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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Alternative belief systems > Syncretist & eclectic religions & belief systems > Gnosticism
1861. The growing power of the infant Gnosticism acting with
inspiration upon the quick warm nature of the Jordan Nazarenes laid
the seed which, nourished by the accumulated wisdom of the
illustrious teachers of the Pharisees, ultimately ripened into the
New Testament - the priceless pearl of the Jewish conception. The
earliest Gnosticism in Irenaeus extends a hand to the Gnosticism of
the Kaball. Irenaeus's Gnostica, the Codex Basareus, the oldest
parts of the Kabbala, the first three chapters of Genesis, the New
Testament theology, Hippolytus, and some extracts from the Rabbins,
are all brought together. See other works by this author available
from Kessinger Publishing.
Early Christian mystical groups were called Gnostics, meaning those
who know, because of their spiritual knowledge. Their teachers were
persecuted and most documents destroyed because the Church desired
a uniform set of beliefs to operate under. "Pistis Sophis" was the
most important Gnostic work until the discovery and publication of
"The Nag Hammadi Library." It remains an important milestone in
Gnostic research and should be part of any serious study. It is the
story of how we, as spiritual beings, have fallen into the physical
world. The soul is asleep, unaware of its true nature, but the
purpose of this gospel is to help awaken us.
An endeavor to systematize and elucidate the Corpus Hermeticum.
This volume emphasizes the more primary and fundamental truths of
the Pymander so the reader may gain a comprehensive survey of the
entire field it covers.
Peter Wilberg presents a political history of the subversive
'gnostic' theologies of the first century, and with it, a
theo-political critique of the ruling god-concepts of the 21st
century. 'From New Age to New Gnosis' is spiritual Marxism and a
powerful spearhead aimed at the 'New World Order' of economic
'liberalism', neo-conservatism and military imperialism. It
challenges all four faces of its famous dollar pyramid - the
'i-dollartry' of new technologies, the reduction of the human being
to a genetic machine, the politically illiterate platitudes of New
Age 'spirituality' - and the spiritual illiterate 'literalism' of
Christian biblical fundamentalism and racist Zionazism - which now
see their own zealotry mirrored and confronted by militant Islam.
What Peter Wilberg's recognises is that what our divided world now
calls for is not a revival of fundamentalisms of any sort but a New
Gnostic spirituality that understands the "wordless knowledge
within the word" (Seth).
This study traces the influence of Gnosis in European culture.
Gnostic roots can be traced to the paintings of Hieronymous Bosch
and William Blake, the romanticism of Novalis, the symbolic poetry
of Gerard de Nerval, the dualistic writings of Herman Hesse, and to
Heideggerean existentialism. Gnostic alternations between grace and
damnation permeate the work of Luis Bunuel, and many others.;The
idea that the body is the prison of the soul was expounded by
Pythagoras, Plato, and the Orphics. Yet with the Gnostics the
dualism of soul-spirit/body-matter became complete. Objects and
lifeforms were created by an evil deity, whereas the souls embedded
in them are particles chipped from an alien, boundless and eternal
divinity. This book is interdisciplinary, combining personality
theory, mythology and theology. It integrates
ontological/ideological philosophy in bio-psycho-sociology. The
claim is that Gnosis, Kabbala and Existentialism are the specific
disciplines linking the dualities of human existence. Finally, an
anthropocentric theory of religion is presented, which links
history and transcendence through the mediation of the human.
The Message of the Alien God and the Beginnings of Christianity
If Jesus Christ is not God, of the same essence with God the Father
and God the Holy Spirit, having all the attributes of the Trinity
while on earth as well as while He reigned in Heaven, then we, of
all men, are most miserable. And how do we know that He is, and
always has been, God from eternity? It is written in the Holy
Scriptures.
But what if the version of the Bible we read is ambivalent, in
one place saying He is co-equal with God, and in another place
denying Him one or more of the attributes that are essential to
God? Read this book and you will see that all but three of the new
versions are guilty of denying Christ's goodness, sinlessness,
omnipresence, omniscience, omnipotence, and a dozen more of the
attributes of God. You will see it written in black and white, with
exact quotations from eight of the new versions.
This important challenge to the trend so evident in the new
versions (the despising of the words God-breathed out through the
prophets and apostles, and the mixing in of the corrupt wisdom of
men), ought to be supported by every one of you who love God and
His Word as HB wrote it.
The Naming of St. John Baptist; The Parables in St. Matthew; The
Mathematical Symbolism of the Gnosis; Words of Power used with the
Miracles; Vision of St. Peter and the Geometrical Symbol of the
Church; Epistle of Apollos to the Hebrews; Examples from the Holy
Scriptures; Gematria of the Greek Scriptures; plus more!
Volume 3 of Boris Mouravieff's Gnosis contains ancient keys to a
tradition of Christian esotericism that was necessarily hermetized
1800 years ago and has since remained unpublished, surviving to the
present only in unwritten form.
A long-awaited illumination of the mystical movement that teaches
'Gnosis' - knowledge of God as opposed to unquestioning
faithAcclaimed author Andrew Phillip Smith delves into the myths
and practices of this ancient movement, exploring its early
popularity, its subsequent decline under the weight of orthodoxy in
the Church, and its present-day resurgence.Gnosticism has travelled
a fascinating path, from the Manichaeans in Persia between the 3rd
and 7th centuries, to the triumphs and tragedies of the Cathars in
southern Europe between the 12th and 14th centuries, to, finally,
today's Mandaeans in Iraq. However the revival of Gnosticism
extends further than these sects, offering inspiration to a legion
of literary figures, including Dan brown and Philip Pullman.
Gnostcisim's emphasis on personal over organized religion, in
keeping with the doctrine of the early Christian era during which
it thrived, has found particular resonance with today's
multicultural world.The Secret History of the Gnostics is not
simply an authoritative account of one sect's practical beliefs and
customs - it is, in effect, a manifesto, an appeal to those
inspired by or drawn to the Gnostic faith not to forget its
origins.
Building on critical work in biblical studies, which shows how a
historically-bounded heretical tradition called Gnosticism was
'invented', this work focuses on the following stage in which it
was "essentialised" into a sui generis, universal category of
religion. At the same time, it shows how Gnosticism became a
religious self-identifier, with a number of sizable contemporary
groups identifying as Gnostics today, drawing on the same
discourses. This book provides a history of this problematic
category, and its relationship with scholarly and popular discourse
on religion in the twentieth century. It uses a critical-historical
method to show how and why Gnosis, Gnostic and Gnosticism were
taken up by specific groups and individuals - practitioners and
scholars - at different times. It shows how ideas about Gnosticism
developed in late nineteenth- and twentieth-century scholarship,
drawing from continental phenomenology, Jungian psychology and
post-Holocaust theology, to be constructed as a perennial religious
current based on special knowledge of the divine in a corrupt
world. David G. Robertson challenges how scholars interact with the
category Gnosticism, and contributes to our understanding of the
complex relationship between primary sources, academics and
practitioners in category formation.
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