Gnosticism (
gnōsis,
knowledge) refers to diverse,
syncretistic religious movements in
antiquity consisting of various
belief systems generally united in the
teaching that humans are divine
souls trapped
in a
material world created by an imperfect
god, the
demiurge; this being is frequently
identified with the
Abrahamic god, (as opposed to the
Gospel according to the
Hebrews) and is contrasted with a superior entity, referred to
by several terms including
Pleroma and
Godhead. Depictions of the
demiurge—the term originates with
Plato's
Timaeus—vary from being as an
embodiment of evil, to being merely imperfect and as benevolent as
its inadequacy permits. Gnosticism was a
dualistic religion,
influenced by and influencing
Hellenic philosophy,
Judaism (see
Notzrim), and
Christianity; however, by
contrast, later strands of the movement, such as the
Valentinians, held a
monistic world-view. This,
along with the varying treatments of the demiurge, may be seen as
indicative of the variety of positions held within the
category.
The
gnōsis referred to in the term is a form of revealed,
esoteric knowledge
through which the spiritual elements of
humanity are reminded of their true origins
within the superior Godhead, being thus permitted to escape
materiality. Consequently, within the sects of gnosticism only the
pneumatics or
psychics obtain
gnōsis; the
hylic or
Somatics, though
human, being incapable of perceiving the higher reality, are
unlikely to attain the
gnōsis deemed by gnostic movements
as necessary for salvation.
Jesus of
Nazareth is identified by some Gnostic sects as an embodiment
of the supreme being who became incarnate to bring
gnōsis
to the earth. In others (e.g. the
Notzrim
and
Mandaeans) he is considered a
mšiha kdaba or "false messiah" who perverted the teachings
entrusted to him by
John the
Baptist. Still other traditions identify
Mani and
Seth, third son
of
Adam and Eve, as salvific
figures.
Whereas Gnosticism was considered by some scholars to originate as
a heretical branch of Christianity, alternate theories have
proposed traces of Gnostic systems existed some centuries before
the Christian Era. Gnostic sects may have existed earlier than the
First Century BC, thus predating the
birth of Jesus.
The movement spread in
areas controlled by the Roman Empire
and Arian Goths , and the Persian Empire; it continued to develop in
the Mediterranean
and Middle East before
and during the second and third centuries. Conversion to
Islam and the
Albigensian Crusade (1209–1229) greatly
reduced the remaining number of Gnostics throughout the
Middle Ages, though a few isolated communities
continue to exist to the present. Gnostic ideas became influential
in the philosophies of various
esoteric
mystical movements of the late
19th and
20th
centuries in
Europe and
North America, including some that explicitly
identify themselves as revivals or even continuations of earlier
gnostic groups.
Nature and structure of Gnosticism
The main features of gnosticism
Gnostic systems are typically marked out by:
"And the Sophia of the Epinoia [...]
brought forth. And [...] something came out of her which was
imperfect and different from her appearance, because she had
created it without her consort. And it was dissimilar to the
likeness of its mother, for it has another form.
"And when she saw (the consequences of) her desire, it changed into
a form of a lion-faced serpent. And its eyes were like lightning
fires which flash. She cast it away from her, outside that place,
that no one of the immortal ones might see it, for she had created
it in ignorance." |
| From The Secret Book of John
(long version), Nag Hammadi
Library, Codex II, trans. Frederik Wisse. |
- The notion of a remote, supreme monadic divinity, source - this figure is
known under a variety of names, including 'Pleroma' and 'Bythos' ;
- The introduction by emanation of further divine beings, which
are nevertheless identifiable as aspects of the God from which they
proceeded; the progressive emanations are often conceived
metaphorically as a gradual and progressive distancing from the
ultimate source, which brings about an instability in the fabric of
the divine nature;
- The subsequent identification of the
Fall of Man as an occurrence with its ultimate foundations
within divinity itself.
- As mysticism, the modern word for the
category of the study of mystic knowledge or gnosis, teaches the
fall of man, and the material world are an illusion.
- Salvation is a radical essentialism and not based on personal
choice, action or behavior but rather destiny or fate.
- Due to this, salvation does not occur either entirely or
partially through any human behavior or agency; this stage in the
divine emanation is usually enacted through the recurrent Gnostic
figure of Sophia (Greek, "wisdom"),
whose presence in a wide variety of Gnostic texts is indicative of her central
importance;
- The introduction of a distinct creator God or demiurge.
- Which is an illusion and as a later emanation from the single monad or source, this
second God is a lesser and inferior or false God.
- This creator god is commonly referred to as the
demiourgós (a technical term literally denoting a public
worker the Latinized form of Greek dēmiourgos,
δημιουργός, hence "ergon or
energy", "public God or skilled worker"
"false God" or "God of the masses"), used in the Platonist tradition.
The gnostic demiurge bears resemblance to figures in Plato's
Timaeus and Republic.
- In the former the demiourgós is a central figure, as
benevolent creator of the universe who works to make the universe
as benevolent as the limitations of matter will allow; in the
latter, the description of the leontomorphic 'desire' in Socrates' model of the psyche bears a resemblance to
descriptions of the demiurge as being in the shape of the lion; the relevant passage of The Republic was
found within a major gnostic library
discovered at Nag Hammadi, wherein a text existed describing
the demiurge as a 'lion-faced serpent'.
Elsewhere this figure is called 'Ialdabaoth', 'Samael' (Aramaic: sæmʕa-ʔel, 'blind god') or
'Saklas' (Syriac: sækla, 'the
foolish one'), who is sometimes ignorant of the superior God, and
sometimes opposed to it; thus in the latter case he is
correspondingly malevolent.
The demiurge as a tyrannical God having
caused the imperfect material world and all of its suffering, is as
the creator God of the pagan philosophers (Zeus) and the Judeo-Christian-Muhammadan creator God
(Yahweh or Adonai) not
real but a construct or illusion of the human mind (as nous).
- Since no secondary creator God is necessary or of high
importance as everything is eternal or emanated and can not be
created or destroyed.
- The demiurge typically creates a group of co-actors named
'Archons', who preside over the material
realm and, in some cases, present obstacles to the soul seeking
ascent from it;
| [The demiurge] is blind; because of
his power and his ignorance and his arrogance he said, with his
power, "It is I who am God; there is none apart from me." When he
said this, he sinned against the entirety. And this speech got up
to incorruptibility; then there was a voice that came forth from
incorruptibility, saying, "You are mistaken, Samael" - which is,
"god of the blind." |
| From The Hypostasis of the
Archons or The Reality of the Rulers, Nag Hammadi Library, Codex II, trans.
Bentley Layton. |
- The explanation of this state through the use of a complex
mythological-cosmological drama in which a divine element 'falls'
into the material realm and lodges itself within certain human
beings; from here, it may be returned to the divine realm through a
process of awakening (leading towards salvation).
- The salvation of the individual thus mirrors a concurrent
restoration of the divine nature; a central Gnostic innovation was
to elevate individual redemption to the level of a cosmically
significant event;
- Knowledge of a specific kind as a central factor in this
process of restoration, achieved through the mediation of a
redeemer figure (Christ, or, in other cases,
Seth or Sophia).
The model limits itself to describing characteristics of the
Syrian-Egyptian
school of Gnosticism. This is for the reason that the greatest
expressions of the
Persian gnostic
school -
Manicheanism and
Mandaeanism - are typically conceived of as
religious traditions in their own right; indeed, the typical usage
of 'Gnosticism' is to refer to the Syrian-Egyptian schools alone,
while 'Manichean' describes the movements of the Persia
school.
This conception of Gnosticism has in recent times come to be
challenged.
Despite this, the understanding presented above remains the most
common and is useful in aiding meaningful discussion of the
phenomena that compose Gnosticism. Above all, the central idea of
gnōsis, a knowledge superior to and independent of faith
made it welcome to many who were half-converted from paganism to
Christianity. The Valentinians, for example, considered
pistis (
Greek: "faith") as
consisting of accepting a body of teaching as true, being
principally intellectual or emotional in character.
The age of the
Gnostics was highly diverse, they seem to have originated in
Alexandria
and coexisted with the early Christians until the
4th century AD and due to there being no fixed church authority,
syncretism with pre-existing belief
systems as well as new religions were often embraced.
According to
Clement of
Alexandria, "...In the times of the
Emperor Hadrian appeared those who devised
heresies, and they continued until the age of the elder
Antoninus."
The relationship between Gnosticism and orthodox Christianity
during the early
first and the whole
of the
second century is vital in
helping us to further understand the main doctrines of Gnosticism;
due in part to the fact that, prior to the discovery of the
Nag Hammadi Library (discussed
below) much of what we know today about gnosticism has only been
preserved in the summaries and assessments of early
church fathers.
Irenaeus declares in his treatise "Against
Heresies" that Gnostic movements subjected all morality to the
caprice of the individual, and made any fixed rule of faith
impossible. According to Irenaeus, a certain sect known as the
"
Cainites" professed to impart a knowledge
"greater and more sublime" than the ordinary doctrine of
Christians, and believed that Cain derived his power from the
superior Godhead. Although a Gnostic Christian himself,
Clement of Alexandria, a 2nd century
church father and the first notable member of the Church of
Alexandria, raised a criticism against the followers of Basilides
and Valentinus in his
Stromata: in
his view it annulled the efficacy of
baptism, in that it held no value faith, the gift
conferred in that sacrament.
Dualism and monism
Typically, Gnostic systems are loosely described as being
'dualistic' in nature, meaning they had the view the world consists
of or is explicable as two fundamental entities.
Hans Jonas writes: "The cardinal feature of
gnostic thought is the radical
dualism that
governs the relation of
God and
world, and correspondingly that of
man and world." Within this definition, they run the
gamut from the 'radical dualist' systems of Manicheanism to the
'mitigated dualism' of classic gnostic movements; Valentinian
developments arguably approach a form of
monism, expressed in terms previously used in a
dualistic manner.
- Radical Dualism - or absolute Dualism which
posits two co-equal divine forces. Manichaeism conceives of two
previously coexistent realms of light and darkness which become
embroiled in conflict, owing to the chaotic actions of the latter.
Subsequently, certain elements of the light became entrapped within
darkness; the purpose of material creation is to enact the slow
process of extraction of these individual elements, at the end of
which the kingdom of light will prevail over darkness. Manicheanism
likely inherits this dualistic mythology from Zoroastrianism , in which the eternal spirit
Ahura Mazda is opposed by his
antithesis, Angra Mainyu; the two are
engaged in a cosmic struggle, the conclusion of which will likewise
see Ahura Mazda triumphant.
The Mandaean creation myth witnesses the progressive emanations of
Supreme Being of Light, with each emanation bringing about a
progressive corruption resulting in the eventual emergence of
Ptahil, the god of darkness who had a hand in creating and
henceforward rules the material realm.
Additionally, general Gnostic thought (specifically to be found in
Iranian sects; for instance, see 'The Hymn of the Pearl') commonly
included the belief that the material world corresponds to some
sort of malevolent intoxication brought about by the powers of
darkness to keep elements of the light trapped inside it, or
literally to keep them 'in the dark', or ignorant; in a state of
drunken distraction.
- Mitigated Dualism - where one of the two
principles is in some way inferior to the other. Such classical
Gnostic movements as the Sethians conceived of the material world
as being created by a lesser divinity than the true God that was
the object of their devotion. The spiritual world is conceived of
as being radically different from the material world, co-extensive
with the true God, and the true home of certain enlightened members
of humanity; thus, these systems were expressive of a feeling of
acute alienation within the world, and their resultant aim was to
allow the soul to escape the constraints presented by the physical
realm.
- Qualified Monism - where it is arguable
whether or not the second entity is divine or semi-divine. Elements
of Valentinian versions of Gnostic myth suggest to some that its
understanding of the universe may have been monistic rather than a
dualistic one. Elaine Pagels states that 'Valentinian gnosticism
[...] differs essentially from dualism'; while, according to
Schoedel'a standard element in the interpretation of Valentinianism
and similar forms of Gnosticism is the recognition that they are
fundamentally monistic'. In these myths, the malevolence of the
demiurge is mitigated; his creation of a flawed materiality is not
due to any moral failing on his part, but due to his imperfection
by contrast to the superior entities of which he is unaware. As
such, Valentinians already have less cause to treat physical
reality with contempt than might a Sethian Gnostic
The Valentinian tradition conceives of materiality, rather than as
being a separate substance from the divine, as attributable to an
error of perception, which become symbolized
mythopoetically as the act of material creation.
Moral and ritual practice
The question of Gnostic morality can only be resolved by reading
the claims of their contemporaries. Numerous Christian writers
accused some Gnostic teachers of claiming to eschew the physical
realm, while simultaneously freely indulging their physical
appetites; however there is reason to question the accuracy of
these claims.
Evidence in the source texts indicates Gnostic moral behaviour as
being generally
ascetic in basis,
expressed most fluently in their sexual and dietary practice. Many
monks would deprive themselves of food, water, or necessary needs
for living. This presented a problem for the heresiologists writing
on gnostic movements: this mode of behavior was one which they
themselves favoured and supported, so the Church Fathers, some
modern-day Gnostic apologist presume, would be required perforce to
offer support to the practices of their theological opponents. In
order to avoid this, a common heresiological approach was to avoid
the issue completely by resorting to slanderous (and, in some
cases, excessive) allegations of
libertinism (see the
Cainites), or to explain Gnostic asceticism as
being based on incorrect interpretations of scripture, or simply
duplicitous in nature.
Epiphanius provides an example when he
writes of the '
Archontics' 'Some of them
ruin their bodies by dissipation, but others feign ostensible fasts
and deceive simple people while they pride themselves with a sort
of
abstinence, under the disguise of
monks' (
Panarion, 40.1.4).
In other areas of morality, Gnostics were less rigorously ascetic,
and took a more moderate approach to correct behaviour. Ptolemy's
Epistle to Flora lays out a project of general asceticism
in which the basis of action is the moral inclination of the
individual:
This extract marks a definite shift away from the position of
orthodoxy, that the correct behaviour for Christians is best
administered and prescribed by the central authority of the
Church, as transmitted through the
Apostles to the Church's bishops. Instead, the internalised
inclination of the individual assumes paramount importance; there
is the recognition that ritualistic behaviour, though
well-intentioned, possesses no significance or effectiveness unless
its external prescription is matched by a personal, internal
motivation. This line of Gnostic thought is echoed in
Protestantism's emphasis on private interpretation of Scripture,
and on its individualist emphasis.
Charges of Gnostic libertinism find their source in the works of
Irenaeus. According to this writer,
Simon Magus (whom he has identified as
the prototypical source of Gnosticism, and who had previously tried
to buy sacramental authority of
ordination from
St.
Peter the Apostle) founded the school of moral freedom
('
amoralism'). Irenaeus reports that
Simon's argument was that those who put their trust in him and his
consort Helen need trouble themselves no further with the biblical
prophets or their moral exhortations and are free 'to do what they
wish', as men are saved by his (Simon's) grace and not by their
'righteous works' (
Adversus
Haereses).
Simon is not known for any libertinistic practice, save for his
curious attachment to Helen, typically reputed to be a prostitute.
There is, however, clear evidence in the
Testimony of Truth that followers of
Simon did, in fact, get married and beget children, so a general
tendency to asceticism can likewise be ruled out.
Irenaeus reports of the Valentinians, whom he characterizes as
eventual inheritors of Simon, that they are lax in their dietary
habits (eating food that has been 'offered to idols'), sexually
promiscuous ('immoderately given over to the desires of the flesh')
and guilty of taking wives under the pretence of living with them
as adopted 'sisters'. In the latter case, Michael Allen Williams
has argued plausibly that Irenaeus was here broadly correct in the
behaviour described, but not in his apprehension of its causes.
Williams argues that members of a cult might live together as
'brother' and 'sister': intimate, yet not sexually active. Over
time, however, the self-denial required of such an endeavour
becomes harder and harder to maintain, leading to the state of
affairs Irenaeus criticizes.
Irenaeus also makes reference to the Valentinian practise of the
Bridal Chamber, a
ritualistic
sacrament in which sexual
union is seen as analogous to the activities of the paired
syzygies that constitute the Valentinian
Pleroma. Though it is known that
Valentinus had a more relaxed approach to
sexuality than much of the Catholic Church (he allowed women to
hold positions of ordination in his community), it is not known
whether the Bridal Chamber was a ritual involving actual
intercourse, or whether human sexuality is here simply being used
in a metaphorical sense.
Of the
Carpocratians Irenaeus makes
much the same report: they 'are so abandoned in their recklessness
that they claim to have in their power and be able to practise
anything whatsoever that is ungodly (irreligious) and impious ...
they say that conduct is only good or evil in the eyes of man'.
Once again a differentiation might be detected between a man's
actions and the grace he has received through his adherence to a
system of
gnosis; whether this is due to a common sharing
of such an attitude amongst Gnostic circles, or whether this is
simply a blanket-charge used by Irenaeus is open to
conjecture.
On the whole, it would seem that Gnostic behavior tended towards
the ascetic. This said, the heresiological accusation of duplicity
in such practises should not be taken at face value; nor should
similar accusations of amoral libertinism. The Nag Hammadi library
itself is full of passages which appear to encourage abstinence
over indulgence. Fundamentally, however, gnostic movements appear
to take the 'ancient schema of the two ways, which leaves the
decision to do what is right to human endeavour and promises a
reward for those who make the effort, and punishment for those who
are negligent' (
Kurt Rudolph,
Gnosis:The Nature and History of Gnosticism, 262).
Major Gnostic movements and their texts
As noted
above, schools of Gnosticism can
be defined according to one classification system as being a member
of two broad categories. These are the 'Eastern'/'Persian' school,
and a 'Syrian-Egyptic' school. The former possesses more
demonstrably dualist tendencies, reflecting a strong influence from
the beliefs of the Persian
Zoroastrians. Among the Syrian-Egyptian schools
and the movements they spawned are a typically more Monist view.
Notable exceptions include relatively modern movements which seem
to include elements of both categories, namely: the Cathars,
Bogomils, and Carpocratians which are included in their own
section.
Persian Gnosticism
The
Persian Schools, which appeared in the western Persian province of
Babylon
, and whose writings were originally produced in the
Aramaic dialects spoken in Babylon at the
time, are representative of what is believed to be among the oldest
of the Gnostic thought forms. These movements are considered
by most to be religions in their own right, and are not emanations
from
Christianity or
Judaism.
- Mandaeanism is still practiced in small
numbers, in parts of southern Iraq
and the
Iranian province of Khuzestan
. The name of the group derives from the term
Mandā d-Heyyi, which roughly means "Knowledge of Life."
Although the exact chronological origins of this movement are not
known, John the Baptist eventually would come to be a key figure in
the religion, as an emphasis on baptism is part of their core
beliefs. As with Manichaeism, despite certain ties with
Christianity, Mandaeans do not believe in Moses, Jesus, or
Mohammed. Their beliefs and practices likewise have little overlap
with the religions that manifested from those religious figures and
the two should not be confused. Significant amounts of original
Mandaean Scripture survive in the modern era. The primary source
text is known as the Genzā Rabbā and has
portions identified by some scholars as being copied as early as
the 2nd century CE. There is also the Qolastā, or Canonical Book of Prayer and The Book of
John the Baptist (sidra ḏ-iahia).
- Manichaeism which
represented an entire independent religious heritage, but is now
mostly extinct was founded by the Prophet Mani (210-276 CE).
Although most of the literature/scripture of the Manichaeans was
believed lost, the discovery of an original series of documents
have helped to shed new light on the subject. Now housed in Cologne Germany
, the
Codex Manichaicus
Coloniensis contains mainly biographical information on the
prophet and details on his claims and teachings. Despite
connections with Jesus Christ, it is not believed that the Manichaeans in
any way practiced a religion with identifiable overlap with any of
the various Jewish or Christian sects. As Mani stated, "The true
God has nothing to do with the material world or cosmos", and, "It
is the Prince of Darkness who
spoke with Moses, the Jews and their priests. Thus the Christians,
the Jews, and the Pagans are involved in the same error when they
worship this God. For he leads them astray in the lusts he taught
them."
Syrian-Egyptian Gnosticism
The Syrian-Egyptian school derives much of its outlook from
Platonist influences. Typically, it
depicts creation in a series of emanations from a primal monadic
source, finally resulting in the creation of the material universe.
As a result, there is a tendency in these schools to view evil in
terms of matter which is markedly inferior to goodness, evil as
lacking spiritual insight and goodness, rather than to emphasize
portrayals of evil as an equal force. These schools of gnosticism
may be said to use the terms 'evil' and 'good' as being
relative descriptive terms, as they refer to the relative
plight of human existence caught between such realities and
confused in its orientation, with 'evil' indicating the extremes of
distance from the principle and source of goodness, without
necessarily emphasizing an
inherent negativity. As can be
seen below, many of these movements included source material
related to Christianity, with some identifying themselves as
specifically Christian (albeit quite different from the so-called
Orthodox or
Roman Catholic forms).
Syrian-Egyptic scripture
Most of
the literature from this category is known/confirmed to us in the
modern age through the Library discovered at Nag Hammadi
.
- Sethian works are named after the third son of
Adam and Eve, believed to be a possessor and disseminator of
gnosis. These typically include:
- Thomasine works are so-named after the School
of St. Thomas the Apostle. The
texts commonly attributed to this school are:
- Valentinian works are named in reference to
the Bishop and teacher Valentinius, also
spelled Valentinus. ca. 153 AD/CE, Valentinius
developed a complex Cosmology outside of the Sethian tradition.
At one
point he was close to being appointed the Bishop of Rome
of what is
now the Roman Catholic
Church. Works attributed to his school are listed below,
and fragmentary pieces directly linked to him are noted with an
asterisk:
- The Divine Word Present in the Infant (Fragment A)
*
- On the Three Natures (Fragment B) *
- Adam's Faculty of Speech (Fragment C) *
- To Agathopous: Jesus' Digestive System (Fragment D)
*
- Annihilation of the Realm of Death (Fragment F) *
- On Friends: The Source of Common Wisdom (Fragment G)
*
- Epistle on Attachments (Fragment H) *
- Summer Harvest*
- The Gospel of
Truth*
- Ptolemy's Version of the Gnostic Myth
- The Prayer of the
Apostle Paul
- Ptolemy's Epistle to Flora
- Treatise on Resurrection (Epistle to
Rheginus)
- Gospel of Philip
- Basilidian works are named for the founder of
their school, Basilides (132–? CE/AD).
These works are mainly known to us through the criticisms of one of
his opponents, Irenaeus in his work
Adversus Haereses. The
other pieces are known through the work of Clement of Alexandria:
- The Octet of Subsistent Entities (Fragment A)
- The Uniqueness of the World (Fragment B)
- Election Naturally Entails Faith and Virtue (Fragment C)
- The State of Virtue (Fragment D)
- The Elect Transcend the World (Fragment E)
- Reincarnation (Fragment F)
- Human Suffering and the Goodness of Providence (Fragment
G)
- Forgivable Sins (Fragment H)
- The Gospel of Judas is the most
recently discovered Gnostic text. National Geographic
has published an English translation of it,
bringing it into mainstream awareness. It portrays Judas Iscariot as the most enlightened
disciple, who acted at Jesus' request when he handed Jesus over to
the authorities. Its reference to Barbelo
and inclusion of material similar to the Apocryphon of John and
other such texts, connects the text to Barbeloite and/or Sethian
Gnosticism.
Later Gnosticism and Gnostic-influenced groups
- Other schools and related movements; these are
presented in chronological order:
- Simon Magus and
Marcion of Sinope both
had Gnostic tendencies, but such familiar ideas as they presented
were as-yet unformed; they might thus be described as pseudo- or
proto-Gnostics. Both developed a sizable following. Simon Magus'
pupil Menander of Antioch could potentially be included
within this grouping. Marcion is popularly labelled a gnostic,
however most scholars do not consider him a gnostic at all, for
example, the Encyclopædia
Britannica article on Marcion clearly states: "In Marcion's own view,
therefore, the founding of his church — to which he was first
driven by opposition — amounts to a reformation of Christendom through a return to the gospel of
Christ and to Paul; nothing was to be accepted beyond that. This of
itself shows that it is a mistake to reckon Marcion among the
Gnostics. A dualist he certainly was, but he
was not a Gnostic - Depending of course on one's definition of
'Gnostic'."
- Cerinthus (c. 100 AD), the
founder of a heretical school with gnostic elements. Like a
Gnostic, Cerinthus depicted Christ as a heavenly spirit separate
from the man Jesus, and he cited the demiurge as creating the
material world. Unlike the Gnostics, Cerinthus taught Christians to
observe the Jewish law; his demiurge was holy, not lowly; and he
taught the Second Coming. His gnosis was a secret teaching
attributed to an apostle. Some scholars believe that the First
Epistle of John was written as a response to Cerinthus.
- The Ophites, so-named because
they worshiped the serpent of Genesis as the bestower of knowledge.
- The Cainites, as the term
implies, worshiped Cain, as well as Esau, Korah, and the Sodomites. There is little evidence
concerning the nature of this group; however, it is surmisable that
they believed that indulgence in sin was the key to salvation
because since the body is evil, one must defile it through immoral
activity (see libertinism). The name
Cainite is used as the name of a religious movement, and not in the
usual Biblical sense of people descended from Cain. According to
Biblical text, which is our only source of knowledge about the man
Cain, all descendants of Cain perished in Noah's Flood, as only Noah's family survived,
deriving from the line of Seth.
- The Carpocratians
- The Borborites
- The Paulicans
- The Bogomils
- The Cathars (Cathari,
Albigenses or Albigensians) are typically seen as
being imitative of Gnosticism; whether or not the Cathari possessed
direct historical influence from ancient Gnosticism is disputed.
Though the basic conceptions of Gnostic cosmology are to be found
in Cathar beliefs (most distinctly in their notion of a lesser,
Satanic, creator god), they did not apparently
place any special relevance upon knowledge (gnosis) as an
effective salvific force. For the relationship between these
medieval heresies and earlier Gnostic forms, see historical discussion
above.
Kabbalah
Gnostic ideas found a Jewish variation in the mystical study of
Kabbalah. The Kabbalists took many core
Gnostic ideas and used them to dramatically reinterpret earlier
Jewish sources according to this new influence. See Gershom
Scholem's
Origins of the Kabbalah for further discussion.
The Kabbalists originated in
Provence which
was at that time also the center of the Gnostic Cathars. It is thus
believed that Cathar Gnostics persuaded Jews to Gnostic ideas,
leading to the development of Kabbalah. Another influence on
Kabbalah was probably that of the Muslim
Ismailis. By contrast, however, followers of
Kabbalah date its origins as early as the Garden of Eden.
Kabbalah, however, does not employ the terminology or labels of
gentile Gnosticism, but grounds the same or similar concepts in the
language of the Torah (first five books of the Hebrew Bible).
Nevertheless, during the time periods when Gnosticism was drawing
large numbers of followers from various religions, creating Gnostic
versions of those religions, many Jews also developed a mystical
version of Judaism remarkably similar to Gnostic beliefs.
While Kabbalah shares several themes with Gnosticism, such as a
multiplicity of heavenly levels and archetypes and the importance
of mystical knowledge of these, it does not reflect the distinctive
Gnostic belief that the material world and the Hebrew Bible are the
work of an inferior and malevolent deity. Rather than describing
Kabbalah as a form of Gnosticism, it would be more accurate to
describe both Kabbalah and Gnosticism as members of a family of
Neoplatonic/Neopythagorean Oriental mystical traditions, which
would also include
Sufism.
Gershom Scholem once described Gnosticism as
"the Greatest case of metaphysical anti-Semitism."
Important terms and concepts
Please note that the following are only summaries of various
Gnostic interpretations that exist. The roles of familiar beings
such as
Jesus Christ,
Sophia, and the
Demiurge
usually share the same general themes between systems but may have
somewhat different functions or identities ascribed to them.
Æon
In many Gnostic systems, the æons are the various
emanations of the superior
God, who is also known by such names as
the One, the
Monad,
Aion teleos (
Greek: "The Complete Æon"),
Bythos (Greek:
Βυθος, 'Depth' or
'profundity'), Proarkhe (Greek:
προαρχη, "Before the
Beginning'), E Arkhe (Greek:
ἡ ἀρχή, 'The Beginning'),
Ennoia (Greek: "Thought") of the Light or Sige (Greek:
Σιγη, "Silence"). From this first being, also an æon, a
series of different
emanations occur,
beginning in certain Gnostic texts with the
hermaphroditic Barbelo, from which successive
pairs of aeons emanate, often in
male-
female pairings called
syzygies; the numbers
of these pairings varied from text to text, though some identify
their number as being thirty. The aeons as a totality constitute
the
pleroma, the "region of light".
The lowest regions of the pleroma are closest to the darkness; that
is, the physical world.
Two of the most commonly paired æons were
Jesus and
Sophia (Greek: "Wisdom"); the latter
refers to Jesus as her 'consort' in
A Valentinian
Exposition.
Sophia, emanating without her partner,
resulting in the production of the
Demiurge (Greek: lit. "public builder"), who
is also referred to as
Yaldabaoth and variations thereof
in some Gnostic texts. This creature is concealed outside the
Pleroma; in isolation, and thinking itself alone, it creates
materiality and a host of co-actors, referred to as archons. The
demiurge is responsible for the creation of mankind, by create he
traps elements of the Pleroma stolen from Sophia in human bodies.
In response, the Godhead emanates two savior æons,
Christ and
the Holy
Spirit; Christ then embodies itself in the form of Jesus,
in order to be able to teach man how to achieve
gnosis, by which they may return to the
Pleroma.
Archon
In late antiquity some variants of Gnosticism used the term
Archon to refer to several servants of the
Demiurge. In this context they may be seen as
having the roles of the
angels and
demons of the
Old
Testament.
According to
Origen's
Contra Celsum, a sect called the
Ophites posited the existence of seven archons,
beginning with
Iadabaoth or Ialdabaoth, who
created the six that follow:
Iao,
Sabaoth,
Adonaios,
Elaios,
Astaphanos and
Horaios. Similarly to the
Mithraic Kronos and
Vedic Narasimha, a form of
Vishnu,
Ialdabaoth had a head of a lion.
Abraxas/Abrasax
The Egyptian Gnostic
Basilideans
referred to a figure called
Abraxas who was at the head of
365 spiritual beings (
Irenaeus,
Adversus Haereses, I.24); it is unclear what to make of
Irenaeus' use of the term 'Archon', which may simply mean 'ruler'
in this context. The role and function of Abraxas for Basilideans
is not clear.
The word
Abraxas was engraved on certain
antique gemstones, called on that
account Abraxas stones, which may have been used as
amulets or charms by Gnostic sects. In popular
culture, Abraxas is sometimes considered the name of a
god who incorporated both
Good and
Evil (God and
Demiurge) in one entity, and therefore
representing the
monotheistic God,
singular, but (unlike, for example, the Christian God) not
omni-benevolent (See Hesse's Demian, and Jung's
Seven Sermons to the Dead).
Opinions abound on Abraxas, who in recent
centuries has been claimed to be both an Egyptian
god and a demon, sometimes
even being associated with the dual nature of Satan/Lucifer. The word
abracadabra may be related to
Abraxas.
The above information relates to interpretations of ancient amulets
and to reports of Christian heresy hunters which are not always
clear.
Actual ancient Gnostic texts from the Nag Hammadi Library, such as
the
Coptic Gospel of the
Egyptians, refer to Abrasax as an Aeon dwelling with Sophia and
other Aeons of the Spiritual Fullness in the light of the luminary
Eleleth. In several texts, the luminary Eleleth is the last of the
luminaries (Spiritual Lights) that come forward, and it is the Aeon
Sophia, associated with Eleleth, who encounters darkness and
becomes involved in the chain of events that leads to the Demiurge
and Archon's rule of this world, and the salvage effort that
ensues. As such, the role of Aeons of Eleleth, including Abrasax,
Sophia, and others, pertains to this outer border of the Divine
Fullness that encounters the ignorance of the world of Lack and
interacts to rectify the error of ignorance in the world of
materiality.
Words like or similar to Abraxas or Abrasax also appear in the
Greek Magical Papyri. There are
similarities and differences between such figures in reports about
Basiledes' teaching, in the larger magical traditions of the
Graeco-Roman world, in the classic ancient Gnostic texts such as
the Gospel of the Egyptians, and in later magical and esoteric
writings.
The Swiss Psychologist
Carl Jung wrote a
short Gnostic treatise in 1916 called The Seven Sermons to the
Dead, which called Abraxas a God higher than the Christian God and
Devil, that combines all opposites into one Being.
Demiurge
The term
Demiurge derives from the
Latinized form of the
Greek term
dēmiourgos,
δημιουργός, (literally "public or skilled worker")
and refers to an entity responsible for the creation of the
physical universe and the physical
aspect of
humanity. The term
dēmiourgos occurs in a number of other religious and
philosophical systems, most notably
Platonism. Moral judgements of the demiurge vary
from group to group within the broad category of gnosticism - such
judgements usually correspond to each group's judgement of the
status of materiality as being inherently evil, or else merely
flawed and as good as its passive constituent matter will
allow.
Like
Plato does, Gnosticism presents a
distinction between a supranatural, unknowable reality and the
sensible materiality of which the demiurge is creator. However, in
contrast to Plato, several systems of Gnostic thought present the
Demiurge as antagonistic to the Supreme God: his act of creation
either in
unconscious and
fundamentally flawed imitation of the divine model, or else formed
with the malevolent intention of entrapping aspects of the divine
in materiality. Thus, in such systems, the Demiurge acts
as a solution to the
problem of
evil. In the
Apocryphon of
John (several versions of which are found in the
Nag Hammadi library), the Demiurge has
the name "
Yaltabaoth", and proclaims
himself as God:
- "Now the archon who is weak has three
names. The first name is Yaltabaoth, the second is
Saklas, and the third is Samael. And he is impious in his arrogance
which is in him. For he said, 'I am God and there is no
other God beside me,' for he is ignorant of his strength, the place
from which he had come."
"Samael", in the
Judeo-Christian
tradition, refers to the
evil Angel of Death, and corresponds to the
Christian
demon of
that
name, one second only to
Satan .
Literally, it can mean "blind god" or "god of the blind" in
Aramaic (
Syriac
sæmʕa-ʔel); another alternative title is "Saklas", Aramaic
for "fool" (Syriac
sækla "the foolish one").
Gnostic myth recounts that
Sophia (Greek, literally meaning "wisdom"),
the Demiurge's mother and a partial aspect of the divine
Pleroma or "Fullness", desired to create something
apart from the divine totality, and without the receipt of divine
assent. In this abortive act of separate creation, she gave birth
to the monstrous Demiurge and, being ashamed of her deed, she
wrapped him in a cloud and created a throne for him within it. The
Demiurge, isolated, did not behold his mother, nor anyone else, and
thus concluded that only he himself existed, being ignorant of the
superior levels of reality that were his birth-place.
The Gnostic myths describing these events are full of intricate
nuances portraying the declination of aspects of the divine into
human form; this process occurs through the agency of the Demiurge
who, having stolen a portion of power from his mother, sets about a
work of creation in unconscious imitation of the superior
Pleromatic realm. Thus Sophia's power becomes enclosed within the
material forms of humanity, themselves entrapped within the
material universe: the goal of Gnostic movements was typically the
awakening of this spark, which permitted a return by the subject to
the superior, non-material realities which were its primal source.
(See
Sethian Gnosticism.)
Some Gnostic philosophers identify the Demiurge with
Yahweh, the
God of the
Old Testament, in opposition and contrast to
the God of the
New Testament. Still
others equated the being with
Satan.
Catharism apparently inherited their idea of Satan
as the creator of the evil world directly or indirectly from
Gnosticism.
Gnosis
The word 'Gnosticism' is a modern construction, though based on an
antiquated linguistic expression: it comes from the
Greek word meaning 'knowledge',
gnosis (γνῶσις). However,
gnosis itself refers to
a very specialised form of knowledge, deriving both from the exact
meaning of the original Greek term and its usage in
Platonist philosophy.
Unlike modern
English, ancient
Greek was capable of discerning between several different forms of
knowing. These different forms may be described in English as being
propositional knowledge,
indicative of knowledge acquired
indirectly through the
reports of others or otherwise by inference (such as "I know
of George Bush" or "I know Berlin
is in
Germany"), and
empirical knowledge
acquired by
direct participation or
acquaintance
(such as "I know George Bush personally" or "I know Berlin, having
visited").
Gnosis (γνῶσις) refers to knowledge of the second kind.
Therefore, in a religious context, to be 'Gnostic' should be
understood as being reliant not on
knowledge in a general sense, but as being
specially receptive to
mystical or
esoteric experiences of direct participation with the divine.
Indeed, in most Gnostic systems the sufficient cause of
salvation is this 'knowledge of' ('acquaintance
with') the divine. This is commonly identified with a process of
inward 'knowing' or self-exploration, comparable to that encouraged
by
Plotinus (
ca. 205–270 AD). However, as may be seen, the
term 'gnostic' also had precedent usage in several ancient
philosophical traditions, which must also be
weighed in considering the very subtle implications of its
appellation to a set of ancient religious groups.
Monad (apophatic theology)
In many
Gnostic systems (and heresiologies),
God is known as the
Monad,
the One,
The
Absolute,
Aion teleos (The Perfect
Æon),
Bythos (Depth or Profundity, Βυθος),
Proarkhe (Before the Beginning, προαρχη), and
E
Arkhe (The Beginning, η αρχη). God is the high source of the
pleroma, the region of light. The various
emanations of God are called
æons.
Within certain variations of Gnosticism, especially those inspired
by
Monoimus, the
Monad was the
highest
God which created lesser
gods, or elements (similar to æons).
According to
Hippolytus, this
view was inspired by the
Pythagoreans,
who called the first thing that came into existence the
Monad, which begat the
dyad, which
begat the
numbers, which begat the
point, begetting
line, etc. This was also clarified in the
writings of
Plato,
Aristotle and
Plotinus.
This teaching being largely
Neopythagorean via
Numenius as well.
This Monad is the
spiritual source of
everything which
emanates the
pleroma, and could be contrasted to the dark
Demiurge (Yaldabaoth) that controls
matter.
The
Sethian cosmogony as most famously
contained in the Apocryphon ('Secret book') of John describes an
unknown
God, very similar to the
orthodox apophatic theology, although very
different from the orthodox credal teachings that there is one such
god who is identified also as creator of heaven and earth. In
describing the nature of a creator god associated with Biblical
texts, orthodox theologians often attempt to define God through a
series of explicit positive statements, themselves universal but in
the divine taken to their superlative degrees: he is
omniscient,
omnipotent
and truly
benevolent. The Sethian
conception of the most hidden transcendent God is, by contrast,
defined through
negative theology:
he is immovable, invisible, intangible, ineffable; commonly, 'he'
is seen as being
hermaphroditic, a
potent symbol for being, as it were, 'all-containing'. In the
Apocryphon of John, this god is good in that it bestows goodness.
After the apophatic statements, the process of the Divine in action
are used to describe the effect of such a god.
An apophatic approach to discussing the Divine is found throughout
gnosticism, Vedanta, and Platonic and Aristotelian theology as
well. It is also found in some Judaic sources.
Pleroma
Pleroma (Greek πληρωμα) generally refers to the totality
of God's powers. The term means
fullness, and is used in
Christian theological contexts: both in Gnosticism generally, and
in
Colossians 2.9.
Gnosticism holds that the world is controlled by evil
archons, one of whom is the demiurge, the deity of
the
Old Testament who holds the human
spirit captive.
The heavenly pleroma is the center of divine life, a region of
light "above" (the term is not to be understood spatially) our
world, occupied by spiritual beings such as
aeons (eternal beings) and sometimes
archons.
Jesus is interpreted as
an intermediary aeon who was sent from the pleroma, with whose aid
humanity can recover the lost knowledge of the divine origins of
humanity. The term is thus a central element of Gnostic
cosmology.
Pleroma is also used in the general Greek language and is used by
the Greek Orthodox church in this general form since the word
appears under the book of Colossians.
Proponents of the
view that Paul was
actually a gnostic, such as Elaine
Pagels of Princeton University
, view the reference in Colossians as something that
was to be interpreted in the gnostic sense.
Sophia
In Gnostic tradition, the term
Sophia (Σoφíα,
Greek for "wisdom") refers to the final and
lowest emanation of God.
In most if not all versions of the gnostic myth, Sophia births the
demiurge, who in turn brings about the
creation of materiality. The positive or negative depiction of
materiality thus resides a great deal on mythic depictions of
Sophia's actions. She is occasionally referred to by the
Hebrew equivalent of
Achamoth (this
is a feature of
Ptolemy's version
of the
Valentinian gnostic myth). Jewish
Gnosticism with a focus on Sophia was active by 90.
Almost all gnostic systems of the
Syrian or
Egyptian
type taught that the universe began with an original, unknowable
God, referred to as the Parent or
Bythos, as the
Monad by
Monoimus, or the first
Aeon by
still other traditions. From this initial unitary beginning, the
One spontaneously
emanated further
Aeons, pairs of progressively 'lesser' beings
in sequence. The lowest of these pairs were Sophia and
Christ. The Aeons together made up the Pleroma, or
fullness, of God, and thus should not be seen as distinct from the
divine, but symbolic abstractions of the divine nature.
History
The development of the Syrian-Egyptian school
Bentley Layton has sketched out a
relationship between the various gnostic movements in his
introduction to
The Gnostic Scriptures (SCM Press, London,
1987).
In
this model, 'Classical Gnosticism' and 'The School of Thomas'
antedated and influenced the development of Valentinus, who was to found his own school of
Gnosticism in both Alexandria
and Rome
, whom Layton
called 'the great [Gnostic] reformer' and 'the focal point' of
Gnostic development. While in Alexandria, where he was born,
Valentinus probably would have had contact with the Gnostic teacher
Basilides, and may have been influenced by
him.
Valentinianism flourished throughout
the early centuries of the common era: while Valentinus himself
lived from
ca. 100–180 AD/CE, a list
of sectarians or heretics, composed in 388 AD/CE, against whom
Emperor Constantine intended legislation includes Valentinus (and,
presumably, his inheritors). The school is also known to have been
extremely popular: several varieties of their central myth are
known, and we know of 'reports from outsiders from which the
intellectual liveliness of the group is evident' (Markschies,
Gnosis: An Introduction, 94). It is known that Valentinus'
students, in further evidence of their intellectual activity,
elaborated upon the teachings and materials they received from him
(though the exact extent of their changes remains unknown), for
example, in the version of the Valentinian myth brought to us
through
Ptolemy.
Valentinianism might be described as the
most elaborate and philosophically 'dense' form of the
Syrian-Egyptian schools of Gnosticism, though it should be
acknowledged that this in no way debarred other schools from
attracting followers: Basilides' own school was popular also, and
survived in Egypt
until the
4th century.
Simone Petrement, in
A Separate God, in arguing for a
Christian origin of Gnosticism, places Valentinus after Basilides,
but before the Sethians. It is her assertion that Valentinus
represented a moderation of the anti-Judaism of the earlier
Hellenized teachers; the demiurge, widely regarded to be a
mythological depiction of the Old Testament God of the Hebrews, is
depicted as more ignorant than evil. (See below.)
The development of the Persian school
An
alternate heritage is offered by Kurt
Rudolph in his book Gnosis: The Nature & Structure of
Gnosticism (Koehler and Amelang, Leipzig
, 1977), to explain the lineage of Persian Gnostic
schools. The decline of
Manicheism
that occurred in Persia in the 5th century AD was too late to
prevent the spread of the movement into the east and the west.
In the
west, the teachings of the school moved into Syria
, Northern Arabia, Egypt
and North Africa (where Augustine was a member of the school from
373-382); from Syria it progressed still farther, into Palestine, Asia Minor
and Armenia
. There is evidence for Manicheans in Rome and
Dalmatia in the 4th century, and also in
Gaul and Spain
. The
influence of Manicheanism was attacked by imperial elects and
polemical writings, but the religion remained prevalent until the
6th century, and still exerted influence in the emergence of the
Paulicians,
Bogomils and
Cathari in the
Middle Ages, until it was ultimately stamped out as a heresy by the
Catholic Church.
In the east, Rudolph relates, Manicheanism was able to bloom, given
that the religious monopoly position previously held by
Christianity and
Zoroastrianism had
been broken by nascent
Islam. In the early
years of the Arab conquest, Manicheanism again found followers in
Persia (mostly amongst educated circles), but flourished most in
Central Asia, to which it had spread
through Iran. Here, in 762, Manicheanism became the state religion
of the
Uyghur Empire.
Neoplatonism and Gnosticism
Historical relations between antique Greek Philosophy and
Gnosticism
The earliest origins of Gnosticism are still obscure and disputed,
but they probably include influence from
Plato,
Middle
Platonism and
Neo-Pythagoreanism academies or schools of thought, and this seems to
be true both of the more
Sethian Gnostics,
and of the
Valentinian Gnostics.
Further, if we compare different Sethian texts to each other in an
attempted chronology of the development of Sethianism during the
first few centuries, it seems that later texts are continuing to
interact with Platonism. Earlier texts such as
Apocalypse of Adam show signs of being
pre-Christian and focus on the
Seth, third son
of Adam and Eve. These early Sethians may be identical to or
related to the
Notzrim,
Ophites or to the sectarian group called the
Minuth by
Philo . Later
Sethian texts such as
Zostrianos and
Allogenes draw on the imagery of older
Sethian texts, but utilize "a large fund of philosophical
conceptuality derived from contemporary Platonism, (that is late
middle Platonism) with no traces of Christian content." Indeed the
doctrine of the "triple-powered one" found in the text
Allogenes, as discovered in the Nag Hammadi
Library, is "the same doctrine as found in the anonymous
Parmenides commentary (Fragment XIV) ascribed by
Hadot to
Porphyry [...] and
is also found in
Plotinus'
Ennead6.7, 17, 13-26."
Rejection by antique Greek Philosophy
However, by the 3rd century Neoplatonists, such as Plotinus,
Porphyry and
Amelius are all attacking the
Sethians. It looks as if Sethianism began as a pre-Christian
tradition, possibly a
syncretic that
incorporated elements of Christianity and Platonism as it grew,
only to have both Christianity and Platonism reject and turn
against it. Professor
John D Turner
believes that this double attack led to Sethianism fragmentation
into numerous smaller groups (
Audians,
Borborites,
Archontics and perhaps
Phibionites,
Stratiotici, and
Secundians).
Scholarship on Gnosticism has been greatly
advanced by the discovery and translation of the Nag Hammadi
texts, which shed light on some of the more
puzzling comments by Plotinus and Porphyry regarding the
Gnostics. More importantly, the texts help to distinguish
different kinds of early Gnostics. It now seems clear that
"
Sethian" and "
Valentinian" gnostics attempted "an
effort towards conciliation, even affiliation" with late antique
philosophy, and were rebuffed by some
Neoplatonists, including
Plotinus.
Philosophical relations between Neoplatonism and
Gnosticism
Gnostics borrow a lot of ideas and terms from Platonism. They
exhibit a keen understanding of Greek philosophical terms and the
Greek
Koine language in general, and use Greek
philosophical concepts throughout their text, including such
concepts as
hypostasis (reality,
existence),
ousia (essence, substance, being),
and
demiurge (creator God). Good examples
include texts such as the
Hypostasis of the Archons (Reality of the Rulers) or
Trimorphic Protennoia (The
first thought in three forms).
Criticism of gnosticism by antique Greek Philosophy
As a pagan mystic
Plotinus considered his
opponents heretics and elitist blasphemers, arriving at
misotheism as the solution to the
problem of evil, being not traditional or
genuine Hellenism (in philosophy or mysticism), but rather one
invented taking all their truths over from Plato, coupled with the
idea expressed by Plotinus that the approach to the infinite force
which is the One or
Monad cannot be
through knowing or not knowing (i.e., dualist, which is of the
dyad or
demiurge). Although there has been dispute as to
which Gnostics Plotinus was referring to it appears they were
indeed
Sethian. Plotinus' main objection to
the Gnostics he was familiar with, however, was their rejection of
the goodness of the
demiurge and the
material world. He attacks the Gnostics as vilifying Plato's
ontology of the universe as contained in
the
Timaeus. He accused Gnosticism of
vilifying the Demiurge, or craftsman that crafted the material
world, and even of thinking that the material world is evil, or a
prison. As Plotinus explains, the demiurge is the nous (as the
first emanation of the One), the ordering principle or mind, and
also reason. Plotinus was also critical of the Gnostic origin of
the demiurge as the offspring of wisdom, represented as a deity
called
Sophia. She was
anthropomorphically expressed as a
feminine spirit deity not unlike the goddess
Athena or the Christian
Holy
Spirit. Plotinus even went so far as to state at one point that
if the Gnostics did believe this world was a prison then they could
at any moment free themselves by committing suicide. To some degree
the texts discovered in Nag Hammadi support his allegations, but
others such as the Valentinians and the Tripartite Tractate insist
on the goodness of the world and the Demiurge.
Buddhism and Gnosticism
Early 3rd century–4th century
Christian
writers such as
Hippolytus and
Epiphanius write about a
Scythianus, who visited India around 50
AD from where he brought "the doctrine of the Two Principles".
According to
Cyril of Jerusalem,
Scythianus' pupil
Terebinthus presented
himself as a "Buddha" ("He called himself Buddas").
Terebinthus went to
Palestine and Judaea
("becoming
known and condemned"), and ultimately settled in Babylon
, where he
transmitted his teachings to Mani,
thereby creating the foundation of Manichaeism:
In the
3rd century, the Syrian writer and Christian Gnostic theologian
Bar Daisan described his exchanges with
the religious missions of holy men from India (Greek: Σαρμαναίοι,
Sramanas), passing through Syria
on their way
to Elagabalus or another Severan dynasty Roman Emperor. His accounts were quoted
by
Porphyry (De abstin., iv,
17 ) and
Stobaeus (Eccles., iii, 56,
141).
Finally,
from the 3rd century to the 12th century, some Gnostic religions
such as Manichaeism, which combined Christian, Hebrew and Buddhist
influences (Mani, the founder of the
religion, resided for some time in Kushan
lands), spread throughout the Old World,
to Gaul and Great Britain
in the West, and to China
in the
East. Some leading Christian theologians such as
Augustine of Hippo were Manichaeans
before converting to orthodox Christianity.
Such exchanges, many more of which may have gone unrecorded,
suggest that Buddhism may have had some influence on early
Christianity: "Scholars have often considered
the possibility that Buddhism influenced the early development of
Christianity. They have drawn attention to many parallels
concerning the births, lives, doctrines, and deaths of the Buddha
and Jesus" (Bentley, "Old World Encounters").
Christianity and Gnosticism
The ascetic notion of immediate revelation through divine knowledge
sought to find an absolute transcendence in a Supreme Deity. This
concept is very important in identifying what evidence there is
pertaining to Gnosticism in the NT, which would influence orthodox
teaching. Main Gnostic beliefs that differ from Biblical teachings
include: the creator as a lower being [‘Demiurge’] and not a
Supreme Deity; scripture having a deep, hidden meaning whose true
message could only be understood through “secret wisdom”; and Jesus
as a spirit that “seemed” to be human, leading to a belief in the
incarnation. The traditional “formula which enshrines the
Incarnation…is that in some sense God, without ceasing to be God,
was made man…which is a prima facie [‘at first sight’ a]
contradiction in theological terms…the [NT] nowhere reflects on the
virgin birth of Jesus as witnessing to the conjunction of deity and
manhood in His person…the deity of Jesus was not…clearly stated in
words and [the book of] Acts gives no hint that it was”. This
philosophy was known by the so-called “Church Fathers” such as
Origen, Irenaeus, and Tertullian.
At its core, Gnosticism formed a speculative interest in the
relationship of the oneness of God to the ‘triplicity’ of his
manifestations. It seems to have taken Neoplatonic metaphysics of
substance and hypostases [“being”] as a departure point for
interpreting the relationship of the “Father” to the “Son” in its
attempt to define a new theology. This would point to the infamous
theological controversies by Arius against followers of the Greek
Alexandrian school, headed by Athanasius.
The discovery of the ancient Nag Hammadi Library in Egypt in the
1940s shows how varied this movement was. The writers of these
manuscripts considered themselves ‘Christians’, but due to their
syncretistic beliefs, borrowed heavily from the Greek philosopher
Plato. The find included the hotly debated Gospel of Thomas, which
parallels some of Jesus’ sayings in the Synoptic Gospels. This may
point to the existence of a postulated lost textual source for the
Gospels of Luke and Matthew, known as the Q document. Thus, modern
debate is split between those who see Gnosticism as a pre-Christian
form of ‘theosophy’ and those who see it as a post-Christian
counter-movement.
NT scripture was largely unwritten, at least in the form of canon,
existing in the practices, customs and teachings of the early
Christian community. What largely was communicated generation to
generation was an oral tradition passed from the apostles to the
Bishops and from Bishops and priests to the faithful through their
preaching and way of life. Constantine’s call for unity in the
building of the new Roman Church led to his request for Eusebius to
produce some 50 copies of manuscripts. These were approved and
accepted by the emperor, which later influenced the final stages of
canonization.
The best known origin story in the NT comes in the person of Simon
the ‘mage’ [Acts 8:9-24]. Although, little is historically known
about this obscure figure, his first disciple is said to have been
Basilides. Paul’s epistles to Timothy contain refutations to “false
doctrine [and] myths” [1 Tim 1:3-5]. The importance placed here, as
in most NT scripture, is to uphold the truth since through such
knowledge God hopes for “all men” to be saved [1 Tim 2:4]. Paul’s
letters to the Corinthians have a lot to say regarding false
teachers (2 Co 11:4), “spiritualists” [pneumatikos—1 Co 2:14-15;
15:44-46] and their gnosis. Warning against the “wisdom of the
wise” and their “hollow and deceptive philosophy” (1 Co 1:19;
2:5—NIV; cp. Col 2:1-10; 2:8). These are seen as the clearest texts
to early Gnostic evidence. The book of Jude also contains scripture
exhorting believers to seek the true faith (Jude 3) and it is
nowhere more influential than in the nature of the man,
Jesus.
But the writings attributed to the Apostle John contain the most
significant amount of content directed at combating the progenitors
of heresies. Most Bible scholars agree that these were some of the
last parts of the NT written and as such, can offer the most
insights into a 1st century perspective. The writer’s repeated
adherence to true knowledge (“hereby we know”—inherent in Jesus’
ministry) and nature seem to challenge other speculative and
opposing beliefs.
The 2nd epistle of John is only 13 verses long but puts strong
emphasis on the ‘Christology’ of Jesus. From its context we see the
importance placed on “knowing…walking” and loving the truth (v.
1-4), on the humanity of the man Jesus (v. 7-11) and adherence to
“teaching [the doctrine] of Christ” [cp. John 7:14-18]. These point
to false teachers who claimed to bring some higher teaching than
what the apostles taught.
From the evidence at hand, it seems that early Christian apologists
used their biblical faith to teach a pagan audience how best to
adopt the new religion. Wrapping their understanding of scripture
and worldly wisdom in the process and taking their lead from such
Jewish apologists like Philo of Alexandria. Whether even without
Philo the ‘Fathers of the Church’ would have attempted to harmonize
scripture and philosophy is a plausible assumption. Whether the
result of their harmonization would have been the same as it is now
is a matter of conjecture. But it happens that Philo came before
them and it also happens that all kinds of evidence show the
influence of Philo upon them.
It is hard to sift through what actual evidence there is regarding
Gnosticism in the NT due to their historical synchronicity. The
Hammadi library find contains Pagan, Jewish, Greek and early
Gnostic influences, further reinforcing the need to tread lightly.
The antiquity of the find being of utmost importance since it shows
primary evidence of texts that may also have influenced the process
of NT canonization.
If any conclusion is to be made at this point is that Gnosticism
was considered a real enough threat by the apostles themselves,
showing us how early it started to infiltrate the Church, through
which several of its undercurrents were to strongly influence later
‘orthodox’ doctrine.
'Gnosticism' as a potentially flawed category
In
1966 in Messina
, Italy
, a
conference was held concerning systems of gnosis.
Among its several aims were the need to establish a program to
translate the recently-acquired
Nag
Hammadi library (discussed above) and the need to arrive at an
agreement concerning an accurate definition of 'Gnosticism'. This
was in answer to the tendency, prevalent since the
eighteenth century, to use the term
'gnostic' less as its origins implied, but rather as an
interpretive
category for
contemporary philosophical and
religious movements.
For example, in
1835, New
Testament scholar Ferdinand Christian Baur
constructed a developmental model of Gnosticism that culminated in
the religious philosophy of Hegel; one might
compare literary critic Harold Bloom's recent attempts to identify
Gnostic elements in contemporary American
religion, or Eric
Voegelin's analysis of totalitarian impulses through the
interpretive lens of Gnosticism.
The 'cautious proposal' reached by the conference concerning
Gnosticism is described by Markschies:
In essence, it had been decided that 'Gnosticism' would become a
historically-specific term, restricted to mean the Gnostic
movements prevalent in the
3rd century,
while 'gnosis' would be a universal term, denoting a system of
knowledge retained 'for a privileged élite.' However, this effort
towards providing clarity in fact created more conceptual
confusion, as the historical term 'Gnosticism' was an entirely
modern construction, while the new universal term 'gnosis'
was a historical term: 'something was being called
"gnosticism" that the ancient theologians had called "gnosis" ...
[A] concept of gnosis had been created by Messina that was almost
unusable in a historical sense'. In antiquity, all agreed that
knowledge was centrally important to life, but few were agreed as
to what exactly
constituted knowledge; the unitary
conception that the Messina proposal presupposed did not
exist.
These flaws have meant that the problems concerning an exact
definition of Gnosticism persist. It remains current convention to
use 'Gnosticism' in a historical sense, and 'gnosis' universally.
Leaving aside the issues with the latter noted above, the usage of
'Gnosticism' to designate a category of 3rd century religions has
recently been questioned as well. Of note is
Michael Allen Williams'
Rethinking Gnosticism: An Argument for the Dismantling of a
Dubious Category, in which the author examines the terms by
which Gnosticism as a category is defined, and then closely
compares these suppositions with the contents of actual Gnostic
texts (the newly-recovered Nag Hammadi library was of central
importance to his argument).
Williams argues that the conceptual foundations on which the
category of Gnosticism rests are the remains of the agenda of the
heresiologists. Too much emphasis has
been laid on perceptions of
dualism,
body- and
matter-
hatred, and
anticosmism
without these suppositions being properly
tested. In
essence, the interpretive definition of Gnosticism that was created
by the antagonistic efforts of the early church heresiologists has
been taken up by modern scholarship and reflected in a
categorical definition, even though the means now existed
to verify its accuracy. Attempting to do so, Williams contests,
reveals the dubious nature of categorical 'Gnosticism', and he
concludes that the term needs replacing in order to more accurately
reflect those movements it comprises. Williams' observations have
provoked debate; however, to date his suggested replacement term
'the Biblical demiurgical tradition' has not become widely
used.
Gnosticism in modern times
A number of 19th century thinkers such as
William Blake,
Arthur Schopenhauer,
Albert Pike and
Madame Blavatsky studied Gnostic
thought extensively and were influenced by it, and even figures
like
Herman Melville and
W. B. Yeats were more tangentially influenced.
Jules Doinel "re-established" a Gnostic
church in France in 1890 which altered its form as it passed
through various direct successors (Fabre des Essarts as
Tau
Synésius and Joanny Bricaud as
Tau Jean II most
notably), and which, although small, is still active today.
Early 20th century thinkers who heavily studied and were influenced
by Gnosticism include
Carl Jung (who
supported Gnosticism),
Eric Voegelin
(who opposed it),
Jorge Luis
Borges (who included it in many of his short stories), and
Aleister Crowley, with figures such
as
Hermann Hesse being more
moderatedly influenced.
Rene Guenon
founded the gnostic review, Le Gnose in 1909 (before moving to a
more
"Perennialist" position).
Gnostic
Thelemite organizations, such as
Ecclesia Gnostica
Catholica and
Ordo Templi
Orientis, trace themselves to Crowley's thought.
The discovery and translation of the
Nag Hammadi library after 1945 had a
huge impact on Gnosticism since World War II. Thinkers who were
heavily influenced by Gnosticism in this period include
Hans Jonas,
Philip
K. Dick and
Harold Bloom, with
Albert Camus and
Allen Ginsberg being more moderately
influenced. A number of ecclesiastical bodies which think of
themselves as Gnostic have been set up or re-founded since World
War II as well, including the
Society of Novus Spiritus,
Ecclesia Gnostica, the
Thomasine Church, the
Apostolic Johannite Church, the
Alexandrian Gnostic
Church, the
North American College of Gnostic Bishops.
Celia Green has written on Gnostic
Christianity in relation to her own philosophy.
See also
Footnotes
- Walker, Benjamin (1990). Gnosticism: Its History and
Influence. Harper Collins. ISBN 1-85274-057-4.
- Pagels, Elaine. The Gnostic Gospels, Vintage Press,
1989, pgs. 18, 37, 42.
- Bart D.
Ehrman Lost Christianities. Oxford University press,
2003, p.188-202
- Hans Jonas The Gnostic Religion, p. 42, Beacon Press,
1963 ISBN 0-8070-5799-1; 1st ed. 1958
- Layton, Bentley (1987). The Gnostic Scriptures. SCM Press -
Introduction to "Against Heresies" by St. Irenaeus
- Classical Texts:Acta Archelai Now, he who spoke with Moses, the
Jews, and the priests he says is the archont of Darkness, and the
Christians, Jews, and pagans (ethnic) are one and the same, as they
revere the same god. For in his aspirations he seduces them, as he
is not the god of truth. And so therefore all those who put their
hope in the god who spoke with Moses and the prophets have (this in
store for themselves, namely) to be bound with him, because they
did not put their hope in the god of truth. For that one spoke with
them (only) according to their own aspirations.
[www.fas.harvard.edu/~iranian/Manicheism/Manicheism_II_Texts.pdf]
Page 76
- Likewise, Manichaeism, being another Gnostic sect, preached a
similar doctrine of positioning God against matter. This dualistic
teaching embodied an elaborate cosmological myth that included the
defeat of a primal man by the powers of darkness that devoured and
imprisoned the particles of light. Thus, to Mani, the devil god
which created the world was the Jewish Jehovah. Mani said, "It is
the Prince of Darkness who spoke with Moses, the Jews and their
priests. Thus the Christians, the Jews, and the Pagans are involved
in the same error when they worship this God. For he leads them
astray in the lusts he taught them."[1]
- González, Justo L.(1970). A History of Christian Thought,
Vol. I. Abingdon. pp. 132-3
- Understanding Jewish History: Texts and Commentaries by
Steven Bayme
Publisher: Ktav Publishing House ISBN 0881255548 ISBN
978-0881255546 [2]
- Campbell, Joseph: Occidental Mythology, page 262.
Penguin Arkana, 1991.
- Turner, John. "Sethian Gnosticism: A Literary History" in Nag
Hammadi, Gnosticism and Early Christianity, 1986 p. 59
- Hebrew
- This is what the scholar A. H. Armstrong wrote as a footnote in his
translation of Plotinus' Enneads in the tract named against the
Gnostics. Footnote from Page 264 1. From this point to the end of
ch.12 Plotinus is attacking a Gnostic myth known to us best at
present in the form it took in the system of Valentinus. The
Mother, Sophia-Achamoth, produced as a result of the complicated
sequence of events which followed the fall of the higher Sophia,
and her offspring the Demiurge, the inferier and ignorant maker of
the material universe, are Valentinian figures: cp. Irenaues adv.
Haer 1.4 and 5. Valentinius had been in Rome, and there is nothing
improbable in the presence of Valentinians there in the time of
Plotinus. But the evidence in the Life ch.16 suggests that the
Gnostics in Plotinus's circle belonged rather to the other group
called Sethians on Archonties, related to the Ophites or
Barbelognostics: they probably called themselves simply "Gnostics."
Gnostic sects borrowed freely from each other, and it is likely
that Valentinius took some of his ideas about Sophia from older
Gnostic sources, and that his ideas in turn influenced other
Gnostics. The probably Sethian Gnostic library discovered at Nag
Hammadi included Valentinian treatise: ep. Puech, Le pp. 162-163
and 179-180.
- Schenke, Hans Martin. "The Phenomenon and Significance of
Gnostic Sethianism" in The Rediscovery of Gnosticism. E. J. Brill
1978
- Introductory Note This treatise (No.33 in Porphyry's
chronological order) is in fact the concluding section of a single
long treatise which Porphyry, in order to carry out the design of
grouping his master's works more or less according to subject into
six sets of nine treatise, hacked roughly into four parts which he
put into different Enneads, the other three being III. 8 (30) V. 8
(31) and V .5 (32). Porphyry says (Life ch. 16.11) that he gave the
treatise the Title "Against the Gnostics" (he is presumably also
responsible for the titles of the other sections of the cut-up
treatise). There is an alternative title in Life. ch. 24 56-57
which runs "Against those who say that the maker of the universe is
evil and the universe is evil. The treatise as it stands in the
Enneads is a most powerful protest on behalf of Hellenic philosophy
against the un-Hellenic heresy (as it was from the
Platonist as well as the orthodox Christian point of view) of
Gnosticism. A.H. Armstrong introduction to II 9. Against the
Gnostics Pages 220-222
- They claimed to be a privileged caste of beings, in whom God
alone was interested, and who were saved not by their own efforts
but by some dramatic and arbitrary divine proceeding; and this,
Plotinus claimed, led to immorality. Worst of all, they despised
and hated the material universe and denied it's goodness and the
goodness of its maker. For a Platonist, this is utter blasphemy -- and all the worse
because it obviously derives to some extent from the sharply
other-worldly side of Plato's own teaching (e.g. in the
Phaedo). At this point in
his attack Plotinus comes very close in some ways to the orthodox
Christian opponents of Gnosticism, who also insist that this world
is the work of God in his goodness. But, here as on the question of
salvation, the doctrine which Plotinus is defending is as sharply
opposed in other ways to orthodox Christianity as to Gnosticism:
for he maintains not only the goodness of the material universe but
also it's eternity and it's divinity. A.H. Armstrong introduction
to II 9. Against the Gnostics Pages 220-222
- The teaching of the Gnostics seems to him untraditional,
irrational and immoral. They despise and revile the ancient
Platonic teachings and claim to have a new and superior wisdom of
their own: but in fact anything that is true in their teaching
comes from Plato, and all
they have done themselves is to add senseless complications and
pervert the true traditional doctrine into a melodramatic,
superstitious fantasy designed to feed their own delusions of
grandeur. They reject the only true way of salvation through wisdom
and virtue, the slow patient study of truth and pursuit of
perfection by men who respect the wisdom of the ancients and know
their place in the universe. A.H. Armstrong introduction to II 9.
Against the Gnostics Pages 220-222
- Faith and Philosophy By David G. Leahy
- Enneads VI 9.6
- This is what the scholar A. H. Armstrong wrote as a footnote in
his translation of Plotinus' Enneads in the tract named against the
Gnostics. Footnote from Page 264 1. From this point to the end of
ch.12 Plotinus is attacking a Gnostic myth known to us best at
present in the form it took in the system of Valentinus. The
Mother, Sophia-Achamoth, produced as a result of the complicated
sequence of events which followed the fall of the higher Sophia,
and her offspring the Demiurge, the inferior and ignorant maker of
the material universe, are Valentinian figures: cp. Irenaues adv.
Haer 1.4 and 5. Valentinius had been in Rome, and there is nothing
improbable in the presence of Valentinians there in the time of
Plotinus. But the evidence in the Life ch.16 suggests that the
Gnostics in Plotinus's circle belonged rather to the other group
called Sethians on Archonties, related to the Ophites or
Barbelognostics: they probably called themselves simply "Gnostics."
Gnostic sects borrowed freely from each other, and it is likely
that Valentinius took some of his ideas about Sophia from older
Gnostic sources, and that his ideas in turn influenced other
Gnostics. The probably Sethian Gnostic library discovered at Nag
Hammadi included Valentinian treatise: ep. Puech, Le pp. 162-163
and 179-180.
- Cyril of Jerusalem Catechetical Lecture 6, paragraph
23
- First coined in Plato’s Politikos [‘Statement’] as gnostikoi
[‘those capable of knowing’], and linking it with knowledge
[episteme] (Introduction to Politikos. Cooper, John M. &
Hutchinson, D. S. [Eds.] (1997)
- What is understood as “orthodox” and “Gnostic” teachings in
this early period [1st-2nd century] needs to be redefined due to
the complexities now unfolding regarding their historical and
doctrinal similarities. Ed. Note.
- The terminology has ties to the passage in Pro 8:23, taking a
well known Judaic-concept of ‘personification’ and defining it with
Christ as the “wisdom of God” [1 Co 1:24]. This metaphor was common
and understood by most church fathers like Athanasius, Basil,
Gregory, Epiphanius and Cyril. (Racovian Catechism, pp. 73-75)
- From the Greek dokein, hence Docetism (Dictionary of the Later
NT & its Developments, Intervarsity Press, 1997)
- Jesus was Sui Generis, the doctrine of the “pre-existent”
Christ accepted by some Gnostics and ‘orthodox’ Christians. Hanson
R. P. C (The Search for the Christian Doctrine of God: The Arian
Controversy, 318-381 A.D. Edinburgh T. & T. Clark, 1988)
- New Bible Dictionary, (Wm. B. Eerdmans Pub., Grand Rapids, MI,
1975), pp. 558-560. Furthermore, scripture teaches that this is not
in line with Judaic [or rabbinic] teaching, something Jesus himself
adhered to [Luke 2; John 4:24; Phil 3:3-4]. Also see, Nuesner,
Jacob, The Modern Study of the Mishna, 1997; & Mishne
Torah.
- In Platonism the soul [psuchē] was self-moving, indivisible;
degenerated and eternal, existing before the body which housed it,
and longing to be free from its earthly imprisonment, leading to
the Docetist-dualist concept of ‘good’ & ‘evil’ matter. Ed.
Note.
- Their own ‘heresiology’ would later be attacked as heretical.
See, Holt, Reinhard, The Western Heritage of Faith and Reason,
Winston N.Y., 1971), p. 382; Alastair H. B. Logan, Gnostic Truth
and Christian Heresy (Hendrickson Publishers, Peabody, MA,
1996)
- “Was the Lord’s prayer addressed only to the hypostasis of the
Father as ‘our Father’ and the Father of the Son, or to the entire
ousia of the Godhead?” Pelikan, Jaroslav. The Christian Tradition:
A History of the Development of Doctrine. Vol. 1, the Emergence of
the Catholic Tradition (100-600). Chicago, University of Chicago
Press, 1971.
- A new theological vocabulary capable of explaining this
doctrine was created [e.g. homoousios=same essence]. Adopting an
idea of Origen’s that easterners would appreciate in their own
Sabellianism. Hanson, Search, pp. 687-688
- The crisis of the later Roman Empire and move towards the east
brought a “new realism” which may have inclined Christians to
accept the new theological doctrine. Ed. note
- Arius preached that, “before Christ, God was not yet a
Father…there was when he [Jesus] was not.” Since most of his works
are lost, the accounts are based on reports of others. Hanson,
Search, pp. 5-8.
- Alexandria had long been a hotbed of theological innovation and
debate where high ranking Christian thinkers used methods from
Greek philosophy as well as Jewish and Christian sources for their
teachings. Ed. note
- Although, he took his monotheism seriously, he later taught
that the only way to save mankind from moral and physical
extinction was for God to do the unthinkable, descend into human
flesh. Athanasius, “On the Incarnation of the World”, in Phillip
Schaff and Henry Wace, eds., Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, 2nd
Series, vol. 4, Athanasius: Select Works and Letters (Peabody,
Mass.: Hendrickson Publishers, 1994)
- See Goodacre, Mark. The Case against Q: Studies in Marcan
Priority and the Synoptic Problem (Harrisburg, PA: Trinity Press
International, 2002); Robinson, James, M. The Nag Hammadi Library,
HarperOne, 1990.
- The word becoming familiar to Greeks in the 3rd century with
Ammonius Saccas and the Alexandrian Neo-Platonists [or Theurgists]
and was adopted in 1875 by H. P. Blavatsky and others associated
with the Theosophical Society (Blavatsky, H. P. The Secret
Doctrine, the synthesis of science, religion, and philosophy,
Theosophical Uni. Press, first published 1888)
- Its formulation coinciding with the period most strongly
associated with Gnosticism [4th-6th centuries]. See, Eusebius Hist.
Eccl; McDonald, L. M, The Formation of the Biblical Canon (rev. and
exp, ed.; Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1995).
- Dictionary of the Later New Testament, pp. 135-143.
- One of the earliest & best known Gnostics (Dictionary of
Paul and his Letters, Intervarsity Press, 1993, pp. 350-351)
- Even though the author makes it clear why the gospel was
written in John 20:31 Ed. Note
- Scholarly debate lies in placing the letters between 70-90A.D.
& 90-110A.D. (Dictionary of the Later NT & its
Developments, Intervarsity Press, 1997)
- “In the beginning the Word existed. The Word existed in the
presence of God, and the Word was a divine being.” John 1:1. A
Contemporary English Translation of the Coptic Text, late 2nd
century C.E based on the texts of George William Horner. The Coptic
version of the NT in the southern dialect, otherwise called Sahidic
and Thebaic, 1911.
- The Apostle states that in light of the continual battle by
Satan against God and His Christ, it’s not surprising that “our
gospel is veiled…the god of this world” blinding people, as per 2
Co 4:3-4 (NRSV)
- It is not surprising to see that John is in harmony with Paul’s
own teachings regarding the “true doctrine” in his pastoral letters
(cp. 1 Tim 6:3-4; 2 Co 11:4). Ed. Note.
- H. A. Wolfson, ‘Notes on Patristic Philosophy’, Harvard
Theological Review 57, no. 2 [Apr. 1964] p. 124.
- “Both pagan mythologies and Platonic philosophical
traditions…extensive use of the early chapters of Genesis…the
obvious centrality of Jesus Christ [and apostolic figures] in many
texts.” Dictionary of the Later New Testament, p 410
- See Everett Ferguson, "Factors leading to the Selection and
Closure of the New Testament Canon," in The Canon Debate. eds. L.
M. McDonald & J. A. Sanders (Hendrickson, 2002); Lindberg,
Carter (2006) A Brief History of Christianity. Blackwell
Publishing
- The Council at Nicaea [325 A.D.] went on to condemn “those who
say…that He [Jesus] came into existence out of nothing, or who
assert that the Son of God is of a different hypostasis or
substance…these, the Catholic Church and apostolic Church
anathematizes”. Kelly, Early Christian Creeds, pp. 215-216. Kelly
translates ousia as “substance” here, and the creed as recited
today translates homoousios as “consubstantial”—of the same
substance.
- Works Cited I. Alastair, H. B. Logan, Gnostic Truth and
Christian Heresy (Hendrickson Publishers, Peabody, MA, 1996) II.
Bewkes, E. G. The Western Heritage of Faith and Reason (Holt,
Rinehart, Winston, N.Y., 1960). III. Blavatsky, H. P. The Secret
Doctrine, the synthesis of science, religion, and philosophy,
Theosophical Uni. Press, first published 1888. IV. Cooper, John M.
& Hutchinson, D. S. (Eds.) Introduction to Politikos, 1997. V.
Danielou, Jean. The Origin of Latin Christianity (Westminster
Press, Philadelphia, PA, 1977). VI. Dictionary of Paul and his
Letters, Intervarsity Press, 1993. VII. Dictionary of the Later New
Testament & its Developments, Intervarsity Press, 1997. VIII.
Hanson, R. P. C. The Search for the Christian Doctrine of God: The
Arian Controversy, 318-381 A.D. Edinburgh T. & T. Clark, 1988.
IX. Holt, Reinhard. The Western Heritage of Faith and Reason,
Winston N.Y., 1971. X. Horner, G. W. The Coptic version of the New
Testament in the southern dialect, otherwise called Sahidic and
Thebaic, 1911. XI. New Bible Dictionary, Wm. B. Eerdmans Pub.,
Grand Rapids, MI, 1975. XII. Pelikan, Jaroslav. The Christian
Tradition: A History of the Development of Doctrine. Vol. 1, the
Emergence of the Catholic Tradition (100-600). Chicago, University
of Chicago Press, 1971. XIII. Phillip, Schaff & Wace, Henry
eds., Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, 2nd Series, vol. 4,
Athanasius: Select Works and Letters (Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson
Publishers, 1994). XIV. Selwyn, E. G. ‘Image, Fact and Faith’, NTS
1 no. 4 (May 1955). XV. Wolfson, H. A. ‘Notes on Patristic
Philosophy’, Harvard Theological Review 57, no. 2 (Apr. 1964) &
the Philosophy of the Church Fathers (Harvard Uni. Press,
Publishing, PA. 1976).
- Schopenhauer, The World as Will and
Representation, Vol. II, Ch. XLVIII
- Smith, Richard. "The Modern Relevance of Gnosticism" in The Nag
Hammadi Library, 1990 ISBN 0-06-066935-7
- Cf. l'Eglise
du Plérôme
- Green, Celia (1981,2006). Advice to Clever Children.
Oxford: Oxford Forum. Ch.s XXXV-XXXVII.
References
Books
Primary sources
- (in 7 volumes), vol. 1: ISBN 0-674-99484-1
- The Gnostic Bible, Ed. Willis
Barnstone
Secondary sources
- , translated as
- Petrement, Simone (1990), A Separate God: The Origins and
Teachings of Gnosticsim, Harper and Row ISBN
0-06-066421-5
Videos
- The Naked Truth: Exposing the Deceptions About the Origins
of Modern Religions (1995).
External links