The Shepheard of Hermas an apocrypha book, used
by some early Christian heresies
Heresis in Christianity, has seen long time ago been sprawling and
trying to infect the correct Christian faith we shold have.
One very famous apocrypha book which was very modern around
"alternative" faith seekers is
The Shepherd
of Hermas
The work has been well known in the west and has been widely copied
in the middle ages.
The original work dating is probably either to the 2nd cenruty or
to the distant 88 - 97 year after Christ.
The work is actually something similar to the Revelation of John,
though it's most probably.
The book consists of five visions granted to Hermas, a former
slave. This is followed by twelve mandates or commandments, and ten
similitudes, or parables. It commences abruptly in the first
person: "He who brought me up sold me to a certain Rhoda, who was
at Rome. After many years I met her again, and began to love her as
a sister." As Hermas was on the road to Cumae, he had a vision of
Rhoda, who was presumably dead. She told him that she was his
accuser in heaven, on account of an unchaste thought the (married)
narrator had once had concerning her, though only in passing. He
was to pray for forgiveness for himself and all his house. He is
consoled by a vision of the Church in the form of an aged woman,
weak and helpless from the sins of the faithful, who tells him to
do penance and to correct the sins of his children. Subsequently he
sees her made younger through penance, yet wrinkled and with white
hair; then again, as quite young but still with white hair; and
lastly, she shows herself as glorious as a Bride.
This allegorical language continues through the other parts of the
work. In the second vision she gives Hermas a book, which she
afterwards takes back in order to add to it. The fifth vision,
which is represented as taking place twenty days after the fourth,
introduces "the Angel of repentance" in the guise of a shepherd,
from whom the whole work takes its name. He delivers to Hermas a
series of precepts (mandata, entolai), which form an interesting
development of early Christian ethics. One point which deserves
special mention is the assertion of a husband's obligation to take
back an adulterous wife on her repentance. The eleventh mandate, on
humility, is concerned with false prophets who desire to occupy the
first seats (that is to say, among the presbyters). Some have seen
here a reference to Marcion, who came to Rome c.140 and desired to
be admitted among the priests (or possibly even to become bishop of
Rome).
After the mandates come ten similitudes (parabolai) in the form of
visions, which are explained by the angel. The longest of these
(Similitude 9) is an elaboration of the parable of the building of
a tower, which had formed the matter of the third vision. The tower
is the Church, and the stones of which it is built are the
faithful. But in the third vision it looked as though only the holy
are a part of the Church; in Similitude 9 it is clearly pointed out
that all the baptized are included, though they may be cast out for
grave sins, and can be readmitted only after penance.
In spite of the grave subjects, the book is written in a very
optimistic and hopeful tone, like most early Christian works. Our
Church the estern Orthodox Church identintifies the work nowadays
as a heresy, so any man determined ot read it better do it with a
blessing of his spiritual father, otherwise man is risking to have
a serious harm on his spiritual state.
We should be well aware that since the book is talking against the
presbyters in the early Church and does criticize the spiritual
authority ok Christ's early church it has to be considered as a
dangerous reading for us the comtemporary Christians.
However I thought mentioning the book here would be interesting,
since it's so ancient and therefore with a high historical value,
not to mention it is so similar by some things with its ideas to
early Christianity.