Saturday, August 3, 2024

Armstrongism, Ebionitism and Adoptionism

 

Armstrongism has always been well known to be an amalgamation of different thought processes and beliefs stemming from the many religious movements that developed as a result of Millerism. While not all of Armstrongism carries all of the beliefs of Ebionitism it has lots of similarities as well as with with adoptionism beliefs. It seemed to latch on to anything that supported their view that the law was still a requirement.

What say ye? 

EBIONITISM

The Ebionites also tended to demote the place of Christ. They taught the necessity for Christians to also uphold and obey the law of Moses and so have often been compared to the Judaistic group who were undermining Paul’s teachings at Galatia. A few have claimed that the Ebionites were the descendants of the Jerusalem church of the first century, but this is very far from being proven. Like the Arians, this group were very soon on the outside of the established Church. This approach is very very similar to the approach adopted by Herbert W. Armstrong, founder of the ‘Worldwide Church of God’ cult/sect.

For Armstrong, law was everything although he was very selective about which laws he was keen on; some were almost ignored, others such as the seventh day Sabbath and the Leviticus 23 holydays, were relentlessly pushed by Armstrong. He appeared totally disinterested in the major Christian doctrine of Grace, despite that doctrines very high profile in the writings of Paul. Armstrong would have agreed that the Old Covenant sacrifices had now ceased but was unwilling to make further concessions which placed his theology a long way from the theology of the New Testament. The tiny WCG offshoot cults have tried to maintain, to a greater or lesser degree, Armstrong’s approach. Ancient Heresies and Discredited Theories

Other views on Ebiontism:

Dr. Schaff sharply distinguishes Ebionism from Gnosticism as follows: "Ebionism is a Judaizing, pseudo-Petrine Christianity, or a Christianizing Judaism; Gnosticism is a paganizing or pseudo-Pauline Christianity, or a pseudo-Christian heathenism. The former is a particularistic contraction of the Christian religion; the latter a vague expansion of it" (Church History, § 67). According to the same writer, "the characteristic marks of Ebionism in all its forms are, degradation of Christianity to the level of Judaism, the principle of the universal and perpetual validity of the Mosaic law, and enmity to the apostle Paul. But, as there were different sects in Judaism itself, we have also to distinguish at least two branches of Ebionism, related to each other, as Pharisaism and Essenism, or, to use a modern illustration, as the older deistic and the speculative pantheistic rationalism in Germany, or the two schools of Unitarianism in England and America. 

1. The common Ebionites, who were by far the more numerous, embodied the Pharisaic legal spirit, and were the proper successors of the Judaizers opposed in the epistle to the Galatians. Their doctrine may be reduced to the following propositions:

(a.) Jesus is, indeed, the promised Messiah, the son of David, and the supreme lawgiver, yet a mere man, like Moses and David, sprung by natural generation from Joseph and Mary. The sense of his Messianic calling first arose in him at his baptism by John, when a higher spirit joined itself to him. Hence Origen compared this sect to the blind man in the Gospel who called to the Lord without seeing him, 'Thou son of David, have mercy on me!'

(b.) Circumcision and the observance of the whole ritual law of Moses are necessary to salvation for all men.

(c.) Paul is an apostate and heretic, and all his epistles are to be discarded. The sect considered him a native heathen, who came over to Judaism in later life from impure motives.

(d.) Christ is soon to come again to introduce the glorious millennial reign of the Messiah, with the earthly Jerusalem for its seatMcClintock and Strong Biblical Cyclopedia

Note this about adoptionism:

It is frequently claimed that the earliest christology was “adoptionist,” the theological claim that ontologically (by nature) Jesus was nothing but human, nothing but “mere man.” This ancient “reductionist-humanistic” concept did, however, allow for an exalted view of Jesus as Messiah, great high priest, the “Prophet like Moses,” and other Jewish-Messianic affirmations. It also permitted Jesus to be a risen prophet, one whom God raised up from the grave as a seal of approval. Moreover, it allowed this risen Jesus to be an angelic being, glorified and exalted into heaven and standing at God’s right hand, carrying God’s name in him, and waiting fto carry out a “second coming” in which he will judge the world. This adoptionist Jesus – properly understood not as a god or God, but as God’s agent – may even be addressed in the Maranatha prayer: “Come, Lord Jesus.” 
 
But all of these glorious affirmations still pertain to the monotheistic, Jewish Jesus, a man, a prophet, a righteous Israelite rewarded by God. God’s reward, as mentioned, was to raise Jesus into heaven. This heavenly reward is necessarily an aspect of adoptionism. Clearly, a risen Messiah to whom one can pray has par excellence been adopted (as “Son”) by God. Yet Ebionites and other early Jewish Christians believed that Jesus’ adoption by God began even earlier, in his earthly life, before his death and resurrection. 
 
It was claimed that Jesus, a devout Israelite, excelled all others in piety, obedience and righteousness (as reflected in Luke 2:51-52), so that, by the time he was baptized by John in the Jordan, Jesus had reached the pinnacle of holiness, and so was “ripe for adoption.” Indeed, say Jewish Christian sources, it was at his baptism that Jesus was “officially” adopted as God’s son: the heavens opened, the holy Spirit descended on Jesus “like a dove,” and God’s voice proclaimed him “Son.” This early Jewish christological understanding extends even into the canonical Gospels and the Pauline writings. 
 
It is generally maintained among scholars that this “low” adoptionist christology characterised only the early, “Jewish” period of church formation. So-called “higher” christologies which made more explict divine claims for Jesus, are held to be much later developments in the tradition. The idea is that the “Jewishness” of low/adoptionist christology indicates its plausibility, because notions of higher christology had not yet had time to evolve. 
 
Adoptionist christology, it is claimed, is in keeping with Jewish perspectives about prophets, inspired or” holy”people, and the monotheistic/singular-unitary nature of God. Higher christology, it is claimed, is the product of later theological reflection and possible importation of pagan, Hellenistic ideas about god-men and demigods.

However, some expressions of early Jewish christology actually contain both “high” and “low” concepts about Jesus. 
 
For the Ebionites, Jesus was the adopted son of God, the Prophet like Moses, whose righteousness caused God to embrace him in a filial relationship at his baptism and then to “set the seal” on the act by raising Jesus from the dead. For the Ebionites, Jesus was the Messiah in the sense of carrying out messianic goals during his ministry. (Interestingly, they also held that messiahship is potentially everyone’s birthright, maintaining that all Ebionites, and those who enter that fold, are oiled with the same messianic chrism that anointed Jesus. Adherents can, like Jesus, perform the messianic task.) 
 
Thus far, Ebionitism qualifies as a typically “low” christology. However, Ebionites also claimed a kind of “high” christology, because they involved their Christ in the field or schema of heavenly pre-existence. Ebionites typically claimed that Jesus, the wholly human but divinely-adopted prophet also embodied God’s holy Spirit. 
 
To return to the baptism scene: Ebionites claimed that the “Spirit Like A Dove” that descended on Jesus was a type of pre-existent, heavenly “Christ” sent down to abide in Jesus. 
 
This spirit was thought to be more or less interchangeable with the Adam Kadmon, or heavenly primal Adam; Yahoel, God’s chief assisting angel; Metatron, the Angel of the Throne; and the Standing One or heavenly Son of Man. 
 
For the Ebionites, Jesus was a man adopted and risen to heaven by God. But he was also the embodiment on earth – or if the term may be used – the incarnation of a pre-existent celestial being. The Ebionite Jesus thus carries in him the dual dignity 1) of a righteous human being and 2) the numinous character who incarnates a revealing tutelary spirit, who is pre-existent and closely related to God. 
 
To reiterate: Ebionitism claims a dual christological significance to Jesus’ baptismal adoption, an adoption that simultanesously consists of: 
 
granting to Jesus a filial relationship to God
– and –
the entering into Jesus of a pre-existent celestial tutelary spirit, perceived, conceptualized and symbolized as a dovelike spirit. 
 
The Ebionite Christ thus exemplifies a synthesis of both “low” and “high” christologies, because: 
 
on the one hand he is the obedient-and-rewarded prophet,

and on the other hand he is the recipient of a pre-existent, heavenly being. 
 
It is therefore possible to think that the Ebionite Jesus speaks in two voices: one, the voice of the Jesus “the carpenter’s son,” the obedient-but-transformed/adopted human mystic, “Jesus the Galilean”; the other, the self-revealing, incarnating Spirit, or Adam Kadmon, primal Son of Man, holy angel. 
 
This christological paradigm is worked out in Islam by the separation of the the Prophet’s (peace be upon him) personal voice from the Voice of God speaking through him. The New Testament does not often or obviously separate the two voices, but a close reading will find them implicit in many texts, most pointedly in John’s Gospel. 
 
John’s Jesus, embodying the Spirit and will of the Father and being the vehicle for the Logos’ incarnation, speaks with the Voice of the Divine, such as in the “I am” statements. Many of the Johannine Jesus’ statements can be read as self-revelations of the Spirit incarnate in him (“I come from the Father and return to the Father; I know the hidden things of God; before Abraham came to be, I am,” etc.). Here – theoretically at least -is the incarnate heavenly Spirit speaking through Jesus.
At other times John’s Jesus looks more like a human mystic reflecting on and talking about what it is like to incarnate God’s spirit and to be filially united with that God and his spiritt (“the Father and I are one; when you see me, you see the Father; I am a man who hears and obeys the word of God; the Father is greater than I; I can do nothing of my own will, only by God’s will,” etc. Here – theoretically – Jesus the Galilean mystic is speaking about himself.

These considerations indicate that the dichotomy between high-late and low-early christologies is at least partially dissolved in Ebionitism’s combination of the two. For a fascinating discussion of the possible “two voices” of Jesus, the reader is referred to Stevan L. Davies’ book, Jesus the Healer (Continuum Publishing Company, NY 1995, especially pp. 151-169). Ebionitism’s Dual Christologies

 

 


26 comments:

Anonymous said...

Works without faith: dead. Faith without works: dead. Faith + works: alive.

Anonymous said...

Doing good work's isn't keeping the law, sabbath keeping, holy days or meat regulations. These are irrelevant for those under the new covenant. They are only necessary for those still bound by sin and held captive like the bondwoman.

Those redeemd by the cross and filled with grace do good works out of the joy of thier heart becasue they have been so blessed. We are no longer slaves like the bondwoman. Good works are anything we do in faith. It’s about using our spiritual gifts, talents, and time to glorify God and do good for others.

Ronco said...

"Faith + works: alive."

Once you add works to the equation, just how many works does it take?

In other words, just how many licks does it take to get to the Tootsie roll center of a Tootsie Pop?

Anonymous said...

Anonymous 6:54

Bravo!

Scout

RSK said...

I know Ive mentioned this before, but when I think of "works", I think of what Jesus said about "that men should see your good deeds and praise your Father".

Your perfect sabbath attendance record wont produce that result. Theres nothing inherently wrong with keeping it, in my view, but it also doesnt do much in the area of glorifying your god to the world.

Anonymous said...

6.54, ah, the Protestant doctrine of universal salvation. I fail to see how that reconciles with the weeping and gnashing of teeth thingy, and the falling away mentioned in many scriptures.
Does this mean that Dave Pack-of-Lies will be in the kingdom and teaching his doctrine of Common to the angels?

Anonymous said...

6:54,
God's Plan of Salvation is revealed in keeping the Sabbath and the Holy Days.My question: When and how is the uncalled who died not knowing Christ have their one and only chance? Over to Scout, Lonnie and the saved Christians for some bibilical answers. I have never been given a satisfactory answer to this question from this Grace group.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous 6:19 wrote, "Faith + works: alive"

This is the problem with sound bite theology. We do not know what is intended by the formula above. I would agree with a certain intrepretation of this formula. And I would very hotly disagree with another interpretation of this formula. Armstrongists and Christians would interpret the formula in starkly different ways. So was this commenter an Armstrongist or a Christian? I will summarize two views.

The Christian View:

By grace through faith the believer receives salvation. Live and active faith leads the believer to walk in The Way - a way of good works. Hence, good works are correlated with salvation. Good works are a symptom of salvation. Good works are an output of salvation.

A Heretical View:

With the power of positive thinking ("faith"), the believer commits to a life of struggling to qualify for salvation through personal perfection. Jesus and his work on the cross is believed to be incomplete and inadequate for salvation. To what Jesus has done, the believer must add his own works to make salvation happen at the judgment. Hence, good works are a joint cause, along with "faith", of salvation. This is sometimes referred to as a Jesus Plus Cult. Good works are an input to salvation.

Which one is the commenter talking about?

Scout


Lee T. Walker said...

Consider examining the Essene connections to Jesus and Christianity. My own personal suspicion-to-point-of-holding-it-as-basically-certain belief is that Jesus was an Essene fraud building his own sect of that faith tradition. An examination of the connections may well serve to be the death knell of Christianity.

TLA said...

Sounds like Islam where Jesus is a prophet.
Quran states it is blasphemy to make Jesus a son of God - God (Allah) has no sons.
Quran has only good to say about Moses (and Noah, Abraham, David, and Solomon).

I decided to read the Quran to see for myself what it says.
So far, I have only seen paradise as a place with gardens and rivers.

Anonymous said...

Scout: I'm talking about the Christian View, including living the law of liberty, you know, not lying, stealing, murdering etc - James 2:11-12. I'm not an armstwrongist; I was put out of WCG in 1980 for writing to hindquarters that Herbie was not an apostle. There are only 12 of them - Rev 21:14.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous 11:18

Thanks for the clarification. Glad you have the Christian view.

Scout

Ronco said...

Anonymous 11:18

"I was put out of WCG in 1980 for writing to hindquarters that Herbie was not an apostle."

Hindquarters... I love that!!!

Anonymous said...

You don't believe in lyng? What if someone intending to kill someone asks you where they are?

Anonymous said...

Lost writers on here going down the rabbit hole yet again. You boldly declare the is no joy in Sabbath keepers observing God's Holy days yet all you post on this blog is misery, misery, misery. No posts about the joy in Jesus Christ character and ministry. No joy in humility only misery, misery. Misery in writing off huge swathes of humans as "Armstrongites '

Anonymous said...

Oh, fer crap sake! There are no huge swaths of Armstongites! We don't write them off, we just lament the fact that they are deceived culties, and worry about a Jonestown or Waco in their future. Some of them are our relatives, after all!

Anonymous said...

"No posts about the joy in Jesus Christ character and ministry."
That's because I find such cut and paste Protestanism divorced from my everyday experiences.

Anonymous said...

Here's something you may want to consider, 12:50. Back in the old high school sports days, Coach would sometime say, "Let's get a rally going, guys! Show some enthusiasm!"

We did, and it worked. Sometimes we wonder about people who have every reason to be miserable, yet express positives as they go through their daily routine. It is possible that "getting a rally going" is possible with whatever your philosophy happens to be as well as in sports. That's probably one of the things that keeps people from going negative and leaving in spite of bad things their church has brought into their lives. They buy into it, and we wonder how and why they stick with it, but they do. It's a thing with some humans.

Anonymous said...

Statements such as: "filled with grace do good works out of the joy of their heart,"
"Good works are an output of salvation," and "the joy in Jesus Christ character and ministry" put the horse before the cart. It's not the way the mind naturally works. Economist Adam Smith's "invisible hand" correctly identified the way people really function as in: "It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages."

The above former Protestant view reverses this and is an attack on cause and effect.

Axel O'Sangon said...

The Adam Smith mold you cited is the way the normal carnal mind works. The Christian is supposed to function in the opposite of that. That's what "putting on the new man" is all about.

RSK said...

From what I understand about Christianity in general though, isnt that the point? Put on the new man and all that?

Anonymous said...

10.30 & 4.24, your definition of "putting on the new man" is in the category of putting new wine into old wine skins. It's this world's way projected into the bible.
In the decade that I attended services, I never once observed your new man/woman. And that's especially true of the elders and ministers. Most demanded their pound of flesh for any assistance given to others.

Ronco said...

Another stinging indictment of Armstrongism.

Anonymous said...

Looking back over the history of religious movements related to Jesus, one can divide them into two groups: those groups that center on Jesus and those groups that think Jesus is kinda peripheral. The Ebionites fall into this latter category along with some other groups including, prominently, the Arians. It is as if two separate strands of development proceeded throughout the last two millennia. One strand exalts Jesus and the other deprecates, sometimes subtly, Jesus. Oddly, the deprecators connect themselves to Jesus and seem to derive some of their spiritual gravitas from association with him.

John wrote of the deprecators as follows:

“And every spirit that confesseth not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is not of God: and this is that spirit of antichrist, whereof ye have heard that it should come; and even now already is it in the world.”

It is uncertain which John wrote this but the Johannine Letters were written during the rise of Gnosticism, one of the deprecator movements. The important thing to realize is that the disciples recognized that Jesus was very God. Jesus himself is not recorded in the Gospels as having said much about this directly. But Doubting Thomas, in a meeting with Jesus and the other disciples, referred to Jesus as “ho theos” which is the distinct Greek expression for “very God.” And nobody quibbled.

So, when John wrote the quoted statement above, he was saying that the spirit of the antichrist is one that states that very God did not come in the flesh. This is in contravention to all those ancient religious movements that would say, “Of course we believe that Jesus came in the flesh. In fact we believe that Jesus was nothing but a fleshly human.” And Paul is addressing all those religious that say Jesus was spirit but he wasn’t really God. He was something less than God – a demiurge or maybe a powerful angel. So, in summary, the spirit of the antichrist says that some guy named Jesus showed up but he wasn’t God-as-God-is-God.

While Armstrongist do not preach that Jesus is not God, they do preach subordinationism, that Jesus is a lesser God. This variant deprecator belief is owing to the fact that Armstrongists do not believe in Binitarianism but in Bitheism. They believe in two individual, non-perichoretic Gods and one is more powerful than the other.

The antichrist theme pops up everywhere. In modern times, after bouncing from group to group for centuries, it found lodgment in the Millerite Movement through Arianism. In the string of comments related to this post, a person who claims to be a worshipper of the Creator terms Jesus an Essene fraud.

John seems to refer to a prophecy about the antichrist of some sort. John said, “Ye have heard that antichrist shall come, even now are there many antichrists.” He associates this with the last time but I don’t think he realized how long things were going to continue. But his words ring and his assessment is worthy. He says the deprecator movements are, “not of God.”

Scout


Anonymous said...

Anonymous 5:17 wrote, “My question: When and how is the uncalled who died not knowing Christ have their one and only chance?”

God created the Cosmos ex nihilo. What he creates, in its ultimate state, must reflect him. The Cosmos, in its final state, must reflect him. A world which contains sentient beings imprisoned in a punitive state does not reflect the glory of God. Moreover, God is absolute and is capable of providing the conditions for every person that will result in that person’s conforming to the requirements for salvation. He has created us in his image. A part of that is that we inherently seek what is good. God may use that inherent goal orientation towards what is good to bring people to salvation. For sentient beings to be annihilated or imprisoned for eternity asserts that God is a failure. The idea that God permits free will decision making on personal eschatology doesn't work. None of us are free. We all live under the influence of many ambient forces.

The mechanism by which God will do this and its chronology is not clear. The idea that has great plausibility in my view is that God will provide a post-mortem opportunity for the non-elect. (This resembles the Purgatory of the Catholics and the One Hundred Year Period of the Armstrongists. It is commonly called Future Probation.) This view is not outside the Christian pale. It calls upon the doctrine of Unlimited Atonement found among the Arminians and Irresistible Grace found among the Calvinists.

Along with this, I have the belief that Hell is not eternal and destructive but of fixed duration and rehabilitative. Hell is certainly something to be avoided – at all costs. But Hell does not trump the absolute God’s plan to renew all things. The standard infernalist concept of Hell is a product mostly of eisegesis and mistranslation in Biblical interpretation.

My two cents...

Scout

Anonymous said...

Misery, misery and wishful thinking of murder and death on others. And you have the arrogance to call others unchristian.