User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
heretics- Plural of heretic
Extensive Definition
distinguish Hearsay Heresy is a
dislocation of some complete and self-supporting system of belief,
especially a religion, by the introduction of a novel denial of
some essential part therein.
The study of heresy is heresiology. The founder of
a heresy is called a heresiarch.
Etymology
The word "heresy" comes from the Greek , hairesis (from , haireomai, "choose"), which means either a choice of beliefs or a faction of believers. It was given wide currency by Irenaeus in his tract Contra Haereses (Against Heresies) to describe and discredit his opponents in the early Christian Church. He described his own position as orthodox (from ortho- "right" + doxa "belief") and his position eventually evolved into the position of the early Christian Church.Used in this way, the term "heresy" has no purely
objective meaning: the category exists only from the point of view
of speakers within a group that has previously agreed about what
counts as "orthodox". Any nonconformist view within
any field may be perceived as "heretical" by others within that
field who are convinced that their view is "orthodox"; in the
sciences this extension is made tongue-in-cheek.
Heretics usually do not define their own beliefs
as heretical. Heresy is a value judgment and the expression of a
view from within an established belief
system. For instance, Roman Catholics held Protestantism as a
heresy while some non-Catholics considered Catholicism the
"Great
Apostasy."
For a heresy to exist there must be an
authoritative system of dogma designated as orthodox, such as those
proposed by Catholicism.
The term orthodox is used in Eastern
Orthodoxy, some Protestant
churches, in Islam, some Jewish
denominations, and to a lesser extent in other religions. Variance from
orthodox Marxism-Leninism
is described as "right" or "left deviationism." The Church
of Scientology uses the term "squirreling" to refer to
unauthorized alterations of its teachings or methods.
Religious heresy
Christianity
In Christianity, heresy is a "theological or religious opinion or doctrine maintained in opposition, or held to be contrary, to the Roman Catholic or Orthodox doctrine of the Christian Church, or, by extension, to that of any church, creed, or religious system, considered as orthodox. By extension, heresy is an opinion or doctrine in philosophy, politics, science, art, etc., at variance with those generally accepted as authoritative."The use of the term "heresy" in the context of
Christianity is less common today, with some notable exceptions:
see for example Rudolf
Bultmann and the "character" of debates over ordination
of women and gay priests. Popular imagination relegates
"heresy" to the Middle Ages,
when the Church's power in Europe was at its height, but the case
of the scholar and humanist Giordano
Bruno was not the last execution for heresy. Heresy remained an
officially punishable offense in Roman Catholic nations until the
late 18th century. In Spain, heretics were prosecuted and punished
during the Counter-Enlightenment
movement of the restoration of the monarchy there after the
Napoleonic Era. Furthermore, while it is often believed that the
Roman Catholic church was primarily the instigator of persecution
of heretics, the Protestant
reformers including Martin Luther, John Calvin, Henry VIII and
Elisabeth I all conducted inquisitions, tortures, and murders of
non-Protestants they believed to be heretics.
Orthodox Judaism
Orthodox
Judaism considers views on the part of Jews which depart from
the traditional
Jewish principles of faith to be heretical. In addition,
mainstream Orthodox Judaism holds that all Jews who reject the
simple meaning of Maimonides's 13
principles of Jewish faith are heretics. As such, most of Orthodox
Judaism considers Reform and
Reconstructionist
Judaism to be heretical movements, and regards most of Conservative
Judaism as heretical. The liberal wing of Modern
Orthodoxy is more tolerant of Conservative Judaism,
particularly its right wing, as there is some theological and
practical overlap between these groups.
The law "You shall not cut yourselves"
(Deuteronomy 14:1) is interpreted by the Rabbis: "You shall not
form divisions, but shall form one bond." (Source: Talmud Yevamot
13a, Midrash Sifre on
Deuteronomy 96)
Besides the term "min" for "heretic," the
Talmud uses
the words "Hitsonim" (outsiders), "apikoros" (Epicurean),and
"kofer ba-Torah" (R. H. 17a), or "kofeir ba-'ikar" (he who denies
the fundamentals of faith; Pes. xxiv. 168b). Similar statuses may
apply to some of those branded "poresh mi-darke tsibbur" (he who
deviates from the customs of the community; Tosef., Sanh. xiii. 5;
R. H. 17a). Some authorities opine that all of these are consigned
to Gehinnom for all eternity (Tosef., Sanh. l.c.; comp. ib. xii. 9,
apparently belonging to xiii. 5: "He who casts off the yoke [of the
Law], and he who severs the Abrahamic covenant; he who interprets
the Torah against the halakic tradition, and he who pronounces in
full the Ineffable Name—all these have no share in the world to
come,") or possibly have no afterlife at all.
The Mishnah says the
following have no share in the world to come: "He who denies that
the Torah is divinely revealed, and the apiḳoros." R. Akiba says,
"also he who reads heretical books". This is explained in the
Talmud (Sanh. 100b) to mean "sifre Ẓeduḳim" (Sadducean writings);
but this is an alteration by the censor of "sifre ha-Minim" (books
of the Gnostics or Heretics). The Biblical version, "That ye seek
not after your own heart" (Num. xv. 39), is explained (Sifre, Num.
115; Ber. 12b) as "Ye shall not turn to heretic views ["minut"]
which lead your heart away from God" (see Maimonides, "Yad,"
'Akkum, ii. 3).
In summarizing the Talmudic statements concerning
heretics in Sanh. 90-103, Maimonides ("Yad," Teshubah, iii. 6-8)
says:
"The following have no share in the world to
come, but are cut off, and perish, and receive their punishment for
all time for their great sin: the minim, the apiḳoresim, they that
deny the belief in the Torah, they that deny the belief in
resurrection of the dead and in the coming of the Redeemer, the
apostates, they that lead many to sin, they that turn away from the
ways of the [Jewish] community... Five are called 'minim': (1) he
who says there is no God and the world has no guide; (2) he who
says the world has more than one guide; (3) he who ascribes to the
Lord of the Universe a body and a figure; (4) he who says that God
was not alone and Creator of all things at the world's beginning;
(5) he who worships some star or constellation as an intermediating
power between himself and the Lord of the World.
"The following three classes are called
'apiḳoresim': (1) he who says there was no prophecy nor was there
any wisdom that came from God and which was attained by the heart
of man; (2) he who denies the prophetic power of Moses our master;
(3) he who says that God has no knowledge concerning the doings of
men.
"The following three are called 'koferim
ba-Torah': (1) he who says the Torah is not from God: he is a kofer
even if he says a single verse or letter thereof was said by Moses
of his own accord; (2) he who denies the traditional interpretation
of the Torah and opposes those authorities who declare it to be
tradition, as did Zadok and Boethus;
and (3) he who says, as do the Nazarenes and the Mohammedans, that
the Lord has given a new dispensation instead of the old, and that
he has abolished the Law, though it was originally divine."
It is noteworthy, however, that Abraham ben
David, in his critical notes, objects to Maimonides characterizing
as heretics all those who attribute corporeality to God; and he
insinuates that the Kabbalists (of his
time) were not heretics. Similarly, Biblical critics who doubt or
deny the Mosaic origin of every portion of the Pentateuch, would
protest against this Maimonidean (or Talmudic; see Sanh. 99a)
conception of heresy (some ascribe a similar view to Ibn Ezra based
on his commentary to Deut. i. 2).
Heresy in Islam
Many in the two main bodies of Islam -- Sunnis and the Shi'as -- have regarded the other as heretical. Groups like the Sufis, the Hurufiya, the Alawis, the Bektashi and even the Ismailis have also been regarded as heretical by some. Although Sufism is often accepted as valid by Shi'a and some Sunnis, Sunni movements like Wahhabism view it as heretical.Both the Ahmadiyya and the
Nation of
Islam are regarded by many Muslim Ulema as being
apostate, but in the
case of the Ahmadiyya
movement, attitudes towards designating the sect apostatical,
heretical or Islamic differ depending on region or Islamic schools
of thought. In Pakistan, where
most Ahmadis live, the state considers the group to be apostatical;
whereas in the neighbouring state of Iran, the same group
is considered to fall within the bounds of Islamic belief. Another
example concerning the Ahmadiyya movement is the Al-Azhar
Islamic University in Egypt, which accepts
a certain Ahmadi belief concerning the nature of prophethood in
Islam, considered by other schools as being heretical, to fall
within Islamic jurisdiction.
Faiths like Druz and Baha'i although now
separate religions, have their roots in Islam and were considered
by some Muslims to be heresies when they first appeared since they
emerged as alternative currents in Islamic culture, and were
founded by people who were considered to be Muslims. Much as
Christianty is viewed by some to be a Jewish heresy, or Islam a
Christian heresy.
Bid'ah in religious matters
In Islam, bid‘ah (Arabic: بدعة) or innovation in religion is forbidden. As Muhammad stated in a hadith:“Whoever innovates something in this matter of
ours [i.e., Islam] that is not a part of it, will have it
rejected.” (Sahih
al-Bukhari Vol 3, Book 49, 861 ; Sahih Muslim
Book 18, 4266 ) In addition, the Qur'an (which Muslims believe is
the word of God) states:
" ..This day, I have perfected your religion for
you, completed My favor upon you, and have chosen for you Islam as
your religion." (Qur'an 5; 3)
The late
Muhammad ibn al Uthaymeen, a prominent Wahhabi modern day
scholar of Islam, wrote: "And there is no such thing in Islaam as
bid’ah hasanah (good innovation)."
Muslims do not all agree on what constitutes
bid`ah - or a new way of worshipping Allah - or whether innovation
includes details of clothing, eating, drinking, speech, etc., or
only more narrow religious matters. When a religious innovation is
committed, it is generally felt that the innovator is assuming that
the Sunnah
is not good enough, that he must resort to something "better."
There are some innovations that imply unbelief or shirk,
and there are some that are rejected (even when committed in all
sincerity) without casting doubt upon that person's status as a
Muslim believer.
Some categories of believers and unbelievers in
Islam are:
- Mu'min: A muslim believer.
- Fajir: A muslim who is wicked or an evil doer, a sinner (by action).
- Fasiq: A muslim who openly violates Islamic law.
- Munafiq: A hypocrite, one who believes in another religion but declares to be a muslim (sometimes also used in non religious context).
- Kafir: An unbeliever, an apostate from Islam, a person who hides, denies, or covers the truth.
- Zindiq: A previous muslim who no longer accepts Islam.
- Ahl al-Kitâb: "People of the Book", members of the monotheistic religions whose holy books share the Qur'an's origins, i.e. Jews and Christians
Contemporary heresy
Today, heresy can be without a religious context as the holding of ideas that are in fundamental disagreement with the status quo in any practice and branch of knowledge. Religion is not a necessary component of the term's definition. The revisionist paleontologist Robert T. Bakker, who published his findings as The Dinosaur Heresies, jokingly treated the mainstream view of dinosaurs as dogma.The term heresy is also used as an ideological
pigeonhole for
contemporary writers because by definition heresy depends on
contrasts with an established orthodoxy. For example, the
tongue-in-cheek contemporary usage of heresy, such as to categorize
a "Wall
Street heresy" or a "Republican
heresy", are metaphors
which invariably retain a subtext that links orthodoxies
in geology or biology or any other field to
religion. These expanded metaphoric senses allude to both the
difference between the person's views and the mainstream, and the
boldness of such a person in propounding these views.
In modern American history, the term heresy has
been applied in the United States to the position of those Catholic
politicians and voters who publicly profess support for abortion. In July 2004, the
group De Fide achieved wide notoriety when it coined the expression
"Right-to-Murder Heresy" in reference to abortion. It and 3,000
other Catholics filed the first "class-action" denunciation for
heresy against Senator John F.
Kerry, soon followed by more denunciations against four other
well-known pro choice
senators.
Following those events, in February 2006, Bishop
Robert F.
Vasa of the Diocese of Baker,
Oregon widened the national debate by becoming the first
sitting Roman Catholic Ordinary to
publicly raise the question of heresy in reference to those who
support or vote in favor of abortion. On September
28, 2007,
Gaston Hebert, the diocese administrator (per the
July 11
Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith) stated that 6 Arkansas nuns were
excommunicated
for heresy (the first in the diocese's 165-year history). They
refused to recant the
doctrines of the
Community of the Lady of All Nations (Army of
Mary). The 6 nuns are
members of the Good Shepherd Monastery of Our Lady of Charity and
Refuge in Hot Springs.
Sister Mary Theresa Dionne, 82, one of 6, said they will still live
at the convent property,
which they own. The sect
believe that its 86-year-old founder, Marie Paule Giguere, is
the reincarnation
of the Virgin
Mary.
Selected quotations
- James G. March on the relation between madness, heresy, and genius: "... we sometimes find that such heresies have been the foundation for bold and necessary change, but heresy is usually just new ideas that are foolish or dangerous and appropriately rejected or ignored. So while it may be true that great geniuses are usually heretics, heretics are rarely great geniuses."
- Isaac Asimov distinguished between two types of scientific heretic: "Endoheretics are appropriately credentialed scientists. If the person is outside the scientific community or at least outside of his specialty, he is an exoheretic. If a person is an endoheretic, he will be considered as eccentric and incompetent, whereas if the person is an exoheretic, he will be regarded as a crackpot, charlatan, or fraud."
References
See also
External links
- Some quotes and information in this article came from the Catholic Encyclopedia.
- De Fide, a non-profit association which uses Canon Law to defend the Faith and Church from Heresy, through lawsuits in Ecclesiastical Court.
- Cathars of the middle age, Philosophy and History.
- What Is Heresy? by Wilbert R. Gawrisch (Lutheran)
- http://biblia.com/christianity/inquisition.htm Inquisitions and Protestant persecutions site.
- http://www.hereticmuslims.com/ A Celebration of Heresy Conference: Critical Thinking for Islamic Reform.
References
heretics in Arabic: هرطقة
heretics in Bosnian: Hereza
heretics in Bulgarian: Ерес
heretics in Catalan: Heretgia
heretics in Czech: Hereze
heretics in Danish: Kætteri
heretics in German: Häresie
heretics in Estonian: Hereesia
heretics in Modern Greek (1453-): Αίρεση
heretics in Spanish: Herejía
heretics in Esperanto: Herezo
heretics in French: Hérésie
heretics in Galician: Herexía
heretics in Korean: 이단
heretics in Croatian: Hereza
heretics in Ido: Herezio
heretics in Indonesian: Ajaran sesat
heretics in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Heresia
heretics in Icelandic: Villutrú
heretics in Italian: Eresia
heretics in Hebrew: כופר (אמונה דתית)
heretics in Latin: Haeresis
heretics in Latvian: Ķecerība
heretics in Lithuanian: Erezija
heretics in Hungarian: Eretnek
heretics in Dutch: Ketterij
heretics in Japanese: 異端
heretics in Norwegian: Heresi
heretics in Occitan (post 1500): Eretgia
heretics in Polish: Herezja
heretics in Portuguese: Heresia
heretics in Russian: Ересь
heretics in Simple English: Heresy
heretics in Slovak: Heréza
heretics in Slovenian: Herezija
heretics in Serbian: Јерес
heretics in Serbo-Croatian: Hereza
heretics in Finnish: Kerettiläisyys
heretics in Swedish: Kätteri
heretics in Ukrainian: Єресь
heretics in Chinese: 異端