Simon Magus? Audiobook By M. David Litwa cover art

Simon Magus?

The Sources and Stories of Christianity’s First Archenemy

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Simon Magus?

By: M. David Litwa
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This book is simple but radical: rather than letting heresy writers define the story of "Simon Magus," it allows The Great Declaration (or Apophasis Megale) to lay the groundwork for Simon and Simonian thought. Building on this foundation, it adds details from other reports and stories about Simon, carefully filtering out the layers of slander and fiction. Simonian Christianity was real, and it evolved in different ways in different regions. The Great Declaration, a gnostic text likely written in Alexandria between 120 and 150 CE, reflects a different form of Simonian thought than what developed in mid-second century Rome and fourth-century Palestine. As our only secure Simonian source, it can serve as a baseline against which we can evaluate later heresiological claims about Simon (the Great Power), Helen (divine Wisdom or Thought), and their ancient followers (Simonians aka Helenians).
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Good research and explanation of Simon Magus' interesting role in early Christianity. Litwa may sound pro-Simon Magus to Christians only familiar with the Acts and Church Fathers, but his approach is scholarly, objective and well-researched. The British-accented Virtual Voice narration is quite understandable, but the many citations (for example: two dot twenty dot thirty; two Core, see eff; eff eff; twelve dot four minus six) interrupt the flow, but sometimes elicit a smile..

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