Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Excerpts from Robert M. Royalty, Jr., The Origin of Heresy: A History of Discourse in Second Temple Judaism and Early Christianity (2013)

  

THE RHETORIC OF HERESY

 

Heresiology is a discourse that negotiates difference within religious communities by seeking ideological hegemony. It can be expressed in a variety of tropes and figures for political functions in communities socially connected by religious ideologies. In this genealogy of heresy in Christianity, I am tracing the development of a cluster of rhetorical forms.

 

1 Membership (Salvation) Depends on Belief or Ideas

 

The notion of heresy inscribes by implication an ontology of belief. While religious identity in the ancient world was shaped primarily through custom and practice, Christian orthodoxy centered on belief; as Foucault writes, an “obligation to hold as true a set of propositions which constitutes a dogma.” I will trace the origins of doctrine or dogma (doxa) as determinative for inclusion in the soteriological community. The notion of dogmatic salvation has roots in sectarian writings of the Qumran community, in which halakhic positions define fissures between Second Temple Jewish groups. We will see how this rhetoric is employed and ideologically populated in first-century texts.

 

2 The Eschatological Idea That Disagreement Was Satanic or Demonic

 

The origins of religious difference must be theorized in the notion of heresy. The position on ideological difference that was systematized by the second century heresiologists has its origins in the dualistic worldview of Second Temple Jewish apocalypticism that explained religious difference via satanic tropes. This is the religious matrix for the Essenes at Qumran, the religious reform movements of John and Jesus in Galilee, and the formative religious and theological context for the early Christian communities that produced the first-century texts. This apocalyptic eschatological worldview drives confrontations with opponents.

 

3 The Importance of Received Tradition

 

The ideology of orthodoxy relies on tradition as a warrant. Received tradition, developed from Pharisaic as well as philosophical discourse, is related to the notion of dogma. As belief proper becomes the ideological center of first-century Christian orthodoxy, tradition gains power. Late first-century texts construct “tradition” as an ideological bulwark against opposing communities that embraced apocalyptic revelation and philosophical speculation. We will see this rhetorical-ideological move in the post-Pauline and Gospel texts.

 

4 The Doxography of Opposing Beliefs

 

As Christian orthodoxy centers increasingly on belief in received dogma to define its identity, classic heresiology of the second century and following includes a doxography of the views of the opposing teachers. I will trace this pattern from Qumran to late first-century texts. For philosophers, doxography functions to record and analyze different positions in order to transmit philosophical knowledge. Within early Christian heresiology, however, the function of heresiological doxography is ideological condemnation of different points of view by means of sarcasm, reduction, or other figures diminishing the intellectual quality of the opposing teachers.

 

5 The Universalized Web of Opposition

 

The genealogy of heresy constructs a historiography of error, from its origins to contemporary opposing teachers or prophets, united against the true church. The origins of this familiar rhetoric of “us” and “them” in Christian orthodoxy are inscribed in theories of difference from Second Temple Jewish literature, most notably apocalyptic eschatology. The political function of this rhetoric, however, contextualizes the binary divisions as more than expressions of structuralist theories of identity. Within orthodox Christian discourse, all other religious groups and communities, whether Christian, Jewish, or Hellenistic, are elided within and with the oikoumenē as “other.” And yet domination of this same oikoumenē is a political goal of orthodox Christians. (Robert M. Royalty, Jr., The Origin of Heresy: A History of Discourse in Second Temple Judaism and Early Christianity [Routledge Studies in Religion 18; New York: Routledge, 2013], 26-27)

 

 

<at the end of the book after surveying ‘heresy’ in 2TJ and EC>

 

Thus I repeat here as summary and conclusion, in modified form, the outlines of the rhetoric of heresiology presented in Chapter 1 and demonstrated in this book:

 

1 Membership (salvation) Depends on Belief or Ideas

 

The notion of heresy inscribes by implication an ontology of belief. While religious identity in the ancient world was shaped primarily through custom and practice, Christian orthodoxy centered on belief or dogma (doxa) as determinative for inclusion in the soteriological community.

 

2 The Eschatological Notion That Disagreement Was Satanic

 

The origins of religious difference must be theorized in the notion of heresy. The position on ideological difference that was systematized by the second-century heresiologists explained religious difference via eschatological and satanic tropes. This apocalyptic, eschatological worldview drives ideological confrontation with opponents, in contrast to other Christianities’ responses to difference.

 

3 The Doxography of Opposing Beliefs

 

For philosophers, doxography functions to record and analyze different positions in order to transmit philosophical knowledge. Within early Christian heresiology the function of heresiological doxography is ideological condemnation of different points of view by means of sarcasm, reduction, or other figures diminishing the intellectual quality of the opposing teachers.

 

4 The Importance of Received Tradition

 

The ideology of orthodoxy relies on tradition as a warrant. As belief proper becomes the ideological center of first-century Christian orthodoxy, tradition gains power. Late first-century texts construct “tradition” as a bulwark against opposing communities that embraced apocalyptic revelation and philosophical speculation. Orthodox Christians claim an “original” truth and label difference as deviance rather than innovation.

 

5 The Universalized Web of Opposition

 

The genealogy of heresy constructs a historiography of error, from its origins to contemporary opposing teachers or prophets, united against the true church. Within orthodox Christian discourse, all other religious groups and communities, whether Christian, Jewish, or Hellenistic, are elided within and with the oikoumenē as “other.” (Robert M. Royalty, Jr., The Origin of Heresy: A History of Discourse in Second Temple Judaism and Early Christianity [Routledge Studies in Religion 18; New York: Routledge, 2013], 174-75)

 

 

 

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