Simon Magus eBook

G. R. S. Mead
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about Simon Magus.

Simon Magus eBook

G. R. S. Mead
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about Simon Magus.
Now Simon, the Samaritan magician, was the first minister of his (the Daemon’s)[58] evil practices who arose.  Who, making his base of operations from Gittha, which is a village of Samaria, and having rushed to the height of sorcery, at first persuaded many, by the wonder-working he wrought, to attend his school, and call him some divine Power.  But afterwards seeing the apostles accomplishing wonder-workings that were really true and divine, and bestowing on those who came to them the grace of the Spirit, thinking himself also worthy to receive equal power from them, when great Peter detected his villainous intention, and bade him heal the incurable wounds of his mind with the drugs of repentance, he immediately returned to his former evil-doing, and leaving Samaria, since it had received the seeds of salvation, ran off to those who had not yet been tilled by the apostles, in order that, having deceived with his magic arts those who were easy to capture, and having enslaved them in the bonds of their own legendary lore,[59] he might make the teachings of the apostles difficult to be believed.
But the divine grace armed great Peter against the fellow’s madness.  For following after him, he dispelled his abominable teaching like mist and darkness, and showed forth the rays of the light of truth.  But for all that the thrice wretched fellow, in spite of his public exposure, did not cease from his working against the truth, until he came to Rome, in the reign of Claudius Caesar.  And he so astonished the Romans with his sorceries that he was honoured with a brazen pillar.  But on the arrival of the divine Peter, he stripped him naked of his wings of deception, and finally, having challenged him to a contest in wonder-working, and having shown the difference between the divine grace and sorcery, in the presence of the assembled Romans, caused him to fall headlong from a great height by his prayers and captured the eye-witnesses of the wonder for salvation.
This (Simon) gave birth to a legend somewhat as follows.  He started with supposing some Boundless Power; and he called this the Universal Root.[60] And he said that this was Fire, which had a twofold energy, the manifested and the concealed.  The world moreover was generable, and had been generated from the manifested energy of the Fire.  And first from it (the manifested energy) were emanated three pairs, which he also called Roots.  And the first (pair) he called Mind and Thought, and the second, Voice and Intelligence, and the third, Reason and Reflection.  Whereas he called himself the Boundless Power, and (said) that he had appeared to the Jews as the Son, and to the Samaritans he had descended as the Father, and among the rest of the nations he had gone up and down as the Holy Spirit.
And having made a certain harlot, who was called Helen, live with him, he pretended that she was his first Thought, and called her the
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Simon Magus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.