The Gnostic Revolt Against the God of Judaism
The Demiurge and the Wisdom Dialogue
by Mark Gaffney
They teach the insidious doctrine
that there is another God besides the Creator.
?Irenaeus, Against Heresies
For many heretics have said that the God
Of the Old Testament is one,
and the God of the New Testament is another.
?Ambrose, On the Holy Spirit, I, 4
that there is another God besides the Creator.
?Irenaeus, Against Heresies
For many heretics have said that the God
Of the Old Testament is one,
and the God of the New Testament is another.
?Ambrose, On the Holy Spirit, I, 4
In the first centuries of our era, Gnostic Christians overthrew the Jewish God Yahweh and attributed the work of Creation to a lesser deity or demiurge, known as Ialdabaoth (also spelled Yaldabaoth, or Jaldabaoth). The word has been translated as: ?begetter of Sabaoth,? a pejorative pun for YHWH Sabaoth, one of the names of Yahweh in the Old Testament.1 The fact that Ialdabaoth turns up in the Nag Hammadi Library and is mentioned in the Naassene Sermon, i.e., the Refutation of All Heresies compiled by Hippolytus, raises important questions that Christian scholarship has never satisfactorily addressed, among them: Did Jesus teach or ratify the demiurge concept?
Origins Within Judaism
Most scholars regard the demiurge as a Gnostic rebellion against Judaism.2 But the rebellion was not a simple phenomenon. Certainly it was not always a matter of either/or. While many Gnostics summarily rejected the Old Testament, not all did. At least one Gnostic sect, the Jewish-Christian community of the Naassenes, based in cosmopolitan Alexandria, retained the Old Testament. The Naassenes are especially important because they claimed to have received their spiritual ideas from James the Just, the brother of Jesus.
Another question is simply: Why did the Gnostics rebel against the God of the Jews? The fact is partially explained by historical events, namely, the three failed Jewish revolts against Roman rule. The first and best known of these was the Jewish War of 66-73 AD. A second less well-known uprising was put down during in 115-117 AD, during the rule of Trajan. And a third and final insurrection, the Bar Kokhba rebellion, was crushed in 135 AD. There is no doubt that these failed political revolts against Rome seriously undermined the prestige of Yahweh. For which reason the Gnostic demiurge could date to anytime after 70 AD, the year of the cataclysmic destruction of the famous temple of Herod. 3
But political history does not tell the full story. The devaluation of Yahweh was also rooted in a process of religious reform that had been underway within Judaism for centuries, and which only attained its full fruition in the person of Jesus. To understand this reform, and how it came about, we must look to the Old Testament, in particular, to the seminal book of Job. (Many scholars have sought answers in Genesis, which is understandable, given that the demiurge is associated with Creation, but with less satisfactory results.)
Most Christians probably assume that the God of the Hebrews in the days of Abraham was the same as the God of Moses and, furthermore, that this God was also equivalent to the Father mentioned by Jesus with such love and devotion. Any such assumptions are false, however, but not because God changed. God?s nature, being absolute and eternal, never changes. What does change is human understanding. The human conception of God, the God concept, has changed many times over the course of history and will continue to evolve in the future. In a famous essay called "The God of the Fathers," first published in 1929, the Old Testament scholar Albrecht Alt explored whether such a transformation had occurred at the time of Moses. Alt found clues in the Pentateuch suggesting that the Elohist scribe had amended the earliest accounts to bring the more archaic God-concept of the early Hebrews, the God of the patriarchs, in line with the later (and more pure) monotheism of Moses. Alt's paper touched off a lively debate among biblical scholars that continues to this day. 4
The reform I am about to discuss is another example of the sort of evolution observed by Alt. The need for reform of the Old Testament God-concept was real enough. While some Old Testament passages describe Yahweh as merciful, loyal, forgiving, and benevolent, he is at least as often portrayed as jealous, grouchy, wrathful, irritable, proud, boastful, unforgiving, temperamental, cruel, vengeful, and even bloodthirsty, prepared to sanction cold-blooded murder or mass slaughter, including the annihilation of entire cities. Given the numerous examples of God-sanctioned mayhem in scripture, it is no wonder that discriminating readers have sometimes doubted whether this same Yahweh can inspire our confidence and trust, to say nothing of love, devotion, respect and emulation. Oftentimes, fear and trembling seems a more likely human response. And while fear of divine retribution can be a powerful force for good, and, at times, perhaps, a necessary motivator, if the goal is to uplift humanity from a moral standpoint, the example set by Yahweh in the Old Testament falls short of inspirational (to say the least).
The Book of Job
The Old Testament Book of Job, whose author is unknown, has two main themes: the question of evil, and the character of Yahweh. Many scholars rightly regard Job, along with Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, as representative of the high-water mark of the Old Testament.5 The central part of the book is a series of poems that was probably composed sometime in the fifth or sixth century B.C.E. Part folk tale, prophetic oracle, hymn, lamentation, didactic treatise, and epic, Job makes use of almost every genre in the Bible. The question it raises is no less pertinent today: Why does evil flourish while good people suffer? The answer the story provides broke sharply with Judaic tradition, and for this reason Job was surely controversial in its day. Tradition held that God would eventually reward the good man, regardless of his sufferings. Like the prophet Jeremiah, however (see Jeremiah 13:14, 24?25 and 15:6?7), the author of Job adopts a much more pessimistic outlook that probably reflects the bleak aftermath of the conquest and destruction of Judah by Nebuchadnezzar in the early sixth century B.C.E. Although the precise composition date of Job is not known, the book is obviously from the time of exile or later.6
The story openly portrays Yahweh in league with Satan. God torments the good man (Job) despite the fact that he keeps the Law and lives a morally upright life. Job's many trials are the work of Satan, Yahweh's servant (or possibly his son), who whispers false accusations in God's ear and receives permission to punish Job in order to test him and expose the wickedness allegedly concealed in his heart. Job?s flocks are stripped from him, his servants are slaughtered, and his sons and daughters are killed in a mighty whirlwind. He himself is stricken with a terrible wasting disease that causes great suffering and brings him to the edge of the grave. Job?s body literally becomes an open wound. To make matters worse, Job?s wife and his friends also turn against him: His wife urges him to curse Yahweh and to abandon all faith in God; meanwhile, his friends make superficial religious cant and castigate Job for having the temerity to maintain his innocence. One after another they admonish him, insisting that because Yahweh is punishing him, ipso facto, he must be guilty. They advise him to submit quietly to his sufferings, which obviously have been ordained by God. But Job will have none of it. Like a rock he holds fast to principle. Stubbornly he maintains his innocence and insists upon justice. Yet, at the same time, he remains faithful to Yahweh, refusing to condemn or even criticize the Almighty.
What is shocking about the story is the ease with which Yahweh succumbs to Satan's false witness about Job's alleged faithlessness. Being omniscient, Yahweh should be able to easily verify Job's goodness and constancy. But instead he hands Job over to Satan with a single proviso: "He is in your power," Yahweh says. "But spare his life." Though Job remains faithful throughout, before his terrible ordeal is done he curses the day of his birth. No less shocking is Yahweh's failure to acquit Job even after his innocence has been established. There is to be no moment of truth and no justice under heaven. Instead of vanquishing Satan for making false accusations, Yahweh turns on the victim. Instead of offering solace and comfort to the innocent, he badgers Job and bullies him, sneers at him with rhetorical questions, and then confronts the hapless man with a mind-boggling display of divine wrath.
In the end poor Job is beaten down and brought to his knees. But how can it be otherwise, given Yahweh's overwhelming might? The rod of God is an awesome thing. In the end Job is reduced to a stuttering simpleton. He repents, even though he is innocent, and admits that he has been talking about things far beyond his ken. Having seen the omnipotence of Yahweh, he is prepared to eat dust. In this vein Job responds: "What reply can I give to you, I who carry no weight?" (Job 40:4; 42:2) In a final prose epilogue Yahweh shows a loving touch by restoring Job's health and property, but there is no mention of restoring his dead servants and children. Indeed, the somewhat cheery conclusion feels out of step with the rest of the composition, as if a later scribe who was no less shocked than we by Yahweh's repulsive behavior added it to redeem God?s tarnished image. Indeed, so subversive is the Book of Job that it is remarkable the book was retained in the bible. Probably the scribal ?correction? saved it from being thrown out, this and the fact that Job is a literary masterpiece. Of course, even with its modified ending, the story is far from satisfactory. Job?s total submission in the face of brute force seems a lame solution to the problem of evil. Nonetheless, the book is momentous because the questions the story fails to resolve were to redound over the centuries, as we shall see, and preoccupy the final books of the Old Testament.
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