Ebionites
The
Ebionites (from
Hebrew;
ˈEbyonim, "the poor ones") were a
sect of
Judean followers of
John the Baptist and
Jesus of Nazareth who existed in the
Iudaea Province of the
Roman Empire during the early centuries of the
Common Era.
The Ebionites were in theological conflict with other strands of
early Christianity. While the Ebionites undoubtedly drew their doctrines from ideas circulating in the
1st century AD,
Robert H. Eisenman, professor of Middle East religions and archaeology and director of the Institute for the Study of
Judeo-Christian Origins, argues that they existed as a distinct group from
Pauline Christians and
Gnostic Christians before the destruction of
Jerusalem.
Some modern scholars, including
Hyam Maccoby,
Robert Graves,
Hugh J. Schonfield,
Keith Akers,
Benjamin Urrutia and Joshua Podro contend that the Ebionites were more faithful than the Apostle
Paul of Tarsus to the original and authentic teachings of Jesus and/or
James the Just.
Few writings of the Ebionites have survived, and in uncertain form (
see below). There are two chief sources for our knowledge of the literature and ideas of the Ebionites:
# Brief quotations from their writings in orthodox
Christian theologians, such as
Irenaeus,
Hippolytus,
Tertullian, and
Epiphanius of Salamis, who considered the Ebionites to be
heretics. The most complete of these comes from
Epiphanius of Salamis, who wrote his "Panarion" in the fourth century, denouncing 80 heretical sects, among them the Ebionites, described in
Panarion 30. In addition to quotations from their gospels, there are also general descriptions of their ideas and point of view.# 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, and specifically Ebionite, in origin. These can be found in volume 8 of the
Ante-Nicene Fathers.
Orthodox writers sometimes distinguished the Ebionites from the
Nazarenes, one patristic author often depending upon another for his assessment. In any event, there is far more information in the
Church Fathers about Ebionites than about Nazoraeans, Nasaraeans, or Nazarenes (in any spelling). Jerome clearly thinks that the Nazoraeans and the Ebionites were a single group (Letter 112). Without surviving texts, it is even less easy now for us to establish exactly the basis for their distinction. The "Nazarenes" are spelled "Nazoraeans" by Epiphanius, a slight but clear difference in Greek from the terms used to refer to "Nazarenes" or "residents of Nazareth," and since this spelling is also found in the New Testament (though usually translated "Nazarene") it is likely the original spelling. Even more confusingly, Epiphanius also refers to yet another group, the "Nasaraeans," which has beliefs very close to the Ebionites.
All these sources within mainstream
Christianity agree that the Ebionites denied the
divinity of Jesus, the doctrine of the
Trinity, the
Virgin Birth and the death of Jesus as an
atonement for the
Original Sin. Epiphanius describes them as opposing animal sacrifice and as vegetarians. Epiphanius quotes their gospel as ascribing the words to Jesus, "I have come to destroy the sacrifices" (
Panarion 30.16.5), and as ascribing to Jesus rejection of the
Passover meat (
Panarion 30.22.4). This is in agreement with numerous passages found in the
Recognitions and
Homilies (e.g.
Recognitions 1.36, 1.54,
Homilies 3.45, 7.4, 7.8). There is less agreement over the passages where Epiphanius describes the Ebionites as claiming that Jesus was neither human nor divine but rather an archangel, "Moreover, they deny that he was a man" (
Panarion 30.14.5), "They say that Christ was not begotten of God the Father but created as one of the archangels ... that he rules over the angels" (
Panarion 30.16.4).
The Ebionites emphasized the humanity of Jesus as the mortal son of
Mary and
Joseph, who was '
adopted' as a
son of God when he was anointed with the
Holy Spirit at his baptism, and therefore could have become the
messianic king-priest of
Israel (by virtue of also being both a descendant of king
David through his father and a descendant of
high priest Aaron through his mother) but was chosen to be the last and greatest of the
prophets.
The Ebionites may have revered the
Desposyni (a sacred name reserved only for Jesus' blood relatives), especially
James the Just (
Yakov or
Jacob), as the legitimate
apostolic successors of Jesus, rather than
Peter. This claim is supported by passages in the
Pauline epistles (
Galatians 2), and portions of the
Book of Acts (e.g.
Acts 15) that supposedly present James as outranking Peter.
The
Gospel of the Ebionites, or
Gospel of the Hebrews, tells how the resurrected Jesus appeared to his brother Jacob ("James") and persuaded him to eat bread. This visit is possibly mentioned in
I Corinthians 15:7. Since the early Ebionites clearly did believe in the ability of Jesus to perform powerful
miracles, it may be possible that the charges of their denying his divinity, etc. were merely propaganda on the part of the patristic sources, eager to paint them as heretics. On the other hand many of the Old Testament
Prophets are also reported as performing miracles (e.g.
Moses parting the
Red Sea) but were not regarded as divine; there is therefore no reason for the Ebionites to have regarded Jesus as divine just because he also performed miracles.
Epiphanius states (
Panarion 16:9) that some Ebionites
gossiped that
Paul was a Greek who
converted to
Sadduceean Judaism in order to marry the High
Priest's daughter, and then
apostasized when she rejected him.
Of the books of the
New Testament the Ebionites only accepted an Aramaic version of the
Gospel of Matthew, referred to as the
Gospel of the Hebrews, as scripture. This version of Matthew, Pauline Christian critics reported, omitted the first two chapters (on Jesus' virgin birth), and started with Jesus' baptism by John.
Ebionites believed that all followers of Jesus, whether they be
Hebrew or
Gentile, must adhere to
Noahide Laws and
Mosaic law through either more reconstructionist (
Essene) or progressive (
Pharisee) interpretation and observance, tempered with the wisdom teachings of Jesus.
The
Church Fathers describe the Cerinthians as "
Jewish Christian" but this is disputed among scholars, and it is unlikely that
Cerinthus or the Cerinthians were closely related to the Ebionites.
The influence of the Ebionites is debated. Hans-Joachim Schoeps argues that their primary influence on orthodox Christianity was to aid in the defeat of
gnosticism. It has also been argued (Akers,
The Lost Religion of Jesus) that they had an influence on
Islam and the
Sufis. However, the Ebionites are represented in history as the sect encountered by the Muslim historian Abd al-Jabbar (
c. 1000) almost 500 years later than most Christian historians admit for the survival of the Ebionites. An additional possible mention of surviving Ebionite communities existing in the lands of the east, Theyma and Thilmes, around the 11th century, is said to be in
Sefer Ha'masaoth, the "Book of the Travels" of Rabbi
Benjamin of Tudela, or Benyamin Bar-Yonnah, a
sephardic rabbi of Spain.
*
The Recognitions of Clement and
The Clementine Homilies are the most expansive of the writings derived from the Ebionites. The exact relationship between the Ebionites and these writings is not clear, but the description of the Ebionites in
Panarion 30 (by Epiphanius) bears repeated and striking similarity to the ideas in the
Recognitions and
Homilies. By scholarly consensus, these writings are Jewish Christian in origin and reflect Jewish Christian ideas and beliefs, though the exact relationship between the writings and the Ebionites is debated.
The
Catholic Encyclopedia, 1908, mentions four classes of Ebionite writings:
*
Gospel of the Ebionites. The Ebionites used only the
Gospel of Matthew (according to Irenaeus).
Eusebius (
Historia Ecclesiae IV, xxi, 8) mentions a
Gospel of the Hebrews, which is often identified as the Aramaic original of Matthew, written with Hebrew letters. Such a work was known to
Hegesippus ( according to Eusebius,
Historia Eccl., ),
Origen (according to Jerome,
De vir., ill., ii), and to
Clement of Alexandria (
Strom., II, ix, 45).
Epiphanius attributes this gospel to the Nazarenes, and claims that the Ebionites only possessed an incomplete, falsified, and truncated copy. (
Adversus Haer., xxix, 9). The question remains whether or not Epiphanius was able to make a genuine distinction between Nazarenes and Ebionites.
* Apocrypha: The
Circuits of Peter (
periodoi Petrou) and
Acts of the Apostles, amongst which is the work usually titled the
Ascents of James (
anabathmoi Iakobou). 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 also in the
Recognitions attributed to Clement. They form an early Christian didactic fiction to express Ebionite views, i.e. the supremacy of James, their connection with Rome, and their antagonism to Simon Magus, as well as Gnostic doctrines.
* The Works of
Symmachus the Ebionite, i.e. his elegant Greek translation of the Old Testament, used by Jerome, fragments of which exist, and his lost
Hypomnemata which was written to counter the canonical Gospel of Matthew. The latter work, which is totally lost (Eusebius,
Hist. Eccl., VI, xvii; Jerome,
De vir. ill., liv), is probably identical with
De distinctione præceptorum, mentioned by Ebed Jesu (Assemani,
Bibl. Or., III, 1).
* The
Book of Elchesai (Elxai), or of "The Hidden power", claimed to have been written about AD 100 and brought to Rome about AD 217 by Alcibiades of Apamea. Those who accepted its doctrines and its new baptism were called
Elkasites. (Hipp.,
Philos., IX, xiv-xvii; Epiphanius.,
Adv. Haer., xix, 1; liii, 1.)
It is also speculated that the core of the
Gospel of Barnabas, beneath a polemical medieval
Muslim overlay, may have been based upon an Ebionite document.
There are several modern Ebionite movements which, like the ancient Ebionites, deny the
divinity of Jesus, the doctrine of the
Trinity, the
Virgin Birth and the death of Jesus as an
atonement for the
Original Sin, whilst accepting Jesus either as a
prophet,
Messiah or both.
The Ebionite Jewish Community and the Ebionite Restoration Movement are two movements which claim to be the legitimate descendants in teaching and practice of the original Ebionites.
Ebionite Jewish Community
In 1985, Shemayah Phillips founded a movement that would eventually grow into the online
Ebionite Jewish Community by 1995.
The Ebionite Jewish Community promotes
Yahwism, the recognition of Jesus as a
messianic king-priest of
Israel (rather than as a
Messiah as he is portrayed in
Christian writing), and claims that
Christianity is not a biblically-based religion. Ebionites actively campaign against missionary work done by Christian groups, and encourages a return to a
Tanakh-reliant approach to Judaism amongst
messianic Jews,
Hebrew Christians,
Gentile Christians and others.
The Ebionite Jewish Community are not
gnostic, or
dualist, but strictly monotheistic. They believe that
monotheism disallows a belief in a "
Satan" that competes with God. They emphasize the
social justice aspect of the
Tanakh, and Yahwism as a
socio-economic as well as a religious idea. They also reject membership for those involved in occupations deemed to be "exploitive."
Ebionite Restoration Movement
Allan Cronshaw, who claims have lived previously as
James the Just, is the leader of the modern Ebionite Restoration Movement which seeks to the follow the
Gospel of the Hebrews and
Clementine literature on the practices and beliefs of the ancient Ebionites. They accept Jesus as a
Messiah.
*
Judaizers*
Christian anarchism*
Christian socialism*
Jewish Christians*
Judas Testament*
Judeo-Christian*
Karaite Judaism*
Messianic Judaism*
Nazarene*
Catholic Encyclopedia: Ebionites*
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 by Henry Wace.
*
Detailed comparison of Ebionite views with Islam*
Evidence of the Ebionites by Hyam Maccoby*
Nazarenes and Ebionites by Dr. James Tabor, University of North Carolina*
Ebionite Community Modern Ebionites
*
Review of literature on the Ebionites*
Text of Recognitions and Homilies from ccel.org*
Jewish Encyclopedia: Ebionites*
Ebionites from the
Catholic Encyclopedia*
Ebionite Restoration Home Page*Akers, Keith.
The Lost Religion of Jesus : Simple Living and Nonviolence in Early Christianity. New York: Lantern Books, 2000.
*Cameron, Ron.
The Other Gospels. Philadephia: Westminster Press, 1982, pp 103-106
*Danielou, Jean.
The Theology of Jewish Christianity. Chicago: The Henry Regnery Company, 1964.
*Eisenman, Robert.
James the Brother of Jesus: The Key to Unlocking the Secrets of Early Christianity and the Dead Sea Scrolls. New York: Viking, 1996.
*Lüdemann, Gerd.
Opposition to Paul in Jewish Christianity. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1989.
*Schoeps, Hans-Joachim.
Jewish Christianity: Factional Disputes in the Early Church. Trans. Douglas R. A. Hare. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1969.
*Skriver, Carl Anders.
The Forgotten Beginnings of Creation and Christianity. Denver: Vegetarian Press, 1990.
*Vaclavik, Charles.
The Origin of Christianity: The Pacifism, Communalism, and Vegeterianism of Primitive Christianity. Platteville, Wisconsin: Kaweah Publishing Company, 2004.