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Werke Irenäus von Lyon (130-202) Contra Haereses Against Heresies
Against Heresies: Book II
Chapter XXIV.--Folly of the arguments derived by the heretics from numbers, letters, and syllables.

4.

But that this point is true, that that number which is called five, which agrees in no respect with their argument, and does not harmonize with their system, nor is suitable for a typical manifestation of the things in the Pleroma, [yet has a wide prevalence, 1 ] will be proved as follows from the Scriptures. Soter is a name of five letters; Pater, too, contains five letters; Agape (love), too, consists of five letters; and our Lord, after 2 blessing the five loaves, fed with them five thousand men. Five virgins 3 were called wise by the Lord; and, in like manner, five were styled foolish. Again, five men are said to have been with the Lord when He obtained testimony 4 from the Father,--namely, Peter, and James, and John, and Moses, and Elias. The Lord also, as the fifth person, entered into the apartment of the dead maiden, and raised her up again; for, says [the Scripture], "He suffered no man to go in, save Peter and James, 5 and the father and mother of the maiden." 6 The rich man in hell 7 declared that he had five brothers, to whom he desired that one rising from the dead should go. The pool from which the Lord commanded the paralytic man to go into his house, had five porches. The very form of the cross, too, has five extremities, 8 two in length, two in breadth, and one in the middle, on which [last] the person rests who is fixed by the nails. Each of our hands has five fingers; we have also five senses; our internal organs may also be reckoned as five, viz., the heart, the liver, the lungs, the spleen, and the kidneys. Moreover, even the whole person may be divided into this number [of parts],--the head, the breast, the belly, the thighs, and the feet. The human race passes through five ages first infancy, then boyhood, then youth, then maturity, 9 and then old age. Moses delivered the law to the people in five books. Each table which he received from God contained five 10 commandments. The veil covering 11 the holy of holies had five pillars. The altar of burnt-offering also was five cubits in breadth. 12 Five priests were chosen in the wilderness,--namely, Aaron, 13 Nadab, Abiud, Eleazar, Ithamar. The ephod and the breastplate, and other sacerdotal vestments, were formed out of five 14 materials; for they combined in themselves gold, and blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine linen. And there were five 15 kings of the Amorites, whom Joshua the son of Nun shut up in a cave, and directed the people to trample upon their heads. Any one, in fact, might collect many thousand other things of the same kind, both with respect to this number and any other he chose to fix upon, either from the Scriptures, or from the works of nature lying under his observation. 16 But although such is the case, we do not therefore affirm that there are five Aeons above the Demiurge; nor do we consecrate the Pentad, as if it were some divine thing; nor do we strive to establish things that are untenable, nor ravings [such as they indulge in], by means of that vain kind of labour; nor do we perversely force a creation well adapted by God [for the ends intended to be served], to change itself into types of things which have no real existence; nor do we seek to bring forward impious and abominable doctrines, the detection and overthrow of which are easy to all possessed of intelligence.


  1. Some such supplement as this seems requisite, but the syntax in the Latin text is very confused.  ↩

  2. Matt. xiv. 19, 21; Mark vi. 41, 44; Luke ix. 13, 14; John vi. 9, 10, 11.  ↩

  3. Matt. xxv. 2, etc.  ↩

  4. Matt. xvii. 1.  ↩

  5. St. John is here strangely overlooked.  ↩

  6. Luke viii. 51.  ↩

  7. Luke xvi. 28.  ↩

  8. "Fines et summitates;" comp. Justin Mart., Dial. c. Tryph., 91.  ↩

  9. "Juvenis," one in the prime of life.  ↩

  10. It has been usual in the Christian Church to reckon four commandments in the first table, and six in the second; but the above was the ancient Jewish division. See Joseph., Antiq., iii. 6.  ↩

  11. Ex. xxvi. 37.  ↩

  12. Ex. xxvii. 1; "altitudo" in the text must be exchanged for "latitudo." ↩

  13. Ex. xxviii. 1.  ↩

  14. Ex. xxviii. 5.  ↩

  15. Josh. x. 17.  ↩

  16. [Note the manly contempt with which our author dismisses a class of similitudes, which seem, even in our day, to have great attractions for some minds not otherwise narrow.] ↩

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Against Heresies
Gegen die Häresien (BKV) vergleichen
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Introductory Note to Irenaeus Against Heresies

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