
Gnostic Doctrine serves as a comprehensive research platform dedicated to exploring the intricate tapestry of Gnostic theology. Our focus revolves around the convergence of Christian mysticism and apocalyptic Judaism. Delving into texts like the Old and New Apocrypha, Pseudepigrapha, and the Nag Hammadi Library, we provide insights for those seeking self-discovery through the profound teachings that Christ imparted to his disciples in intimate setting
Saturday 28 November 2020
[Talk Gnosis] Aeon Cards, Aeonology, & Gnostic Guidance
A Fractal Model of the Conscious Universe
Tuesday 24 November 2020
Gematria
HOW GOD EMPLOYS NUMBERS IN THE HOLY BIBLE
No. 1 Just as number 1 is the foundation of all mathematics, so Yahweh is the
beginning of all. Number 1 therefore in Scripture pertains to God.
number.
No. 4 The number of creative work—the number of organization, sometimes referred
to as the world number.
No. 5 The number of grace—free gift of God—the number of mercy.
No. 6 The number of flesh or pertaining to that which will be destroyed.
No. 7 The second perfect number. The number of spiritual perfection. The
covenant number. The number of God's seal.
No. 8 The number of resurrection—a new beginning. The number of immortality.
No. 9 The number of finality. The number of judgment.
No. 10 The third perfect number. The number of ordinal perfection.
No. 11 The number of disorganization. The number of incompleteness.
No. 12 The fourth perfect number. The number of governmental perfection.
No. 13 The number of sin. The number of rebellion.
No. 14 Double of seven. The number of double spiritual benefits.
No. 15 3 X 5—The number describing the ultimate of grace or mercy.
No. 17 Seventeen is not a multiple of any number. It has no factors. It is a
combination of 10 (ordinal perfection) and 7 (spiritual perfection). It is
therefore indicative of perfection of spiritual order, (see Rom. 8:35-39).
No. 19 Combination of 10 and 9. Denotes Divine order connected with judgment.
No. 20 The number of expectancy. It is one short of the ultimate of spiritual
perfection—3 X 7.
No. 21 The ultimate of spiritual perfection - 3 X 7.
No. 22 The double of 11. It carries the meaning of 11 (disorganization or
incompleteness in intensified form).
No. 24 The double of 12 (governmental perfection) and speaks of the new or
spiritual Jerusalem.
No. 25 Carries the essence of the square of 5 (mercy or grace).- ^
No. 27 The cube of 3 X 3 X 3. The ultimate of completeness.
No. 28 The product of 7 (spiritual perfection) X 4 (number of creation).
No. 29 The product of 20 (expectancy) plus 9 (judgment).
No. 30 Perfection of Divine order. 3 X 10 - see Luke 3:23.
No. 37 The word of God.
No. 40 The number of probation, trial and chastisement.
No. 70 Perfect spiritual order - 7 X 10.
No. 153 Gematria of "The sons of God."
No. 144,000 12 X 12
Kabbalah and Gnostic Tarot Cards
Kabbalah and Gnostic Tarot Cards
Is magic part of classical Gnosticism? To answer this question we will have a reading from a text from the Nag Hammadi Library, called "On the Origin of the World"
Let us return to the aforementioned rulers, so that we may offer some explanation of them. Now, when the seven rulers were cast down from their heavens onto the earth, they made for themselves angels, numerous, demonic, to serve them. And the latter instructed mankind in many kinds of error and magic and potions and worship of idols and spilling of blood and altars and temples and sacrifices and libations to all the spirits of the earth, having their coworker fate, who came into existence by the concord between the gods of injustice and justice. (On the Origin of the World)
In nineteenth century Europe, spiritualism revived witchcraft and mysticism, and when wed with false Christianity, Satanism was born.
In the twentieth century, public Satanism came out, which coincides with a decline in power of Catholic church. The opportunity for Satanism to grow comes at times of weakness and a need for good leadership.
Today, ‘Kabbalah’ is united with Satanism. Tarot cards go with ‘Kabbalah’, the practice which developed in Babylon in the early middle ages. The New Age religions appeal to believers of these powers, as do Free Masons, Order of the Golden Dawn. Modern Satanism tries to define the occult in honest ways.
‘KABBALAH’. (HEBREW: tradition). The mystical religious stream in JUDAISM, transmitted alongside the written law, seeks to explain the connection between God and creation, the existence of good and evil, to show the road to spiritual perfection, always preserving its basic Hebrew character. Practicers of Kabbalah: Kabbalists.
EXAMPLES: Superstitious belief in verses on amulets, or good luck charms, to protect from evil.
People in the past wore amulets and talismans to protect themselves, and they turned to medicine men and shamans for cures. People today still carry “Saint” Christopher medals or wear “good luck” charms, and they have their séances, Ouija boards, crystal balls, horoscopes, and tarot cards
Some fortune-tellers work with Tarot cards. These special cards include 22 “Tarots” (or trumps) and 56 numeral cards. The numeral cards are divided into four suits. Each suit is given an overall sense and each card is given a specific meaning. The cards are interpreted according to their assigned meanings, modified by the combination of one card with another when dealt, drawn or spread out.
Tarot reading, too, is connected with astrology. The book How the Tarot Speaks to Modern Man explains that Tarot readers “base their interpretation of the cards upon the structure of the universe, particularly the solar system as symbolized by the Holy Cabala.” The “Cabala” (a body of Jewish occult doctrine) divides up the universe into three elements (fire, air and water), seven planets and the twelve signs of the zodiac—22 in all, corresponding with the 22 trump cards of the Tarot deck.
Isaiah 8:19 And when they shall say unto you, Seek unto them that have familiar spirits and unto the wizards, that chirp and that mutter: should not a people seek unto their God? on behalf of the living [should they seek] unto the dead?
20 To the law and to the testimony! if they speak not according to this word, surely there is no morning for them..
Wednesday 11 November 2020
The Triacontad

- First generation
- Bythos (the One) and Sige (Silence, Charis, Ennoea, etc.)
- Second generation
- Nous (Nus, Mind) and Aletheia (Veritas, Truth)
- Third generation, emanated from Nous and Aletheia
- Sermo (the Word) and Vita (the Life)
- Fourth generation, emanated from Sermo and Vita
- Anthropos (Homo, Man) and Ecclesia (Church)[5]
- Fifth generation
- Emanated from Sermo and Vita:
- Bythios (Profound) and Mixis (Mixture)
- Ageratos (Never old) and Henosis (Union)
- Autophyes (Essential nature) and Hedone (Pleasure)
- Acinetos (Immovable) and Syncrasis (Commixture)
- Monogenes (Only-begotten) and Macaria (Happiness)
- Emanated from Anthropos and Ecclesia
- Paracletus (Comforter) and Pistis (Faith)
- Patricas (Paternal) and Elpis (Hope)
- Metricos (Maternal) and Agape (Love)
- Ainos (Praise) and Synesis (Intelligence)
- Ecclesiasticus (Son of Ecclesia) and Macariotes (Blessedness)
- Theletus (Perfect) and Sophia (Wisdom)
Saturday 7 November 2020
Secrets of Salome: Unveiling the Hidden Disciple
Secrets of Salome: Unveiling the Hidden Disciple
Secrets of Salome, is an in-depth investigation into the identity and traditions surrounding Salome, a disciple of Jesus.
Secrets of Salome: Unveiling the Hidden Disciple Kindle Editionby Angela Elwell (Author) Format: Kindle Edition
https://www.amazon.com/Secrets-Salome-Unveiling-Hidden-Disciple-ebook/dp/B08L8J25VN/
Aeon Cards
AEONOLOGY BOOK AND CARDS
Limited first edition of 300.
AEON cards re-discover the ancient practice of Aeonology.
This gorgeous first edition of the book is both a guide and explanation of the origin Aeons. Only 300 books were published in foiled, linen covered, hardback book with incredible images of each of the Aeon cards and guidance for how to do your own aeonology readings.
Each numbered book comes with a beautiful set of Aeon cards.
NOCKWOOD CARDS
The original Nockwood behavioral archetype cards are available at the store. Each deck comes with the beautiful designed 'guide' which explains the different archetypes and their historic origin.
https://www.nockwoodcards.com/buy
https://www.nockwoodcards.com/buy/AEON-c18195019
This beautiful numbered set of book, cards and a poster of the 2nd Century poem "Thunder, the perfect mind".
The AEON book is beautifully printed, hard back, foiled and linen cover. Each of these first edition books is numbered and a record will be kept of the 300 people who are lucky enough to order these books.
The book describes the origins of the Aeons and the meaning of each of the cards. At the back of the book are a number of different methods for conducting readings.
The cards are high quality, playing cards designed for regular use. They are specifically made for heavy use so they will keep their colorful design through the most rigorous of daily reflections or rituals.
These 300 books also come with a poster sized representation of the 2nd Century poem ":Thunder, the perfect mind". This poem a beautiful piece has been transformed into a circular mandala representing wholeness of being. It's an amazing tool for reflection and focus.
Wednesday 4 November 2020
The Hierarchy of the Pleroma


There are many parallels between Gnosticism and Christianity, including a belief in angels. One key difference between these two religious belief systems is that Gnostics recognize a divine hierarchy above the angels. This hierarchy, known as the Pleroma, is populated by beings called aeons. Angels are messengers between humankind and the aeons of the Pleroma, and ultimately between humankind and the true God. As messengers, angels are not directly worshipped, but they are called upon to take prayers to the true God on behalf of humankind -- a practice similar to Catholics praying for the intercession of saints.
While the transcendent Deity or invisible spirit is inconceivable and ineffable, the pleroma (Greek: “full perfection”) of the divine is a hierarchical family of personified aeons, who emerge as the fruit of the spirit’s self-contemplation or self-expression.
The Pleroma is a hierarchy where each aeon occupies a station according to a certain level of gnosis
The primal Tetrad is both an individual entity and a quartet of unities—a complex unity. The unities relate to each other in a hierarchy and sequence modeled upon their character.
Names are important in this Ogdoad, just as they are in Epiphanes’ Tetrad. They are patterned to reinforce the numerical structure of the aeonic realm. They indicate hierarchy and function.
So the hierarchy proceeds from the Pleroma downward, to the spiritual realm of Wisdom’s Resolution, to the Demiurge, and finally to the material world.
Because the Demiurge creates the seven heavens, he is called the Hebdomad; and Akhamoth (i.e. Wisdom) is called the Ogdoad, thus “preserving the number of the original, first Ogdoad of the Pleroma” (Against Heresies 1.5.2–4)
Sophia (Wisdom) or simply the Logos. This being is described as the final emanation of a divine hierarchy, called the Plêrôma or "Fullness," at the head of which resides the supreme Deity, the One beyond Being.
- In the Gospel of the Egyptians, there are at least five orders of aeons: thrones, powers, glories, authorities and angels.
In order to emphasize unity at every level, the numerical order of aeons is composed of the monad (one-fold), dyad (two-fold), triad (three-fold) etc, as follows:
2. dyad - twofold
3. triad - threefold
4. tetrad - fourfold
5. pentad - fivefold
6. hexad - sixfold
7. heptad or hebdomad - sevenfold
8. ogdoad - eightfold
9. ennead - ninefold
10. decad - tenfold
12. dodecad - twelvefold
Some Gnostics taught of the Beyond the Deep, a hierarchy of Deeps; and curiously enough in The Untitled Text from the Bruce Codex we meet with such hierarchies, and also find them assumed in the Pistis Sophia treatise. What absurdity, then, to seek a "beginning" in infinitude! Such a conception as a beginning was low down in the scale of being; we can speak of the "beginning" of some special phenomenal universe, but there is an infinitude of such universes, and infinitude has no beginning.
This is he who is sought in every place. And this is the Father from whom, like a light-spark, the monad came forth, beside which all the worlds are as nothing. . . . It is this which moved all things with its shining. And they received gnosis and life and hope and rest and love and resurrection and faith and rebirth and the seal. This is the ennead which came from the Father of those without beginning, who alone is Father and Mother unto himself, whose pleroma surrounds the twelve deeps -
In the Untitled Text in the Bruce Codex, there are at least five types of angels, though the order is uncertain: powers, glories, angels, archangels, ministers.1. The first deep is the all-wise from which all sources have come.
2. The second deep is the all-wise from which all the wise have come.
3. The third deep is the all-mystery from which, or out of which, all mysteries have come.
4. The fourth deep moreover is the all-gnosis out of which all gnoses have come.
5. The fifth deep is the all-chaste from which everything chaste has come.
6. The sixth deep is silence. In this is every silence.
7. The seventh deep is the insubstantial door from which all substances has come forth.
8. The eight deep is the forefather from whom, or out of whom, have come into existence all forefathers.
9. The ninth deep moreover is an all-father and a self-farther, that is, every fatherhood is in him and he alone is father to them.
10. The tenth deep is the all-powerful from which has come every power.
11. The eleventh deep moreover is that in which is the first invisible one, from which all invisible ones have come.
12. The Twelfth deep moreover is the truth from which has come all truth. (The Untitled Text from the Bruce Codex)
The Gnostic Understanding of the Tabernacle
The Valentinian Teachings on the Tabernacle
For Valentinians there are multiple levels of interpretation when it comes to the temple or Tabernacle for example the Gospel of Philip understands the three structures or three rooms or chambers of the Temple to refer to baptism, redemption; and the bridal chamber:
There were three structures for sacrifice in Jerusalem. One opened to the west and was called the holy place; a second opened to the south and was called the holy of the holy; the third opened to the east and was called the holy of holies, where only the high priest could enter. The holy place is baptism; the holy of the holy is redemption; the holy of holies is the bridal chamber. (Gospel of Philip)
Here in the Gospel of Philip the Temple is divided into three sections "the holy place, the holy of the holy and the holy of holies" the holy place could refer to the Inner Court (1 Kings 6:36), or Court of the Priests (2 Chr. 4:9), outside the temple building were the brazen altar and Laver are located.
It is possible that the porch or vestibule is counted here as a separate room. Philo also mentions three sections in Mos. 2. 101, but he describes the Tabernacle, not the Temple in Jerusalem, like the passage in the Gospel of Philip.
Heracleon understands the holy of holies to refer to the divine realm or Peroma:
The sanctuary is the Holy of Holies, into which only the High-Priest enters, into which the spiritual go. The temple courtyard, where the Levites also enter, is a symbol of the animate ones who attain a salvation outside the Fullness (Pleroma). (Heracleon: Fragments from his Commentary on the Gospel of John)
Therefore, he says, it has a veil in order that the things may not be destroyed by the sight of it. And only the archangel enters it, and to typify this the high priest every year enters the holy of holies. From thence Jesus was called and sat down with Space, that the spirits might remain and not rise before him, and that he might subdue Space and provide the seed with a passage into the Pleroma. (Extracts from the Works of Theodotus)
According to Valentinians theologians, the divine Fullness (pleroma) corresponds to the Holy of Holies in the Temple (Herakleon Fragment 13). Like the Holy of Holies, the Pleroma is separated from the "outer tent" (i.e. the cosmos) by a boundary or Limit which is often described as a curtain or "veil".
The Gospel of Philip compares the hidden nature of the Pleroma to that of the Holy of Holies: "At the present time we have access to the visible aspects of creation. We say that they are mighty and glorious, but the hidden things are powerless and contemptible. Are the hidden aspects of Truth like this? Are they powerless? Are they contemptible? No, rather it is these hidden aspects that are mighty and glorious. The mysteries of Truth are manifestly representations and images. Thus the bridal chamber (i.e. Pleroma) remains hidden. It stands for the Holy in the Holy." (Gospel of Philip 105)
In the Extracts from the Works of Theodotus. 38 the allegory of the Temple is related to the ascent of the pneumatics to the Pleroma. Jesus is identified with the High Priest who is allowed to enter into the Holy of Holies. Strikingly, the Holy of Holies does not depict the Pleroma, but the throne of the Demiurge, which has a veil so that the spiritual human beings are not destroyed by the sight of it. The task of the Savior is to subdue the flames and to provide an entrance for the pneumatics to the Pleroma. For the allegory of the Temple in the Gospel of Philip, see Ronald McL. Wilson, The Gospel of Philip. Translated from the Coptic Text, with an Introduction and Commentary (London: A. R. Mowbray & Co., 1962), 139-141.
Gen 1:6 Then God said, "Let there be an expanse in the midst of the waters, and let it separate the waters from the waters."
expanse: the Hebrew word raqia sometimes translated "firmament" means, literally, an "expansion", and so indicates the Scriptural anticipation by many thousand years, of the modern scientists' "expanding universe". Raqah the verb is used by Jeremiah to speak of "silver spread into plates" (Jer. 10:9). Job speaks of Him "which alone spreadeth out the heavens" (Job 9:8), and who "stretcheth out the north over the empty place" (tohu, "without form" of Genesis 1:2), (Job 26:7). The stretched-out heavens are likened to a tent or tabernacle.
"That stretcheth out the heavens as a curtain, and spreadeth them out as a tent to dwell in" (Isa. 40:22).
"He that created the heavens, and stretched them out" (Isa 42:5).
"That stretched forth the heavens alone" (Isa. 44:24; 51:13; Zech. 12:1)
Not only is the firmament spoken of in language that reminds of the Tabernacle, there is a reference in Job, that suggests that the earth too, is looked upon as the ground upon which this tabernacle of the sky rests.
Psa 19:5 LXX (18:5) In the sun he has set his tabernacle; and he comes forth as a bridegroom out of his chamber: he will exult as a giant to run his course.
Hebrew 9:11 But when Christ came as high priest of the good things that have come, He went through the greater and more perfect tabernacle that is not made by hands and is not a part of this creation.
Ex 25:9 According to all that I shew thee, [after] the pattern of the tabernacle, and the pattern of all the instruments thereof, even so shall ye make [it].
Heb 8:5 Who serve unto the example and shadow of heavenly things, as Moses was admonished of God when he was about to make the tabernacle: for, See, saith he, [that] thou make all things according to the pattern shewed to thee in the mount.
The tabernacle was built after the pattern that was shown to Moses in the mount.
XXXI. (95) Now, Bezaleel, being interpreted, means God in his shadow. But the shadow of God is his word, which he used like an instrument when he was making the world. And this shadow, and, as it were, model, is the archetype of other things. For, as God is himself the model of that image which he has now called a shadow, so also that image is the model of other things, as he showed when he commenced giving the law to the Israelites, and said, "And God made man according to the image of God."{46}{#ge 1:26.} as the image was modelled according to God, and as man was modelled according to the image, which thus received the power and character of the model. (Allegorical Interpretation, III)
The tabernacle is symbolic of inner purification
The setting up of the tabernacle means the establishing of a new state of perception within the mind.
"The tabernacle or the tent of meeting" means that a definite point shall be established in mind where we shall dwell in the spirit of the Divine Mind composed of archetype ideas, which moves as a tent wherever we go.
The Table - gevura
The Altar - tiferet with its connection to malchut
The Basin and Jug or Laver - netzach and hod
The word 'zeh' hints at the sefira of malchut as in the verse "This [zeh] is the gate to God" (Psalms 18:20). We enter the realm of the spiritual through a properly rectified reality (malchut).
The Following is a taken adapted and amplified from Against Heresies (Book I, Chapter 18):
The gate of the court would represent wisdom (Sophia) the last or the lowest aeon her partner is willed or Will (Theletos) a person has to will themselves into the outer court of the Tabernacle.
Theletos meaning natural or free will,This is the beginning of Ascension
Upon entering the Tabernacle a believer becomes a Child of Ecclesia (Ecclesiasticus) and enjoys the Blessedness (Macariotes)

The Tabernacle is basically about ascension into the divine realm