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The Conditionalist Faith of Our Fathers, vol. 1 - Contents
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    CHAPTER FIFTY: Gnostic-Manichaean Perversions Compel Restatement of Truth

    One of the earliest and gravest of doctrinal perversions to imperil the Early Church and its pristine faith was the menace of Gnosticism. This development was most prominent in Egypt and Syria. But in Rome, Asia Minor, Mesopotamia, Armenia, and eastern Persia fruitful soil was likewise found for its propagation. And it not only flourished widely but proved to be exceedingly persistent. In fact, it was overcome only after some three centuries of stubborn controversy. It confronted the world with a whole battery of new terms that connoted alien concepts. It was a neopagan revival with tremendous virility and persistence. Its significance therefore needs to be sensed.CFF1 853.1

    In time the church defeated Gnosticism, but the marks of the adversary were left indelibly upon her. Plagued by this, and other departures that followed—especially Neoplatonism—the church never went back to her primitive form of teaching. To clarify her position before the world she felt compelled to crystallize and to creedalize her faith. But as a result, among other departures, alien teachings regarding the nature and destiny of the soul came to be adopted by the majority, and were retained in large sections of the church from the third century onward. This constitutes a compelling reason for this little survey of Gnosticism.CFF1 853.2

    The Gnostic movement professed to have the answer to the baffling problem of the origin and destiny of the universe, especially the inception and disposition of evil. As to its distinctive teachings, three major concepts were elemental in this strange development. These were: (1) a Supreme Being, the Absolute Eternal God, unconnected with matter and incapable of being affected by it; (2) matter, also eternal, produced by emanations instead of creation, matter being the source of all evil and opposed to God; and (3) a series of intermediate beings between the two. From these elementals sprang a host of errors and evils profoundly affecting the subject of our quest.CFF1 853.3

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