Monday, January 16, 2017

Montanus and His Religion [Montanism]

Image result for montanusMontanus was the founder of Montanism, a schismatic movement of Christianity in Asia Minor (modern Turkey) and North Africa from [at least] the 2nd to the 6th centuries A.D. Other scholars believe this religious movement lasted well into the 9th century.

The Man of Phrygia

Little is known about the man named Montanus. Before his conversion to Christianity, he was purportedly a priest of the Oriental ecstatic cult of Cybele, the mother goddess of fertility. According to the 4th-century Church historian, Eusebius of Caesarea, Montanus entered into an ecstatic state and began prophesying in the region of Phrygia (now in central Turkey) around 172 A.D.

Montanus became the leader of a group of illuminati (or “the enlightened”), including the prophetesses Prisca and Maximilla, long before the Age of Enlightenment in the 18th century. The members of the illuminati exhibited the frenzied nature of their religious experience by enraptured seizures and utterances of strange languages that the disciples regarded as oracles of the Holy Spirit.

The Religion of Montanism

Image result for MontanismOriginally, Montanus declared that the Holy Spirit was giving new revelations to the Church, and named himself, along with two women (Prisca and Maximilla), as prophets. 

This ancient prophetic development was expecting an imminent transformation of the world but later evolved into a sectarian movement claiming a new revelation. This religious movement held similar views concerning the basic tenets of Christianity, although the congregation believed in new revelations which were unapproved by the Christian Church as a whole. The emphases of the "new prophecy" seem to have been on resisting persecution, fasting, and avoiding remarriage, together with hostility to any compromise with sin.

Montanism, as a prophetic movement, called for a reliance on the spontaneity of the Holy Spirit and a more conservative personal ethic. Parallels have been drawn between Montanism and modern-day movements such as Pentecostalism and the New Apostolic Reformation.

Image result for Phrygia, a province of Asia MinorMontanism originated in Phrygia, a province of Asia Minor, and flourished throughout the local region, leading to the movement being referred to also as "Cataphrygian" (meaning it was "from Phrygia") or simply as "Phrygian". 

The epiphanic revolution spread rapidly to other regions in the Roman Empire at a time before Christianity was generally tolerated or legal. It persisted in some isolated places into the 6th century.

Convinced that the end of the world was at hand [and the New Jerusalem mentioned in the Book of Ezekiel in the Old Testament and the Book of Revelation in the New Testament was about to descend near the Phrygian village of Pepuza]. Montanus laid down a severe morality to purify Christians and detach them from their material desires. Official criticism of Montanus and his unorthodox movement consequently emphasized the new prophecy’s unconventional ecstatic expression and his neglect of the bishops’ divinely appointed rule. 

Despite official disapproval and the failure of the world to come to an end, Montanism survived in the rural areas of Asia Minor. The earliest Christian inscriptions - outside the Catacombs of Rome - have been discovered in the valley of the Tembris River in Phrygia, dated by scholars to the middle of the 3rd century. A Montanist church with a full hierarchy survived until the 8th century. Its most significant figure, however, lived in North Africa.

Image result for TertullianTertullian, who converted to Montanism about 207, was a brilliant writer and the first important Christian to compose in Latin. This ancient scribe informed that, "the Spirit proclaimed no innovation in doctrine, but only gave instructions and directions about matters of Church discipline, which were coming to be the prerogative of the bishop." The response to Tertullian's edict was met with mixed emotions among the Church, who believed that prophecy was a genuine gift of God.

Some scholars believe Tertullian fiercely attacked those who condemned the 'new prophecy', especially the Church authorities who were more interested in their own political power in the Church than in listening to the Spirit. This is very much indicative to the Protestant reaction to Papal claims

Eventually Montanism was ultimately condemned by the Bishop of Rome (also known as The Pope) and the Montanistic movement, which was declared as "heretical", was pushed out. This resulted in the excommunication of the adherents of Montanism by the Church. 

Today, fragments of Montanist prophecies are preserved by Eusebius of Caesarea, in his Ecclesiastical History, which is available in several English translations.


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For further reading about Montanus and Montanism, please visit the following pages:

The Development of the Canon of the New Testament

Montanism [2nd century heresy] Ancient Pentecostal History and Roots


Monday, January 2, 2017

The Prophet Haggai

Image result for haggaiHaggai was one of the twelve Minor Prophets in the Hebrew/Christian Bibles and was noted for his exhortation to the Jews to rebuild their Temple. There is not much known about this ancient prophet, as the Holy Books do not go into detail about his personal history, but many scholars believe he was one of the captives taken to Babylon by Nebuchadnezzar

It is purported Haggai began his ministry about sixteen years after Cyrus the Great conquered the Babylonian Empire and the return of the Jews to Judah around 520 B.C. 

His book was purported to exist around this same time period and contained four prophecies, all of them dealing with rebuilding the Temple under the reign of Zerubbabel.

The first chapter contains:
The first prophecy (2–11) and its effects (12–15).

The second chapter contains:
The second prophecy (1–9), which was delivered a month after the first 
The third prophecy (10–19), delivered two months and three days after the second
The fourth prophecy (20–23), delivered on the same day as the third 

These discourses are referred to in Ezra 5:1 and 6:14. (Compare Haggai 2:7, 8 and 22)

He was the first of three post-exile prophets from the Neo-Babylonian Exile of the House of Judah (with Zechariah, his contemporary, and Malachi, who lived about one hundred years later), who belonged to the period of Jewish history which began after the return from captivity in Babylon. The work of rebuilding the temple had been put to a stop through the political intrigues of the Samaritans. After having been suspended for eighteen years, the work was resumed through the efforts of Haggai and Zechariah. They exhorted the people, which roused them from their lethargy, and induced them to take advantage of a change in the policy of the Persian government under Darius the Great.

Haggai in Jewish Tradition

Related imageHaggai, in rabbinic tradition, is often referred to as one of the "Men of the Great Assembly". The Babylonian Talmud (5th century BC) mentions a tradition concerning the prophet Haggai, saying that he gave instruction concerning three things: (1) that it is not lawful for a man whose brother married his daughter (as a co-wife in a polygamous relationship) to consummate a levirate marriage with one of his deceased brother's co-wives (a teaching accepted by the House of Hillel, but rejected by the House of Shammai); (2) that Jews living in the regions of Ammon and Moab separate from their produce the poor man's tithe during the Sabbatical year; (3) that they accept of proselytes from the peoples of Tadmor (Palmyra) and from the people of Ḳardu.

Haggai and Officials of His Time

Haggai supported the officials of his time, specifically the governor, Zerubbabel, and Joshua the High Priest. In the Book of Haggai, the God of the Israelites refers to Zerubbabel as "my servant" [as King David was] and says he will make him as a "signet ring" [as King Jehoiachin was] (Haggai 2:23; cf. Jer. 22:24). The signet ring symbolized a ring worn on the hand of Yahweh (or the God of Israel), showing that a king held divine favour. Thus, Haggai is implicitly, but not explicitly, saying that Zerubbabel would preside over a restored Davidic kingdom.

The Book of Haggai

Image result for book of haggaiThe Book of Haggai was written in 520 BCE some 18 years after Cyrus had conquered Babylon and issued a decree in 538 BC allowing the captive Jews to return to Judea. Cyrus saw the restoration of the temple as necessary for the restoration of the religious practices and a sense of brotherhood after a long exile.

Haggai reports that three weeks after his first prophecy, the rebuilding of the Temple began on September 7 521 BCE. "They came and began to work on the house of the LORD Almighty, their God, on the twenty-fourth day of the sixth month in the second year of Darius the King.(Haggai 1:14–15) and the Book of Ezra indicates that it was finished on February 25 516 BCE "The Temple was completed on the third day of the month Adar, in the sixth year of the reign of King Darius." (Ezra 6:15)

Haggai's message is filled with an urgency for the people to proceed with the rebuilding of the second Jerusalem temple. Haggai attributes a recent drought to the people's refusal to rebuild the temple, which he sees as key to Jerusalem’s glory. The book ends with the prediction of the downfall of kingdoms, with one Zerubbabel, governor of Judah, as the Lord’s chosen leader. The language here is not as finely wrought as in some other books of the minor prophets, yet the intent seems straightforward.

Synopsis of the Prophecies

Image result for book of haggai

     The Command to Rebuild the Temple ---------------------------------------------(1:1–15)
     Reluctant Rebuilders --------------------------------------------------------------- (1:1–2)
     Fruitless Prosperity ----------------------------------------------------------------  (1:3–12)
     Promise and Progress -------------------------------------------------------------- (1:13–15)
     The Coming Glory of the Temple -------------------------------------------------- (2:1–2)
     God Will Fulfill His Promise ------------------------------------------------------ (2:1–5)
     Future Splendor of the Temple ----------------------------------------------------- (2:6–9)
     Blessings for a Defiled People ---------------------------------------------------- (2:10–19
     Former Misery ---------------------------------------------------------------------- (2:10–17)
     Future Blessing --------------------------------------------------------------------- (2:18–19)
     Zerubbabel Chosen as a Signet ---------------------------------------------------- (2:20–23)

Haggai's Final Resting Place

The Tomb of the Prophets Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi (Arabic: Qubur el Anbia) is an ancient burial site located on the upper western slope of the Mount of Olives, Jerusalem. According to a medieval Jewish tradition also adopted by Christians, the catacomb is believed to be the burial place of Haggai, Zechariah and Malachi, the last three Hebrew Bible prophets who are believed to have lived during the 6th-5th centuries BC. Archaeologists have dated the three earliest burial chambers to the 1st century BC, thus contradicting the tradition.