T
TimothyH
Guest
Before anyone gets the wrong idea, this post is not about the heresy Gnosticism. By “Gnosis” is meant the Greek word for “Knowledge”.
I’m having difficulty grasping the concepts of “Theology” and “Gnosis”, or “Theologian” and “Gnostic”, according to Diadochus of Photike in his work titled “Dicourse on Judgement and Spiritual Discernment” (also titled “One Hundred Gnostic Chapters”) and am hoping to get an assist here from anyone who may have studied his work.
Take for example the following passage…
72. The theologian who is satisfied and set aflame by the very words of God, sets his soul, after many vicissitudes, onto the wide open path of impassibility. For it is written, “the words of God are chase, silver tested in fire and purified of every stain”. The gnostic, in his turn, fortified by his experience, rises above passions. The theologian, if he remains humble, tastes the gnostics’s experience. The gnostic, if he leans his part of infallible discernment of spirits, acquires a little contemplative virtue. The two gifts do not concur entirely in the same person…
This type of writing is very new to me, and I’m wondering if it is because I have simply not been exposed to eastern spirituality. But my immediate concern is grasping the difference between what the author means by “Theologian” and “Gnostic.” I believe that I have a basic understanding of the author’s idea of gnosis, or knowledge of God gained through the experience of God in prayer and other intimate contact, what the translator’s notes calls “Lived theology”, as explained in the following passage…
This type of experience, to which Diadocuhs refers can be achieved through prayer and intimate contact with the divine Beloved. Such experinces fill the soul with light that the world can never offer. Such experiences occure in the sense and result in knowledge.
But then chapter 72, which is partially quoted above, and a few other passages confused me. What is meant by “Theologian” vs “Gnostic”? It is almost as if the author uses some terms familiar to me as a twenty-first century Roman Catholic in a manner opposite to what I am used to, but that may be something I have to work through.
So if anyone can shed some light on the terms Gnostic and Theologian as used by the author, I would be most appreciative. If not, I’ll read on, pray about it, put it down, and know that I will understand some day if it is God’s will.
-Tim-
I’m having difficulty grasping the concepts of “Theology” and “Gnosis”, or “Theologian” and “Gnostic”, according to Diadochus of Photike in his work titled “Dicourse on Judgement and Spiritual Discernment” (also titled “One Hundred Gnostic Chapters”) and am hoping to get an assist here from anyone who may have studied his work.
Take for example the following passage…
72. The theologian who is satisfied and set aflame by the very words of God, sets his soul, after many vicissitudes, onto the wide open path of impassibility. For it is written, “the words of God are chase, silver tested in fire and purified of every stain”. The gnostic, in his turn, fortified by his experience, rises above passions. The theologian, if he remains humble, tastes the gnostics’s experience. The gnostic, if he leans his part of infallible discernment of spirits, acquires a little contemplative virtue. The two gifts do not concur entirely in the same person…
This type of writing is very new to me, and I’m wondering if it is because I have simply not been exposed to eastern spirituality. But my immediate concern is grasping the difference between what the author means by “Theologian” and “Gnostic.” I believe that I have a basic understanding of the author’s idea of gnosis, or knowledge of God gained through the experience of God in prayer and other intimate contact, what the translator’s notes calls “Lived theology”, as explained in the following passage…
This type of experience, to which Diadocuhs refers can be achieved through prayer and intimate contact with the divine Beloved. Such experinces fill the soul with light that the world can never offer. Such experiences occure in the sense and result in knowledge.
But then chapter 72, which is partially quoted above, and a few other passages confused me. What is meant by “Theologian” vs “Gnostic”? It is almost as if the author uses some terms familiar to me as a twenty-first century Roman Catholic in a manner opposite to what I am used to, but that may be something I have to work through.
So if anyone can shed some light on the terms Gnostic and Theologian as used by the author, I would be most appreciative. If not, I’ll read on, pray about it, put it down, and know that I will understand some day if it is God’s will.
-Tim-