According to the doctrine of Valentinus, as described by
Irenaeus i. 2, the youngest Aeon Sophia, in her passion to comprehend the Father of all, runs the danger of being absorbed into his essence, from which she is saved by coming into contact with the limiting power
Horos, whose function it is to strengthen all things outside the ineffable Greatness, by confining each to its appointed place. According to this version Horos was a previously existing power; but according to another, and apparently a later account, Horos is an Aeon only generated on this occasion at the request of all the Aeons, who implored the Father to avert a danger that threatened to affect them all. Then (as Hippolytus tells the story, vi. 31) he directs the production of a new pair of Aeons, Christ and the Holy Spirit, who restore order by separating from the Pleroma the unformed offspring of Sophia. After this Horos is produced in order to secure the permanence of the order thus produced. Irenaeus (
u. s.) reverses this order, and Horos is produced first, afterwards the other pair. The Valentinian fragment in Epiphanius (
Haer. 31, p. 171), which seems to give a more ancient form of this heresy, knows nothing of Horos, but it relates as the last spiritual birth the generation of five beings without consorts, whose names are used in the Irenaean version as titles for the supernumerary Aeon Horos. But besides, this Aeon has a sixth name, which in the version of Hippolytus is made his primary title
Stauros; and it is explained (
Irenaeus, i. 3) that besides his function as a separator, in respect of which he is called Horos, this Aeon does the work of establishing and settling, in respect of which he is called Stauros. A derivation from is hinted at. The literal earthly crucifixion of the Saviour (that seen by the
psychic church, which only believes in the
historical Jesus) was meant to represent an
archetypal scene in the world of Aeons, when the younger Sophia, Achamoth, is healed through the Savior's instrumentation. The distinction just explained as to the different use of the names Horos and Stauros was not carefully observed by Valentinians. Thus the last word is sometimes used when the function of separation and division is spoken of (
Excerpt. ex Script. Theodot. 22 and 42, Clem. Alex. ii. pp. 974, 979), it being remarked in the latter passage that the cross separates the faithful from the unbelievers; and Clem. Alex., who occasionally uses Valentinian language in an orthodox sense, speaks in the same way (
Paed. iii. 12, p. 303, and
Strom. ii. 20, p. 486). In the Valentinian theory there is a double Horos, or at least a double function discharged by Horos. On the one hand, he discharges as already described, a function within the Pleroma, separating the other Aeons from the ineffable Bythos, and saving them from absorption into his essence. On the other hand, Horos is the outside boundary of the Pleroma itself, giving it permanence and stability by guarding it against the intrusion of any foreign element. ==Cultural references==