180 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
180 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
DO THE NAG HAMMADI WRITING AND DEAD SEA SCROLLS
|
|
CONFIRM MORMONISM
|
|
or
|
|
IS EINAR ERICKSON CONFUSED ?
|
|
|
|
. In recent years, Mormon lecturer, Einar C. Erickson, has
|
|
given numerous talks to Mormon church groups concerning the Dead
|
|
Sea Scrolls, Nag Hammadi writings, Mandean Ginza and related
|
|
Middle East finds. These lectures have been taped and widely
|
|
distributed for use in converting the uninformed to Mormonism. Mr
|
|
Erickson states that the writings discovered in the vicinity of
|
|
Nag Hammadi, Egypt, are one of the greatest confirmations of the
|
|
"truthfulness" of the Mormon church that anyone would find
|
|
anywhere.
|
|
. On one of his tapes, Mr. Erickson boldly declares that:
|
|
"These documents and others leave without doubt evidence positive
|
|
even on the best rules of evidence that an attorney might be able
|
|
to assemble, that this gospel [i.e. the Mormon gospel] is true.
|
|
You get no credit for faith anymore." Mr. Erickson attempts to
|
|
convince his listeners that the writers of the Nag Hammadi were
|
|
the true Christians, (based upon his allegation of their
|
|
similarity to Mormonism) and that all others had slipped off into
|
|
apostasy.
|
|
. However; the Nag Hammadi writings are of "Gnostic" origin
|
|
which were written during the first to fourth century A.D. The
|
|
Gnostic heretics did cherish both the Old and New testament
|
|
Scripture, but re-interpreted them in terms of a mythological
|
|
Gnostic Redeemer. Gnosticism gave rise to the writings of a
|
|
number of totally spurious apocalyptic books, false gospels and
|
|
epistles that incorporated their own mysticism.
|
|
. Gnosticism was a movement that vigorously contended with
|
|
Orthodox Christianity for supremacy. Writings by the early Church
|
|
Fathers show how widespread and influential Gnosticism was; and
|
|
it was combatted as a lethal threat to the proclamation of the
|
|
Gospel. The bishops pointed out the great gulf between Biblical
|
|
Christianity and Gnosticism, even though the Gnostics made use of
|
|
Biblical text. It is obvious that Paul, the Apostle, knew of the
|
|
false ideas of Gnosticism, and spoke out against such doctrines
|
|
several times in the Scriptures.
|
|
. The Gnostics believed in the supreme being as an
|
|
undescribable God. He is invisible, incomprehensible, and dwells
|
|
unbegotten in eternal peace. Some names used to describe God and
|
|
to stress His transcendence were "Father of All", "The
|
|
Unapproachable God", "The Unknowable". Such a God could not
|
|
possibly have direct contact with the material world; therefore,
|
|
He does so through intermediates, each one answerable to the
|
|
other. Each intermediate in descending order is less divine and
|
|
more earthy as the chain nears the material world.
|
|
. Mr. Erickson spellbinds his listeners when he tells them
|
|
that the Nag Hammadi writings confirm the Mormon doctrine of the
|
|
Heavenly Mother! What he fails to tell them is that this Mother
|
|
God of the Nag Hammadi is the "Holy Spirit." Certainly this is in
|
|
direct conflict with the Mormon concept of a Mother God, because
|
|
in Mormon doctrine, the Holy Spirit is a male. The supreme being
|
|
has a female counterpart which emanates from Him. She is known as
|
|
"Mother of All" or "The Holy Spirit."
|
|
. Other emanations that come forth from the Supreme Being in
|
|
pairs are called AEONS; the lowest Aeon being "Sophia Akhamoth",
|
|
she was so full of passion to understand or know God that she
|
|
fell and was placed outside the Pleroma, God's heavenly dwelling.
|
|
Because of her desire, she becomes fertile with a formless
|
|
monster. This monster (Yaldabaoth, Samael or SATAN) is the
|
|
Demiurge or inferior god who created this material world and
|
|
brought forth man upon it.
|
|
. According to the Gnostic, all matter is evil; therefore,
|
|
only an inferior being could have created it. Satan is the
|
|
creator-god of this earth and of man, and is an evil god. To the
|
|
Gnostics, Satan is Jehovah of the Old Testament! After Jehovah
|
|
(Satan) creates man and breathes life into him, he creates Eve.
|
|
The demonic forces see the beauty of Eve, and proceed to rape
|
|
her. Through this act, she conceives Cain and Abel.
|
|
. Mr. Erickson often refers to the Hypostasis of the Archons
|
|
of the Nag Hammadi and being direct parallel to the Garden of
|
|
Eden scene of the Mormon Temple Ceremony. However, he fails to
|
|
inform his listeners that the Hypostasis of the Archeons tells of
|
|
the demons raping Eve! Nor does he point out that the serpent in
|
|
the garden is really the Holy Spirit coming to give Adam and Eve
|
|
the "true knowledge." He neglects to mention to his listeners
|
|
that the "god" who comes into the garden to ask Adam and Eve what
|
|
they have done is not the "Heavenly Father" but is Satan the
|
|
arrogant Archon, the evil god. In this instance, Mr. Erickson is,
|
|
at best, mistaken about the facts -- a fault which reappears
|
|
throughout his lectures and tapes.
|
|
. The authors of the Nag Hammadi writings taught a form of re-
|
|
incarnation, and that marriage was evil, because it is of the
|
|
earth. They believed the begetting of children was from Satan,
|
|
since it merely increases the number subjected to the evil
|
|
angels. Resurrection of the flesh is denied by these Gnostics,
|
|
since earthly flesh is in itself evil, and can have no part in
|
|
the spiritual scheme of God. All of these concepts are not
|
|
confirmations of Mormon doctrine, but are direct contradictions
|
|
of it!
|
|
. Mr. Erickson, looking elsewhere in the Middle East for
|
|
"proof," tells his audiences that the writings of the Mandaeans
|
|
of Iraq and Iran are (also) a confirmation of Mormonism. His
|
|
"evidence" for this is that they speak of baptism for the dead,
|
|
baptism by immersion, priesthood and baptize in the name of the
|
|
Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost. What he fails to mention to
|
|
them is: according to the Mandaeans, Jesus was a rebel and a
|
|
heretic who led men astray by betraying secret doctrine and
|
|
making religion easier. The Mandaean sacred book tells of how
|
|
Jesus perverted the Scriptures, and that Jesus told the Jews that
|
|
He was the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost. Furthermore, the
|
|
Mandaean book accuses Jesus perverting baptism by baptizing in
|
|
the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost.
|
|
. The Mandaeans were baptized many times throughout their
|
|
lives. They baptized infants; and if an infant died before or
|
|
during this baptism, a clay or dough image was made which they
|
|
then baptized in proxy for that infant. Proxy baptism was also
|
|
done for an adult who died before getting his last minute
|
|
washings before death. In this case, an individual that looked
|
|
like the deceased was baptized in proxy for the dead person.
|
|
. The Mandaeans also had a ceremony of "eating for the dead"
|
|
to give the deceased nourishment for his travels to the heavenly
|
|
spheres. The Mormon people do not baptize infants, do not eat for
|
|
the dead, nor do they have last minute washing rituals before
|
|
death as the Mandaeans did. The Mormon proxy baptisms have less
|
|
in common with the Mandaean baptisms than they do with Catholic
|
|
infant baptisms, last rites ritual, and prayers for the dead.
|
|
Clearly, the Mandaean concepts of Jesus and baptism are in no way
|
|
similar to Mormon doctrine.
|
|
. Those holding the Mandaean priesthood had to have a clean
|
|
family history for a number of generations, and meet strict
|
|
physical and mental qualifications. They had to be without the
|
|
slightest physical blemish, and be of pure Mandaean blood. A man
|
|
who was circumcised, impotent, or a eunuch could not be a priest
|
|
for the body must be sound, pure, and perfect. If a man was
|
|
already a priest and he received an injury which destroyed his
|
|
manhood or robbed him of a limb, he could no longer officiate as
|
|
a priest. There are no such restrictions within the Mormon
|
|
priesthoods. The only things in common with the Mormon
|
|
priesthoods and baptism and that of the Mandaean are the very
|
|
words themselves!
|
|
. Mr. Erickson makes false claims about the Dead Sea Scrolls
|
|
community, as well. He states that those at Qumran baptized at
|
|
the age of eight, just as the Mormons do. This is just simply NOT
|
|
the case. They trained young men for their celibate monastic
|
|
order for about ten years before they were baptized into their
|
|
ranks. This baptism never took place before the age of twenty.
|
|
Mr. Erickson states that the people of Qumran were essentially
|
|
the first "Mormons." However, the people at Qumran didn't even
|
|
believe in marriage! Rather they adopted in young men from other
|
|
Essene groups who married only to beget children. By contrast, in
|
|
Mormonism, marriage is absolutely essential to each member's
|
|
salvation in the Celestial Kingdom of God.
|
|
. Mr. Erickson claims that the Apocryphal books should be used
|
|
as scripture. However, even the Mormon's own "latter day"
|
|
revelation disagrees with him. In the introductory heading of
|
|
Section 91 of the Doctrine and Covenants, it declares
|
|
specifically that the apocryphal books are NOT to be accepted as
|
|
scripture. Beyond that built-in contradiction, lies the fact that
|
|
one need only to read some of these apocrypha for himself to
|
|
quickly discover their singular lack of inspiration.
|
|
. For example, two "Gospels" portray the life of the young
|
|
Jesus, allegedly covering the "silent" years skipped over in the
|
|
Bible. The book, "The First Gospel of the Infancy of Jesus"
|
|
portrays Jesus as a spoiled despot who curses another child for
|
|
bumping into him, and a schoolmaster who was going to discipline
|
|
Him for refusing to answer a question. After these two people are
|
|
killed at Jesus' command, Joseph tells Mary, "we will not allow
|
|
him to go out of the house; for every one who displeases him is
|
|
killed." In Thomas' "Gospel of the Infancy of Jesus Christ", we
|
|
see Jesus causing the withering of hands, blindness, and again,
|
|
death. This is clearly not the Jesus Christ of the Bible!
|
|
. The conclusion is inescapable -- the claims by Mr. Erickson
|
|
(and consequently other Mormons) that the Mormon doctrine is
|
|
"exonerated" by the findings in the Middle East is totally
|
|
without foundation. Mormon doctrine is not confirmed by these
|
|
different religious sects, it is contradicted by them! It is
|
|
apparent that these claims are just another chapter in the long
|
|
history of false archeological boasts made by Mormons in the
|
|
past.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: A full and completely documented study of Mr. Erickson's
|
|
scholarship regarding the above topics has been written by Mrs.
|
|
Melaine Layton entitled: The Truth About the Dead Sea Scrolls and
|
|
the Nag Hammadi Writings in Reference to Mormonism. For further
|
|
information, please write to the office of Computers For Christ -
|
|
San Jose.
|