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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
GNOSTICISM 101,
By
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Heresies and Heretics (Hardcover)
This is by far the best introduction to pre-christian theology, gnosticism, et al, that I've seen. It sets the stage for those who understand the dynamics of the drama which inevitably follows...
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A fun and wonderful, fascinating collection of information on 'heretical' groups and individuals,
By Gnostic Path "http://gnosticpath.blogspot.com/" (Maryland, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Heresies and Heretics (Hardcover)
This book is crammed full of different 'heresies' and colorful figures of history. I'm particularly impressed with its scope. An excellent, fun read. A great way to find an intriguing piece of history, a strange idea, that can be pursued and studied in more depth. Can lead the reader on a historical journey into the alternative, the fringe, the inspired. With a bit of detective work, following some of the leads given here, all kinds of doors open to the reader.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
short but sweet, good starting point on religion,
By
This review is from: Encyclopedia of Heresies and Heretics (Hardcover)
This book, "Encyclopedia of Heresies and Heretics" is a weird little tome. But a very good fine little bit of weirdness. First, it is not as much an all-encompassing book about Christian Heretics and Heresies, as a catalog of major European ones from the Dark and Middle Ages. Christianity have changed and evolved over the years to include and exclude odd-groups of people at times. Where the author has the most difficulty is in nailing-down what the, in many cases, now eliminated sect actually believed in. This is where some of it gets real hazy, because often the groups that may have had similar surface beliefs but gotten them from radically different sources. A good example of this is probably in two major dualistic sects of: the Italian Cathari movement and the southern French Albigensians. Both became rather large minorities within greater Catholicism, but the Albigensians probably had, at its most inner core, a heart of Manichaeism (another religion that was a very early competitor to Christianity, St. Augustine at an early part of his life had been one), where as the Cathar movement was more a back-to-basics purity movement, probably influenced by a very early form of Christianity called Gnosticism. They get confused for each other because they worked together against what they saw as their common enemy: the Roman Catholic officialdom. And then there was the Eastern Bogomils as well, also with similar surface beliefs. They probably helped give rise to the Cathari in Italy... but, how close where they in core basic belief... well... we can't be positively sure. At issue, lets think of it this way... Modern forms of Christianity: Orthodoxy, Catholicism and Protestantism all share some very basic beliefs, but also have some very large disagreements amongst themselves. Outsides often have trouble figuring out what surface disagreements and what are core disagreements. Well, looking at the various heresies of the past, we may have trouble noticing core disagreements because, in practice, they often cooperated with each other, and looked and acted much the same. It also does help that those who fought against them often couldn't seem to tell the difference themselves. Of course, there is the added problem that most of the writings the various groups may have had were destroyed by the Catholic higharcy that, in the end, suppressed them. So, what is left often is either what the oppressors either missed or thought didn't matter. It is material that may not represent a true cross section of what the groups truly believed. The book provides a good introduction to the various topics. He covers the major European topics. There are some over sights; he doesn't mention either Zoroastrism or Islam. He covers Mani and Manichaeism, but doesn't really discuss its roots in Zoroastrism. Also, Islam had a big affect on Christianity in many ways and places. There were some weird sects that tried to combine aspects of Islam and Christianity in Spain, Southern Italy, and later in Southeastern Europe, that could have been covered. A lot of this may have been cut because the book is short, and I guess that was on purpose, and therefore was swept out for brevity. The author also covers the leaders and prophets of these and other groups. The book also covers aspects of other things... witchcraft, the Spanish Inquisition, biblical fine points over which scholars used to debate for centuries, etc. Still, I like this book very much. Religious splintering is not a new event in Christendom, but something with a very long history. Understanding it can help one understand our place in the world more effectively.
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