This Is What It Means When It Is Said “According to the Gospel of”
“The gospel of truth is joy to those who have received from the Father of truth the gift of knowing him by the power of the Logos, who has come from the Pleroma and who is in the thought and the mind of the Father; he it is who is called ‘the Savior,’ since that is the name of the work which he must do for the redemption of those who have not known the Father. For the name of the gospel is the manifestation of hope, since that is the discovery of those who seek him, because the All sought him from whom it had come forth. You see, the All had been inside of him, that illimitable, inconceivable one, who is better than every thought.” — Gospel of Truth
When it is said, “According to the Gospel of,” many have understood this phrase as a statement of authorship, as though the truth of the message depended upon the hand that wrote it. Thus, men say, “This is according to Matthew,” or “according to John,” believing that the authority lies in the name that follows. Yet this understanding is shallow, for it rests upon the outward form rather than the inward reality.
For many years, many have said that the so-called lost Gospels were truly lost, and that the authors of these writings are unknown. Yet those who speak in this way reveal not knowledge, but ignorance. They themselves are lost, not the writings. For how can the truth be lost when it proceeds from the Father of truth? That which is truly from him cannot be destroyed, but only hidden from those who do not seek with understanding.
Such claims are often made to stir debate among themselves and confusion among others. By declaring the Gospels lost, they create uncertainty, and by presenting fragments with phrases such as “1 line unreadable,” “6 lines missing,” or “text unrecoverable,” they give the impression that the truth itself is broken. Yet the truth is not contained in fragments of parchment, nor does it depend upon the completeness of a manuscript. The truth is whole, even when men handle it in pieces.
When their scholars speak in this manner, it becomes a subtle deception. For while they write carefully and present themselves as guardians of knowledge, they fail to perceive that the message they handle is not bound to ink and papyrus. They speak as though the absence of lines diminishes the truth, but the truth does not diminish. Rather, it is the understanding of those who read that is lacking.
For this reason it is written:
“John 5:39 ►
New Living Translation
‘You search the Scriptures because you think they give you eternal life. But the Scriptures point to me!’”
Here is the matter plainly declared. The writings themselves are not the end, but the witness. The words are not life in themselves, but they direct the hearer toward the one who gives life. Therefore, to argue over authorship, or to dispute over missing lines, is to remain occupied with the surface, while neglecting the substance.
Do not concern yourselves with who authored the Gospels. For even now, when one speaks, no two hearers receive the words in exactly the same way. Each hears according to their own level of knowledge and understanding. One hears and perceives deeply; another hears and grasps only the surface. Yet both say, “I have heard,” though what they have understood differs.
After hearing, each one speaks again, telling another according to what they have received. In this way, the message continues, not as a fixed repetition of identical words, but as a living transmission shaped by understanding. Thus, what is written “according to” one is not a claim of ownership, but a reflection of perception.
When it is said, “According to the Gospel of,” it does not mean that the truth belongs to that person, nor that it originates from them. Rather, it means that what is written is the account as it has been received, understood, and expressed through that individual. It is the gospel as seen through their hearing, their comprehension, and their measure of insight.
This is why there are many accounts, yet one message. The message itself proceeds from the Logos, who is in the thought and mind of the Father, and who has come from the Pleroma. The variation lies not in the source, but in the receivers. Just as many may look upon the same thing and describe it differently, so also many may receive the same word and express it in different ways.
Therefore, the phrase “according to” is not a division, but a witness to the living nature of the message. It shows that the gospel is not a dead letter, fixed and unchanging, but a reality that is perceived and communicated through those who hear. Each account bears the mark of the one who received it, yet the source remains the same.
This understanding removes the anxiety that comes from debates about lost texts or unknown authors. For the truth is not dependent upon the preservation of every line, nor upon the certainty of every name. It is known by those who receive the gift of knowing him, as it is written: “the gift of knowing him by the power of the Logos.”
Thus, those who seek only the outward form—who argue over manuscripts, authorship, and fragments—remain occupied with shadows. But those who seek the Father of truth discover the substance to which all writings point. For the gospel is “the manifestation of hope,” and hope is not found in ink, but in understanding.
Stay encouraged, my brothers and sisters. To some it was appointed to write the many sayings of Christ, to record and preserve what they had received. Yet to you it is appointed to know him. This is the greater portion. For to write is to testify, but to know is to partake.
Therefore, when you hear the words, “According to the Gospel of,” understand what is being said. It is not a claim of authority rooted in a name, but a declaration of reception—an acknowledgment that what follows is the testimony as it has been understood and delivered by one who has heard.
And so the message continues, not bound to one voice, nor limited to one account, but living and active in those who receive it. For the All sought him from whom it had come forth, and those who find him discover that the truth was never lost, but only awaiting those who would understand.


