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Ebionites

Ebionites (Greek: Ἐβιωναῖοι, translit. Ebiōnaîoi, derived from Hebrew אֶבְיוֹנִים‎,[1] ʾEḇyōnīm, meaning 'the poor' or 'poor ones') as a term refers to a Jewish Christian sect, which viewed poverty as a blessing, that existed during the early centuries of the Common Era.[2][3] The Ebionites embraced an adoptionist Christology, thus understanding Jesus of Nazareth as a mere man who, by virtue of his righteousness in following the Law of Moses, was chosen by God to be the Messiah.[4] A majority of the Ebionites rejected as heresies the orthodox Christian beliefs in Jesus' divinity, virgin birth and substitutionary atonement; and therefore maintained that Jesus was born the natural son of Joseph and Mary, sought to abolish animal sacrifices by prophetic proclamation, and died as a martyr in order to move all Israel to repentance.

Beyond voluntary poverty, the Ebionites were said to practice religious vegetarianism and ritual bathing. They insisted on the necessity of following the Written Law and Jesus' Sermon on the Mount; used one, some or all of the Jewish–Christian gospels, such as the Gospel of the Ebionites, as additional scripture to the Hebrew Bible; and revered James the Just as an exemplar of righteousness and the true successor to Jesus (rather than Peter), while rejecting Paul as a false apostle and an apostate from the Law.[5][6][7]: 88 

Since historical records by the Ebionites are scarce, fragmentary and disputed, much of what is known or conjectured about them derives from the Church Fathers who saw certain Jewish Christians as Ebionites and confused different groups in their polemics whom they labeled heretical "Judaizers".[8][9][page needed] Consequently, very little about the Ebionite sect or sects is known with certainty, and most, if not all, statements about them are speculative. The Church Fathers consider the Ebionites identical with other Jewish Christian sects, such as the Nazarenes.[10][11]

Name edit

The hellenized Hebrew term Ebionite (Ebionai) was first applied by Irenaeus in the second century without making mention of Nazarenes (c. 180 CE).[12][13] Origen wrote "for Ebion signifies 'poor' among the Jews, and those Jews who have received Jesus as Christ are called by the name of Ebionites."[14][15] Tertullian was the first to write against a heresiarch called Ebion; scholars believe he derived this name from a literal reading of Ebionaioi as 'followers of Ebion', a derivation now considered mistaken for lack of any more substantial references to such a figure.[16][17] The term the poor (Greek: ptōkhoí) was still used in its original, more general sense.[16][17] Modern Hebrew still uses the Biblical Hebrew term the needy both in histories of Christianity for "Ebionites" (אביונים‎) and for almsgiving to the needy at Purim.[18]

History edit

 
Map of the Decapolis showing the location of Pella.

Emergence edit

The earliest reference to a sect that might fit the description of the later Ebionites appears in Justin Martyr's Dialogue with Trypho (c. 140).[citation needed] Justin distinguishes between Jewish Christians who observe the Law of Moses but do not require its observance upon others and those who believe the Mosaic Law to be obligatory on all.[19] Irenaeus (c. 180) was probably the first to use the term Ebionites to name a sect he labeled heretical "Judaizers" for "stubbornly clinging to the Law".[20] Origen (c. 212) remarks that the name derives from the Hebrew word evyon, meaning 'poor'.[21] Epiphanius of Salamis (c. 310–320 – 403) gives the most complete account in his heresiology called Panarion, denouncing eighty heretical sects, among them the Ebionites.[22]: 30 [23] Epiphanius mostly gives general descriptions of their religious beliefs and includes quotations from their gospels, which have not survived. According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, the Ebionite movement "may have arisen about the time of the destruction of the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem" (70 CE).[2] The tentative dating of the origins of this sect depends on Epiphanius writing three centuries later and relying on information for the Ebionites from the Book of Elchasai, which may not have had anything to do with the Ebionites.[24]

Paul talks of his collection for the "poor among the saints" in the Jerusalem church, but this is generally taken as meaning the poorer members of the church rather than a schismatic sect.[25]

The actual number of sects described as Ebionites is difficult to ascertain, as the contradictory patristic accounts in their attempt to distinguish various sects sometimes confuse them with each other.[17] Other sects mentioned are the Carpocratians, the Cerinthians, the Elcesaites, the fourth century Nazarenes and the Sampsaeans, most of whom were Jewish Christian sects who held gnostic or other views rejected by the Ebionites. Epiphanius, however, mentions that a sect of Ebionites came to embrace some of these views despite keeping their name.[26]

As the Ebionites are first mentioned as such in the second century, their earlier history and any relation to the first Jerusalem church remains obscure and a matter of contention. There is no evidence linking the origin of the later sect of the Ebionites with the First Jewish-Roman War of 66–70 CE or with the Jerusalem church led by James. Eusebius relates a tradition, probably based on Aristo of Pella, that the early Christians left Jerusalem just prior to the war and fled to Pella,[27] Jordan beyond the Jordan River, but does not connect this with Ebionites.[16][17] They were led by Simeon of Jerusalem (d. 107) and during the Second Jewish-Roman War of 115–117, they were persecuted by the Jewish followers of Bar Kochba for refusing to recognize his messianic claims.[26] As late as Epiphanius of Salamis (310–403), members of the Ebionite sect resided in Nabatea, and Paneas, Moabitis, and Kochaba in the region of Bashan, near Adraa.[28] From these places, they dispersed and went into Asia (Turkey), Rome and Cyprus.[28]

According to Harnack, the influence of Elchasaites places some Ebionites in the context of the gnostic movements widespread in Syria and the lands to the east.[17][29]

Disappearance edit

After the end of the First Jewish–Roman War, the importance of the Jerusalem church began to fade. Jewish Christianity became dispersed throughout the Jewish diaspora in the Levant, where it was slowly eclipsed by Gentile Christianity, which then spread throughout the Roman Empire without competition from Jewish Christian sects.[30][page needed] Once the Jerusalem church was eliminated during the Bar Kokhba revolt ending in 136 C.E., the Ebionites gradually lost influence and followers. Some modern scholars, such as Hyam Maccoby, argue the decline of the Ebionites was due to marginalization and persecution by both Jews and Christians.[6] However, Maccoby's views expressed in his works from the 1980s and ’90s have been almost universally rejected by scholars.[31] Following the defeat of the rebellion and the expulsion of Jews from Judea, Jerusalem became the Gentile city of Aelia Capitolina. Many of the Jewish Christians residing at Pella renounced their Jewish practices at this time and joined the mainstream Christian church. Those who remained at Pella and continued in obedience to the Law were labeled heretics.[32] In 375, Epiphanius records the settlement of Ebionites on Cyprus, but by the fifth century, Theodoret of Cyrrhus reported that they were no longer present in the region.[26]

The Ebionites are still attested, if as marginal communities, down to the 7th century. Some modern scholars argue that the Ebionites survived much longer and identify them with a sect encountered by the historian Abd al-Jabbar ibn Ahmad around the year 1000.[33] There is another possible reference to Ebionite communities existing around the 11th century in northwestern Arabia in Sefer Ha'masaot, the "Book of the Travels" of Rabbi Benjamin of Tudela, a rabbi from Spain. These communities were located in two cities, Tayma and "Tilmas",[34] possibly Saada in Yemen. The 12th century Muslim historian Muhammad al-Shahrastani mentions Jews living in nearby Medina and Hejaz who accepted Jesus as a prophetic figure and followed traditional Judaism, rejecting mainstream Christian views.[35] Some scholars argue that they contributed to the development of the Islamic view of Jesus due to exchanges of Ebionite remnants with the first Muslims.[17][36]

Views and practices edit

Judaism, Gnosticism and Essenism edit

Most patristic sources[citation needed] portray the Ebionites as Jews who zealously followed the Torah, revered Jerusalem as the holiest city[20] and restricted table fellowship only to Gentiles who converted to Judaism.[19]

Some Church Fathers describe some Ebionites as departing from traditional Jewish principles of faith and practice. For example, Methodius of Olympus stated that the Ebionites believed that the prophets spoke only by their own power and not by the power of the Holy Spirit.[37] Epiphanius of Salamis stated that the Ebionites engaged in excessive ritual bathing,[22]: 19:28–30  possessed an angelology which claimed that the Christ is an angel of God who was incarnated in Jesus when he was adopted as the son of God during his baptism,[22]: 330, 14, 5 [22]: 30, 16, 4–5  denied parts of the Law deemed obsolete or corrupt,[22]: 30, 18, 7–9  opposed animal sacrifice,[22]: 30, 16, 4–5 [38] practiced Vegetarianism[22]: 30.22.4  and celebrated a commemorative meal annually[39] on or around Passover with unleavened bread and water only, in contrast to the daily Christian Eucharist.[22]: 30 [40][41] The reliability of Epiphanius' account of the Ebionites is questioned by some scholars.[9][page needed][42] Modern scholar Shlomo Pines, for example, argues that the heterodox views and practices he ascribes to some Ebionites originated in Gnostic Christianity rather than Jewish Christianity and are characteristics of the Jewish Elcesaite sect, which Epiphanius mistakenly attributed to the Ebionites.[33]: 39 

While mainstream biblical scholars do suppose some Essene influence on the nascent Jewish Christian church in some organizational, administrative and cultic respects, some scholars go beyond that assumption. Regarding the Ebionites specifically, a number of scholars have different theories on how the Ebionites may have developed from an Essene Jewish messianic sect. Hans-Joachim Schoeps argues that the conversion of some Essenes to Jewish Christianity after the Siege of Jerusalem in 70 CE may be the source of some Ebionites adopting Essene views and practices,[36][page needed] while some conclude that the Essenes did not become Jewish Christians, but still had an influence on the Ebionites.[43][page needed]

On John the Baptist edit

In the Gospel of the Ebionites, as quoted by Epiphanius, John the Baptist and Jesus are portrayed as vegetarians.[44][45][46] Epiphanius states that the Ebionites had amended "locusts" (Greek akris) to "honey cake" (Greek ekris). This emendation is not found in any other New Testament manuscript or translation,[47][48] though a different vegetarian reading is found in a late Slavonic version of Josephus' War of the Jews.[49] Pines and other modern scholars propose that the Ebionites were projecting their own vegetarianism onto John the Baptist.[33]: 39 

The strict vegetarianism of the Ebionites may have been a reaction to the cessation of animal sacrifices after the destruction of Jerusalem Temple in 70 CE and a safeguard against the consumption of unclean meat in a pagan environment.[50] James Tabor, however, argues that Ebionite disdain for eating meat and the Temple sacrifice of animals is due to their preference for the ideal pre-Flood diet and what they took to be the original form of worship. In this view, the Ebionites had an interest in reviving the traditions inspired by pre-Sinai revelation, especially the time from Enoch to Noah.[51]

On Jesus the Nazarene edit

The Church Fathers agree that some or all of the Ebionites rejected many of the precepts central to proto-orthodox Christianity, such as Jesus' divinity and virgin birth.[9][page needed] The Ebionites are described as emphasizing the humanity of Jesus as the biological son of Joseph and Mary, who, by virtue of his righteousness in keeping the Mosaic law perfectly, was adopted as the son of God to fulfill the Hebrew scriptures.[52]

Origen (Contra Celsum 5.61)[53] and Eusebius (Historia Ecclesiastica 3.27.3) recognize some variation in the Christology of Ebionite sects; for example, that while all Ebionites denied Jesus' pre-existence, there was a sub-sect which did not deny the virgin birth.[54] Theodoret, while dependent on earlier writers,[55] draws the conclusion that the two sub-sects would have used different gospels.[56] The Ebionites may have used only one, some or all of the Jewish–Christian gospels as additional scripture to the Hebrew Bible. However, Irenaeus reports that they only used a version of the Gospel of Matthew, which omitted the first two chapters (on the nativity of Jesus) and started with the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist.[20]

The Ebionites appear to have understood Jesus as the messianic "prophet like Moses" (foretold in Deuteronomy 18:15-19) who has come to proclaim the abolishment of animal sacrifices,[22]: 30, 16, 4–5 [38] rather than substituting himself for them through self-sacrifice. Consequently, Jesus is believed to have died as a martyr in order to move all descendants of the ancient Israelites to repentance by living immediately according to a radical ethic of inward and outward righteousness that will be standard in the Messianic Age.[57]

Therefore, in order to become righteous, achieve communion with God[58][not specific enough to verify] and be saved from annihilation, the Ebionites insisted that both Jews and Gentile converts must observe all the commandments in the Written Law[19] (except for those concerning animal sacrifice) and in Jesus' Sermon on the Mount with an emphasis on his "Culminations".[59]

On James the Just edit

Among modern scholars, Robert Eisenman suggests that the Ebionites revered James the Just, brother of Jesus and leader of the Jerusalem church, as the true successor to Jesus (rather than Peter) and an exemplar of righteousness, and therefore they followed the permanent Nazirite vow that James had taken.[60] One of the popular primary connections of the Ebionites to James is that the Ascents of James in the Pseudo-Clementine literature are related to the Ebionites.[42] The other popularly proposed connection is that mentioned by William Whiston in his 1794 edition of Josephus, where he notes that we learn from fragments of Hegesippus that the Ebionites interpreted a prophecy of Isaiah as foretelling the murder of James.[61]

Scholars, including Eisenman,[62][63] Pierre-Antoine Bernheim [fr],[64] Will Durant, Michael Goulder,[65] Gerd Ludemann,[66] John Painter[67] and James Tabor,[51] argue for some form of continuity of the Jerusalem church into the second and third centuries and that the Ebionites regarded James as their leader. Tabor argues that the Ebionites claimed a dynastic apostolic succession for the relatives of Jesus.[51][68]

Conservative Christian scholars, such as Richard Bauckham, hold that James and his circle in the early Jerusalem church held a "high Christology" (i.e. Jesus was God incarnate) while the Ebionites held a "low Christology" (i.e. Jesus was a mere man adopted by God).[69] As an alternative to the traditional view of Eusebius that the Jewish Jerusalem church gradually adopted the proto-orthodox Christian theology of the Gentile church, Bauckham and others suggest immediate successors to the Jerusalem church under James and the other relatives of Jesus were the Nazarenes who accepted Paul as an "apostle to the Gentiles", while the Ebionites were a later schismatic sect of the early second century that rejected Paul.[70][57]

On Paul the Apostle edit

The Ebionites rejected the Pauline Epistles,[3] and according to Origen they viewed Paul as an "apostate from the law".[71] The Ebionites may have been spiritual and physical descendants of the "super-apostles" — talented and respected Jewish Christian ministers in favour of mandatory circumcision of converts — who sought to undermine Paul in Galatia and Corinth.[72]

Epiphanius relates that the Ebionites opposed Paul, who they saw as responsible for the idea that Gentile Christians did not have to be circumcised or follow the Law of Moses, and named him an apostate.[20] Epiphanius further relates that some Ebionites alleged that Paul was a Greek who converted to Judaism in order to marry the daughter of a high priest of Israel, but apostatized when she rejected him.[73][7]: 88 

Writings edit

No writings of the Ebionites have survived outside of a few quotes by others and they are in uncertain form.[2] The Recognitions of Clement and the Clementine Homilies, two third century Christian works, are regarded by general scholarly consensus as largely or entirely Jewish Christian in origin and reflect Jewish Christian beliefs. The exact relationship between the Ebionites and these writings is debated, but Epiphanius's description of some Ebionites in Panarion 30 bears a striking similarity to the ideas in the Recognitions and Homilies. Scholar Glenn Alan Koch speculates that Epiphanius likely relied upon a version of the Homilies as a source document.[23] Some scholars also speculate that the core of the Gospel of Barnabas, beneath a polemical medieval Muslim overlay, may have been based upon an Ebionite or gnostic document.[74] The existence and origin of this source continues to be debated by scholars.[75]

John Arendzen classifies the Ebionite writings into four groups.[76]

Gospel of the Ebionites edit

Irenaeus stated that the Ebionites used the Gospel of Matthew exclusively.[77] Eusebius of Caesarea wrote that they used only the Gospel of the Hebrews.[78] From this, the minority view of James R. Edwards and Bodley's Librarian Edward Nicholson claim that there was only one Hebrew gospel in circulation, Matthew's Gospel of the Hebrews. They also note that the title Gospel of the Ebionites was never used by anyone in the early church.[79][80][81] Epiphanius contended that the gospel the Ebionites used was written by Matthew and called the "Gospel of the Hebrews".[82] Because Epiphanius said that it was "not wholly complete, but falsified and mutilated",[22]: 30.13.1  writers such as Walter Richard Cassels and Pierson Parker consider it a different "edition" of Matthew's Hebrew Gospel;[83][84] however, internal evidence from the quotations in Panarion 30.13.4 and 30.13.7 suggest that the text was a gospel harmony originally composed in Greek.[85]

Mainstream scholarly texts, such as the standard edition of the New Testament apocrypha edited by Wilhelm Schneemelcher, generally refer to the text Jerome cites as used by the Ebionites as the Gospel of the Ebionites, though this is not a term current in the early church.[86][87]

Clementine literature edit

The collection of New Testament apocrypha known as the Clementine literature included three works known in antiquity as the Circuits of Peter, the Acts of the Apostles and a work usually titled the Ascents of James. They are specifically referenced by Epiphanius in his polemic against the Ebionites. The first-named books are substantially contained in the Homilies of Clement under the title of Clement's Compendium of Peter's itinerary sermons and in the Recognitions attributed to Clement. They form an early Christian didactic fiction to express Jewish Christian views, such as the primacy of James the Just, brother of Jesus; their connection with the episcopal see of Rome; and their antagonism to Simon Magus, as well as gnostic doctrines. Scholar Robert E. Van Voorst opines of the Ascents of James (R 1.33–71), "There is, in fact, no section of the Clementine literature about whose origin in Jewish Christianity one may be more certain".[42] Despite this assertion, he expresses reservations that the material is genuinely Ebionite in origin.

Symmachus edit

Symmachus produced a translation of the Hebrew Bible in Koine Greek, which was used by Jerome and is still extant in fragments, and his lost Hypomnemata,[88][89] written to counter the canonical Gospel of Matthew. Although lost, the Hypomnemata is probably identical to De distinctione præceptorum mentioned by Ebed Jesu (Assemani, Bibl. Or., III, 1). The identity of Symmachus as an Ebionite has been questioned in recent scholarship.[90]

Elkesaites edit

Hippolytus of Rome reported that a Jewish Christian, Alcibiades of Apamea, appeared in Rome teaching from a book which he claimed to be the revelation which a righteous man, Elkesai, had received from an angel, though Hippolytus suspected that Alcibiades was himself the author.[91] Shortly afterwards, Origen recorded a sect, the Elkesaites, with the same beliefs.[92] Epiphanius claimed the Ebionites also used this book as a source for some of their beliefs and practices (Panarion 30.17).[23][93][22]: 19, 1; 53, 1  Epiphanius explains the origin of the name Elkesai to be Aramaic El Ksai, meaning "hidden power" (Panarion 19.2.1). Scholar Petri Luomanen believes the book to have been written originally in Aramaic as a Jewish apocalypse, probably in Babylonia in 116–117.[7]: 96, 299, 331:note 7 

Religious and critical perspectives edit

Christianity edit

The mainstream Christian view of the Ebionites is partly based on interpretation of the polemical views of the Church Fathers, who portrayed them as heretics for rejecting many of the proto-orthodox Christian views of Jesus and allegedly having an improper fixation on the Law of Moses at the expense of the grace of God.[76] In this view, the Ebionites may have been the descendants of a Jewish Christian sect within the early Jerusalem church which broke away from its proto-orthodox theology possibly in reaction to the Council of Jerusalem compromise of 50 CE.[94][page needed]

Islam edit

Islam charges Christianity with having distorted the pure monotheism of the God of Abraham through the doctrines of the Trinity and through the veneration of icons. Paul Addae and Tim Bowes write that the Ebionites were faithful to the original teachings of the historical Jesus and thus shared Islamic views about Jesus' humanity and also rejected classic and objective theories of atonement,[95] though the Islamic view of Jesus may conflict with the view of most Ebionites regarding the virgin birth,[96][page needed][97] with Muslims affirming and Ebionites denying, according to Epiphanius and other church fathers.

Hans Joachim Schoeps observes that the Christianity which Muhammad, the prophet of Islam, was likely to have encountered on the Arabian peninsula "was not the state religion of Byzantium but a schismatic Christianity characterized by Ebionite and Monophysite views":[36]: 137 

Thus we have a paradox of world-historical proportions, viz., the fact that Jewish Christianity indeed disappeared within the Christian church, but was preserved in Islam and thereby extended some of its basic ideas even to our own day. According to Islamic doctrine, the Ebionite combination of Moses and Jesus found its fulfillment in Muhammad.

— Hans Joachim Schoeps, Jewish Christianity[36]: 140 

But the Christian scholar in the field of Oriental studies, Irfan Shahîd, says that there is no evidence that the Ebionites remained until the 7th century AD, much less that they had a presence in Mecca.[98]

Judaism edit

The counter-missionary group Jews for Judaism favorably mentions the historical Ebionites in their literature in order to argue that "Messianic Judaism", as promoted by missionary groups such as Jews for Jesus, is Pauline Christianity misrepresenting itself as Judaism.[99] In 2007, some Messianic commentators expressed concern over a possible existential crisis for the Messianic movement in Israel due to a resurgence of Ebionitism, specifically the problem of Israeli Messianic leaders apostatizing from the belief in the alleged divinity of Jesus.[100][101]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Ebionites" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 842.
  2. ^ a b c "Ebionites". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 2022-11-14.
  3. ^ a b The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Oxford University Press. 2005. pp. 526–. ISBN 978-0-19-280290-3.
  4. ^ Bart D. Ehrman (2005). Lost Christianities: The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew. Oxford University Press. p. 102–. ISBN 978-0-19-518249-1.
  5. ^ Kohler, Kaufmann (1901–1906). . In Singer, Isidore; Alder, Cyrus (eds.). Jewish Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 2020-09-30. Retrieved 26 July 2020.
  6. ^ a b Hyam Maccoby (1987). The Mythmaker: Paul and the Invention of Christianity. HarperCollins. pp. 172–183. ISBN 0-06-250585-8, an abridgement.
  7. ^ a b c Petri Luomanen (2007). Matt Jackson-McCabe (ed.). Jewish Christianity Reconsidered. Fortress Press. ISBN 978-0-8006-3865-8.
  8. ^ A Companion to Second-Century Christian 'Heretics'. BRILL; 2008. ISBN 90-04-17038-3. p. 267–.
  9. ^ a b c Klijn, AFJ; Reinink, GJ (1973). Patristic Evidence for Jewish-Christian Sects. Brill. ISBN 90-04-03763-2.
  10. ^ Hegg, Tim (2007). (PDF). TorahResource. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-08-21. Retrieved 13 August 2007.
  11. ^ Jeffrey Butz (2010). The Secret Legacy of Jesus. Inner Traditions. ISBN 978-1-59477-307-5. p. 124: In fact, the Ebionites and the Nazarenes are one and the same; p. 137: "Following the devastation of the Jewish War, the Nazarenes took refuge in Pella, a community in exile, where they lay in anxious wait with their fellow Jews. From this point on it is preferable to call them the Ebionites. There was no clear demarcation or formal transition from Nazarene to Ebionite; there was no sudden change of theology or Christology."; p. 137: "While the writings of later church fathers speak of Nazarenes and Ebionites as if they were different Jewish Christian groups, they are mistaken in that assessment. The Nazarenes and the Ebionites were one and the same group, but for clarity we will refer to the pre-70 group in Jerusalem as Nazarenes, and the post-70 group in Pella and elsewhere as Ebionites."
  12. ^ Antti Marjanen, Petri Luomanen "A companion to second-century Christian "heretics" p250 "It is interesting to note that the Ebionites first appear in the catalogues in the latter half of the second century. The earliest reference to the Ebionites was included in a catalogue used by Irenaeus in his Refutation and Subversion ..."
  13. ^ Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible 2000 p. 364 "EBIONITES Name for Jewish Christians first witnessed in Irenaeus (Adv. haer. 1.26.2; Gk. ebionaioi) ca. 180 ce".
  14. ^ Origen. Contra Celsum. II, 1.
  15. ^ "Philip Schaff: ANF04. Fathers of the Third Century: Tertullian, Part Fourth; Minucius Felix; Commodian; Origen, Parts First and Second - Christian Classics Ethereal Library". www.ccel.org.
  16. ^ a b c G. Uhlhorn. "Ebionites". In Philip Schaff (ed.). A Religious Encyclopaedia or Dictionary of Biblical, Historical, Doctrinal, and Practical Theology. Vol. 2 (3rd ed.). pp. 684–685.
  17. ^ a b c d e f O. Cullmann. "Ebioniten". Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart. Vol. 2. p. 7435.
  18. ^ The Oxford English-Hebrew Dictionary. ISBN 9780198601722.
  19. ^ a b c Justin Martyr. Dialogue with Trypho. 47.
  20. ^ a b c d Irenaeus of Lyon. Adversus Haereses. I, 26; III,21.
  21. ^ Origen. De Principiis. IV, 22.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Epiphanius of Salamis. Panarion.
  23. ^ a b c Glenn Alan Koch (1976). A Critical Investigation of Epiphanius' Knowledge of the Ebionites: A Translation and Critical Discussion of 'Panarion' 30. University of Pennsylvania.
  24. ^ Hakkinen, Sakara. "Ebionites," in Marjanen, Antti, and Petri Luomanen, eds. A Companion to Second-Century Christian'Heretics. Vol. 76. Brill, 2008, 257–278, esp. 259
  25. ^ Some scholars see the title present already in Paul's references to a collection for the "poor" in Jerusalem (Gal.1:10). But in Rom.15:26 Paul distinguishes this sect from the other Jerusalem believers by speaking of "the poor among the saints." In 2 Cor.9:12 Paul further confirms the economic, or literal, aspect by speaking of the collection as making up for "the deficiencies of the saints". E. Stanley Jones, '"Ebionites", in Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible, Amsterdam University Press, 2000 p. 364.
  26. ^ a b c Henry Wace & William Piercy (1911). A Dictionary of Early Christian Biography. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
  27. ^ Eusebius, Church History 3, 5, 3; Epiphanius, Panarion 29,7,7-8; 30, 2, 7; On Weights and Measures 15. On the flight to Pella see: Jonathan Bourgel (2010). "The Jewish Christians' Move from Jerusalem as a pragmatic choice". In Dan Jaffe (ed.). Studies in Rabbinic Judaism and Early Christianity. Leyden: Brill. pp. 107–138.
  28. ^ a b Klijn, A.F.J.; Reinink, G.J. (1973). Patristic Evidence for Jewish-Christian Sects. Leiden: E.J. Brill. p. 29. ISBN 978-9-00403763-2. OCLC 1076236746. (citing Epiphanius' Anacephalaiosis 30.18.1.)
  29. ^ Adolf von Harnack (1907). "Chapter VI. The Christianity of the Jewish Christians". The History of Dogma. ISBN 978-1-57910-067-4.
  30. ^ Brandon, S. G. F (1968). The fall of Jerusalem and the Christian church: A study of the effects of the Jewish overthrow of A. D. 70 on Christianity. S.P. C.K. ISBN 0-281-00450-1.
  31. ^ Gregerman, Adam (2012-02-09). . The Forward. Archived from the original on 2016-04-27. Retrieved 2023-03-11.
  32. ^ Edward Gibbon (2003). The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Random House, NY. . ISBN 0-375-75811-9.
  33. ^ a b c Shlomo Pines (1966). The Jewish Christians Of The Early Centuries Of Christianity According To A New Source. Proceedings of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities II, No. 13. OCLC 13610178.
  34. ^ Marcus N. Adler (1907). The Itinerary of Benjamin of Tudela: Critical Text, Translation and Commentary. Phillip Feldheim. pp. 70–72.
  35. ^ Muhammad al-Shahrastani (2002). The Book of Religious and Philosophical Sects, William Cureton edition. Gorgias Press. p. 167.
  36. ^ a b c d Hans-Joachim Schoeps (1969). Jewish Christianity: Factional Disputes in the Early Church. Translation Douglas R. A. Hare. Fortress Press.
  37. ^ Thomas C. Oden (2006). Ancient Christian commentary on Scripture: New Testament. InterVarsity Press. pp. 178–. ISBN 978-0-8308-1497-8. Retrieved 14 October 2010. Excerpt from St. Methodius of Olympus, Symposium on Virginity, 8.10., "and with regard to the Spirit, such as the Ebionites, who contend that the prophets spoke only by their own power".
  38. ^ a b Simon J. Joseph (January 2017). "'I Have Come to Abolish Sacrifices' (Epiphanius, Pan. 30.16.5): Re-examining a Jewish Christian Text and Tradition". New Testament Studies. 63. New Testament Studies, Volume 63, Issue 1: 92–110. doi:10.1017/S0028688516000345. S2CID 164739491.
  39. ^ W.M. Ramsey (1912). "The Tekmoreian Guest-Friends". Journal of Hellenic Studies. 32: 151–170. doi:10.2307/624138. JSTOR 624138. S2CID 162190693.
  40. ^ Exarch Anthony J. Aneed (1919). . Archived from the original on 17 April 2007. Retrieved 28 April 2007.
  41. ^ Irenaeus of Lyon. Adversus Haereses. V, 1.
  42. ^ a b c Robert E. van Voorst (1989). The Ascents of James: History and Theology of a Jewish-Christian Community. Society of Biblical Literature. ISBN 1-55540-294-1.
  43. ^ Kriste Stendahl (1991). The Scrolls and the New Testament. Herder & Herder. ISBN 0-8245-1136-0.
  44. ^ J Verheyden (2003). "Epiphanius on the Ebionites". In Peter J. Tomson; Doris Lambers-Petry (eds.). The image of the Judaeo-Christians in ancient Jewish and Christian literature. Mohr Siebeck. ISBN 3-16-148094-5. p. 188: The vegetarianism of John the Baptist and of Jesus is an important issue too in the Ebionite interpretation of the Christian life.
  45. ^ Bart D. Ehrman (2003). Lost Christianities: The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew. Oxford University Press. pp. 102, 103. ISBN 0-19-514183-0. p. 102: Probably the most interesting of the changes from the familiar New Testament accounts of Jesus comes in the Gospel of the Ebionites description of John the Baptist, who, evidently, like his successor Jesus, maintained a strictly vegetarian cuisine.
  46. ^ Bart D. Ehrman (2003). Lost Scriptures: Books that Did Not Make It into the New Testament. Oxford University Press. p. 13. ISBN 0-19-514182-2. Referring to Epiphanius' quotation from the Gospel of the Ebionites in Panarion 30.13, "And his food, it says, was wild honey whose taste was of manna, as cake in oil".
  47. ^ Textual Apparatus of the UBS Greek New Testament. United Bible Societies. 1993 - with Peshitta, Old Latin etc.
  48. ^ James A. Kelhoffer (2005). The Diet of John the Baptist. Mohr Siebeck. pp. 19–21. ISBN 978-3-16-148460-5.
  49. ^ G.R.S. Mead (2007). Gnostic John the Baptizer: Selections from the Mandæan John-Book. Forgotten Books. ISBN 978-1-60506-210-5. p. 104: And when he had been brought to Archelaus and the doctors of the Law had assembled, they asked him who he is and where he has been until then. And to this he made answer and spake: I am pure; [for] the Spirit of God hath led me on, and [I live on] cane and roots and tree-food.
  50. ^ Hans-Josef Klauck (2003). The Apocryphal Gospels: An Introduction. A&C Black. p. 52–. ISBN 978-0-567-08390-6.
  51. ^ a b c James D. Tabor (2006). The Jesus Dynasty: The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-8723-4.
  52. ^ Bart D. Ehrman (2005). Lost Christianities: The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew. Oxford University Press. pp. 100–103. ISBN 978-0-19-975668-1.
  53. ^ Schaff (1904). A select library of Nicene and post-Nicene fathers of the Christian church. p. footnote 828: That there were two different views among the Ebionites as to the birth of Christ is stated frequently by Origen (cf. e.g. Contra Celsum V. 61), but there was unanimity in the denial of his pre-existence and essential divinity, and this constituted the essence of the heresy in the eyes of the Fathers from Irenæus on.
  54. ^ Geoffrey W. Bromiley (1982). "Ebionites". International Standard Bible Encyclopedia: E-J. p. 9 citing E.H.3.27.3 "There were others, however, besides them, that were of the same name, that avoided the strange and absurd beliefs of the former, and did not deny that the Lord was born of a virgin and of the Holy Spirit. But nevertheless, inasmuch as they also refused to acknowledge that he pre-existed, being God, Word, and Wisdom, they turned aside into the impiety of the former, especially when they, like them, endeavored to observe strictly the bodily worship of the law." Also source text online at CCEL.org.
  55. ^ Albertus Frederik Johannes Klijn, G. J. Reinink (1973). Patristic evidence for Jewish-Christian sects. p. 42: Irenaeus wrote that these Ebionites used the Gospel of Matthew, which explains Theodoret's remark. Unlike Eusebius, he did not link Irenaeus' reference to Matthew with Origen's remarks about the 'Gospel of the Hebrews'
  56. ^ Edwin K. Broadhead (2010). Jewish Ways of Following Jesus: Redrawing the Religious Map of Antiquity. p. 209: Theodoret describes two groups of Ebionites on the basis of their view of the virgin birth. Those who deny the virgin birth use the Gospel of the Hebrews; those who accept it use the Gospel of Matthew.
  57. ^ a b Richard Bauckham (2003). "The Origin of the Ebionites". The Image of the Judeo-Christians in Ancient Jewish and Christian Literature. Brill, Peter J. Tomson and Doris Lambers-Petry eds. pp. 162–181. ISBN 3-16-148094-5.
  58. ^ Hippolytus. {{cite book}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  59. ^ Viljoen, Francois (2006). "Jesus' Teaching on the Torah in the Sermon on the Mount". Neotestamentica. 40 (1). Neotestamenica / New Testament Society of Southern Africa: 135–155. JSTOR 43049229.
  60. ^ Robert Eisenman (1998). James the brother of Jesus: the key to unlocking the secrets of early Christianity and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Penguin Books. pp. 36–7, 156, 224, 432, 495, 566, 674, 744, 781, 941. ISBN 0-14-025773-X.
  61. ^ Whiston, W. Antiquities (2008 ed.). p. 594.
  62. ^ Eisenman (1997). {{cite book}}: Missing or empty |title= (help), e.g. p. 154: "As presented by Paul, James is the Leader of the early Church par excellence. Terms like 'Bishop of the Jerusalem Church' or 'Leader of the Jerusalem Community' are of little actual moment at this point, because from the 40s to the 60s CE, when James held sway in Jerusalem, there really were no other centres of any importance."; p. 156: "there can be little doubt that 'the Poor' was the name for James' Community in Jerusalem or that Community descended from it in the East in the next two-three centuries, the Ebionites."
  63. ^ Robert Eisenman (2006). The New Testament Code. Watkins Publishing. pp. 34, 145, 273. ISBN 978-1-84293-186-8. p. 34: These 'Ebionites' are also the followers of James par excellence, himself considered (even in early Christian accounts) to be the leader of 'the Poor' or these selfsame 'Ebionites'; p. 145: "For James 2:5, of course, it is 'the Poor of this world ('the Ebionim' or 'Ebionites') whom God chose as Heirs to the Kingdom He promised to those that love Him'"; p. 273: "...'the Righteous Teacher' and those of his followers (called 'the Poor' or 'Ebionim' - in our view, James and his Community, pointedly referred to in the early Church literature, as will by now have become crystal clear, as 'the Ebionites' or 'the Poor')."
  64. ^ Pierre-Antoine Bernheim (1997). James, Brother of Jesus. SCM Press. ISBN 978-0-334-02695-2. The fact that he became the head of the Jerusalem church is something which is generally accepted. From an ABC interview with author.
  65. ^ Michael Goulder (1995). St. Paul versus St. Peter: A Tale of Two Missions. John Knox Press. pp. 107–113, 134. ISBN 0-664-25561-2. p. 134: So the 'Ebionite' Christology, which we found first described in Irenaeus about 180 is not the invention of the late second century. It was the creed of the Jerusalem Church from early times.
  66. ^ Gerd Ludemann (1996). Heretics: The Other Side of Early Christianity. John Knox Press. pp. 52–56. ISBN 0-664-22085-1. Retrieved 27 March 2011. pp. 52–53: Since there is a good century between the end of the Jerusalem community and the writing down of the report quoted above (by Irenaeus), of course reasons must be given why the group of Ebionites should be seen as an offshoot of the Jerusalem community. The following considerations tell in favor of the historical plausibility of this: 1. The name 'Ebionites' might be the term this group used to denote themselves. 2. Hostility to Paul in the Christian sphere before 70 is attested above all in groups which come from Jerusalem. 3. The same is true of observance of the law culminating in circumcision. 4. The direction of prayer towards Jerusalem makes the derivation of the Ebionites from there probable.; p. 56: "therefore, it seems that we should conclude that Justin's Jewish Christians are a historical connecting link between the Jewish Christianity of Jerusalem before the year 70 and the Jewish Christian communities summed up in Irenaeus' account of the heretics."
  67. ^ John Painter (1999). Just James - The Brother of Jesus in History and Tradition. Fortress Press. pp. 83–102, 229. ISBN 0-8006-3169-2. p. 229: A connection between early Jerusalem Christianity (the Hebrews) and the later Ebionites is probable.
  68. ^ Keith Augustus Burton (2007). The Blessing of Africa: The Bible and African Christianity. Intervarsity Press. pp. 116–117. ISBN 978-0-8308-2762-6.
  69. ^ Richard Bauckham (2001). "James and Jesus". The brother of Jesus: James the Just and his mission. By Bruce Chilton; Jacob Neusner. Westminster John Knox Press. pp. 100–137, 135. We may now assert quite confidently that the self-consciously low christology of the later Jewish sect known as the Ebionites does not, as has sometimes been asserted, go back to James and his circle in the early Jerusalem church.
  70. ^ Richard Bauckham (January 1996). "The Relatives of Jesus". Themelios. 21 (2): 18–21. Retrieved 11 February 2011. Reproduced in part by permission of the author.
  71. ^ Paul and the Second Century. A&C Black. 2011. p. 164–. ISBN 978-0-567-15827-7.
  72. ^ Bart D. Ehrman (2014). How Jesus Became God: The Exaltation of a Jewish Preacher from Galilee. HarperOne. ISBN 978-0-06-177818-6.
  73. ^ "[The Ebionites] declare that he was a Greek [...] He went up to Jerusalem, they say, and when he had spent some time there, he was seized with a passion to marry the daughter of the priest. For this reason he became a proselyte and was circumcised. Then, when he failed to get the girl, he flew into a rage and wrote against circumcision and against the sabbath and the Law " - Epiphanius of Salamis, Panarion 30.16.6–9
  74. ^ John Toland (1718). Nazarenus, or Jewish, Gentile and Mahometan Christianity.
  75. ^ Blackhirst, R. (2000). "Barnabas and the Gospels: Was There an Early Gospel of Barnabas?". Journal of Higher Criticism. 7 (1): 1–22. Retrieved 11 March 2007.
  76. ^ a b J.P Arendzen (1909). "Ebionites" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  77. ^ "Those who are called Ebionites accept that God made the world. However, their opinions with respect to the Lord are quite similar to those of Cerinthus and Carpocrates. They use Matthew's gospel only, and repudiate the Apostle Paul, maintaining that he was an apostate from the Law." - Irenaeus, Haer 1.26.2
  78. ^ Eusebius of Caesarea, Church History, III, 27, 4.
  79. ^ James R. Edwards (2009). The Hebrew Gospel & the Development of the Synoptic Tradition. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. p. 121.
  80. ^ Nicholson (1879). The Gospel according to the Hebrews, reprinted print on demand BiblioBazaar, LLC, 2009. pp. 1–81.
  81. ^ William Whiston; H. Stebbing. The Life and Works of Flavius Josephus, reprinted Vol. II, Kessinger Publishing, 2006. p. 576.
  82. ^ They too accept the Matthew's gospel, and like the followers of Cerinthus and Merinthus, they use it alone. They call it the Gospel of the Hebrews, for in truth Matthew alone in the New Testament expounded and declared the Gospel in Hebrew using Hebrew script. - Epiphanius, Panarion 30.3.7
  83. ^ Walter Richard Cassels (1877). Supernatural Religion - An Inquiry into the Reality of Divine Revelation, reprinted print on demand Read Books, 2010. Vol. 1, pp. 419–422.
  84. ^ Pierson Parker (1940). "A Proto-Lukan Basis for the Gospel According to the Hebrews". Journal of Biblical Literature. 59 (4): 471–478. doi:10.2307/3262407. JSTOR 3262407.
  85. ^ The Complete Gospels. Polebridge Press, Robert J. Miller ed. 1994. p. 436. ISBN 0-06-065587-9.
  86. ^ Robert Walter Funk (1999). The Gospel of Jesus: according to the Jesus Seminar. Polebridge Press.
  87. ^ F.L. Cross; E.A. Livingston (1989). The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Oxford University Press. pp. 438–439.
  88. ^ Symmachus' Hypomnemata is mentioned by Eusebius in his Historia Ecclesiae, VI, xvii: "As to these translators it should be stated that Symmachus was an Ebionite. But the heresy of the Ebionites, as it is called, asserts that Christ was the son of Joseph and Mary, considering him a mere man, and insists strongly on keeping the law in a Jewish manner, as we have seen already in this history. Commentaries of Symmachus are still extant in which he appears to support this heresy by attacking the Gospel of Matthew. Origen states that he obtained these and other commentaries of Symmachus on the Scriptures from a certain Juliana, who, he says, received the books by inheritance from Symmachus himself."; Jerome, De Viris Illustribus, chapter 54; Church History. VI, 17.
  89. ^ Jerome, De viris illustribus, 54.
  90. ^ Oscar Skarsaune (2007). Jewish Believers in Jesus. Hendrickson Publishers. pp. 448–450. ISBN 978-1-56563-763-4. Skarsaune argues that Eusebius may have only inferred that Symmachus was an Ebionite based on his commentaries on certain passages in the Hebrew Scriptures. E.g., Eusebius mentions Isa 7:14 where Symmachus reads "young woman" based on the Hebrew text rather than "virgin" as in the LXX, and he interprets this commentary as attacking the Gospel of Matthew.(Dem. ev. 7.1) and (Hist. eccl. 5.17).
  91. ^ Gerard P. Luttikhuizen (1985). The revelation of Elchasai. p. 216.
  92. ^ Antti Marjanen, Petri Luomanen A companion to second-century Christian "heretics" p336
  93. ^ Philosophumena, IX, 14–17. Luttikhuizen 1985: "Epiphanius deviates so strikingly from Hippolytus' account of the heresy of Alcibiades that we cannot possibly assume that he is dependent on the Refutation."
  94. ^ Jean Daniélou (1964). The theology of Jewish Christianity: The Development of Christian doctrine before the Council of Nicea. H. Regnery Co. ASIN B0007FOFQI.
  95. ^ Karl Baus (1980). From the Apostolic Community to Constantine. Crossroad. p. 155. ISBN 978-0-824-50314-7.
  96. ^ Abdulhaq al-Ashanti & Abdur-Rahmaan Bowes (Paul Addae and Tim Bowes 1998) (2005). Before Nicea: The Early Followers of Prophet Jesus. Jamia Media. ISBN 0-9551099-0-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  97. ^ J.P Arendzen (1909). "Ebionites" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Those who accepted the virginal birth seem to have had more exalted views concerning Christ and, besides observing the Sabbath, to have kept the Sunday as a memorial of His Resurrection. The milder sort of Ebionites were probably fewer and less important than their stricter brethren, because the denial of the virgin birth was commonly attributed to all. (Origen, Horn. in Luc., xvii.) St. Epiphanius calls the more heretical section Ebionites, and the more Catholic-minded, Nazarenes.
  98. ^ Irfan Shahîd. Islam And Oriens Christianus: Makka 610-622 Ad. in Mark Swanson et al, eds. The Encounter of Eastern Christianity with Early Islam. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2006. p18.
  99. ^ Bentzion Kravitz (2001). The Jewish Response to Missionaries: Counter-Missionary Handbook. Jews for Judaism International.
  100. ^ Moshe Koniuchowsky (2007). . yourarmstoisrael.org. Archived from the original on 12 August 2007. Retrieved 21 July 2007.
  101. ^ James Prasch (2007). . Moriel Ministries. Archived from the original on 11 August 2004. Retrieved 21 July 2007.

Literature edit

  • J. M. Fuller (1999). "Ebionism and Ebionites". In Henry Wace (ed.). A Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature to the End of the Sixth Century A.D., with an Account of the Principal Sects and Heresies. Hendrickson Publishers. ISBN 1-56563-460-8.
  • G. Uhlhorn (1894). "Ebionites". In Philip Schaff (ed.). A Religious Encyclopaedia or Dictionary of Biblical, Historical, Doctrinal, and Practical Theology. Vol. 2 (3rd ed.). pp. 684–685.
  • Wilson, Barrie (2008). How Jesus Became Christian - The early Christians and the transformation of a Jewish teacher into the Son of God. Orion. ISBN 978-0-297-85200-1.
  • Jeffrey Butz (2010). The Secret Legacy of Jesus. Inner Traditions. ISBN 978-1-59477-307-5.
  • Goranson, Stephen (1992). "Ebionites". In D Freedman (ed.). The Anchor Bible Dictionary. Vol. 2. New York: Doubleday. pp. 260–1.

External links edit

  • "Ebionites" . The American Cyclopædia. 1879.
  • (archived website of a modern Ebionite revival group founded by Shemayah Phillips in 1985)
  • The Ebionite Home Page by Allan Cronshaw -- Brother Of Jesus

ebionites, this, article, about, early, jewish, christian, sect, gospel, associated, with, them, gospel, greek, Ἐβιωναῖοι, translit, ebiōnaîoi, derived, from, hebrew, יו, ים, ʾeḇyōnīm, meaning, poor, poor, ones, term, refers, jewish, christian, sect, which, vi. This article is about the early Jewish Christian sect For the gospel associated with them see Gospel of the Ebionites Ebionites Greek Ἐbiwnaῖoi translit Ebiōnaioi derived from Hebrew א ב יו נ ים 1 ʾEḇyōnim meaning the poor or poor ones as a term refers to a Jewish Christian sect which viewed poverty as a blessing that existed during the early centuries of the Common Era 2 3 The Ebionites embraced an adoptionist Christology thus understanding Jesus of Nazareth as a mere man who by virtue of his righteousness in following the Law of Moses was chosen by God to be the Messiah 4 A majority of the Ebionites rejected as heresies the orthodox Christian beliefs in Jesus divinity virgin birth and substitutionary atonement and therefore maintained that Jesus was born the natural son of Joseph and Mary sought to abolish animal sacrifices by prophetic proclamation and died as a martyr in order to move all Israel to repentance Beyond voluntary poverty the Ebionites were said to practice religious vegetarianism and ritual bathing They insisted on the necessity of following the Written Law and Jesus Sermon on the Mount used one some or all of the Jewish Christian gospels such as the Gospel of the Ebionites as additional scripture to the Hebrew Bible and revered James the Just as an exemplar of righteousness and the true successor to Jesus rather than Peter while rejecting Paul as a false apostle and an apostate from the Law 5 6 7 88 Since historical records by the Ebionites are scarce fragmentary and disputed much of what is known or conjectured about them derives from the Church Fathers who saw certain Jewish Christians as Ebionites and confused different groups in their polemics whom they labeled heretical Judaizers 8 9 page needed Consequently very little about the Ebionite sect or sects is known with certainty and most if not all statements about them are speculative The Church Fathers consider the Ebionites identical with other Jewish Christian sects such as the Nazarenes 10 11 Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Emergence 2 2 Disappearance 3 Views and practices 3 1 Judaism Gnosticism and Essenism 3 2 On John the Baptist 3 3 On Jesus the Nazarene 3 4 On James the Just 3 5 On Paul the Apostle 4 Writings 4 1 Gospel of the Ebionites 4 2 Clementine literature 4 3 Symmachus 4 4 Elkesaites 5 Religious and critical perspectives 5 1 Christianity 5 2 Islam 5 3 Judaism 6 See also 7 References 8 Literature 9 External linksName editThe hellenized Hebrew term Ebionite Ebionai was first applied by Irenaeus in the second century without making mention of Nazarenes c 180 CE 12 13 Origen wrote for Ebion signifies poor among the Jews and those Jews who have received Jesus as Christ are called by the name of Ebionites 14 15 Tertullian was the first to write against a heresiarch called Ebion scholars believe he derived this name from a literal reading of Ebionaioi as followers of Ebion a derivation now considered mistaken for lack of any more substantial references to such a figure 16 17 The term the poor Greek ptōkhoi was still used in its original more general sense 16 17 Modern Hebrew still uses the Biblical Hebrew term the needy both in histories of Christianity for Ebionites אביונים and for almsgiving to the needy at Purim 18 History edit nbsp Map of the Decapolis showing the location of Pella Emergence edit The earliest reference to a sect that might fit the description of the later Ebionites appears in Justin Martyr s Dialogue with Trypho c 140 citation needed Justin distinguishes between Jewish Christians who observe the Law of Moses but do not require its observance upon others and those who believe the Mosaic Law to be obligatory on all 19 Irenaeus c 180 was probably the first to use the term Ebionites to name a sect he labeled heretical Judaizers for stubbornly clinging to the Law 20 Origen c 212 remarks that the name derives from the Hebrew word evyon meaning poor 21 Epiphanius of Salamis c 310 320 403 gives the most complete account in his heresiology called Panarion denouncing eighty heretical sects among them the Ebionites 22 30 23 Epiphanius mostly gives general descriptions of their religious beliefs and includes quotations from their gospels which have not survived According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica the Ebionite movement may have arisen about the time of the destruction of the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem 70 CE 2 The tentative dating of the origins of this sect depends on Epiphanius writing three centuries later and relying on information for the Ebionites from the Book of Elchasai which may not have had anything to do with the Ebionites 24 Paul talks of his collection for the poor among the saints in the Jerusalem church but this is generally taken as meaning the poorer members of the church rather than a schismatic sect 25 The actual number of sects described as Ebionites is difficult to ascertain as the contradictory patristic accounts in their attempt to distinguish various sects sometimes confuse them with each other 17 Other sects mentioned are the Carpocratians the Cerinthians the Elcesaites the fourth century Nazarenes and the Sampsaeans most of whom were Jewish Christian sects who held gnostic or other views rejected by the Ebionites Epiphanius however mentions that a sect of Ebionites came to embrace some of these views despite keeping their name 26 As the Ebionites are first mentioned as such in the second century their earlier history and any relation to the first Jerusalem church remains obscure and a matter of contention There is no evidence linking the origin of the later sect of the Ebionites with the First Jewish Roman War of 66 70 CE or with the Jerusalem church led by James Eusebius relates a tradition probably based on Aristo of Pella that the early Christians left Jerusalem just prior to the war and fled to Pella 27 Jordan beyond the Jordan River but does not connect this with Ebionites 16 17 They were led by Simeon of Jerusalem d 107 and during the Second Jewish Roman War of 115 117 they were persecuted by the Jewish followers of Bar Kochba for refusing to recognize his messianic claims 26 As late as Epiphanius of Salamis 310 403 members of the Ebionite sect resided in Nabatea and Paneas Moabitis and Kochaba in the region of Bashan near Adraa 28 From these places they dispersed and went into Asia Turkey Rome and Cyprus 28 According to Harnack the influence of Elchasaites places some Ebionites in the context of the gnostic movements widespread in Syria and the lands to the east 17 29 Disappearance edit After the end of the First Jewish Roman War the importance of the Jerusalem church began to fade Jewish Christianity became dispersed throughout the Jewish diaspora in the Levant where it was slowly eclipsed by Gentile Christianity which then spread throughout the Roman Empire without competition from Jewish Christian sects 30 page needed Once the Jerusalem church was eliminated during the Bar Kokhba revolt ending in 136 C E the Ebionites gradually lost influence and followers Some modern scholars such as Hyam Maccoby argue the decline of the Ebionites was due to marginalization and persecution by both Jews and Christians 6 However Maccoby s views expressed in his works from the 1980s and 90s have been almost universally rejected by scholars 31 Following the defeat of the rebellion and the expulsion of Jews from Judea Jerusalem became the Gentile city of Aelia Capitolina Many of the Jewish Christians residing at Pella renounced their Jewish practices at this time and joined the mainstream Christian church Those who remained at Pella and continued in obedience to the Law were labeled heretics 32 In 375 Epiphanius records the settlement of Ebionites on Cyprus but by the fifth century Theodoret of Cyrrhus reported that they were no longer present in the region 26 The Ebionites are still attested if as marginal communities down to the 7th century Some modern scholars argue that the Ebionites survived much longer and identify them with a sect encountered by the historian Abd al Jabbar ibn Ahmad around the year 1000 33 There is another possible reference to Ebionite communities existing around the 11th century in northwestern Arabia in Sefer Ha masaot the Book of the Travels of Rabbi Benjamin of Tudela a rabbi from Spain These communities were located in two cities Tayma and Tilmas 34 possibly Saada in Yemen The 12th century Muslim historian Muhammad al Shahrastani mentions Jews living in nearby Medina and Hejaz who accepted Jesus as a prophetic figure and followed traditional Judaism rejecting mainstream Christian views 35 Some scholars argue that they contributed to the development of the Islamic view of Jesus due to exchanges of Ebionite remnants with the first Muslims 17 36 Views and practices editJudaism Gnosticism and Essenism edit Most patristic sources citation needed portray the Ebionites as Jews who zealously followed the Torah revered Jerusalem as the holiest city 20 and restricted table fellowship only to Gentiles who converted to Judaism 19 Some Church Fathers describe some Ebionites as departing from traditional Jewish principles of faith and practice For example Methodius of Olympus stated that the Ebionites believed that the prophets spoke only by their own power and not by the power of the Holy Spirit 37 Epiphanius of Salamis stated that the Ebionites engaged in excessive ritual bathing 22 19 28 30 possessed an angelology which claimed that the Christ is an angel of God who was incarnated in Jesus when he was adopted as the son of God during his baptism 22 330 14 5 22 30 16 4 5 denied parts of the Law deemed obsolete or corrupt 22 30 18 7 9 opposed animal sacrifice 22 30 16 4 5 38 practiced Vegetarianism 22 30 22 4 and celebrated a commemorative meal annually 39 on or around Passover with unleavened bread and water only in contrast to the daily Christian Eucharist 22 30 40 41 The reliability of Epiphanius account of the Ebionites is questioned by some scholars 9 page needed 42 Modern scholar Shlomo Pines for example argues that the heterodox views and practices he ascribes to some Ebionites originated in Gnostic Christianity rather than Jewish Christianity and are characteristics of the Jewish Elcesaite sect which Epiphanius mistakenly attributed to the Ebionites 33 39 While mainstream biblical scholars do suppose some Essene influence on the nascent Jewish Christian church in some organizational administrative and cultic respects some scholars go beyond that assumption Regarding the Ebionites specifically a number of scholars have different theories on how the Ebionites may have developed from an Essene Jewish messianic sect Hans Joachim Schoeps argues that the conversion of some Essenes to Jewish Christianity after the Siege of Jerusalem in 70 CE may be the source of some Ebionites adopting Essene views and practices 36 page needed while some conclude that the Essenes did not become Jewish Christians but still had an influence on the Ebionites 43 page needed On John the Baptist edit In the Gospel of the Ebionites as quoted by Epiphanius John the Baptist and Jesus are portrayed as vegetarians 44 45 46 Epiphanius states that the Ebionites had amended locusts Greek akris to honey cake Greek ekris This emendation is not found in any other New Testament manuscript or translation 47 48 though a different vegetarian reading is found in a late Slavonic version of Josephus War of the Jews 49 Pines and other modern scholars propose that the Ebionites were projecting their own vegetarianism onto John the Baptist 33 39 The strict vegetarianism of the Ebionites may have been a reaction to the cessation of animal sacrifices after the destruction of Jerusalem Temple in 70 CE and a safeguard against the consumption of unclean meat in a pagan environment 50 James Tabor however argues that Ebionite disdain for eating meat and the Temple sacrifice of animals is due to their preference for the ideal pre Flood diet and what they took to be the original form of worship In this view the Ebionites had an interest in reviving the traditions inspired by pre Sinai revelation especially the time from Enoch to Noah 51 On Jesus the Nazarene edit The Church Fathers agree that some or all of the Ebionites rejected many of the precepts central to proto orthodox Christianity such as Jesus divinity and virgin birth 9 page needed The Ebionites are described as emphasizing the humanity of Jesus as the biological son of Joseph and Mary who by virtue of his righteousness in keeping the Mosaic law perfectly was adopted as the son of God to fulfill the Hebrew scriptures 52 Origen Contra Celsum 5 61 53 and Eusebius Historia Ecclesiastica 3 27 3 recognize some variation in the Christology of Ebionite sects for example that while all Ebionites denied Jesus pre existence there was a sub sect which did not deny the virgin birth 54 Theodoret while dependent on earlier writers 55 draws the conclusion that the two sub sects would have used different gospels 56 The Ebionites may have used only one some or all of the Jewish Christian gospels as additional scripture to the Hebrew Bible However Irenaeus reports that they only used a version of the Gospel of Matthew which omitted the first two chapters on the nativity of Jesus and started with the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist 20 The Ebionites appear to have understood Jesus as the messianic prophet like Moses foretold in Deuteronomy 18 15 19 who has come to proclaim the abolishment of animal sacrifices 22 30 16 4 5 38 rather than substituting himself for them through self sacrifice Consequently Jesus is believed to have died as a martyr in order to move all descendants of the ancient Israelites to repentance by living immediately according to a radical ethic of inward and outward righteousness that will be standard in the Messianic Age 57 Therefore in order to become righteous achieve communion with God 58 not specific enough to verify and be saved from annihilation the Ebionites insisted that both Jews and Gentile converts must observe all the commandments in the Written Law 19 except for those concerning animal sacrifice and in Jesus Sermon on the Mount with an emphasis on his Culminations 59 On James the Just edit Among modern scholars Robert Eisenman suggests that the Ebionites revered James the Just brother of Jesus and leader of the Jerusalem church as the true successor to Jesus rather than Peter and an exemplar of righteousness and therefore they followed the permanent Nazirite vow that James had taken 60 One of the popular primary connections of the Ebionites to James is that the Ascents of James in the Pseudo Clementine literature are related to the Ebionites 42 The other popularly proposed connection is that mentioned by William Whiston in his 1794 edition of Josephus where he notes that we learn from fragments of Hegesippus that the Ebionites interpreted a prophecy of Isaiah as foretelling the murder of James 61 Scholars including Eisenman 62 63 Pierre Antoine Bernheim fr 64 Will Durant Michael Goulder 65 Gerd Ludemann 66 John Painter 67 and James Tabor 51 argue for some form of continuity of the Jerusalem church into the second and third centuries and that the Ebionites regarded James as their leader Tabor argues that the Ebionites claimed a dynastic apostolic succession for the relatives of Jesus 51 68 Conservative Christian scholars such as Richard Bauckham hold that James and his circle in the early Jerusalem church held a high Christology i e Jesus was God incarnate while the Ebionites held a low Christology i e Jesus was a mere man adopted by God 69 As an alternative to the traditional view of Eusebius that the Jewish Jerusalem church gradually adopted the proto orthodox Christian theology of the Gentile church Bauckham and others suggest immediate successors to the Jerusalem church under James and the other relatives of Jesus were the Nazarenes who accepted Paul as an apostle to the Gentiles while the Ebionites were a later schismatic sect of the early second century that rejected Paul 70 57 On Paul the Apostle edit The Ebionites rejected the Pauline Epistles 3 and according to Origen they viewed Paul as an apostate from the law 71 The Ebionites may have been spiritual and physical descendants of the super apostles talented and respected Jewish Christian ministers in favour of mandatory circumcision of converts who sought to undermine Paul in Galatia and Corinth 72 Epiphanius relates that the Ebionites opposed Paul who they saw as responsible for the idea that Gentile Christians did not have to be circumcised or follow the Law of Moses and named him an apostate 20 Epiphanius further relates that some Ebionites alleged that Paul was a Greek who converted to Judaism in order to marry the daughter of a high priest of Israel but apostatized when she rejected him 73 7 88 Writings editNo writings of the Ebionites have survived outside of a few quotes by others and they are in uncertain form 2 The Recognitions of Clement and the Clementine Homilies two third century Christian works are regarded by general scholarly consensus as largely or entirely Jewish Christian in origin and reflect Jewish Christian beliefs The exact relationship between the Ebionites and these writings is debated but Epiphanius s description of some Ebionites in Panarion 30 bears a striking similarity to the ideas in the Recognitions and Homilies Scholar Glenn Alan Koch speculates that Epiphanius likely relied upon a version of the Homilies as a source document 23 Some scholars also speculate that the core of the Gospel of Barnabas beneath a polemical medieval Muslim overlay may have been based upon an Ebionite or gnostic document 74 The existence and origin of this source continues to be debated by scholars 75 John Arendzen classifies the Ebionite writings into four groups 76 Gospel of the Ebionites edit Irenaeus stated that the Ebionites used the Gospel of Matthew exclusively 77 Eusebius of Caesarea wrote that they used only the Gospel of the Hebrews 78 From this the minority view of James R Edwards and Bodley s Librarian Edward Nicholson claim that there was only one Hebrew gospel in circulation Matthew s Gospel of the Hebrews They also note that the title Gospel of the Ebionites was never used by anyone in the early church 79 80 81 Epiphanius contended that the gospel the Ebionites used was written by Matthew and called the Gospel of the Hebrews 82 Because Epiphanius said that it was not wholly complete but falsified and mutilated 22 30 13 1 writers such as Walter Richard Cassels and Pierson Parker consider it a different edition of Matthew s Hebrew Gospel 83 84 however internal evidence from the quotations in Panarion 30 13 4 and 30 13 7 suggest that the text was a gospel harmony originally composed in Greek 85 Mainstream scholarly texts such as the standard edition of the New Testament apocrypha edited by Wilhelm Schneemelcher generally refer to the text Jerome cites as used by the Ebionites as the Gospel of the Ebionites though this is not a term current in the early church 86 87 Clementine literature edit The collection of New Testament apocrypha known as the Clementine literature included three works known in antiquity as the Circuits of Peter the Acts of the Apostles and a work usually titled the Ascents of James They are specifically referenced by Epiphanius in his polemic against the Ebionites The first named books are substantially contained in the Homilies of Clement under the title of Clement s Compendium of Peter s itinerary sermons and in the Recognitions attributed to Clement They form an early Christian didactic fiction to express Jewish Christian views such as the primacy of James the Just brother of Jesus their connection with the episcopal see of Rome and their antagonism to Simon Magus as well as gnostic doctrines Scholar Robert E Van Voorst opines of the Ascents of James R 1 33 71 There is in fact no section of the Clementine literature about whose origin in Jewish Christianity one may be more certain 42 Despite this assertion he expresses reservations that the material is genuinely Ebionite in origin Symmachus edit Symmachus produced a translation of the Hebrew Bible in Koine Greek which was used by Jerome and is still extant in fragments and his lost Hypomnemata 88 89 written to counter the canonical Gospel of Matthew Although lost the Hypomnemata is probably identical to De distinctione praeceptorum mentioned by Ebed Jesu Assemani Bibl Or III 1 The identity of Symmachus as an Ebionite has been questioned in recent scholarship 90 Elkesaites edit Hippolytus of Rome reported that a Jewish Christian Alcibiades of Apamea appeared in Rome teaching from a book which he claimed to be the revelation which a righteous man Elkesai had received from an angel though Hippolytus suspected that Alcibiades was himself the author 91 Shortly afterwards Origen recorded a sect the Elkesaites with the same beliefs 92 Epiphanius claimed the Ebionites also used this book as a source for some of their beliefs and practices Panarion 30 17 23 93 22 19 1 53 1 Epiphanius explains the origin of the name Elkesai to be Aramaic El Ksai meaning hidden power Panarion 19 2 1 Scholar Petri Luomanen believes the book to have been written originally in Aramaic as a Jewish apocalypse probably in Babylonia in 116 117 7 96 299 331 note 7 Religious and critical perspectives editChristianity edit The mainstream Christian view of the Ebionites is partly based on interpretation of the polemical views of the Church Fathers who portrayed them as heretics for rejecting many of the proto orthodox Christian views of Jesus and allegedly having an improper fixation on the Law of Moses at the expense of the grace of God 76 In this view the Ebionites may have been the descendants of a Jewish Christian sect within the early Jerusalem church which broke away from its proto orthodox theology possibly in reaction to the Council of Jerusalem compromise of 50 CE 94 page needed Islam edit Islam charges Christianity with having distorted the pure monotheism of the God of Abraham through the doctrines of the Trinity and through the veneration of icons Paul Addae and Tim Bowes write that the Ebionites were faithful to the original teachings of the historical Jesus and thus shared Islamic views about Jesus humanity and also rejected classic and objective theories of atonement 95 though the Islamic view of Jesus may conflict with the view of most Ebionites regarding the virgin birth 96 page needed 97 with Muslims affirming and Ebionites denying according to Epiphanius and other church fathers Hans Joachim Schoeps observes that the Christianity which Muhammad the prophet of Islam was likely to have encountered on the Arabian peninsula was not the state religion of Byzantium but a schismatic Christianity characterized by Ebionite and Monophysite views 36 137 Thus we have a paradox of world historical proportions viz the fact that Jewish Christianity indeed disappeared within the Christian church but was preserved in Islam and thereby extended some of its basic ideas even to our own day According to Islamic doctrine the Ebionite combination of Moses and Jesus found its fulfillment in Muhammad Hans Joachim Schoeps Jewish Christianity 36 140 But the Christian scholar in the field of Oriental studies Irfan Shahid says that there is no evidence that the Ebionites remained until the 7th century AD much less that they had a presence in Mecca 98 Judaism edit The counter missionary group Jews for Judaism favorably mentions the historical Ebionites in their literature in order to argue that Messianic Judaism as promoted by missionary groups such as Jews for Jesus is Pauline Christianity misrepresenting itself as Judaism 99 In 2007 some Messianic commentators expressed concern over a possible existential crisis for the Messianic movement in Israel due to a resurgence of Ebionitism specifically the problem of Israeli Messianic leaders apostatizing from the belief in the alleged divinity of Jesus 100 101 See also editAdoptionism Christianity and Judaism Christianity in the 1st century Conversion to Judaism Diversity in early Christian theology Gospel of the Ebionites Hebrew Roots Heresy in Christianity History of Christianity Jesus in the Talmud List of heresies in the Catholic Church Mandaeans Nazarenes Pauline Christianity Proto orthodox Christianity Psilanthropism Restorationism UnitarianismReferences edit Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Ebionites Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 8 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 842 a b c Ebionites Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2022 11 14 a b The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford University Press 2005 pp 526 ISBN 978 0 19 280290 3 Bart D Ehrman 2005 Lost Christianities The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew Oxford University Press p 102 ISBN 978 0 19 518249 1 Kohler Kaufmann 1901 1906 EBIONITES from the poor In Singer Isidore Alder Cyrus eds Jewish Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 2020 09 30 Retrieved 26 July 2020 a b Hyam Maccoby 1987 The Mythmaker Paul and the Invention of Christianity HarperCollins pp 172 183 ISBN 0 06 250585 8 an abridgement a b c Petri Luomanen 2007 Matt Jackson McCabe ed Jewish Christianity Reconsidered Fortress Press ISBN 978 0 8006 3865 8 A Companion to Second Century Christian Heretics BRILL 2008 ISBN 90 04 17038 3 p 267 a b c Klijn AFJ Reinink GJ 1973 Patristic Evidence for Jewish Christian Sects Brill ISBN 90 04 03763 2 Hegg Tim 2007 The Virgin Birth An Inquiry into the Biblical Doctrine PDF TorahResource Archived from the original PDF on 2007 08 21 Retrieved 13 August 2007 Jeffrey Butz 2010 The Secret Legacy of Jesus Inner Traditions ISBN 978 1 59477 307 5 p 124 In fact the Ebionites and the Nazarenes are one and the same p 137 Following the devastation of the Jewish War the Nazarenes took refuge in Pella a community in exile where they lay in anxious wait with their fellow Jews From this point on it is preferable to call them the Ebionites There was no clear demarcation or formal transition from Nazarene to Ebionite there was no sudden change of theology or Christology p 137 While the writings of later church fathers speak of Nazarenes and Ebionites as if they were different Jewish Christian groups they are mistaken in that assessment The Nazarenes and the Ebionites were one and the same group but for clarity we will refer to the pre 70 group in Jerusalem as Nazarenes and the post 70 group in Pella and elsewhere as Ebionites Antti Marjanen Petri Luomanen A companion to second century Christian heretics p250 It is interesting to note that the Ebionites first appear in the catalogues in the latter half of the second century The earliest reference to the Ebionites was included in a catalogue used by Irenaeus in his Refutation and Subversion Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible 2000 p 364 EBIONITES Name for Jewish Christians first witnessed in Irenaeus Adv haer 1 26 2 Gk ebionaioi ca 180 ce Origen Contra Celsum II 1 Philip Schaff ANF04 Fathers of the Third Century Tertullian Part Fourth Minucius Felix Commodian Origen Parts First and Second Christian Classics Ethereal Library www ccel org a b c G Uhlhorn Ebionites In Philip Schaff ed A Religious Encyclopaedia or Dictionary of Biblical Historical Doctrinal and Practical Theology Vol 2 3rd ed pp 684 685 a b c d e f O Cullmann Ebioniten Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart Vol 2 p 7435 The Oxford English Hebrew Dictionary ISBN 9780198601722 a b c Justin Martyr Dialogue with Trypho 47 a b c d Irenaeus of Lyon Adversus Haereses I 26 III 21 Origen De Principiis IV 22 a b c d e f g h i j k Epiphanius of Salamis Panarion a b c Glenn Alan Koch 1976 A Critical Investigation of Epiphanius Knowledge of the Ebionites A Translation and Critical Discussion of Panarion 30 University of Pennsylvania Hakkinen Sakara Ebionites in Marjanen Antti and Petri Luomanen eds A Companion to Second Century Christian Heretics Vol 76 Brill 2008 257 278 esp 259 Some scholars see the title present already in Paul s references to a collection for the poor in Jerusalem Gal 1 10 But in Rom 15 26 Paul distinguishes this sect from the other Jerusalem believers by speaking of the poor among the saints In 2 Cor 9 12 Paul further confirms the economic or literal aspect by speaking of the collection as making up for the deficiencies of the saints E Stanley Jones Ebionites in Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible Amsterdam University Press 2000 p 364 a b c Henry Wace amp William Piercy 1911 A Dictionary of Early Christian Biography Retrieved 1 August 2007 Eusebius Church History 3 5 3 Epiphanius Panarion 29 7 7 8 30 2 7 On Weights and Measures 15 On the flight to Pella see Jonathan Bourgel 2010 The Jewish Christians Move from Jerusalem as a pragmatic choice In Dan Jaffe ed Studies in Rabbinic Judaism and Early Christianity Leyden Brill pp 107 138 a b Klijn A F J Reinink G J 1973 Patristic Evidence for Jewish Christian Sects Leiden E J Brill p 29 ISBN 978 9 00403763 2 OCLC 1076236746 citing Epiphanius Anacephalaiosis 30 18 1 Adolf von Harnack 1907 Chapter VI The Christianity of the Jewish Christians The History of Dogma ISBN 978 1 57910 067 4 Brandon S G F 1968 The fall of Jerusalem and the Christian church A study of the effects of the Jewish overthrow of A D 70 on Christianity S P C K ISBN 0 281 00450 1 Gregerman Adam 2012 02 09 It s Kosher To Accept Real Jesus The Forward Archived from the original on 2016 04 27 Retrieved 2023 03 11 Edward Gibbon 2003 The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Random House NY Chapter 15 pp 390 391 ISBN 0 375 75811 9 a b c Shlomo Pines 1966 The Jewish Christians Of The Early Centuries Of Christianity According To A New Source Proceedings of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities II No 13 OCLC 13610178 Marcus N Adler 1907 The Itinerary of Benjamin of Tudela Critical Text Translation and Commentary Phillip Feldheim pp 70 72 Muhammad al Shahrastani 2002 The Book of Religious and Philosophical Sects William Cureton edition Gorgias Press p 167 a b c d Hans Joachim Schoeps 1969 Jewish Christianity Factional Disputes in the Early Church Translation Douglas R A Hare Fortress Press Thomas C Oden 2006 Ancient Christian commentary on Scripture New Testament InterVarsity Press pp 178 ISBN 978 0 8308 1497 8 Retrieved 14 October 2010 Excerpt from St Methodius of Olympus Symposium on Virginity 8 10 and with regard to the Spirit such as the Ebionites who contend that the prophets spoke only by their own power a b Simon J Joseph January 2017 I Have Come to Abolish Sacrifices Epiphanius Pan 30 16 5 Re examining a Jewish Christian Text and Tradition New Testament Studies 63 New Testament Studies Volume 63 Issue 1 92 110 doi 10 1017 S0028688516000345 S2CID 164739491 W M Ramsey 1912 The Tekmoreian Guest Friends Journal of Hellenic Studies 32 151 170 doi 10 2307 624138 JSTOR 624138 S2CID 162190693 Exarch Anthony J Aneed 1919 Syrian Christians A Brief History of the Catholic Church of St George in Milwaukee Wis And a Sketch of the Eastern Church Archived from the original on 17 April 2007 Retrieved 28 April 2007 Irenaeus of Lyon Adversus Haereses V 1 a b c Robert E van Voorst 1989 The Ascents of James History and Theology of a Jewish Christian Community Society of Biblical Literature ISBN 1 55540 294 1 Kriste Stendahl 1991 The Scrolls and the New Testament Herder amp Herder ISBN 0 8245 1136 0 J Verheyden 2003 Epiphanius on the Ebionites In Peter J Tomson Doris Lambers Petry eds The image of the Judaeo Christians in ancient Jewish and Christian literature Mohr Siebeck ISBN 3 16 148094 5 p 188 The vegetarianism of John the Baptist and of Jesus is an important issue too in the Ebionite interpretation of the Christian life Bart D Ehrman 2003 Lost Christianities The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew Oxford University Press pp 102 103 ISBN 0 19 514183 0 p 102 Probably the most interesting of the changes from the familiar New Testament accounts of Jesus comes in the Gospel of the Ebionites description of John the Baptist who evidently like his successor Jesus maintained a strictly vegetarian cuisine Bart D Ehrman 2003 Lost Scriptures Books that Did Not Make It into the New Testament Oxford University Press p 13 ISBN 0 19 514182 2 Referring to Epiphanius quotation from the Gospel of the Ebionites in Panarion 30 13 And his food it says was wild honey whose taste was of manna as cake in oil Textual Apparatus of the UBS Greek New Testament United Bible Societies 1993 with Peshitta Old Latin etc James A Kelhoffer 2005 The Diet of John the Baptist Mohr Siebeck pp 19 21 ISBN 978 3 16 148460 5 G R S Mead 2007 Gnostic John the Baptizer Selections from the Mandaean John Book Forgotten Books ISBN 978 1 60506 210 5 p 104 And when he had been brought to Archelaus and the doctors of the Law had assembled they asked him who he is and where he has been until then And to this he made answer and spake I am pure for the Spirit of God hath led me on and I live on cane and roots and tree food Hans Josef Klauck 2003 The Apocryphal Gospels An Introduction A amp C Black p 52 ISBN 978 0 567 08390 6 a b c James D Tabor 2006 The Jesus Dynasty The Hidden History of Jesus His Royal Family and the Birth of Christianity Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 8723 4 Bart D Ehrman 2005 Lost Christianities The Battles for Scripture and the Faiths We Never Knew Oxford University Press pp 100 103 ISBN 978 0 19 975668 1 Schaff 1904 A select library of Nicene and post Nicene fathers of the Christian church p footnote 828 That there were two different views among the Ebionites as to the birth of Christ is stated frequently by Origen cf e g Contra Celsum V 61 but there was unanimity in the denial of his pre existence and essential divinity and this constituted the essence of the heresy in the eyes of the Fathers from Irenaeus on Geoffrey W Bromiley 1982 Ebionites International Standard Bible Encyclopedia E J p 9 citing E H 3 27 3 There were others however besides them that were of the same name that avoided the strange and absurd beliefs of the former and did not deny that the Lord was born of a virgin and of the Holy Spirit But nevertheless inasmuch as they also refused to acknowledge that he pre existed being God Word and Wisdom they turned aside into the impiety of the former especially when they like them endeavored to observe strictly the bodily worship of the law Also source text online at CCEL org Albertus Frederik Johannes Klijn G J Reinink 1973 Patristic evidence for Jewish Christian sects p 42 Irenaeus wrote that these Ebionites used the Gospel of Matthew which explains Theodoret s remark Unlike Eusebius he did not link Irenaeus reference to Matthew with Origen s remarks about the Gospel of the Hebrews Edwin K Broadhead 2010 Jewish Ways of Following Jesus Redrawing the Religious Map of Antiquity p 209 Theodoret describes two groups of Ebionites on the basis of their view of the virgin birth Those who deny the virgin birth use the Gospel of the Hebrews those who accept it use the Gospel of Matthew a b Richard Bauckham 2003 The Origin of the Ebionites The Image of the Judeo Christians in Ancient Jewish and Christian Literature Brill Peter J Tomson and Doris Lambers Petry eds pp 162 181 ISBN 3 16 148094 5 Hippolytus a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a Missing or empty title help Viljoen Francois 2006 Jesus Teaching on the Torah in the Sermon on the Mount Neotestamentica 40 1 Neotestamenica New Testament Society of Southern Africa 135 155 JSTOR 43049229 Robert Eisenman 1998 James the brother of Jesus the key to unlocking the secrets of early Christianity and the Dead Sea Scrolls Penguin Books pp 36 7 156 224 432 495 566 674 744 781 941 ISBN 0 14 025773 X Whiston W Antiquities 2008 ed p 594 Eisenman 1997 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a Missing or empty title help e g p 154 As presented by Paul James is the Leader of the early Church par excellence Terms like Bishop of the Jerusalem Church or Leader of the Jerusalem Community are of little actual moment at this point because from the 40s to the 60s CE when James held sway in Jerusalem there really were no other centres of any importance p 156 there can be little doubt that the Poor was the name for James Community in Jerusalem or that Community descended from it in the East in the next two three centuries the Ebionites Robert Eisenman 2006 The New Testament Code Watkins Publishing pp 34 145 273 ISBN 978 1 84293 186 8 p 34 These Ebionites are also the followers of James par excellence himself considered even in early Christian accounts to be the leader of the Poor or these selfsame Ebionites p 145 For James 2 5 of course it is the Poor of this world the Ebionim or Ebionites whom God chose as Heirs to the Kingdom He promised to those that love Him p 273 the Righteous Teacher and those of his followers called the Poor or Ebionim in our view James and his Community pointedly referred to in the early Church literature as will by now have become crystal clear as the Ebionites or the Poor Pierre Antoine Bernheim 1997 James Brother of Jesus SCM Press ISBN 978 0 334 02695 2 The fact that he became the head of the Jerusalem church is something which is generally accepted From an ABC interview with author Michael Goulder 1995 St Paul versus St Peter A Tale of Two Missions John Knox Press pp 107 113 134 ISBN 0 664 25561 2 p 134 So the Ebionite Christology which we found first described in Irenaeus about 180 is not the invention of the late second century It was the creed of the Jerusalem Church from early times Gerd Ludemann 1996 Heretics The Other Side of Early Christianity John Knox Press pp 52 56 ISBN 0 664 22085 1 Retrieved 27 March 2011 pp 52 53 Since there is a good century between the end of the Jerusalem community and the writing down of the report quoted above by Irenaeus of course reasons must be given why the group of Ebionites should be seen as an offshoot of the Jerusalem community The following considerations tell in favor of the historical plausibility of this 1 The name Ebionites might be the term this group used to denote themselves 2 Hostility to Paul in the Christian sphere before 70 is attested above all in groups which come from Jerusalem 3 The same is true of observance of the law culminating in circumcision 4 The direction of prayer towards Jerusalem makes the derivation of the Ebionites from there probable p 56 therefore it seems that we should conclude that Justin s Jewish Christians are a historical connecting link between the Jewish Christianity of Jerusalem before the year 70 and the Jewish Christian communities summed up in Irenaeus account of the heretics John Painter 1999 Just James The Brother of Jesus in History and Tradition Fortress Press pp 83 102 229 ISBN 0 8006 3169 2 p 229 A connection between early Jerusalem Christianity the Hebrews and the later Ebionites is probable Keith Augustus Burton 2007 The Blessing of Africa The Bible and African Christianity Intervarsity Press pp 116 117 ISBN 978 0 8308 2762 6 Richard Bauckham 2001 James and Jesus The brother of Jesus James the Just and his mission By Bruce Chilton Jacob Neusner Westminster John Knox Press pp 100 137 135 We may now assert quite confidently that the self consciously low christology of the later Jewish sect known as the Ebionites does not as has sometimes been asserted go back to James and his circle in the early Jerusalem church Richard Bauckham January 1996 The Relatives of Jesus Themelios 21 2 18 21 Retrieved 11 February 2011 Reproduced in part by permission of the author Paul and the Second Century A amp C Black 2011 p 164 ISBN 978 0 567 15827 7 Bart D Ehrman 2014 How Jesus Became God The Exaltation of a Jewish Preacher from Galilee HarperOne ISBN 978 0 06 177818 6 The Ebionites declare that he was a Greek He went up to Jerusalem they say and when he had spent some time there he was seized with a passion to marry the daughter of the priest For this reason he became a proselyte and was circumcised Then when he failed to get the girl he flew into a rage and wrote against circumcision and against the sabbath and the Law Epiphanius of Salamis Panarion 30 16 6 9 John Toland 1718 Nazarenus or Jewish Gentile and Mahometan Christianity Blackhirst R 2000 Barnabas and the Gospels Was There an Early Gospel of Barnabas Journal of Higher Criticism 7 1 1 22 Retrieved 11 March 2007 a b J P Arendzen 1909 Ebionites In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Those who are called Ebionites accept that God made the world However their opinions with respect to the Lord are quite similar to those of Cerinthus and Carpocrates They useMatthew s gospelonly and repudiate the Apostle Paul maintaining that he was an apostate from the Law Irenaeus Haer 1 26 2 Eusebius of Caesarea Church History III 27 4 James R Edwards 2009 The Hebrew Gospel amp the Development of the Synoptic Tradition Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Co p 121 Nicholson 1879 The Gospel according to the Hebrews reprinted print on demand BiblioBazaar LLC 2009 pp 1 81 William Whiston H Stebbing The Life and Works of Flavius Josephus reprinted Vol II Kessinger Publishing 2006 p 576 They too accept the Matthew s gospel and like the followers of Cerinthus and Merinthus they use it alone They call it the Gospel of the Hebrews for in truth Matthew alone in the New Testament expounded and declared the Gospel in Hebrew using Hebrew script Epiphanius Panarion 30 3 7 Walter Richard Cassels 1877 Supernatural Religion An Inquiry into the Reality of Divine Revelation reprinted print on demand Read Books 2010 Vol 1 pp 419 422 Pierson Parker 1940 A Proto Lukan Basis for the Gospel According to the Hebrews Journal of Biblical Literature 59 4 471 478 doi 10 2307 3262407 JSTOR 3262407 The Complete Gospels Polebridge Press Robert J Miller ed 1994 p 436 ISBN 0 06 065587 9 Robert Walter Funk 1999 The Gospel of Jesus according to the Jesus Seminar Polebridge Press F L Cross E A Livingston 1989 The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford University Press pp 438 439 Symmachus Hypomnemata is mentioned by Eusebius in his Historia Ecclesiae VI xvii As to these translators it should be stated that Symmachus was an Ebionite But the heresy of the Ebionites as it is called asserts that Christ was the son of Joseph and Mary considering him a mere man and insists strongly on keeping the law in a Jewish manner as we have seen already in this history Commentaries of Symmachus are still extant in which he appears to support this heresy by attacking the Gospel of Matthew Origen states that he obtained these and other commentaries of Symmachus on the Scriptures from a certain Juliana who he says received the books by inheritance from Symmachus himself Jerome De Viris Illustribus chapter 54 Church History VI 17 Jerome De viris illustribus 54 Oscar Skarsaune 2007 Jewish Believers in Jesus Hendrickson Publishers pp 448 450 ISBN 978 1 56563 763 4 Skarsaune argues that Eusebius may have only inferred that Symmachus was an Ebionite based on his commentaries on certain passages in the Hebrew Scriptures E g Eusebius mentions Isa 7 14 where Symmachus reads young woman based on the Hebrew text rather than virgin as in the LXX and he interprets this commentary as attacking the Gospel of Matthew Dem ev 7 1 and Hist eccl 5 17 Gerard P Luttikhuizen 1985 The revelation of Elchasai p 216 Antti Marjanen Petri Luomanen A companion to second century Christian heretics p336 Philosophumena IX 14 17 Luttikhuizen 1985 Epiphanius deviates so strikingly from Hippolytus account of the heresy of Alcibiades that we cannot possibly assume that he is dependent on the Refutation Jean Danielou 1964 The theology of Jewish Christianity The Development of Christian doctrine before the Council of Nicea H Regnery Co ASIN B0007FOFQI Karl Baus 1980 From the Apostolic Community to Constantine Crossroad p 155 ISBN 978 0 824 50314 7 Abdulhaq al Ashanti amp Abdur Rahmaan Bowes Paul Addae and Tim Bowes 1998 2005 Before Nicea The Early Followers of Prophet Jesus Jamia Media ISBN 0 9551099 0 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link J P Arendzen 1909 Ebionites In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Those who accepted the virginal birth seem to have had more exalted views concerning Christ and besides observing the Sabbath to have kept the Sunday as a memorial of His Resurrection The milder sort of Ebionites were probably fewer and less important than their stricter brethren because the denial of the virgin birth was commonly attributed to all Origen Horn in Luc xvii St Epiphanius calls the more heretical section Ebionites and the more Catholic minded Nazarenes Irfan Shahid Islam And Oriens Christianus Makka 610 622 Ad in Mark Swanson et al eds The Encounter of Eastern Christianity with Early Islam Leiden and Boston Brill 2006 p18 Bentzion Kravitz 2001 The Jewish Response to Missionaries Counter Missionary Handbook Jews for Judaism International Moshe Koniuchowsky 2007 Messianic Leaders Deny Yeshua in Record Numbers yourarmstoisrael org Archived from the original on 12 August 2007 Retrieved 21 July 2007 James Prasch 2007 You Foolish Galatians Who Bewitched You A Crisis in Messianic Judaism Moriel Ministries Archived from the original on 11 August 2004 Retrieved 21 July 2007 Literature editJ M Fuller 1999 Ebionism and Ebionites In Henry Wace ed A Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature to the End of the Sixth Century A D with an Account of the Principal Sects and Heresies Hendrickson Publishers ISBN 1 56563 460 8 G Uhlhorn 1894 Ebionites In Philip Schaff ed A Religious Encyclopaedia or Dictionary of Biblical Historical Doctrinal and Practical Theology Vol 2 3rd ed pp 684 685 Wilson Barrie 2008 How Jesus Became Christian The early Christians and the transformation of a Jewish teacher into the Son of God Orion ISBN 978 0 297 85200 1 Jeffrey Butz 2010 The Secret Legacy of Jesus Inner Traditions ISBN 978 1 59477 307 5 Goranson Stephen 1992 Ebionites In D Freedman ed The Anchor Bible Dictionary Vol 2 New York Doubleday pp 260 1 External links edit nbsp Look up Ebionite in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Ebionites according to the Church Fathers Ebionites The American Cyclopaedia 1879 Yahad Ebyoni Ebionite Jewish Community archived website of a modern Ebionite revival group founded by Shemayah Phillips in 1985 The Ebionite Home Page by Allan Cronshaw Brother Of Jesus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ebionites amp oldid 1208704512, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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