which is identified with the deficient God of the Old Testament." I don't quite understand what this line means, is this saying that Valentine theology identified God as deficient and refers to God as Sophia, or is it trying to state as fact that God is deficient? Because the latter really isn't neutral, and I don't think its currently written to precisely mean the former. Homestarmy 16:04, 2 April 2007 (UTC)
When the expansion was done, all of the books were added into a further reading section, but it looks like since there's Harvard Citation in the article, these were meant to be references. However, I can't be sure what's what, were all of the books meant to be references? Further Reading generally contains things that aren't actually utilized by the article at all, but would likely be helpful to a reader on the topic at hand. Homestarmy 02:11, 3 April 2007 (UTC)
I've put the 9 I can see actuals refs to in refs, & the other 2 in further reading. Johnbod 02:40, 3 April 2007 (UTC)
The references should be fixed by <ref name="this_or_that"></ref> markups. I'll do it myself later, if nobody else does it before me... Rursus 21:00, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
They are, i think, in accordance with Wikipedia:Harvard referencing, but do them as notes if you like. Johnbod 22:00, 15 April 2007 (UTC)
Evilly (?) enough I marked the section The Valentinian System factually disputed, because Sophia is a zyzygy of Christ/Logos. That must mean that they're Aeons of the same dignity, and I can't understand that she created Christ/Logos if they are. Besides the Demiurge was a defect spawn of Sophia, so they are not the same. Said: Rursus 21:13, 26 May 2007 (UTC)
I also take exception to the comment:
"On the other hand, it is incorrect I think to characterize first and second century Christianity as a mere amalgam of disparate belief that only later was sorted into orthodoxy and heresy."
Elaine Pagels,' in her book, Beyond Belief, makes a very good argument for this happening.
In addition, the early Christians may more than likely have had a near universal belief in the God of Israel, but to say that their belief in the God of Israel meant that they also believed that Jesus Christ was God incarnate, and the same God of the Old Testament, is just an unsupportable inference.
I think the article is now in good order, mayhap some experts from around Stephan Hoeller the Valentinian have been active on the page. Nevertheless it is readable and comprehensive, could anyone that have some insight in the matter take a look at Sethianism that claims the existence of "Thomasine Gnostics". Never ever heard of it. About Valentinianism and Basilideans I remember from Irenaeus and from the gnostic library at www.gnosis.org. ... said: Rursus ( mbork³) 19:09, 26 September 2009 (UTC)
there is a proposal for the creation of Wikiproject:Gnosticism. Its scope will include all gnostic faiths and will serve as a nexus for the improvement of Gnosticism related articles on Wikipedia, If any one would like to join or comment it is located here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Council/Proposals/Gnosticism -- Zaharous ( talk) 01:41, 17 June 2010 (UTC)
In section Bridal Chamber statement
looks like someones creative imagination, please take a look in history and see if added by anon IP, it looks like a hoax. Rursus dixit. ( mbork3!) 17:11, 23 October 2010 (UTC)
I do not think that "sin" is a correct word to refer to Sophia's (flawed) creation of the world. I am no expert with Valentinianism, though, but from all I know about Gnosticism in general, this can hardly be called a "sin" (and from my understanding, it definitely should not). Also refer to the recent discussion on BBC ( http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01s4rhz), where, IIRC, Caroline Humfress corrects the host when he also used words like "sin". -- 83.228.215.119 ( talk) 22:41, 2 June 2013 (UTC)
The edited quote believed to refer to the bridal chamber ritual is at I. XIII. 3. 64.90.143.2 ( talk) 00:26, 9 June 2015 (UTC)Samgwan Spiess
In the section "The Valentinian System," the line "The theology that Irenaeus attributed to Valentinus is extremely complicated and difficult to follow." This seems subjective. Perhaps "The theology that Irenaeus attributed to Valentinus is complex."
Mtbusler ( talk) 18:17, 28 March 2017 (UTC)mtbusler