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gnosisofthomas
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A Gnostic, strictly speaking, is someone who has Gnosis – experiential knowledge of the Divine. In a more general sense though, “Gnostic” applies to anyone on the path of Gnosis, using the tools of ancient Gnosticism to seek liberation and reunion with God who is our ultimate source. For me, the Gospel of Philip offers a summary of the path of Gnosis, expanding on the tradition Theological Virtues: “Farming in the world requires the cooperation of four essential elements. A harvest is gathered into the barn only as a result of the natural action of water, earth, wind and light. God’s farming likewise has four elements: faith, hope, love, and knowledge. Faith is our earth, that in which we take root. And hope is the water through which we are nourished. Love is the wind through which we grow. Knowledge, then, is the light through which we ripen.”What is a gnostic?
The way I interpret this is rather like a journey, where faith is the starting point – but where does that faith lead us? It gives us hope in salvation. It causes us to grow in love, knowing that every human being has his/her origin in God. When we know that we all contain a spark of the Divine Light within us, how can we help but love? Christ commanded us to love God above all things, and love our neighbors as ourselves, which are really truly connected to each other… Because like Christ said, “As long as you did it to one of these my least brethren, you did it to me.” My priest has often said that the reason St. Mary Magdalene has such an important position in the Gnostic scriptures, as the one who truly understood Christ, was because she “loved much,” as the scriptures say. That love led to her Gnosis (knowledge), which is the culmination of these Theological Virtues given in the Gospel of Philip.
The Gnostic Revival of the 19th century was definitely a revival. So while modern Gnosticism is new, I think our church does a good job of being rooted in ancient Gnostic teaching – perhaps moreso than other groups that consider themselves Gnostic. Many modern “Gnostics” use the term to imply a sort of freeform New Age spirituality, that often has nothing to do with the teachings of the early Gnostics. We definitely don’t claim to descend from an unbroken line going back to the first Gnostics, but we do base our theology firmly on those teachings.Do you really think you are in the same vein as the early gnostics?
Thomas 141 was most likely added to the original collection of sayings, at a later date. But like most of Thomas, it shouldn’t be taken literally. That verse is interesting, because normally in Thomas and in most of the Gnostic scriptures, the spirit is described as feminine, while the body is considered masculine. So uniting the lower and higher natures is a way of describing Gnosis, as in Thomas 22: “When you make the two into one, and when you make the inner like the outer and the outer like the inner, and the upper like the lower, and when you make male and female into a single one, so that the male will not be male nor the female be female, when you make eyes in place of an eye, a hand in place of a hand, a foot in place of a foot, an image in place of an image, then you will enter the Kingdom.”Do women need to become men inorder to achieve salvaiton as per the teaching of the Gospel of Thomas, verse 141.
I think one of the reasons v. 141 seems so out of place is that it seems to suggest bringing the higher nature down to the lower one. However, if it was added later, it could be rooted in the idea of the time that men were more suited to teach than women, and that they had a better understanding of spiritual things – kind of like when St. Paul says that women should remain silent in church. The Gospel of Thomas may or may not even be a specifically Gnostic scripture, although the Valentinians accepted it. One common theme in Gnostic scripture is that St. Peter and St. Mary Magdalene tend not to get along very well, and Peter often gets irritated when Mary tries to ask questions or interpret something Jesus has said. Then Jesus has to go and smooth things over between the two of them. So along those lines, this verse could be one of those situations where Jesus is trying to calm Peter down.
I’m a Gnostic because it gives me a deeper understanding and appreciation for the teachings of Christ. It answers a lot of questions about theology I had growing up that orthodoxy was never able to answer. Gnostics have a concept of the outer darkness as well, although whether that hell exists as a place some people will go to when they die, or whether we’re living in it right now remains to be seen. Perhaps it’s both! Jesus said, “The Kingdom is spread out upon the earth, but men don’t see it.” So it could be a matter of shifting one’s perception from looking at the world as a hell, or seeing that the kingdom really is spread out upon the earth right now. But that’s getting into a completely different question that has nothing to do with yours, haha!Are you a gnostic because it sounds spiritual or can’t stomach the reality of hell?
Do I believe in hell as a place of fire and brimstone? No. Do I believe in an existence completely separate from God? Yes and no.