Gnosticism & Heresy

⏱ 1 min read Updated Jun 5, 2026
Quick Answer

The label "heresy" applied to Gnosticism was not a neutral theological verdict — it was a political act. When Irenaeus of Lyon wrote Against Heresies around 180 AD, he was not merely refuting bad theology; he was asserting the authority of the Roman episcopal hierarchy over competing Christian communities across the empire.

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Quick Facts

  • The Greek word hairesis originally meant "school of thought" or "choice" — not necessarily negative
  • Irenaeus redefined heresy as deliberate departure from apostolic tradition — placing himself as the standard
  • Elaine Pagels argues in The Gnostic Gospels that the heresy label was primarily a political tool
  • Michael Williams (1996) questions whether "Gnosticism" is coherent enough to be a heresy at all

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