Two Kingdoms
Then the appointed time came and drew near. And he changed the commands. Then the time came until the child had grown up. When he had come to his maturity, then the archons sent the imitator to that man in order that they might know our great Power. And they were expecting from him that he would perform for them a sign. And he bore great signs. And he reigned over the whole earth and all those who are under heaven. He placed his throne upon the end of the earth, for "I shall make you god of the world". He will perform signs and wonders. Then they will turn from me, and they will go astray. — The Concept of Our Great Power
The world, as seen from the perspective of the Gnostic texts, is structured under forces that exercise dominion over humanity. These powers, often referred to as archons or rulers, operate to maintain control over the material realm and to obscure the knowledge of the divine. In the words of the Gospel of Philip,
“The rulers wanted to fool people, since they saw that people have a kinship with what is truly good. They took the names of the good and assigned them to what is not good, to fool people with names and link the names to what is not good. So, as if they were doing people a favor, they took names from what is not good and transferred them to the good, in their own way of thinking. For they wished to take free people and enslave them forever.”
Here, the rulers’ manipulation of names and concepts reflects the deeper duality of the world: that of knowledge versus ignorance, spiritual freedom versus bondage, and righteousness versus sin. The forces that act in the world have no interest in the salvation of humanity; they are concerned only with the perpetuation of their dominion. The Gospel of Philip explains:
“There are forces that do [favors] for people. They do not want people to come to [salvation], but they want their own existence to continue. For if people come to salvation, sacrifice will [stop]…and animals will not be offered up [55] to the forces. In fact, those to whom sacrifices were made were animals. The animals were offered up alive, and after being offered they died. But a human being was offered up to God dead, and the human being came alive.”
The established order of the material universe is further clarified in The Tripartite Tractate:
“The whole establishment of matter is divided into three. The strong powers which the spiritual Logos brought forth from fantasy and arrogance, he established in the first spiritual rank. Then those (powers) which these produced by their lust for power, he set in the middle area, since they are powers of ambition, so that they might exercise dominion and give commands with compulsion and force to the establishment which is beneath them. Those which came into being through envy and jealousy, and all the other offspring from dispositions of this sort, he set in a servile order controlling the extremities, commanding all those which exist and all (the realm of) generation, from whom come rapidly destroying illnesses, who eagerly desire begetting, who are something in the place where they are from and to which they will return. And therefore, he appointed over them authoritative powers, acting continuously on matter, in order that the offspring of those which exist might also exist continuously. For this is their glory.”
This description demonstrates the structured hierarchy of powers governing the world. From the top ranks of the spiritual to the servile order controlling matter, all are invested with authority over the life and death of creation, acting in accordance with the constitution of the world.
Humanity itself is divided according to the nature of the Logos and the dispositions from which it arose:
“Those who had come into being not knowing themselves both did not know the Pleromas from which they came forth and did not know the one who was the cause of their existence.”
“The Logos, being in such unstable conditions, did not continue to bring forth anything like emanations, the things which are in the Pleroma, the glories which exist for the honor of the Father. Rather, he brought forth little weaklings, hindered by the illnesses by which he too was hindered. It was the likeness of the disposition which was a unity, that which was the cause of the things which do not themselves exist from the first.”
These passages reflect the origin of human frailty and the entanglement of beings with ignorance and imperfection. From this flawed beginning, humanity was divided into three essential types: spiritual, psychic, and material. The Tripartite Tractate states:
“Mankind came to be in three essential types, the spiritual, the psychic, and the material, conforming to the triple disposition of the Logos, from which were brought forth the material ones and the psychic ones and the spiritual ones. Each of the three essential types is known by its fruit. And they were not known at first but only at the coming of the Savior, who shone upon the saints and revealed what each was.”
This threefold division mirrors the duality of the world in moral and spiritual terms, establishing two contrasting states or kingdoms.
The first of these is the kingdom of sin, the dominion of the adversary.
“Sin made flesh, whose character is revealed in the works of the flesh, is the Wicked One of the world. He is called by Jesus, the Prince of this world. Kosmos, rendered world in this phrase, signifies, that order of things constituted upon the basis of sin in the flesh, and called the kingdom of Satan (Matt. 12:26), as opposed to the kingdom of God: which is to be established upon the foundation of ‘the word made flesh’ obedient unto death.”
The second is the kingdom of God, founded upon incarnated obedience and righteousness. These two hostile kingdoms—God’s and the adversary’s—are distinguished not merely by external appearances, but by their very constitution. Incarnated sin governs the worldly order, dominating through the flesh and the structures of power, while incarnated obedience constitutes the spiritual realm, manifest in the saints and those obedient to God’s word.
“Incarnated sin, and incarnated obedience, are the bases of the two hostile kingdoms, of God and of the adversary. The world is Satan’s kingdom; therefore it is, that ‘the saints,’ or people of God, both natural and spiritual Israel (Rom. 2:28,29; 9:6,7; John 1:47), are a dispersed and persecuted community.”
“Satan’s kingdom is the kingdom of sin. It is a kingdom in which ‘sin reigns in the mortal body,’ and thus has dominion over men.”
The world, therefore, is structured as Satan’s dominion. All the power of the enemy, the adversary of God and His people, is concentrated and incarnated in it. It manifests in various forms, including religion and superstition, all born from the thinking of sinful flesh. These phases of the adversary’s kingdom have appeared historically in successive powers over humanity: the Roman world during the time of Jesus, the Gothic kingdoms, the Papal and Protestant orders in the west, and Islam in the east.
“The kingdom of sin is among the living upon the earth; and it is called the kingdom of Satan, because ‘all the power of the enemy,’ or adversary, of God and His people, is concentrated and incarnated in it. It is a kingdom teeming with religion, or rather forms of superstition, all of which have sprung from the thinking of sinful flesh.”
“The kingdom of Satan is manifested under various phases… The lord that dominates over them all from the days of Jesus to the present time is SIN, the incarnate accuser and adversary of the law of God, and therefore called ‘the Devil and Satan’.”
The other kingdom, the Kingdom of God, is distinguished by its citizens, who are the saints. Men cannot inherit this kingdom through the will of the flesh, as natural birth confers no spiritual right. One may be born a sinner before one can become a saint, just as one must be born a foreigner before becoming an adopted citizen.
“There are two states or kingdoms, in God’s arrangements, which are distinguished by constitution. These are the Kingdom of Satan and the Kingdom of God. The citizens of the former are all sinners; the heirs of the latter are saints. Men cannot be born heirs by the will of the flesh; for natural birth confers no right to God’s Kingdom. Men might be born sinners before they can become saints; even as one must be born a foreigner before he can be an adopted citizen of the States.”
Children are not born holy except in the sense of legitimacy. They are born sinners, inheriting a nature of sin from their flesh. This is not a crime but a misfortune, and they have no choice in the matter. As the apostle wrote:
“‘The creature was made subject to the evil, not willingly, but by reason of him who subjected it in hope’ (Rom. 8:20)… ‘By Adam’s disobedience the many were made sinners’ (Rom. 5:19); that is, they were endowed with a nature like his, which had become unclean, as the result of disobedience; and by the constitution of the economy into which they were introduced by the will of the flesh, they were constituted transgressors before they were able to discern between right and wrong.”
This establishes the law of the world: it is the constitution of sin, the dominion of the adversary, and the opposing force to God’s kingdom. Yet, the Word made flesh, obedient unto death, inaugurates the alternative kingdom, showing humanity a path out of sin’s dominion.
“This is the constituted order of things. It is the constitution of the world; and as the world is sin’s dominion, or the kingdom of the adversary, it is the constitution of the kingdom of sin.”
The division between the kingdoms is thus both moral and ontological: one founded on sin and dominion, the other on obedience and divine truth. The texts from the Nag Hammadi Library, including The Concept of Our Great Power, the Gospel of Philip, and The Tripartite Tractate, provide a detailed understanding of the powers, the rulers, and the forces that structure the world. The Gnostic framework complements the biblical understanding of the world as a realm dominated by sin, while the Kingdom of God is revealed through the incarnation, the obedience of the Word, and the illumination brought by the Savior.
In conclusion, humanity exists between these two kingdoms. One is a kingdom of sin, ruled by the incarnate adversary, manifest in flesh, power, and superstition. The other is a kingdom of righteousness, revealed through obedience and spiritual enlightenment, drawing humans toward the inheritance of life. The saints, natural and spiritual Israel, navigate this duality, living as dispersed witnesses to the Kingdom of God while dwelling in a world dominated by the Kingdom of Satan. The texts of the Nag Hammadi Library and the biblical scriptures together illuminate the profound conflict between sin and obedience, between the material powers of the world and the spiritual reality of God’s kingdom.