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mailing list archive - DIE SCHERE #58: Note on "kainitisch"

kainitisch

does not just mean like Cain, the murderer of his brother Abel. EJ has in mind 
people whose life is dedicated to the pursuit of evil because their religion 
turns upside down the code of the good life implied in the Bible. The term 
originally refers to a group of gnostics described by the early Church Father 
Irenaeus in his work ADVERSUS HAERESES [AGAINST HERESIES], written around A.D. 
180. The Encyclopaedia Britannica offers an instructive summary:

Cainite: member of a Gnostic sect mentioned by Irenaeus and other early Christian 
writers as flourishing in the 2nd century AD, probably in the eastern area of the 
Roman Empire. The Christian theologian Origen declared that the Cainites had 
"entirely abandoned Jesus." Their reinterpretation of Old Testament texts 
reflected the view that Yahweh (the God of the Jews) was not merely an inferior 
demiurge, as many Gnostics believed, but that he was positively evil because his 
creation of the world was perversely designed to prevent the reunion of the 
divine element in man with the unknown perfect God. The Cainites also reversed 
biblical values by revering such rejected figures as Cain (whence their name), 
Esau, and the Sodomites, all of whom were considered to be bearers of an 
esoteric, saving knowledge (gnosis). These biblical persons were said to have 
been punished by a jealous, irrational creator called Hystera (Womb). The 
Cainites also honoured Eve and Judas Iscariot and had gospels bearing their 
names. The Cainites are sometimes called libertine Gnostics for believing that 
true perfection, and hence salvation, comes only by breaking all the laws of the 
Old Testament. The violation of biblical prescriptions was, therefore, a 
religious duty. Because it was difficult to violate all biblical laws during a 
single lifetime, the Cainites did not look for salvation in the created world but 
rather escape from it. Their subversion of biblical stories allowed them to use 
Sacred Scripture to support their dualistic view of existence. [Copyright © 
1994-2000 Encyclopędia Britannica, Inc.]





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