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Diogenes Laertius and the Apostolic Succession
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 February 2009
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The cultural and historical location of the concept of ςιαςοϰή in second century claims about the apostolic succession has been widely debated. In England, under the influence of Ehrhardt, the term is generally taken to be used by analogy with the sacerdotal succession of Jewish high priests, and to derive from the influence of James the Just on Jewish Christianity. In Germany, on the other hand, following Campenhausen, ςιαςοϰή has been understood in terms of continuity of doctrine, in which references to James in the sources are regarded as pure legend constructed to make the point of such continuity in a picturesque way. Both Ehrhardt and Campenhausen, and their respective followers, regard the ςιαςοχή of teachers in the literature of the Hellenistic philosophical schools as quite incidental, without any close relation to the Christian usage. In this article I will argue the contrary, that there are in fact integral connections between the Hellenistic literature of the philosophical successions, and the development of the idea of the apostolic succession in the late second century, where perhaps the true origin of the Christian concept is to be found.
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References
1 Ehrhardt, A. A. J., The Apostolic Succession in the First Two Centuries of the Church, London 1953Google Scholar; Telfer, W., The Office of a Bishop, London 1962Google Scholar.
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10 Ap. Trad. 3. 2–4, cf. proem. 6: x03BF;ίάπόστολοι…ών ήμεĩς δΙάδοΧοι τυγΧάνοντες τής τεαÙτής Χάριτος μετέΧοντες άρΧιερατείας τε καί διδασκαλίας.
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13 Adv. Haer. i. 11. 1; Ref. vi. 38. 2; Adv. Haer. i. 13. 1 (6 (ό μέν уάρ πρ⋯τος άπό τήςλεΥοένης Г⋯νωστικής αίρέσεως τάς άρχάς είς ίδιον χαραχτ⋯ρα διδασχαλείοʋ μεθαρμόσας Οὺαλεντίνος ούτως ώρίσατο); Ref. vi. 39. 1; Tertullian, , De Praescriptione Haereticorum 42Google Scholar.
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40 Ibid. viii. 42.
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44 Ibid.
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46 Ibid. i. 5.
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55 Ibid. ii. 3.
56 Ibid. ii. 4.
57 Ibid. viii. 49.
58 Epistula Petri ad Iacobum 1. 1.
59 Epistula Clementis ad Iacobum 1. 1.
60 Epist. Pet. ad lac. 2–3.
61 Epist. Clem, ad lac. 1. 19.
62 Succ. ii. 3–4; viii. 49.
63 Epist. Clem, ad lac. 1.
64 Ibid. 19. 2.
65 Epist. Pet. ad lac. 2. 1.
66 Ibid. 1.3.
67 Ref. i proem. 6, cf. Ap. Trad. 7.
68 For a detailed summary of research on the Clementines, see Jones, F. Stanley, ‘The Pseudo Clementines: a history of research’, Second Century ii (1982), 1–33, 63–96. Although the Clementines in their final form may be mid-third century and subsequent to Hippolytus, it has been argued that a common and early liturgy underlines both the report of Clement's consecration inGoogle ScholarEpist. Clem, ad lac. and in Homilies 3. 62–71Google Scholar, with the epistle's account as the more original. Furthermore, such an account must underlie the Grundschrift, since the passages in the Homilies are paralleled in the Recognitions (3. 65–6) too:Strecker, G., ‘Das Judenchristentum in der Pseudoclementinen’, Texte und Untersuchungen lxx (1958), 97–115Google Scholar. Such a liturgy would, according to my argument, originate in Irenaeus' time, and predate Hippolytan sacerdotalism.
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70 Ibid. 3. 1.
71 Ibid. 3. 3.
72 Epist. Clem, ad lac. 2. 2.
73 Ap. Cons. 2. 25. 9–13.
74 Epist. Clem, ad lac. 2. 4, cf. for this phrase, Origen De Principiis 4. 9= έχΟμένοις τούκανóνος τής 'ιησού χριστού κατά ςιαςοχήν τών αποστóλων ούρανίον Έκκλησίας.
75 Epist. Clem, ad lac. 2. 5, cf. 6. 2–4; 17. 1. I translate τòν άληθείας πρΟκαθεξόίας as ‘pre-eminent’ rather than ‘preside’ here as well as in the Ignatian passages, as far more natural. See Brent, A. ‘The relation between Ignatius of Antioch and the’ Didascalia Apostolorum', Second Century viii (1991), 129–56Google Scholar.
76 Epist. Clem, ad lac. 3. 1.
77 Ibid. 3. 2; cf. 4. 4; 13. 3.
78 Ibid. 19. 3; 6. 2.
79 Hom. 29–58; Recog. 19–70.
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81 Adv. Haer. iii. 3. 2.
82 Ibid. iii. 3. 3.
83 My italics: Telfer, W., ‘Was Hegesippus a Jew?’, Harvard Theological Review liii (1960), 143–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Cf. also ‘I t is thus the sacerdotal character of the bishop which Irenaeus sees as passing from the order of the apostles to the order of bishops’: idem, Office of a Bishop, 115.
84 The text of this sentence is problematic. The alternative, Greek reading from John Damascene, Sacra Parallela (Holl edition), 61 πάς βασιλεύς ςίκαιος ίερατικήν έΧει τάξιν. In that case, it was the character of Christ as priest that constituted the real justification for the disciples' act rather than their own righteousness. See Lyon, Irénée de, Contre Les Hérésies, in Rousseau, A. and others, Sources Chrétiennes C, Paris 1965, Livre IV, 472–3Google Scholar.
85 Deut. xxxiii. 9; x. 9; xviii. 1.
86 Mai. 1. 10–11.
87 Adv. Haer. iv. 17. 6; 18. 1.
88 Ibid. iv. 2. 2; vi. 2. 4; 8. 1.
89 Luke xiii. 10–13.
90 Adv. Haer. iv. 8. 2.
91 He uses this quote from Ehrhardt, (Apostolic Succession, 82Google Scholar) against Campenhausen:Smittals, W., Office of Apostle in the Early Church, trans Steely, J. E., London 1971, 288Google Scholar. Cf. Campenhausen, von, ‘Der urchristliche Apostelbegriff’, 96–120Google Scholar, and ‘Die Nachfolge desjakobs’, 133–44.
92 HE.ii 23.3.
93 Ibid. iv. 22. 4, 3.
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95 Zuckschwerdt, E., ‘Das Naziraät des Herrenbruders Jakobus nach Hegesippus’, Zeitschrift für die neutestamentliche Wissenschaft lxviii (1977), 276–87Google Scholar: ‘die Tradition des lebenslangen Nazirtums… wurde durch den Gegensatz zu dieser priesterlichen Konzeption und durch die sich heraus ergebenden, im Lauf der Zeit zunehmend verschärften Antithesen, die Wiederspeigelungen geschichtlicher Spannungen und hieraus erwach-sender Gegensätze zum priesterlich bestimmten’ (p. 287).
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97 Coulsen, J., Les functions ecclesiales aux deux premiers siècles, Paris 1956, 117–19Google Scholar: ‘cesjuifs convertis de Jérusalem avaient choisi… celui qui était le plus proche par le sang du “Fils de David.” Ainsi, à la morte de Judas Macchabée…s'é;tait continuéd la “dynastie” macchabéenne…Sans doute “la chair et le sang” trouvent encore leur compte dans une telle mentalite”’.
98 Stauffer, E., ‘Zum Kalifat des Jacobus’, Zeitschrift für Religions und Geislesgeschichte iv (1952), 193–214Google Scholar, in reply to von Campenhausen, ‘Die Nachfolge des Jakobs’. The most recent historical study supporting the caliphate view is Hengel, M., ‘Jacobus der Herrenbruder – der erst Papst?’, in Glaube und Eschatologie, Festshrift für W. C. Kümmel zum 80 Geburtstag, Tübingen 1985, 71–104Google Scholar.
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104 See e.g. Stauffer, ‘Zum Kalifat des Jacobus’, 119–200, 202, 206Google Scholar; Brandon, S. C. F., Jesus and the Zealots, Manchester 1967, 28–32, 115–25Google Scholar; Telfer, , Office of a Bishop, 11–12Google Scholar.
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107 Ibid. iv. 22. 2.
108 Ibid. iv. 22. 3, cf. Hyldahl, , ‘Hegesipps Hypomnemata’, 100–3Google Scholar. See also Campenhausen, H. von, ‘Lehrerreihen und Bishofsreihen im 2. Jahrhundert’, in In Memoriam Ernst Lohmeyer, Stuttgart 1953, 247Google Scholar: ‘Daher verzichtet sie auf die Datierung und iiberhaupt auf jede historische Auswertung und zahlt die Apostel nicht etwa selbst schon also das erste Glied sondern nur den jeweiligen Abstand, in dem die späteren Bischofe also Erben ihrer Lehre in dem Zusammenhang der ςιαςοχή erscheinen.’
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110 Adv. Haer. iii. 3. 3, cf. Succ. proem. 1; v. 94.
111 Apostolic Succession, 77–80, 121–2.
112 Campenhausen, von, ‘Lehrerreihen und Bishofsreihen’, 242Google Scholar: ‘An den person-lichen, rechtlichen oder sakramentalen Zusammenhang mit den Aposteln ist ebenfalls noch nich gedacht, und der Gedanke an eine Lehre und Lehrüberlieferung bleibt völlig beiseite’.
113 Clement xliv. 2.
114 Ibid. xl. 5.
115 Ibid. xli. 1–2.
116 Ibid. xlii. 2.
117 Ibid. xliv. 2.
118 Succ. viii. 50. 91; ix. 1; x. 21. 25.
119 Ant. Jud. xx. 16. 103, 197, 213, 229, 235 etc.
120 Ibid. xv. 297–8.
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