Friedrich Bernard Christian Maassen

 Jean Mabillon

 Mabinogion

 Diocese of Macao

 St. Macarius

 Macarius Magnes

 Macarius of Antioch

 Edward McCabe

 Hugh MacCaghwell

 Denis Florence MacCarthy

 Nicholas Tuite MacCarthy

 John McCloskey

 William George McCloskey

 John MacDonald

 Alexander Macdonell

 Mace

 Francisco Macedo

 José Agostinho de Macedo

 United Sees of Macerata and Tolentino

 Francis Patrick McFarland

 Thomas D'Arcy McGee

 James MacGeoghegan

 Machabees

 Books of Machabees

 John MacHale

 Nicolò Machiavelli

 Machpelah

 St. Machutus

 Vicariate Apostolic of Mackenzie

 John McLoughlin

 Marie-Edmé-Patrice-Maurice de MacMahon

 Martin Thomas McMahon

 James Alphonsus McMaster

 William James MacNeven

 Ancient Diocese of Mâcon

 Bernard John McQuaid

 Macri

 Macrina

 James McSherry (1)

 James McSherry (2)

 Richard McSherry

 Mactaris

 Madagascar

 Madaurus, or Madaura

 Carlo Maderna

 Stefano Maderno

 Madianites

 Archdiocese of Madras

 Diocese of Madrid-Alcalá

 Christopher Madruzzi

 Madura Mission

 St. Maedoc

 St. Maelruan

 St. Maelrubha

 Jacob van Maerlant

 Maestro di Camera del Papa

 Bernardino Maffei

 Francesco Maffei

 Raffaelo Maffei

 Antoine-Dominique Magaud

 Magdala

 Magdalens

 Magdeburg

 Mageddo

 Ferdinand Magellan

 Magi

 Magin Catalá

 Simone de Magistris

 Antonio Magliabechi

 Magna Carta

 Magnesia

 Alphonse Magnien

 Magnificat

 St. Magnus

 Olaus Magnus

 Valerianus Magnus

 John Macrory Magrath

 Magydus

 Ven. Charles Mahony

 Angelo Mai

 Emmanuel Maignan

 Joseph-Anna-Marie de Moyria de Mailla

 Antoine-Simon Maillard

 Olivier Maillard

 Louis Maimbourg

 Teaching of Moses Maimonides

 Maina Indians

 Maine

 François-Pierre-Gonthier Maine de Biran

 Françoise, Marquise de Maintenon

 Mainz

 Maipure Indians

 Joseph-Marie, Comte de Maistre

 Xavier de Maistre

 Diocese of Maitland

 Benedetto da Majano

 Diocese of Majorca and Iviza

 Majordomo

 Majority

 Paul Majunke

 Malabar

 Malabar Rites

 Diocese of Malacca

 Malachias

 St. Malachy

 Diocese of Malaga

 Gabriel Malagrida

 House of Malatesta

 Malchus

 Juan Maldonado

 Nicolas Malebranche

 Malediction (in Scripture)

 François Malherbe

 Maliseet Indians

 Ernest-François Mallard

 Hermann von Mallinckrodt

 Pauline Mallinckrodt

 Stephen Russell Mallory

 Mallus

 Malmesbury

 Monk of Malmesbury

 William Malone

 Sir Thomas Malory

 Marcello Malpighi

 Malta

 Claude Maltret

 Thomas Malvenda

 Malvern

 Thomas Maria Mamachi

 Alfred-Henri-Amand Mame

 Mameluco

 Mamertine Prison

 St. Mamertus

 Mammon

 Man

 Manahem

 St. Manahen

 Manasses

 Jeanne Mance

 Diocese of Manchester

 Manchuria

 Mandan Indians

 Jean de Mandeville

 Archdiocese of Manfredonia

 Diocese of Mangalore

 James Clarence Mangan

 Manharter

 Manichæism

 Manifestation of Conscience

 Archdiocese of Manila

 Manila Observatory

 Maniple

 Manitoba

 Theodore Augustine Mann

 Manna

 Henry Edward Manning

 Robert Mannyng of Brunne

 Mansard

 Gian Domenico Mansi

 Andrea Mantegna

 Mantelletta

 Diocese of Mantua

 Laws of Manu

 Manuel Chysoloras

 Manuscripts

 Illuminated Manuscripts

 Manuscripts of the Bible

 Manuterge

 Aldus Manutius

 Alessandro Manzoni

 Walter Map

 Maphrian

 Prudentius Maran

 Marash

 Carlo Maratta

 Marbodius

 Pierre de Marca

 St. Marcellina

 Pope St. Marcellinus

 Flavius Marcellinus

 Marcellinus Comes

 Marcellinus of Civezza, O.F.M.

 Benedetto Marcello

 Pope St. Marcellus I

 Pope Marcellus II

 Marcellus of Ancyra

 Auzias March

 Jean Baptiste Marchand

 Peter Marchant

 Pompeo Marchesi

 Giuseppe Marchi

 Marcian

 Marciane

 Marcianopolis

 Marcionites

 Marcopolis

 Marcosians

 Joseph Marcoux

 Marcus

 Marcus Diadochus

 Marcus Eremita

 Mardin

 Ambrose Maréchal

 Marenco

 Luca Marenzio

 St. Margaret

 Bl. Margaret Colonna

 Margaret Haughery

 St. Margaret Mary Alacoque

 St. Margaret of Cortona

 Bl. Margaret of Hungary

 Bl. Margaret of Lorraine

 Bl. Margaret of Savoy

 St. Margaret of Scotland

 Margaret of the Blessed Sacrament

 Bl. Margaret Pole

 Margaritae

 Antonio Margil

 Giacomo Margotti

 Maria-Laach

 Xantes Mariales

 Juan Mariana

 Archdiocese of Mariana

 Prefecture Apostolic of Mariana Islands

 Congregation of the Missionaries of Mariannhill

 Marian Priests

 Marianus of Florence

 Marianus Scotus

 Maria Theresa

 Marie Antoinette

 Bl. Marie Christine of Savoy

 Marie de France

 Bl. Marie de l'Incarnation

 Ven. Marie de l'Incarnation

 Marienberg

 Marini

 Luigi Gaetano Marini

 Pope Marinus I

 Pope Marinus II

 Edme Mariotte

 Sts. Maris, Martha, Audifax, and Abachum

 Adam de Marisco

 St. Marius Aventicus

 Lucius Perpetuus Aurelianus Marius Maximus

 Marius Mercator

 St. Mark

 Pope St. Mark

 Gospel of Saint Mark

 Sts. Mark and Marcellian

 Mark of Lisbon

 Paul Maroni

 Maronia

 Maronites

 Vicariate Apostolic of Marquesas Islands

 Diocese of Marquette

 Jacques Marquette

 Marquette League

 Civil Marriage

 History of Marriage

 Mixed Marriage

 Moral and Canonical Aspect of Marriage

 Mystical Marriage

 Ritual of Marriage

 Sacrament of Marriage

 Florence Marryat

 Diocese of Marseilles (Massilia)

 Thomas William Marshall

 Vicariate Apostolic of the Marshall Islands

 Diocese of Marsi

 Diocese of Marsico Nuovo and Potenza

 Luigi Ferdinando, Count de Marsigli

 Marsilius of Padua

 Edmond Martène

 St. Martha

 St. Martial

 John Martiall

 Jean Martianay

 Martianus Capella

 Joseph-Alexandre Martigny

 Pope St. Martin I

 Pope Martin IV

 Pope Martin V

 Martin

 Felix Martin

 Gregory Martin

 Konrad Martin

 Paulin Martin

 St. Martina

 Antonio Martini

 Martino Martini

 Simone Martini

 Diocese of Martinique

 St. Martin of Braga

 St. Martin of Leon

 St. Martin of Tours

 Martin of Troppau

 Martin of Valencia

 John Martinov

 Martinsberg

 George Martinuzzi

 Luis Martin y Garcia

 Martyr

 Peter Martyr d'Anghiera

 Martyrology

 Martyropolis

 Acts of the Martyrs

 Japanese Martyrs

 The Ten Thousand Martyrs

 Martyrs in China

 St. Maruthas

 Mary of Cleophas

 Little Brothers of Mary

 Missionaries of the Company of Mary

 Servants of Mary (Order of Servites)

 Society of Mary (Marist Fathers)

 Society of Mary of Paris

 Name of Mary (1)

 Bl. Mary Anne de Paredes

 Mary de Cervellione

 Ven. Mary de Sales Chappuis

 St. Mary Frances of the Five Wounds of Jesus

 Maryland

 St. Mary Magdalen

 St. Mary Magdalen de' Pazzi

 St. Mary of Egypt

 Mary Queen of Scots

 Mary Tudor

 Masaccio

 Mascoutens Indians

 Masolino da Panicale

 Richard Angelus a S. Francisco Mason

 Masonry (Freemasonry)

 Maspha

 Chapter and Conventual Mass

 Liturgy of the Mass

 Volume 11

 Music of the Mass

 Nuptial Mass

 Sacrifice of the Mass

 Massa Candida

 Diocese of Massa Carrara

 Massachusetts

 Guglielmo Massaia

 Diocese of Massa Marittima

 Enemond Massé

 Bequests for Masses (Canada)

 Bequests for Masses (England)

 Devises and Bequests for Masses (United States)

 Jean-Baptiste Massillon

 Massorah

 Antoine Massoulié

 René Massuet

 Quentin Massys

 Master of the Sacred Palace

 Bartholomew Mastrius

 Mataco Indians

 Mater

 Materialism

 Feast of the Maternity of the Blessed Virgin Mary

 Mathathias

 Theobald Mathew

 François-Désiré Mathieu

 Mathusala

 St. Matilda

 Matilda of Canossa

 Matins

 Matricula

 Matteo da Siena

 Matteo of Aquasparta

 Matter

 Carlo Matteucci

 St. Matthew

 Gospel of St. Matthew

 Sir Tobie Matthew

 Matthew of Cracow

 St. Matthias

 Matthias Corvinus

 Matthias of Neuburg

 Maundy Thursday

 Auguste-François Maunoury

 St. Maurice

 Maurice

 Maurists

 St. Maurus

 Sylvester Maurus

 Jean-Siffrein Maury

 Joannes Maxentius

 Marcus Aurelius Maxentius

 Ven. Thomas Maxfield

 Maximianopolis

 Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maximianus

 Maximilian

 Maximilian I

 St. Maximinus

 Caius Valerius Daja Maximinus

 Caius Julius Verus Maximinus Thrax

 Maximopolis

 St. Maximus of Constantinople

 St. Maximus of Turin

 William Maxwell

 Winifred Maxwell

 Maya Indians

 Christian Mayer

 Edward Mayhew

 Bl. Cuthbert Mayne

 Maynooth College

 School of Mayo

 Mayo Indians

 John Mayor

 Mayoruna Indians

 Prefecture Apostolic of Mayotte, Nossi-Bé, and Comoro

 Beda Mayr

 Francis Mayron

 Jules Mazarin

 Mazatec Indians

 Charles Joseph Eugene de Mazenod

 Diocese of Mazzara del Vallo

 Camillo Mazzella

 Lodovico Mazzolini

 Sylvester Mazzolini

 Pietro Francesco Mazzuchelli

 Mbaya Indians

 Thomas Francis Meagher

 Diocese of Meath

 Diocese of Meaux

 Mecca

 Mechanism

 Mechitar

 Mechitarists

 Archdiocese of Mechlin

 Johann Mechtel

 St. Mechtilde

 Mechtild of Magdeburg

 Mecklenburg

 Jean Paul Medaille

 Devotional Medals

 St. Medardus

 Medea

 Archdiocese of Medellín

 Media and Medes

 Mediator (Christ as Mediator)

 Hieronymus Medices

 House of Medici

 Maria de' Medici

 History of Medicine

 Medicine and Canon Law

 Bartholomew Medina

 Juan de Medina

 Miguel de Medina

 Francisco Medrano

 Andreas Medulic

 Charles Patrick Meehan

 Megara

 Megarians

 Antoine-Joseph Mège

 Mehrerau

 Guillaume-René Meignan

 Jean-Baptiste Meilleur

 Bl. Meinwerk

 Meissen

 Ernest Meissonier

 Philipp Melanchthon

 St. Melania (the Younger)

 Archdiocese of Melbourne

 Paul Melchers

 Melchisedech

 Melchisedechians

 Melchites

 Juan Meléndez Valdés

 Meletius of Antioch

 Meletius of Lycopolis

 Diocese of Melfi and Rapolla

 Giovanni Meli

 Pius Melia

 Melissus of Samos

 Melitene

 St. Melito

 Abbey and Congregation of Melk

 Melleray

 Abbey of Mellifont

 St. Mellitus

 Diocese of Melo

 Melos

 Melozzo da Forlí

 Abbey of Melrose

 Chronicle of Melrose

 Francesco Melzi

 Memberton

 Zenobius Membre

 Hans Memling

 Memory

 Memphis

 Juan de Mena

 Menaion

 Léon Ménard

 Nicolas-Hugues Ménard

 René Ménard

 St. Menas

 Mencius

 Alvaro de Mendaña de Neyra

 Diocese of Mende

 Mendel, Mendelism

 João Mendes de Silva

 Vicariate Apostolic of Méndez and Gualaquiza

 Manuel de Mendiburu

 Mendicant Friars

 Jerónimo Mendieta

 Diego Hurtade de Mendoza

 Francisco Sarmiento de Mendoza

 Pedro Gonzalez de Mendoza

 Osorio Francisco Meneses

 Diocese of Menevia

 Gregorio Mengarini

 Anthon Rafael Mengs

 Mennas

 Mennonites

 Giovanni Stefano Menochio

 Men of Understanding

 Menologium

 Menominee Indians

 Mensa, Mensal Revenue

 John Mensing

 Mental Reservation

 Johannes Mentelin

 Benedetto Menzini

 Eustache Mercadé

 Mercedarians

 Louis-Honoré Mercier

 Geronimo Mercuriali

 Brothers of Our Lady of Mercy

 Corporal and Spiritual Works of Mercy

 Sisters of Mercy

 Sisters of Mercy of St. Borromeo

 Edward Meredith

 Diocese of Mérida

 Merit

 Gaspard Mermillod

 Merneptah I

 Frédéric-François-Xavier Ghislain de Mérode

 Marin Mersenne

 Mesa

 Delegation Apostolic of Mesopotamia, Kurdistan, and Armenia

 Mesrob

 Messalians

 Messene

 Messias

 Antonello da Messina

 Archdiocese of Messina

 Thomas Messingham

 Metal-Work in the Service of the Church

 Symeon Metaphrastes

 Metaphysics

 Pietro Metastasio

 Edward Metcalfe

 Metellopolis

 Metempsychosis

 Sir Thomas Metham

 Methodism

 St. Methodius of Olympus

 Methymna

 Metrophanes of Smyrna

 Metropolis

 Metropolitan

 Prince Klemens Lothar Wenzel von Metternich

 Metz

 Jean Clopinel de Meun

 Mexico

 Archdiocese of Mexico

 Francis, Joseph, and Paul Mezger

 Giuseppe Mezzofanti

 Miami Indians

 Military Orders of St. Michael

 Michael Cærularius

 St. Michael de Sanctis

 Michael of Cesena

 Michael Scotus

 St. Michael the Archangel

 Joseph-François Michaud

 Micheas (Micah)

 Jean Michel

 Michelians

 Edward Michelis

 Michelozzo di Bartolommeo

 Michigan

 Archdiocese of Michoacan

 Adam Mickiewicz

 Micmacs

 Micrologus

 Jakob Middendorp

 Middle Ages

 Diocese of Middlesbrough

 Midrashim

 Midwives

 Christoph Anton Migazzi

 Pierre Mignard

 Jacques-Paul Migne

 Migration

 Archdiocese of Milan

 Vinzenz Eduard Milde

 George Henry Miles

 Diocese of Mileto

 Miletopolis

 Miletus

 Vitus Miletus

 Milevum

 Jan Milic

 Military Orders

 Millennium and Millenarianism

 Ferdinand von Miller

 Jean-François Millet

 Pierre Millet

 John Milner

 Ven. Ralph Milner

 Milo Crispin

 Milopotamos

 Pope St. Miltiades

 Karl von Miltiz

 Diocese of Milwaukee

 Mind

 Diocese of Minden

 John Ming

 Minimi

 Minister

 Jean-Pierre Minkelers

 Minnesota

 Minor

 Diocese of Minorca

 Minor Orders

 Diocese of Minsk

 Papal Mint

 Minucius Felix

 Mirabilia Urbis Romæ

 Miracle

 Miracle Plays and Mysteries

 Gift of Miracles

 Aubert Miraeus

 Giovanni Francesco Pico della Mirandola

 Giovanni Pico della Mirandola

 Abbey of Miridite

 Miserere

 Congregation of the Sisters of Misericorde

 Prefecture Apostolic of Misocco and Calanca

 Missal

 Congregation of Priests of the Mission

 Congregation of Missionaries of St. Charles Borromeo

 Missionaries of St. Francis de Sales of Annecy

 Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle

 Mission Indians (of California)

 Catholic Missions

 Catholic Indian Missions of Canada

 Catholic Indian Missions of the United States

 Catholic Parochial Missions

 Mississippi

 Missouri

 Mithraism

 Mitre

 Nicola Giacomo Mittarelli

 Mitylene

 St. George Jackson Mivart

 Mixe Indians

 Mixteca Indians

 Moab, Moabites

 Diocese of Mobile

 Mocissus

 Mocoví Indians

 Archdiocese of Modena

 Modernism

 Diocese of Modigliana

 Modra

 Mohammedan Confraternities

 Mohammed and Mohammedanism

 Archdiocese of Mohileff

 Johann Adam Möhler

 Christian Mohr

 Joseph Mohr

 François-Napoléon-Marie Moigno

 Jacques de Molai

 Notre-Dame de Molesme

 Diocese of Molfetta, Terlizzi, and Giovinazzo

 Jean-Baptiste Poquelin Molière

 Alonso de Molina

 Antonio de Molina

 Juan Ignacio Molina

 Luis de Molina

 Molinism

 Miguel de Molinos

 Wilhelm Molitor

 Francis Molloy

 Gerald Molloy

 Gasparo Molo

 Moloch

 Molokai

 Sir Caryll Molyneux

 Bonino Mombritius

 Principality and Diocese of Monaco

 Monad

 Monarchians

 Monarchia Sicula

 Double Monasteries

 Suppression of Monasteries

 Canonical Erection of a Monastery

 Monasticism

 Francisco de Moncada

 Mondino dei Lucci

 Diocese of Mondoñedo

 Diocese of Mondovi

 Franz Mone

 Moneta

 Mongolia

 St. Monica

 Monism

 Monita Secreta

 Monk

 Monogram of Christ

 Monomotapa

 Monophysites and Monophysitism

 Diocese of Monopoli

 Moral Aspects of Monopoly

 Monotheism

 Monothelitism and Monothelites

 Archdiocese of Monreale

 James Monroe

 Jacques-Marie-Louis Monsabré

 Monseigneur

 William Monsell, Baron Emly

 Monsignor

 Enguerrand de Monstrelet

 Bartolomeo Montagna

 Montagnais Indians (Quebec)

 Montagnais Indians (Chippewayans)

 Michel-Eyquen de Montaigne

 Diocese of Montalcino

 Charles-Forbes-René, Comte de Montalembert

 Diocese of Montalto

 Montana

 Juan Martínez Montañés

 Montanists

 Diocese of Montauban

 Xavier Barbier de Montault

 Bl. Peter of Montboissier

 Marquis de Louis-Joseph Montcalm-Gozon

 Abbey of Monte Cassino

 Diocese of Montefeltro

 Diocese of Montefiascone

 Jorge de Montemayor

 Montenegro

 Diocese of Montepulciano

 Diocese of Monterey and Los Angeles

 Military Order of Montesa

 Antonio Montesino

 Luis de Montesinos

 Montes Pietatis

 Charles-Louis de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu

 Claudio Monteverde

 Monte Vergine

 Archdiocese of Montevideo

 Bernard de Montfaucon

 Simon de Montfort

 Joseph-Michel Montgolfier

 Special Devotions for Months

 Charles Huault de Montmagny

 John de Montmirail

 Anne, First Duke of Montmorency

 Alexis-François Artaud de Montor

 Diocese of Montpellier

 Archdiocese of Montreal

 Montreuil

 Montreuil Abbey

 Mont-St-Michel

 Antoine-Jean-Baptiste-Robert Auget, Baron de Montyon

 Arthur Moore

 Michael Moore

 Thomas Moore

 Mopsuestia

 Antonis Van Dashorst Mor

 Ambrosio Morales

 Juan Bautista Morales

 Luis de Morales

 Moralities

 Morality

 Leandro Fernandez de Moratín

 Moravia

 Stefano Antonio Morcelli

 Helen More

 Henry More

 Gall Morel

 Juliana Morell

 José María Morelos

 Louis Moréri

 Augustín Moreto y Cabaña

 Giovanni Battista Morgagni

 Ven. Edward Morgan

 Raffaello Morghen

 David Moriarty

 Michelangelo Morigi

 Abbey of Morimond

 Jean Morin

 Mormons

 Morocco

 Giovanni Morone

 Gaetano Moroni

 Giovanni Battista Moroni

 John Morris

 John Brande Morris

 Martin Ferdinand Morris

 Morse

 Ven. Henry Morse

 Mortification

 Mortmain

 John Morton

 Ven. Robert Morton

 Mosaic Legislation

 Mosaics

 Johannes Moschus

 Moscow

 Moses

 Moses Bar Cephas

 Moses of Chorene

 Mossul

 Dioceses of Mostar and Markana-Trebinje

 Feast of the Most Pure Heart of Mary

 Mosynoupolis

 Motet

 Toribio de Benavente Motolinia

 Motu Proprio

 Antoine de Mouchy

 Franz Christoph Ignaz Moufang

 Diocese of Moulins

 Congregations of Mount Calvary

 Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel

 Mount St. Mary's College

 Franz Karl Movers

 Moxos Indians

 Karl Ernst, Freiherr von Moy de Sons

 Ven. John Martin Moye

 Francis Moylan

 Stephen Moylan

 Mozambique

 Mozarabic Rite

 Johann Chrysostomus Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

 Mozetena Indians

 Mozzetta

 Luigi Mozzi

 Ignatius Mrak

 Albert Anton Von Muchar

 Engelbert Mühlbacher

 Michael George Mulhall

 St. Clair Augustine Mulholland

 John Mullanphy

 Adam Heinrich Müller

 Johann Müller

 Johann Müller (Regiomontanus)

 Karl Müller

 John T. Mullock

 Baron Eligius Franz Joseph von Münch-Bellinghausen

 Fintan Mundwiler

 Archdiocese of Munich-Freising

 Diocese of Munkács

 Diocese of Münster

 University of Münster

 Eugène Müntz

 St. Mura

 Luigi Antonio Muratori

 Muratorian Canon

 Marc-Antoine Muret

 Muri

 Bartolomé Esteban Murillo

 Thomas Murner

 Diocese of Muro-Lucano

 Daniel Murray

 Patrick Murray

 Christian Museums

 Mush

 John Mush

 Ecclesiastical Music

 Musical Instruments in Church Services

 Musti

 Markos Musuros

 José Celestino Mutis

 Alfonso Muzzarelli

 Mylasa

 Myndus

 Myra

 Myrina

 Myriophytum

 Diocese of Mysore

 Mystery

 Mystical Body of the Church

 Mysticism

Monarchians


Heretics of the second and third centuries. The word, Monarchiani, was first used by Tertullian as a nickname for the Patripassian group (adv. Prax., x), and was seldom used by the ancients. In modern times it has been extended to an earlier group of heretics, who are distinguished as Dynamistic, or Adoptionist, Monarchians from the Modalist Monarchians, or Patripassians [Sabellians].


I. DYNAMISTS, OR ADOPTIONISTS

All Christians hold the unity (monarchia) of God as a fundamental doctrine. By the Patripassians this first principle was used to deny the Trinity, and they are with some reason called Monarchians. But the Adoptionists, or Dynamists, have no claim to the title, for they did not start from the monarchy of God, and their error is strictly Christological. An account of them must, however, be given here simply because the name Monarchian has adhered to them in spite of the repeated protests of historians of dogma. But their ancient and accurate name was Theodotians. The founder of the sect was a leather-seller of Byzantium named Theodotus. He came to Rome under Pope Victor (c. 190-200) or earlier. He taught (Philosophumena, VII, xxxv) that Jesus was a man born of a virgin according to the counsel of the Father, that He lived like other men, and was most pious; that at His baptism in the Jordan the Christ came down upon Him in the likeness of a dove, and therefore wonders (dynameis) were not wrought in Him until the Spirit (which Theodotus called Christ) came down and was manifested in Him. They did not admit that this made Him God; but some of them said He was God after His resurrection. It was reported that Theodotus had been seized, with others, at Byzantium as a Christian, and that he had denied Christ, whereas his companions had been martyred; he had fled to Rome, and had invented his heresy in order to excuse his fall, saying that it was but a man and not God that he had denied. Pope Victor excommunicated him, and he gathered together a sect in which we are told much secular study was carried on. Hippolytus says that they argued on Holy Scripture in syllogistic form. Euclid, Aristotle, and Theophrastus were their admiration, and Galen they even adored. We should probably assume, with Harnack, that Hippolytus would have had less objection to the study of Plato or the Stoics, and that he disliked their purely literal exegesis, which neglected the allegorical sense. They also emended the text of Scripture, but their versions differed, that of Asclepiodotus was different from that of Theodotus, and again from that of Hermophilus; and the copies of Apolloniades did not even tally with one another. Some of them "denied the law and the Prophets", that is to say, they followed Marcion in rejecting the Old Testament. The only disciple of the leather-seller of whom we know anything definite is his namesake Theodotus the banker (ho trapezites). He added to his master's doctrine the view that Melchisedech was a celestial power, who was the advocate for the angels in heaven, as Jesus Christ was for men upon earth (a view found among later sects). (See MELCHISEDECHIANS). This teaching was of course grounded on Hebrews, vii, 3, and it is refuted at length by St. Epiphanius as Heresy 55, "Melchisedechians", after he has attacked the leather-seller under Heresy 54, "Theodotians". As he meets a series of arguments of both heretics, it is probable that some writings of the sect had been before Hippolytus, whose lost "Syntagma against all heresies" supplied St. Epiphanius with all his information. After the death of Pope Victor, Theodotus, the banker, and Asclepiodotus designed to raise their sect from the position of a mere school like those of the Gnostics to the rank of a Church like that of Marcion. They got hold of a certain confessor named Natalius, and persuaded him to be called their bishop at a salary of 150 denarii (24 dollars) a month. Natalius thus became the first antipope. But after he had joined them, he was frequently warned in visions by the Lord, Who did not wish His martyr to be lost outside the Church. He neglected the visions, for the sake of the honour and gain, but finally was scourged all night by the holy angels, so that in the morning with haste and tears he betook himself in sackcloth and ashes to Pope Zephyrinus and cast himself at the feet of the clergy, and even of the laity, showing the weals of the blows, and was after some difficulty restored to communion. This story is quoted by Eusebius II (VI, xxviii) from the "Little Labyrinth" of the contemporary Hippolytus, a work composed against Artemon, a late leader of the sect (perhaps c. 225-30), whom he did not mention in the "Syntagma" or the "Philosophumena". Our knowledge of Artemon, or Artemas, is limited to the reference to him made at the end of the Council of Antioch against Paul of Samosata (about 266-268), where that heretic was said to have followed Artemon, and in fact the teaching of Paul is but a more learned and theological development of Theodotianism (see Paul of Samosata).

The sect probably died out about the middle of the third century, and can never have been numerous. All our knowledge of it goes back to Hippolytus. His "Syntagma" (c.205) is epitomized in Pseudo-Tertullian (Praescript., lii) and Philastrius, and is developed by Epiphanius (Haer., liv. lv); his "Little Labyrinth" (written 139-5, cited by Eusebius, V, 28) and his "Philosophumena" are still extant. See also his "Contra Noetum" 3, and a fragment "On the Melchisedechians and Theodotians and Athingani", published by Caspari (Tidskr. für der Evangel. Luth. Kirke, Ny Raekke, VIII, 3, p. 307). But the Athingani are a later sect, for which see MEDCHISEDECHIANS. The Monarchianism of Photinus (q. v.) seems to have been akin to that of the Theodotians. All speculations as to the origin of the theories of Theodotus are fanciful. At any rate he is not connected with the Ebionites. The Alogi have sometimes been classed with the Monarchians. Lipsius in his "Quelenkritik des Epiphanius" supposed them to be even Philanthropists, on account of their denial of the Logos, and Epiphanius in fact calls Theodotus an apopasma of the Alogi; but this is only a guess, and is not derived by him from Hippolytus. As a fact, Epiphanius assures us (Haer. 51) that the Alogi (that is, Gaius and his party) were orthodox in their Christology (see MONTANISTS).


II. MODALISTS

The Monarchians properly so-called (Modalists) exaggerated the oneness of the Father and the Son so as to make them but one Person; thus the distinctions in the Holy Trinity are energies or modes, not Persons: God the Father appears on earth as Son; hence it seemed to their opponents that Monarchians made the Father suffer and die. In the West they were called Patripassians, whereas in the East they are usually called Sabellians. The first to visit Rome was probably Praxeas, who went on to Carthage some time before 206-208; but he was apparently not in reality a heresiarch, and the arguments refuted by Tertullian somewhat later in his book "Adversus Praxean" are doubtless those of the Roman Monarchians (see PRAXEAS).


A. History

Noetus (from whom the Noetians) was a Smyrnaean (Epiphanius, by a slip, says an Ephesian). He called himself Moses, and his brother Aaron. When accused before the presbyterate of teaching that the Father suffered, he denied it; but after having made a few disciples he was again interrogated, and expelled from the Church. He died soon after, and did not receive Christian burial. Hippolytus mockingly declares him to have been a follower of Heraclitus, on account of the union of the opposites which he taught when he called God both visible and invisible, passible and impassible. His pupil Epigonus came to Rome. As he was not mentioned in the "Syntagma" of Hippolytus, which was written in one of the first five years of the third century, he was not then well known in Rome, or had not yet arrived. According to Hippolytus (Philos., IX, 7), Cleomenes, a follower of Epigonus, was allowed by Pope Zephyrinus to establish a school, which flourished under his approbation and that of Callistus. Hagemann urges that we should conclude that Cleomenes was not a Noetian at all, and that he was an orthodox opponent of the incorrect theology of Hippolytus. The same writer gives most ingenious and interesting (though hardly convincing) reasons for identifying Praxeas with Callistus; he proves that the Monarchians attacked in Tertullian's "Contra Praxean" and in the "Philosophumena" had identical tenets which were not necessarily heretical; he denies that Tertullian means us to understand that Praxeas came to Carthage, and he explains the nameless refuter of Praxeas to be, not Tertullian himself, but Hippolytus. It is true that it is easy to suppose Tertullian and Hippolytus to have misrepresented the opinions of their opponents, but it cannot be proved that Cleomenes was not a follower of the heretical Noetus, and that Sabellius did not issue from his school; further, it is not obvious that Tertullian would attack Callistus under a nickname.

Sabellius soon became the leader of the Monarchians in Rome, perhaps even before the death of Zephyrinus (c. 218). He is said by Epiphanius to have founded his views on the Gospel according to the Egyptians, and the fragments of that apocryphon support this statement. Hippolytus hoped to convert Sabellius to his own views, and attributed his failure in this to the influence of Callistus. That pope, however, excommunicated Sabellius c. 220 ("fearing me", says Hippolytus). Hippolytus accuses Callistus of now inventing a new heresy by combing the views of Theodotus and those of Sabellius, although he excommunicated them both (see CALLISTUS I, POPE). Sabellius was apparently still in Rome when Hippolytus wrote the Philosophumena (between 230 and 235). Of his earlier and later history nothing is known. St. Basil and others call him a Libyan from Pentapolis, but this seems to rest on the fact that Pentapolis was found to be full of Sabellianism by Dionysius of Alexandria, c. 260. A number of Montanists led by Aeschines became Modalists (unless Harnack is right in making Modalism the original belief of the Montanists and in regarding Aeschines as a conservative). Sabellius (or at least his followers) may have considerably amplified the original Noetianism. There was still Sabellianism to be found in the fourth century. Marcellus of Ancyra developed a Monarchianism of his own, which was carried much further by his disciple, Photinus. Priscillian was an extreme Monarchian and so was Commodian ("Carmen Apol.", 89, 277, 771). The "Monarchian Prologues" to the Gospels found in most old manuscripts of the Vulgate, were attributed by von Dobschütz and P. Corssen to a Roman author of the time of Callistus, but they are almost certainly the work of Priscillian. Beryllus, Bishop of Bostra, is vaguely said by Eusebius (H. E., VI, 33) to have taught that the Saviour had no distinct pre-existence before the Incarnation, and had no Divinity of His own, but that the Divinity of the Father dwelt in Him. Origen disputed with him in a council and convinced him of his error. The minutes of the disputation were known to Eusebius. It is not clear whether Beryllus was a Modalist or a Dynamist.


B. Theology

There was much that was unsatisfactory in the theology of the Trinity and in the Christology of the orthodox writers of the Ante-Nicene period. The simple teaching of tradition was explained by philosophical ideas, which tended to obscure as well as to elucidate it. The distinction of the Son from the Father was so spoken of that the Son appeared to have functions of His own, apart from the Father, with regard to the creation and preservation of the world, and thus to be a derivative and secondary God. The unity of the Divinity was commonly guarded by a reference to a unity of origin. It was said that God from eternity was alone, with His Word, one with Him (as Reason, in vulca cordis, logos endiathetos), before the Word was spoken (ex ore Patris, logos prophorikos), or was generated and became Son for the purpose of creation. The Alexandrians alone insisted rightly on the generation of the Son from all eternity; but thus the Unity of God was even less manifest. The writers who thus theologize may often expressly teach the traditional Unity in Trinity, but it hardly squares with the Platonism of their philosophy. The theologians were thus defending the doctrine of the Logos at the expense of the two fundamental doctrines of Christianity, the Unity of God, and the Divinity of Christ. They seemed to make the Unity of the Godhead split into two or even three, and to make Jesus Christ something less than the supreme God the Father. This is eminently true of the chief opponents of the Monarchians, Tertullian, Hippolytus, and Novatian. (See Newman, "The Causes of Arianism", in "Tracts theol. and eccles.") Monarchianism was the protest against this learned philosophizing, which to the simplicity of the faithful looked too much like a mythology or a Gnostic emanationism. The Monarchians emphatically declared that God is one, wholly and perfectly one, and that Jesus Christ is God, wholly and perfectly God. This was right, and even most necessary, and whilst it is easy to see why the theologians like Tertullian and Hippolytus opposed them (for their protest was precisely against the Platonism which these theologians had inherited from Justin and the Apologists), it is equally comprehensible that guardians of the Faith should have welcomed at first the return of the Monarchians to the simplicity of the Faith, "ne videantur deos dicere, neque rursum negare salvatoris deitatem" ("Lest they seem to be asserting two Gods or, on the other hand, denying the Saviour's Godhead". - Origen, "On Titus", frag. II). Tertullian in opposing them acknowledges that the uninstructed were against him; they could not understand the magic word oikonomia with which he conceived he had saved the situation; they declared that he taught two or three Gods, and cried "Monarchiam tenemus." So Callistus reproached Hippolytus, and not without reason, with teaching two Gods.

Already St. Justin knew of Christians who taught the identity of the Father and the Son ("Apol.", I, 63; "Dial.", cxxviii). In Hermas, as in Theodotus, the Son and the Holy Ghost are confused. But it was reserved for Noetus and his school to deny categorically that the unity of the Godhead is compatible with a distinction of Persons. They seem to have regarded the Logos as a mere name, or faculty, or attribute, and to have made the Son and the Holy Ghost merely aspects of modes of existence of the Father, thus emphatically identifying Christ with the one God. "What harm am I doing", was the reply made by Noetus to the presbyters who interrogated him, "in glorifying Christ?" They replied: "We too know in truth one God; we know Christ; we know that the Son suffered even as He suffered, and died even as He died, and rose again on the third day, and is at the right hand of the Father, and cometh to judge the living and the dead; and what we have learned we declare" (Hippol.; "Contra Noetum", 1). Thus they refuted Noetus with tradition - the Apostles' Creed is enough; for the Creed and the New Testament indeed make the distinction of Persons clear, and the traditional formulas and prayers were equally unmistakable. Once the Monarchian system was put into philosophical language, it was seen to be no longer the old Christianity. Ridicule was used; the heretics were told that if the Father and the Son were really identified, then no denial on their part could prevent the conclusion that the Father suffered and died, and sat at His own right hand. Hippolytus tells us that Pope Zephyrinus, whom he represents as a stupid old man, declared at the instance of Callistus: "I know one God Christ Jesus, and besides Him no other Who was born and Who suffered"; but he added: "Not the Father died, but the Son". The reporter is an unsympathetic adversary; but we can see why the aged pope was viewing the simple assertions of Sabellius in a favorable light. Hippolytus declares that Callistus said that the Father suffered with the Son, and Tertullian says the same of the Monarchians whom he attacks. Hagemann thinks Callistus-Praxeas especially attacked the doctrine of the Apologists and of Hippolytus and Tertullian, which assigned all such attributes as impassibility and invisibility to the Father and made the Son alone capable of becoming passible and visible, ascribing to Him the work of creation, and all operations ad extra. It is true that the Monarchians opposed this Platonizing in general, but it is not evident that they had grasped the principle that all the works of God ad extra are common to the Three Persons as proceeding form the Divine Nature; and they seem to have said simply that God as Father is invisible and impassible, but becomes visible and passible as Son. This explanation brings them curiously into line with their adversaries. Both parties represented God as one and alone in His eternity. Both made the generation of the Son a subsequent development; only Tertullian and Hippolytus date it before the creation, and the Monarchians perhaps not until the Incarnation. Further, their identification of the Father and the Son was not favourable to a true view of the Incarnation. The very insistence on the unity of God emphasized also the distance of God from man, and was likely to end in making the union of God with man a mere indwelling or external union, after the fashion of that which was attributed to Nestorius. They spoke of the Father as "Spirit" and the Son as "flesh", and it is scarcely surprising that the similar Monarchianism of Marcellus should have issued in the Theodotianism of Photinus.

It is impossible to arrive at the philosophical views of Sabellius. Hagemann thought that he started from the Stoic system as surely as his adversaries did from the Platonic. Dorner has drawn too much upon his imagination for the doctrine of Sabellius; Harnack is too fanciful with regard to its origin. In fact we know little of him but that he said the Son was the Father (so Novatian, "De. Trin." 12, and Pope Dionysius relate). St. Athanasius tells us that he said the Father is the Son and the Son is the Father, one is hypostasis, but two in name (so Epiphanius): "As there are divisions of gifts, but the same Spirit, so the Father is the same, but is developed [platynetai] into Son and Spirit" (Orat., IV, c. Ar., xxv). Theodoret says he spoke of one hypostasis and a threefold prosopa, whereas St. Basil says he willingly admitted three prosopa in one hypostasis. This is, so far as words go, exactly the famous formulation of Tertullian, "tres personae, una substantia" (three persons, one substance), but Sabellius seems to have meant "three modes or characters of one person". The Father is the Monad of whom the Son is a kind of manifestation: for the Father is in Himself silent, inactive (siopon, hanenerletos), and speaks, creates, works, as Son (Athan., 1. c., 11). Here again we have a parallel to the teaching of the Apologists about the Word as Reason and the Word spoken, the latter alone being called Son. It would seem that the difference between Sabellius and his opponents lay mainly in his insisting on the unity of hypostasis after the emission of the Word as Son. It does not seem clear that he regarded the Son as beginning at the Incarnation; according to the passage of St. Athanasius just referred to, he may have agreed with the Apologists to date Sonship from the creative action of God. But we have few texts to go upon, and it is quite uncertain whether Sabellius left any writings. Monarchianism is frequently combated by Origen. Dionysius of Alexandria fought Sabellianism with some imprudence. In the fourth century the Arians and Semi-Arians professed to be much afraid of it, and indeed the alliance of Pope Julius and Arhanasius with Marcellus gave some colour to accusations against the Nicene formulas as opening the way to Sabellianism. The Fathers of the fourth century (as, for instance, St. Gregory of Nyssa, "Contra Sabellium", ed. Mai) seem to contemplate a more developed form than that known to Hippolytus ("Contra Noetum" and "Philosophumena") and through him, to Epiphanius: the consummation of creation is to consist in the return of the Logos from the humanity of Christ to the Father, so that the original unity of the Divine Nature is after all held to have been temporally compromised, and only in the end will it be restored, that God may be all in all.

Our chief original authorities for early Monarchianism of the Modalist type are Tertullian, "Adversus Praxean", and Hippolytus, "Contra Noetum" (fragment) and "Philosophumena". The "Contra Noetum" and the lost "Syntagma" were used by Epiphanius, Haer. 57 (Noetians), but the sources of Epiphanius's Haer. 62 (Sabellians) are less certain. The references by Origen, Novatian, and later Fathers are somewhat indefinite.

John Chapman.