Volume > Issue > Note List > A Little Bit of Gnosticism

A Little Bit of Gnosticism

We received the paperback version of First Comes Love by Dr. Scott Hahn, unsolicited from the publisher, in August 2006. Then we received the paperback version from Scott Hahn himself in September 2006, saying, “Check out the changes: the controversial chapter is re-written and placed in the back as an appendix.” We appreciate Scott sending it to us. The controversial chapter in the hardback version was Chapter 10: “The Family Spirit.”

We critiqued First Comes Love (hardback) in our New Oxford Note “Burn, Baby, Burn!” (Sept. 2002), and Monica Miller’s “The Gender of the Holy Trinity: Shall We Feminize the Holy Spirit?” (May 2003), and Edward O’Neill’s “Scott Hahn’s Novelties” (June 2004). And there were many letters and two articles replying to those three critiques.

In the hardback version, Hahn said: “Indeed, if the Magisterium should find any of them [his ‘findings’ in favor of a feminine Holy Spirit] to be unsatisfactory I will be the first to renounce them, and rip the following pages out of the book and gratefully consign them to the flames — and then invite you to do the same.” That’s where our New Oxford Note “Burn, Baby, Burn!” came from. But in the paperback version, he omits this sentence; so he will not renounce them. Indeed, Hahn digs himself in deeper.

So, what is at issue? Hahn calls the Holy Spirit “mother,” “motherly,” “maternal,” “feminine,” “womanhood,” and “bridal,” in both the hardback and paperback versions.

Enjoyed reading this?

READ MORE! REGISTER TODAY

SUBSCRIBE

You May Also Enjoy

The Burden of History & the Promise of Divine Life

After grappling with "A Canticle for Leibowitz," I found that Walter M. Miller Jr.’s novel attempts to study nothing less than the whole problem of history.

A Response to Andrew Messaros

Ave Maria College's relocation plan began after it became clear that it was highly unlikely that the Michigan property would receive the required zoning change.

Nero Fiddled & We Watch Television

"Getting to the bottom of things" is what philosophy is all about. So argues Karol Wojtyla, later Pope John Paul II, in an essay collection written between 1955 and 1975.