Heresiarch

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In this Gustave Dore engraving, Dante and Virgil speak to a Heresiarch trapped within a burning tomb. Dante placed arch-heretics in the Sixth Circle of Hell.


In Christian theology, a heresiarch (also hæresiarch, according to the Oxford English Dictionary; from Greek: αἱρεσιάρχης, hairesiárkhēs via the late Latin haeresiarcha[1]) or arch-heretic is an originator of heretical doctrine, or the founder of a sect that sustains such a doctrine.[1]




Contents





  • 1 Examples


  • 2 Dante's Inferno


  • 3 See also


  • 4 References




Examples



  • Marcion, the founder of Marcionism


  • Arius, the founder of Arianism


  • St Augustine refers to Mani, the founder of Manichaeism, as a heresiarch.[2]

  • Some traditionalist Catholics, such as Hilaire Belloc, consider Martin Luther, John Calvin, and other leaders of the Protestant Reformation to be arch-heretics.[3]

  • Conversely, some fundamentalist Protestants (including Alexander Hislop and Charles Chiniquy) have used the term to refer to the papacy and the members of the Roman Curia.


  • Martin of Armenia, the fictional founder of the Old Russian Rite used by the Old Believers


Dante's Inferno


In his Divine Comedy, Dante Alighieri represents the heresiarchs as being immured in tombs of fire in the Sixth Circle of Hell. In Cantos IX and X of the Inferno, Virgil describes the suffering these souls experience, saying "Here are the Arch-Heretics, surrounded by every sect their followers... / Like with like is buried, and the monuments are different in degrees of heat."[4] Among the historical figures that Dante specifically lists as arch-heretics are Epicurus, Farinata Degli Uberti, Frederick of Sicily, and Pope Anastasius II.



See also



  • List of Christian heresies

  • Heresy in Christianity


References






  1. ^ ab Cross and Livingstone, Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church 1974


  2. ^ Augustine and Manichaeism, Gillian Clark


  3. ^ Hilaire Belloc, "What was the Reformation?"


  4. ^ Dante's Inferno, Canto IX, 125–129



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  • Catholic Encyclopedia





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