AGAINST
HERESY
“But
some most worthless persons are in the habit of carrying about the name [of
Jesus Christ] in wicked guile, while yet they practice things unworthy of God,
and hold opinions contrary to the doctrine of Christ, to their own destruction,
and that of those who give credit to them, whom you must avoid as ye would wild
beasts. For there are some vain talkers and deceivers, not Christians, but
Christ-betrayers, bearing about the name of Christ in deceit, and 'corrupting
the Word' of the Gospel; while they intermix the poison of their deceit with
their persuasive talk, as if they mingled aconite with sweet wine, that so he
who drinks, being deceived in his taste by the very great sweetness of the
draught, may incautiously meet with his death. If any man follows him that
makes a schism in the Church, he shall not inherit the kingdom
of God. If any one walks according
to a strange opinion, he agrees not with the passion [of Christ.].” St. Ignatius of Antioch ("Epistle To The Ephesians," c. 105 A.D.)
"Do not err, my brethren. Those that corrupt families shall not
inherit the kingdom of God.
And if those that corrupt mere human families are condemned to death, how much
more shall those suffer everlasting punishment who endeavour to corrupt the
Church of Christ, for which the Lord Jesus, the only-begotten Son of God,
endured the cross, and submitted to death! Whosoever, 'being waxen fat,' and
'become gross,' sets at nought His doctrine, shall go into Hell. In like
manner, every one that has received from God the power of distinguishing, and
yet follows an unskillful shepherd, and receives a false opinion for the truth,
shall be punished." St. Ignatius of Antioch ("Epistle To The Ephesians," c. 105 A.D.)
"These men falsify the oracles of God, and prove themselves evil
interpreters of the good Word of revelation. They also overthrow the faith of
many, by drawing them away, under a pretence of [superior] knowledge, from Him
who rounded and adorned the universe; as if, forsooth, they had something more
excellent and sublime to reveal, than that God who created the heaven and the
earth, and all things that are therein. By means of specious and plausible
words, they cunningly allure the simple-minded to inquire into their system;
but they nevertheless clumsily destroy them, while they initiate them into
their blasphemous and impious opinions respecting the Demiurge; and these
simple ones are unable, even in such a matter, to distinguish falsehood from
truth." St. Irenaeus ("Against
All Heresies," c. 180 A.D.)
"In the four preceding books, my very dear friend, which I put forth
to thee, all the heretics have been exposed, and their doctrines brought to
light, and these men refuted who have devised irreligious opinions. [I have
accomplished this by adducing] something from the doctrine peculiar to each of
these men, which they have left in their writings, as well as by using
arguments of a more general nature, and applicable to them all. Then I have
pointed out the Truth, and shown the preaching of the Church, which the
prophets proclaimed (as I have already demonstrated), but which Christ brought
to perfection, and the apostles have handed down, from whom the Church,
receiving [these truths], and throughout all the world alone preserving them in
their integrity (bene), has transmitted them to her sons." St. Irenaeus ("Against All Heresies," c. 180
A.D.)
"Do not devote your attention to the fallacies of artificial
discourses, nor the vain promises of plagiarizing heretics, but to the
venerable simplicity of unassuming truth." St. Hippolytus ("Refutation Of All Heresies," c.
205 A.D.)
"Tell me, I pray, if any Jew or pagan denied the Creed of the Catholic
faith, should you think that we ought to listen to him? Most certainly not.
What if a heretic or an apostate does the same? Still less should we listen to
him, for it is worse for a man to forsake the truth which he has known, than to
deny it without ever having known it." St.
John Cassian ("On The Incarnation," early 5th century A.D.)
"For the scheme of the mysteries of the Church and the Catholic faith
is such that one who denies one portion of the Sacred Mystery cannot confess
the other. For all parts of it are so bound up and united together that one
cannot stand without the other and if a man denies one point out of the whole
number, it is of no use for him to believe all the others." St.
John Cassian ("On The Incarnation," early 5th century A.D.)
CHURCH
BELIEFS & ISSUES
WHAT THE
EARLY CHURCH BELIEVED
Biblical quotations on this web site are either
from the King James Version or the Douay-Rheims Version of the Bible.
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