Anthropomorphitae
Anthropomorphitae (Anthropomorphism), (ἄνθρωπος,
man, and μορφή, form). Terms
applied to those who ascribe to God human shape and form. We must distinguish two
kinds of anthropomorphism, a doctrinal and a symbolical. The former is heretical,
the latter Scriptural, and necessarily arises from the imperfection of human language
and human knowledge of God. The one takes the Scripture passages which speak of
God's arm, hand, eye, ear, mouth, etc., literally; the other understands and uses
them figuratively. Anthropomorphism is always connected with anthropopathism (from
ἄνθρωπος and
πάθος, passion), which ascribes to God human passions and affections,
such as wrath, anger, envy, jealousy, pity, repentance. The latter, however, does
not necessarily imply the
29former. All forms of idolatry, especially those of Greece and Rome,
are essentially anthropomorphic and anthropopathic. The classical divinities are
in character simply deified men and women. The Christian, Jewish, and Mohammedan
religions teach that God is a Spirit, and thus elevate him above the reach of materialistic
and sensual conceptions and representations. But within the Christian church anthropomorphism
appeared from time to time as an isolated opinion or as the tenet of a party. Tertullian
is often charged with it, because he ascribed to God a body (Adv. Prax. c.
7: "Quis enim negabit, Deum corpus esse, etsi Deus Spiritus est?
Spiritus enim corpus sui generis in effigie"). But he probably identified
corporeality with substantiality, and hence he maintained that everything real had
a body of some kind (de Carne Chr. c. 11: "Omne quod est,
corpus est sui generis, nihil est incorporale, nisi quod non est"). The pseudo-Clementine
Homilies (xvii. 2 seq.) teach that God, in order to be an object of love, must be
the highest beauty, and consequently have a body, since there is no beauty without
form; nor could we pray to a God Who was mere spirit. (Cf. Baur, Vorlesungen
über die Dogmengeschichte, vol. i. p. 412.) In the middle of the 4th cent.
Audius, or Audaeus, of Syria, a bold censor of the luxury and vices
of the clergy, and an irregularly consecrated bishop, founded a strictly ascetic
sect, which were called Audians or Anthropomorphites, and maintained
themselves, in spite of repeated persecution, till the close of the 5th cent. He
started from a literal interpretation of
Gen. i. 28, and reasoned from the nature of man to the nature
of God, Whose image he was (Epiphanius, Haer. 70; Theod. H. E. iv.
9; Walch, Ketzerhistorie, iii. 300). During the Origenistic controversies
towards the end of the 4th cent., anthropomorphism was held independently by many
Egyptian monks in the Scetic desert, who, with Pachomius at their head, were the
most violent opponents of the spiritualistic theology of Origen, and were likewise
called Anthropomorphites; they felt the need of material conceptions in their prayers
and ascetic exercises. Theophilus of Alexandria, formerly an admirer of Origen,
became his bitter opponent, and expelled the Origenists from Egypt, but nevertheless
he rejected the Anthropomorphism of the anti-Origenistic monks (Ep. Pastr.
for 399). In the present century Anthropomorphism has been revived by the Mormons,
who conceive God as an intelligent material being, with body, members, and passions,
and unable to occupy two distinct places at once.
[P.S.]