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FigLeafe From across this grey land... |
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Bogomils
Dualist theology and other belief systems regarded as heretical.. Dualism is a theology based on the belief in two gods: a good god of light and immaterial things, and an evil god of darkness and material things. Although the names of the gods change, and in some variations there is a third intermediary god, the same basic belief system can be traced from its origins in Persia some three thousand years ago. The spread of Dualism can be summarised as follows:
In summary, some of the more important manifestations, in chronological order, are the following:
Here is a
little more detail about some of these threads: Manichaeism In the third century AD, before Christianity became the official religion of the Roman empire, a Persian named Many (Latin Manes, Manicheus), gathered Christian Gnostic and Buddhist elements and combined them with the Zoroastrian teaching. He gave a simple explanation for where evil in the world comes from, preaching new dualistic religion. For this he was condemned by the Persian magi (those wise men - actually Zoroastrian priests - mentioned in the Bible). Mani was executed for his heresy in 276 AD.
By the
second half of the seventh century a Gnostic sect named Pavlikianis was
active in Armenia incorporating elements of Mani's teachings. This sect
was seen as a threat to the state authorities. Tzars Constantine V
Kopronim (741-775) and Ivan Cimiskes (969-976) forceably removed them to
Thrace and Macedonia. Bogomils The Bogomils or Bogumils appeared in Bulgaria in the middle of the 10th century in the time of Bulgarian Tzar Peter (927-969). It seems evident, though there is no formal proof, that the Dualist beliefs of the Bogomils was a continuation of the Pavlikiani teaching from nearby Macedonia. The first known written information about this heresy appears in the epistle of Patriarch Teofilact to Tsar Peter. He explains to the Tsar that this heresy is the "Pavlikian heresy mixed with Manicheanism". More information is to be found in the apologetic tractate of the presbyter Cosma, "Speech on Heresy" created around 972. Cosma blames a priest called Bogomil for spreading this new teaching across Bulgaria - a teaching that opposes the teaching of the orthodox Christian church - that there is only one god. Bogomil taught that there are two gods - one the god of good, and the other the god of evil. The god of evil created whole material world, including human beings. By his will exist all the visible things: the earth itself, animals, churches, crosses. Some of the Bogomils thought that the evil god, Satan, was God's younger son, next to Christ, the older brother. Others thought that he was not God's son but an angel that seceded from the ranks. Cosma, further on in his tractate, says that the Bogomils were attacking the Church establishment, especially the clergy and bishops, and that they rejected Old Testament along with the books of the church fathers, and the [then new] cult of the Virgin Mary's along with the cults of other saints, all the other Church literature and all the prayers except the Lord's Prayer "Our father…". Further, they did not respect icons, nor the cross, and they did not accept church buildings as the house of God. They gathered in their houses to pray and confess to each other. They had critical attitude towards the governments, the state establishment, and the rules of society. They were alleged to incite their followers to rebel against the authorities, deterring slaves from working for their masters. They were attacking the established Church hierarchy and the nobility, teaching that those who worked for the tsar were repulsive to God. They preached poverty and were critical of the rich. Cosma describes the heretics as quiet people, pale from fasting, dressed in modest clothes. But according to Cosma, this is only a ploy, and in fact they are rapacious, seeking out people with a simple spirit, and talking to them about the salvation of their souls. The popularity of the dualistic heresy may be an expression of rebellion towards the hierarchy of the Orthodox Christian Church - a Church that like it's offshoot, the Roman Catholic Church, uses the idea of a god to keep its followers in obedience. It may also be an expression of rebellion against government institutions that lean on the Christian Church, using it to bolster and endorse their power. The appearance of the Bogomils in Macedonia and Bulgaria occurs at a time when local people felt oppressed by Byzantium, after the death of the Tsar Simeon, in the time of Tsar Peter. Ideologically, this Gnostic teaching was opposed to the Byzantine conquerors, against the pliable local nobility and against the hierarchy of the Orthodox Christian Church. (According to Cosma's notes the Orthodox Christian Church was itself utterly corrupt). Another factor is probably the attraction of a plausible explanation for the existence of evil in the world. It is a simple fact that despite developing an entire field of philosophy to the question (Theodicity), the mainstream Churches have never succeeded in producing a half-viable theory as to how a perfect creator could create such an imperfect world. (Most believers, it must be said, are entirely unaware of this problem, or else imagine that it is answered by the doctrine of Freewill)
There are no important differences in the organization of their churches. Followers are divided in to two categories:
Only the Elect know all the secrets of their religion and only they are required to lead the rigid ascetic life described in their teaching The hierarchy that runs the church consisted of bishops - all male members of the Elect, each supported by an "Older Son" and a "Younger Son". Cathars Click on the following link to go to a page on Cathars and Catharism
Recent work
by Georgi Vasalev has largely confirmed long-held suspicions that
distictive Bogomil / Cathar ideas were known to key characters in the
development of Protestant ideas. It is now probable, rather than merely
possible, that Dualist ideas motivated men like Wycliffe, Langland,
Tyndale and Milton.
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