In
Christianity, 'Docetism' (from the
Greek [dokeō], "to seem") is the belief that
Jesus' physical body was an illusion, as was his
crucifixion; that is, Jesus only ''seemed'' to have a physical body and to physically die, but in reality he was incorporeal, a pure spirit, and hence could not physically die. This belief treats the sentence "the Word was made Flesh" (''
John 1:14'') as merely figurative. Docetism has historically been regarded as
heretical by most Christian theologians
[1].
This belief is most commonly attributed to the
Gnostics, who believed that matter was evil, and hence that
God would not take on a material body. This statement is rooted in the idea that a divine spark is imprisoned within the material body, and that the material body is in itself an obstacle, deliberately created by an evil lesser god (the
demiurge) to prevent man from seeing his divine origin. Humanity is, in essence, asleep.
Docetism could be further explained as the view that, because the human body is temporary and the spirit is eternal, the body of Jesus therefore must have been an illusion and his crucifixion as well. Even so, saying that the human body is temporary has a tendency to undercut the importance of the belief in
resurrection of the dead and the goodness of created matter, and is in opposition to this
orthodox view.
Docetism was rejected by the
ecumenical councils and mainstream Christianity, and largely died out during the
first millennium A.D.
Catharism, and other surviving gnostic movements, incorporated docetism into their beliefs, but the movement was destroyed by the
Albigensian Crusade ''(1209-1229)''.
Islam teaches that Jesus was a fully human prophet, but also asserts that Jesus's
crucifixion was an illusion. The
Qur'an says, "They did not kill him and they did not crucify him, but it was made to seem so to them..."()
See also
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Christology
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Christian heresy,
Monophysitism
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External links
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Docetae in the Catholic Encyclopedia