I haven’t forgotten about you.
But unfortunately, you must understand, there are a lot of misunderstandings regarding BOTH sides that are really ingrained due to centuries of misinformation and prejudice----so MUCH SO that really you HAVE to repeat the same things over and over again in order for you to overcome the ingrained prejudices and stereotypes.
Exactly! I definitely understand the misinformation out there, and I know it’s going to take a long time to overcome. I was just having a conversation with a friend of mine about that recently, actually.
Even you should know we also in the RCC have had to overcome and educate regarding centuries of popular misunderstandings and stereotypes.
I definitely understand that too. I actually converted to Catholicism in high school, after having been raised in the Church of the Nazarene. Confronting stereotypes was a reality in my family, and even with some of my friends. My dad, despite the fact that his mom was a devout Catholic, hated Catholicism… So we tended to get into arguments quite a bit. It’s funny though because he never said to his mom the things he said to me!
- How do you reconcile the fact that Jesus (to paraphrase Him) said He “taught openly” in the synanogues and public places and “hid nothing”, yet Gnosticism (particularly The Gospel of Thomas) emphasizes Jesus’s HIDDEN knowledge and teachings?

I can’t think which verse you’re referring to… Do you know the verse(s)?
In Matthew 13, the disciples ask Jesus why he speaks to the masses in parables, and he says to them, “Because it has been given to you to know the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it has not been given . . . Therefore I speak to them in parables, because seeing they do not see, and hearing they do not hear, nor do they understand. And in them the prophecy of Isaiah is fulfilled . . . But blessed are your eyes for they see, and your ears for they hear.”
The Gospel of Thomas repeats “He who has ears to hear, let him hear” a lot! It’s important to remember that the GoT wasn’t specifically a Gnostic text, although it was used by some Gnostics. In fact most of the Gospel is identical to the canonical Gospels, it’s really only a small portion of it that is unique. The “hidden teachings” idea is a concept from both canonical and non-canonical writings – Jesus taught certain spiritual truths to those who were able to understand them, but he revealed them only when one was ready. With others, he had to teach them in a way that they could understand. Even many of the Gnostic scriptures are hard to decode because they’re written in a way that the average person won’t understand. As you read more of the Gnostic scriptures though, and start to become familiar with the concepts, it becomes easier to put the pieces together and everything starts to make more sense.
- One of the BIG questions---------do you believe Jesus was married? And also, married to Mary Magdalene? And what is you and your churches’s opinions on Dan Brown and The DaVinci Code?

Haha! Well, the church doesn’t really have a position on The DaVinci Code. It’s entertaining fiction, but nothing more. One plus is that it revived an interest in Gnosticism, but the negative side is that it’s given people very wrong ideas of what Gnosticism is. As for Jesus and Mary Magdalene being married – I have no idea, because I wasn’t alive back then. Personally, I doubt that they were married, but who knows? It doesn’t detract from Jesus’ teachings one way or another, for me. Scripture does indicate that they had a special relationship. Our Gospel reading yesterday at Mass, for the Feast of the Descent of Sophia was from the Gospel of Philip, and it said, “The Sophia whom they call barren is the mother of the angels. And the consort of Christ is Mary Magdalen. The Lord loved her more than all the disciples, and kissed her on her mouth often . . . There were three who walked with the Lord at all times, Mary his mother and her sister and Magdalene, whom they called his consort. For Mary was his mother and his sister and his consort.”
Aside from the pronoun issue in the last sentence, which was probably an error by the scribe – this passage refers to Mary as His consort. But what “consort” means could vary… I could mean they were married, but not necessarily. It could also simply indicate their close relationship, perhaps Mary’s deeper understanding of the Mysteries. It could also be a reference to the Mystery of the Bridal Chamber, which was the highest Gnostic sacrament (and has nothing to do with actual marriage). Since the passage starts with mentioning Sophia, the Aeon Who with Christ forms a syzygy, I tend to think that’s what it’s referring to by calling Mary His consort.
- Do you believe in Ultimate Truths? And do you believe your Church HAS the Ultimate Truth, as OUR Church does?

Yes, I believe in Ultimate Truth. But we arrive at that Truth in different ways. I don’t believe that Ultimate Truth is contained in any earthly church, including my own – the only way we can know that Truth is through Gnosis. And Gnosis certainly isn’t limited to any one particular denomination. Many Catholic saints and mystics have had experiences that one might call Gnosis. I think the difference is that sometimes one’s church doesn’t give one a context in which to handle such an experience, and occasionally it can cause a person to feel they’re going mad! I think there’s definitely Truth in the RCC, but I think that when you try to pin down the Truth and define it, you miss what the Truth really is – it’s ineffable, just as God is ineffable.