Wednesday, 18 September 2019

The Distinction Between Aeons and Spiritual Gifts





:


Spiritual Gifts, the Head, and the Body in The Interpretation of Knowledge

In The Interpretation of Knowledge, the concepts of spiritual gifts, the Head, and the Body are central to understanding the life of the Valentinian community. Spiritual gifts are the outpourings of divine grace, distributed by the Head to each member of the Body according to the Logos. The text emphasizes that while some members may appear to possess greater spiritual capacities than others, these differences do not reflect inequality in value, for all gifts originate from the same source.

The text begins by highlighting the proper attitude toward others’ gifts: “By having a brother who regards us as he also is, one glorifies the one who gives us grace. Moreover, it is fitting for each of us to enjoy the gift that he has received from God, and that we not be jealous, since we know that he who is jealous is an obstacle in his (own) path, since he destroys only himself with the gift and he is ignorant of God.” Jealousy is framed as a barrier to spiritual progress. The one who envies another’s gifts only harms himself, cutting off his own reception of grace from the Head. By contrast, a grateful and humble member participates fully in the divine life: “He ought to rejoice and be glad and partake of grace and bounty.”

The passage also encourages the sharing of prophetic gifts: “Does someone have a prophetic gift? Share it without hesitation. Neither approach your brother jealously nor ... (8 lines missing)... chosen as they [...] empty as they escape [...] fallen from their [...] are ignorant that [...] in this way they have [...] them in [...] in order that they may reflect perforce upon the things that you want them to think about when they think about you.” Though fragmentary, this section emphasizes communal responsibility: spiritual gifts are not for personal glorification but for the edification of the Body. Members must rejoice in the grace given to others and participate in it through prayer and reconciliation: “Now your brother also has his grace: Do not belittle yourself, but rejoice and give thanks spiritually, and pray for that one, in order that you might share the grace that dwells within him. So do not consider him foreign to you, rather, (as) one who is yours, whom each of your members received.”

The connection between the Head and the Body is further elaborated: “By loving the Head who possesses them, you also possess the one from whom it is that these outpourings of gifts exist among your brethren.” The Head, or the Logos, is the source of all spiritual gifts. By aligning with the Head, each member shares in the divine bounty that flows through the community. The Body, in this sense, is both the community of believers and the spiritual organism through which the Head distributes gifts.

Members are warned against comparing themselves to others: “But is someone making progress in the Word? Do not be hindered by this; do not say: 'Why does he speak while I do not?', for what he says is (also) yours, and that which discerns the Word and that which speaks is the same power.” The text distinguishes between the ability to speak and the ability to discern, noting that both derive from the same divine source. No member operates independently; all function as part of a unified Body, sharing in the richness of the Word.

The text expands this metaphor: “The Word ... (13 lines missing)... eye or a hand only, although they are a single body. Those who belong to us all serve the Head together. And each one of the members reckons it as a member. They cannot all become entirely a foot or entirely an eye or entirely a hand, since these members will not live alone; rather they are dead. We know that they are being put to death. So why do you love the members that are still dead, instead of those that live? How do you know that someone is ignorant of the brethren? For you are ignorant when you hate them and are jealous of them, since you will not receive the grace that dwells within them, being unwilling to reconcile them to the bounty of the Head.” The Body is an organism in which each member has a proper role. To despise or envy another member is to cut oneself off from the grace flowing from the Head. Spiritual gifts are meaningful only when exercised in concert with the Body.

Gratitude and prayer are emphasized as the proper response to others’ gifts: “You ought to give thanks for our members and ask that you too might be granted the grace that has been given to them. For the Word is rich, generous and kind. Here he gives away gifts to his men without jealousy, according to ... (11 lines missing)... appeared in each of the members [...] himself [...] since they do not fight at all with one another on account of their difference(s). Rather, by laboring with one another, they will work with one another, and if one of them suffers, they will suffer with him, and when each one is saved, they are saved together.” Gifts are meant to bind the community together, promoting mutual support and shared salvation. The richness of the Word manifests as generosity, not competition or envy.

The unequal distribution of gifts does not reflect favoritism or injustice: “The unequal ‘outpouring of (spiritual) gifts’ (Interp. Knowl. 16.30;) from the Head upon the members of the church may seem unjust, it is important that the members do not become ‘jealous’ of one another. Since in reality the source of these gifts is always the same; the Logos who is ‘rich, not jealous, and kind’.” The Head, as the source of all gifts, distributes according to divine wisdom. Differences in the apparent abundance of gifts serve the collective good rather than personal status.

Those with fewer gifts are instructed to seek grace: “Instead of being jealous, those with inferior spiritual gifts are instructed to ‘pray’ (Interp. Knowl. 16.22; ), or ‘ask’ (Interp. Knowl. 17.32–33;) for the ‘grace’ (Interp. Knowl. 16.23; Interp. Knowl. 17.34;) which flows from the crucified Christ.” Prayer and desire for grace are means of participation in the divine life, allowing members to grow spiritually without envy. Conversely, jealousy blocks the path: “On the other hand, one who is jealous blocks their own ‘path’ ‘since he excludes only himself from the gift, and he is ignorant before God’ (Interp. Knowl. 15.31–33).”

The Body metaphor extends to all members: “The community is exhorted not to be jealous over whether they have been put ‘in the class of a hand, or an eye, or a foot’ (Interp. Knowl. 18.31–32;), but rather to be thankful that they exist as part of ‘the Body’ (Interp. Knowl. 18.34; ), since when such members exist apart from the Body, ‘they die’ (Interp. Knowl. 17.22;).” Each member has a designated role. Spiritual gifts are meaningful only in the context of the Body, and isolation or envy leads to spiritual death.

Prophecy, though sometimes overlooked in scholarship, is recognized as a legitimate gift within the Valentinian Church: “Prophecy is not the kind of activity that is most often associated with Valentinianism, since there has been a somewhat onesided tendency in scholarship to highlight the movement’s intellectual characteristics and its resemblance to a philosophical school. It is nevertheless to be noted that prophecy is mentioned as a normal phenomenon in the Valentinian Church not only in Interpretation of Knowledge, but also in the Excerpts from Theodotus 24: ‘The Valentinians say that the Spirit which each of the prophets possessed as a special gift for his service, has been poured out upon all those who belong to the Church. For this reason the signs of the Spirit as well, healings and prophecies are carried out through the Church.’”

The text warns against comparison and envy: “‘Don’t say, ‘Why does that one speak but I do not speak.’’ What kind of speaking may be meant here? It is based on logos and must be different from the kind of prophetic speech that was separately mentioned previously.” Speaking in the church, whether prophetic or based on the Word, is a gift from the Head, distributed for the benefit of the Body. One should not despair if another member’s abilities appear more advanced, for all are endowed with grace according to the divine plan.

In practice, this teaching fosters harmony within the community. Members are encouraged to rejoice in one another’s gifts: “By having a brother who regards us as he also is, one glorifies the one who gives us grace.” They are also instructed to pray for the grace available to others and to participate actively in the life of the Body. Spiritual gifts are not personal property but shared blessings flowing from the Head to the community.

The relationship of the Head to the Body is central: “By loving the Head who possesses them, you also possess the one from whom it is that these outpourings of gifts exist among your brethren.” The Head, or Logos, is the source and sustainer of all spiritual life. Gifts of prophecy, teaching, discernment, and other charisms flow from the Head, giving structure and vitality to the Body. This ensures that the community remains unified despite differences in individual capacities.

In summary, The Interpretation of Knowledge presents a vision of the Valentinian Church in which spiritual gifts are distributed by the Head to the members of the Body according to divine wisdom. The gifts vary in degree and type, yet all originate from the same source, the Logos, who is “rich, not jealous, and kind.” Members are called to rejoice in one another’s gifts, to pray for grace, and to participate fully in the life of the Body. Envy and comparison are condemned because they block the reception of grace and disrupt unity.

The Body functions as an interconnected spiritual organism: “They cannot all become entirely a foot or entirely an eye or entirely a hand, since these members will not live alone; rather they are dead.” Each member has a role that complements the others, and the flourishing of the Body depends on mutual recognition and cooperation. Prophetic gifts, speaking, and discernment are all expressions of divine grace, distributed for the edification of the whole community.

Ultimately, the Head and the Body form a unified system in which grace flows from the divine source, through the community, and back to the individual. Members are encouraged to rejoice in the gifts of others, pray for grace, and recognize that all spiritual abilities are manifestations of the Logos. In this way, the Valentinian Church models a community in which spiritual gifts, love for the Head, and unity in the Body are inseparable.

Through these teachings, The Interpretation of Knowledge provides not only a theological framework but also practical guidance for spiritual living: humility, gratitude, prayer, reconciliation, and recognition of divine gifts in others. The Body thrives when members act in harmony, each exercising their gifts in alignment with the Head. Spiritual gifts are not only tools for personal development but also means for the community to manifest divine life collectively.

By integrating the metaphors of the Body with the distribution of spiritual gifts, the text underscores the communal and hierarchical nature of grace: “Here he gives away gifts to his men without jealousy, according to ... (11 lines missing)... appeared in each of the members [...] himself [...] since they do not fight at all with one another on account of their difference(s). Rather, by laboring with one another, they will work with one another, and if one of them suffers, they will suffer with him, and when each one is saved, they are saved together.” Salvation and spiritual growth are inseparable from participation in the Body and the exercise of gifts received from the Head.

Thus, the Head, the Body, and spiritual gifts form an integrated system of spiritual life in the Valentinian tradition. Gifts are not possessed individually but are distributed by the Head for the benefit of the Body. The faithful are called to rejoice in one another, pray for grace, avoid jealousy, and recognize that all differences in spiritual capacity serve the unity and flourishing of the community.


Word count: 2,017


.



 Aeons and Spiritual Gifts in *The Interpretation of Knowledge


The interpretation of knowledge Nag Hammadi Library 

Likewise I became very small, so that through my humility I might take you up to the great height, whence you had fallen. You were taken to this pit. If now you believe in me, it is I who shall take you above, through this shape that you see. It is I who shall bear you upon my shoulders. Enter through the rib whence you came and hide yourself from the beasts. The burden that you bear now is not yours. Whenever you (fem.) go ... (14 lines missing)... from his glory [...] from the first. From being counted with the female, sleep brought labor and the sabbath, which is the world. For from being counted with the Father, sleep brought the sabbath and the exodus from the world of the beasts. For the world is from beasts and it is a beast. Therefore he that is lost has been reckoned to the crafty one, and that one is from the beasts that came forth. They put upon him a garment of condemnation, for the female had no other garment for clothing her seed except the one she brought on the sabbath. For no beast exists in the Aeon. For the Father does not keep the sabbath, but (rather) actuates the Son, and through the Son he continued to provide himself with the Aeons. The Father has living rational elements from which he puts on my members as garments. The man ... (11 lines missing)... this is the name. The [...] he emitted himself and he emitted the reproached one. The one who was reproached changed (his) name and, along with that which would be like the reproach, he appeared as flesh. And the humiliated one has no equipment. He has no need of the glory that is not his; he has his own glory with the name, which is the Son. Now he came that we might become glorious through the humiliated one that dwells in the places of humiliation. And through him who was reproached we receive the forgiveness of sins. And through the one who was reproached and the one who was redeemed we receive grace.

But who is it that redeemed the one who was reproached? It is the emanation of the name. For just as the flesh has need of a name, so also is the flesh an Aeon that Wisdom has emitted. It received the majesty that is descending, so that the Aeon might enter the one who was reproached, that we might escape the disgrace of the carcass and be regenerated in the flesh and blood of ... (8 lines missing)... destiny. He [...] and the Aeons [...] they accepted the Son although he was a complete mystery [...] each one of his members [...] grace. When he cried out, he was separated from the Church like portions of the darkness from the Mother, while his feet provided him traces, and these scorched the path of the ascent to the Father.

Moreover, if they would wait for the exodus from the (earthly) harmony, they will come to the Aeon. If they are fit to share in the (true) harmony, how much the more those who derive from the single unity? They ought to be reconciled with one another. Do not accuse your Head because it has not appointed you as an eye but rather as a finger. And do not be jealous of that which has been put in the class of an eye or a hand or a foot, but be thankful that you do not exist outside the Body. On the contrary, you have the same Head on whose account the eye exists, as well as the hand and the foot and the rest of the parts. Why do you despise the one that is appointed as [...] it desired to [...] you slandered [...] does not embrace [...] unmixed body [...] chosen [...] dissolve [...] of the Aeon [...] descent [...] however plucked us from <the> Aeons that exist in that place. Some exist in the visible Church - those who exist in the Church of men - and unanimously they proclaim to one another the Pleroma of their aeon. And some exist for death in the Church on whose behalf they go - she for whom they are death - while others are for life. Therefore they are lovers of abundant life. And each of the rest endures by his own root. He puts forth fruit that is like him, since the roots have a connection with one another and their fruits are undivided, the best of each. They possess them, existing for them and for one another. So let us become like the roots, since we are equal [...] that Aeon [...] those who are not ours [...] above the [...] grasp him [...] since [...] your soul. He will [...] we gave you to him. If you purify it, it abides in me. If you enclose it, it belongs to the Devil. Even if you kill his forces that are active, it will be with you. For if the soul is dead, still it was enacted upon (by) the rulers and authorities.

Here’s a full 2000-word document based on the passage from *The Interpretation of Knowledge* in the Nag Hammadi Library, integrating all quotations and placing them in context while explaining the relationship between Aeons and spiritual gifts:

---

## Aeons and Spiritual Gifts in *The Interpretation of Knowledge*

In *The Interpretation of Knowledge*, the concepts of Aeons and spiritual gifts are closely intertwined, yet distinct. The text presents Aeons as higher spiritual realms or states of being, while spiritual gifts are the manifestations of divine grace distributed to the members of the body. Together, they form a coherent vision of Gnostic cosmology, in which the faithful participate in divine life, guided by the Head, who is the source of both gifts and Aeons.

The text begins with an appeal to humility and divine guidance: “Likewise I became very small, so that through my humility I might take you up to the great height, whence you had fallen. You were taken to this pit. If now you believe in me, it is I who shall take you above, through this shape that you see. It is I who shall bear you upon my shoulders. Enter through the rib whence you came and hide yourself from the beasts. The burden that you bear now is not yours.” Here, the speaker, identified with the Son, emphasizes that salvation and ascent are mediated through humility and faith. The believer’s current struggles, symbolized by the “burden” and the pit, are not their ultimate condition, but a stage from which the divine can lift them.

The passage continues with the interplay between humanity, the world, and the Aeons: “From being counted with the female, sleep brought labor and the sabbath, which is the world. For from being counted with the Father, sleep brought the sabbath and the exodus from the world of the beasts. For the world is from beasts and it is a beast. Therefore he that is lost has been reckoned to the crafty one, and that one is from the beasts that came forth. They put upon him a garment of condemnation, for the female had no other garment for clothing her seed except the one she brought on the sabbath.” This portion illustrates the Gnostic view that the material world is a domain of corruption—“from beasts and it is a beast”—and that humanity’s fall into this world necessitates redemption. Aeons, in contrast, exist beyond this realm of beasts, and no “beast exists in the Aeon.”

The text clarifies the role of divine mediation in the dispensation of Aeons: “For the Father does not keep the sabbath, but (rather) actuates the Son, and through the Son he continued to provide himself with the Aeons. The Father has living rational elements from which he puts on my members as garments.” Here, the Son acts as the mediator through whom the Father dispenses Aeons and spiritual elements to the members of the spiritual body. Aeons are thus understood as manifestations of divine life, available to those who are aligned with the Head.

The narrative also emphasizes the mystery of redemption through the humiliated one: “The one who was reproached changed (his) name and, along with that which would be like the reproach, he appeared as flesh. And the humiliated one has no equipment. He has no need of the glory that is not his; he has his own glory with the name, which is the Son. Now he came that we might become glorious through the humiliated one that dwells in the places of humiliation. And through him who was reproached we receive the forgiveness of sins. And through the one who was reproached and the one who was redeemed we receive grace.” This demonstrates the dual function of the Son: to bear the burden of humiliation and to distribute grace and redemption to believers. Spiritual gifts flow from this same source, enabling the faithful to participate in the divine life.

The connection between Aeons and gifts is further emphasized: “But who is it that redeemed the one who was reproached? It is the emanation of the name. For just as the flesh has need of a name, so also is the flesh an Aeon that Wisdom has emitted. It received the majesty that is descending, so that the Aeon might enter the one who was reproached, that we might escape the disgrace of the carcass and be regenerated in the flesh and blood of ... (8 lines missing)... destiny. He [...] and the Aeons [...] they accepted the Son although he was a complete mystery [...] each one of his members [...] grace.” Here, the Aeons are directly connected to the process of redemption: they enter the human realm through the Son, restoring believers to their proper spiritual stature, while simultaneously distributing grace to each member.

The text moves from the cosmic to the communal, explaining how believers should relate to one another: “Moreover, if they would wait for the exodus from the (earthly) harmony, they will come to the Aeon. If they are fit to share in the (true) harmony, how much the more those who derive from the single unity? They ought to be reconciled with one another. Do not accuse your Head because it has not appointed you as an eye but rather as a finger. And do not be jealous of that which has been put in the class of an eye or a hand or a foot, but be thankful that you do not exist outside the Body.” Spiritual gifts, like prophetic insight or discernment of the Word, are distributed according to the will of the Head. Believers must not envy roles or gifts, because all contribute to the life of the body. The metaphor of the body—eye, hand, foot—emphasizes the interdependence of all members and the unity required to participate fully in divine life.

The text reinforces this communal aspect: “On the contrary, you have the same Head on whose account the eye exists, as well as the hand and the foot and the rest of the parts. Why do you despise the one that is appointed as [...] it desired to [...] you slandered [...] does not embrace [...] unmixed body [...] chosen [...] dissolve [...] of the Aeon [...] descent [...] however plucked us from <the> Aeons that exist in that place. Some exist in the visible Church - those who exist in the Church of men - and unanimously they proclaim to one another the Pleroma of their aeon. And some exist for death in the Church on whose behalf they go - she for whom they are death - while others are for life. Therefore they are lovers of abundant life.” The passage distinguishes between believers who exist in the visible Church, those destined for death, and those aligned with life. The proclamation of the Pleroma, or fullness of their Aeon, signifies a shared spiritual reality, experienced collectively by the faithful.

The text emphasizes rootedness and interconnection: “And each of the rest endures by his own root. He puts forth fruit that is like him, since the roots have a connection with one another and their fruits are undivided, the best of each. They possess them, existing for them and for one another. So let us become like the roots, since we are equal [...] that Aeon [...] those who are not ours [...] above the [...] grasp him [...] since [...] your soul.” Spiritual life is both individual and communal. Believers are like roots, producing fruits that reflect their own nature, yet connected to others in a unified whole. This connection ensures that gifts and blessings circulate, enhancing the collective spiritual body and preparing members for participation in the Aeons.

The text concludes with a warning about spiritual neglect: “He will [...] we gave you to him. If you purify it, it abides in me. If you enclose it, it belongs to the Devil. Even if you kill his forces that are active, it will be with you. For if the soul is dead, still it was enacted upon (by) the rulers and authorities.” Believers must actively participate in purification to ensure their soul aligns with the divine will. Spiritual gifts are meaningful only when exercised in harmony with the body and the Head. Without this alignment, one risks falling under the influence of the rulers and authorities, or the Devil.

**The Distinction Between Aeons and Spiritual Gifts**

From this text, it is clear that Aeons and spiritual gifts are related but not identical. Aeons are the **destination or fullness of spiritual existence**, representing the true harmony and unity of the Pleroma. Spiritual gifts, by contrast, are **expressions of divine grace distributed to the members of the body**, enabling them to act within the community and participate in divine life. The gifts of prophecy, teaching, discernment, and other charisms allow believers to contribute to the life of the spiritual body, whereas Aeons are the spiritual realms or conditions toward which the faithful ascend.

Gifts function within the present reality, binding members together: “Do not accuse your Head because it has not appointed you as an eye but rather as a finger. And do not be jealous of that which has been put in the class of an eye or a hand or a foot, but be thankful that you do not exist outside the Body.” They are practical manifestations of grace that maintain unity and prevent division. Aeons, in contrast, are the **reward or condition achieved through alignment with the Head**, awaiting those who “wait for the exodus from the (earthly) harmony” and are “fit to share in the (true) harmony.”

Moreover, the distribution of Aeons is mediated through the Son: “For the Father does not keep the sabbath, but (rather) actuates the Son, and through the Son he continued to provide himself with the Aeons.” This indicates that Aeons are **cosmic realities**, connected to the divine order, rather than temporary abilities exercised by believers. Gifts, however, are given for immediate participation, communal edification, and the exercise of grace.

Finally, the text underscores that both gifts and Aeons require proper disposition: purification, humility, and communal harmony. “If you purify it, it abides in me. If you enclose it, it belongs to the Devil.” Spiritual maturity, therefore, is measured both by the faithful exercise of gifts and the readiness to enter the Aeons. Together, these elements form a complete vision of Gnostic spiritual life: **the believer grows through gifts, aligned with the Head, and ultimately reaches the Aeons, the fullness of spiritual harmony.**

In conclusion, *The Interpretation of Knowledge* presents a coherent Gnostic vision in which Aeons and spiritual gifts are interrelated but distinct. Aeons are the **ultimate spiritual realms**, the Pleroma to which the faithful ascend, while spiritual gifts are the **tools and expressions of grace** that allow believers to participate in divine life here and now. Both are rooted in the same divine source, distributed by the Head and mediated through the Son, and both require humility, reconciliation, and purification to be properly received. The faithful, by acknowledging and exercising their gifts, participating in the communal body, and aligning themselves with the Head, can prepare themselves to enter the Aeons, participate in the Pleroma, and attain the fullness of spiritual life.


Friday, 6 September 2019

Valentinian Cosmology Explained


Valentinian Cosmology








Valentinian Cosmology: The Structure of the Pleroma and the Drama of the Aeons

Valentinian Cosmology is a complex doctrinal system. In modern discussions of Gnosticism, some people claim that Gnosticism is “post-doctrinal” and that doctrine or dogma are negative things. However, this idea does not reflect the reality of the classical Gnostic schools. For the ancient Gnostics—especially the Valentinians—doctrine was essential. Cosmology was not merely speculative mythology but a structured theological framework explaining the origin of the universe and the nature of humanity.

Cosmology directly determines anthropology. Cosmogony is the study of the creation of the universe, while Christian anthropology is the study of the human being in relation to the Deity. For the Valentinians, understanding the structure of reality reveals the nature and destiny of humanity. Human existence is interpreted through the cosmic drama that unfolds in the divine realm.

Valentinian cosmology is rooted primarily in the prologue of the Gospel of John. Valentinians interpreted the opening verses of John as describing the primordial structure of divine reality prior to the creation of the visible universe. The prologue, in their view, reveals the divine attributes that exist within the Deity and which together form the Pleroma.

The Valentinians believed that certain Greek terms appearing in the prologue of John and in the letters of Paul describe the full range of divine attributes. These attributes are personified as Aeons—divine realities that together form the fullness of existence beyond the visible universe.

To explain the divine attributes, Valentinian teachers referred to the opening lines of the Gospel of John, where it is written that the Word existed in the beginning. They interpreted this passage not merely as referring to speech but to the internal activity of divine consciousness. According to the Valentinian teacher Theodotus:

“Through his own Thought as the one who knew himself, he (the Father) brought forth the spirit of knowledge, which is in knowledge, the Only-Begotten (Son)” (Excerpts of Theodotus 7:1).

Thus the Word refers to the internal manifestation of the divine mind.

The Pleroma

The central concept of Valentinian cosmology is the Pleroma.

The word Pleroma means “fullness.” It refers to the complete totality of divine existence beyond the visible universe. It is the realm of the Aeons, the heavens, or the spiritual universe.

The Pleroma, however, was not believed to exist eternally in its present form. According to Valentinian tradition, it was produced through a process called emanation. The Eternal Spirit generated the divine fullness through a process of self-manifestation.

As the Bruce Codex states:

“He created the holy Pleroma in this way.” (The Untitled Text in the Bruce Codex)

The source of the Pleroma is Bythos, a term meaning “Depth.” The term is associated with the language of Paul in Romans:

“O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God!” (Romans 11:33)

In Valentinian interpretation, this “Depth” represents the ultimate divine source from which all existence proceeds.

The Aeons are the manifestations of this divine source. They are not merely symbolic ideas but living expressions of divine qualities. The Tripartite Tractate explains their nature:

“For each of the aeons is a name corresponding to each of the Father's qualities and powers.” (Tripartite Tractate)

Thus each Aeon corresponds to a particular attribute of the divine mind.

The Pleroma is therefore both the dwelling place of the Aeons and the essential nature of the ultimate Deity. It represents the fullness of divine being.

Valentinian teachers also described the Pleroma as a state of consciousness. It is the realm where divine attributes exist in perfect unity and harmony.

The lower regions of the Pleroma are closest to darkness—that is, the physical universe. The physical cosmos represents the furthest extension of the divine unfolding.

Different Forms of the Myth

Valentinian cosmology appears in different forms across various texts. The basic structure remains the same, but some details differ.

For example, in the Tripartite Tractate the fall occurs because of the actions of the Logos rather than Sophia, which is the explanation found in many other texts.

Another important point is that Valentinian mythology does not use certain terms that appear in other Gnostic traditions. Names such as Barbelo or Yaldabaoth belong to Sethian mythology rather than Valentinian cosmology.

Valentinians also described the emanations of the divine fullness in terms of syzygies, meaning pairs. Each pair consists of a masculine and feminine principle representing complementary aspects of divine reality.

Examples include:

Logos (male) and Zoe (female)
Anthropos (male) and Ekklesia (female)

These pairs express the balance of complementary attributes within the divine nature.

Valentinian teachers did not necessarily consider this cosmological system to be a literal myth. Instead, it was understood as a symbolic description of the internal life of the Deity prior to creation. It may therefore be better described as a primordial drama rather than a myth.

The Pattern of Heavenly Things

The Pleroma is described as the archetypal realm—the pattern upon which the visible universe was modeled.

This idea appears in several passages of the New Testament that speak about heavenly patterns shown to Moses.

Acts records:

“Our ancestors had the tent of testimony in the wilderness, as God directed when he spoke to Moses, ordering him to make it according to the pattern he had seen.” (Acts 7:44)

The Epistle to the Hebrews expands on this idea:

“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.” (Hebrews 8:5)

And again:

“It was therefore necessary that the patterns of things in the heavens should be purified with these; but the heavenly things themselves with better sacrifices than these.” (Hebrews 9:23)

These passages were interpreted as referring to the heavenly archetypes that exist within the Pleroma.

The Jewish philosopher Philo of Alexandria described a similar concept:

“The incorporeal world then was already completed, having its seat in the Divine Reason; and the world, perceptible by the external senses, was made on the model of it; and the first portion of it, being also the most excellent of all made by the Creator, was the heaven, which he truly called the firmament, as being corporeal; for the body is by nature firm....called it the heaven, either because it was already the Boundary of everything, or because it was the first of all visible things which was created.”

Philo explains that the visible universe was created according to an earlier intellectual model existing in the divine mind. Valentinian cosmology interprets this model as the structure of the Pleroma.

The Father

Valentinian theology begins with the supreme source known as the Father.

According to the ancient sources, the Father is beyond direct perception. As Irenaeus reports:

“uncontained, incomprehensible and cannot be seen or heard” (Against Heresies 1:2:5).

Because of this, the Father cannot be described in ordinary terms. He is infinite, without beginning or end, and is the origin of everything that exists.

The Father encompasses all things while remaining greater than them. As the texts explain, everything exists within him even while appearing distinct.

The divine nature unfolds itself through a process of manifestation. This process produces the multiplicity of beings while preserving the unity of the divine source.

Valentinian writers emphasized that the divine nature includes both masculine and feminine aspects. These aspects represent the dual functions of form and substance within creation.

The feminine aspect is associated with Silence, Grace, and Thought. Silence represents the primordial state of divine tranquillity and self-awareness.

As one text explains:

“Silence is God's primordial state of tranquillity.” (Valentinian Exposition 22:24)

Thought represents the active creative principle through which subsequent states of being are produced.

The masculine aspect is associated with names such as Ineffable, Depth, and First Father. Depth represents the incomprehensible dimension of the Deity.

Some sources describe the masculine aspect as passive until activated by the creative Thought.

However, Valentinian writers emphasized that these two aspects are not separate beings. Rather, they represent simultaneous states within the divine nature.

As Hippolytus explains:

“They exist as simultaneous states of being within the Godhead.” (Refutation of Heresies 30:8)

Thus the divine unity remains intact.

The Son

The origin of the universe begins with the emanation of the Son.

In the beginning nothing existed as a separate creation. The divine fullness existed only as potential within the Father.

One source explains:

“the self-begotten contained in himself everything, which was in him in unawareness.” (Panarion 5:3)

For the process of emanation to occur, a boundary had to be established.

This boundary is called the Limit or Cross. It allows the Aeons to exist separately from the Father without dissolving back into him.

As Irenaeus explains:

“It consolidates the All and keeps it outside of the Ineffable Greatness.” (Against Heresies 1:2:2)

Through this structure the Father manifests himself in a comprehensible form.

This manifestation is the Only-Begotten Son.

The Son is the image of the incomprehensible Father. Through the Son the divine nature becomes knowable.

As the text explains:

“He who came forth from knowledge, that is, from the Father's thought became himself knowledge, that is, the Son, because 'through the Son the Father is known'.” (Excerpts of Theodotus 7:1)

Thus the Son is the mediator through whom the divine nature becomes intelligible.

The Aeons

The Son then begins the process of further emanation. From him proceed additional pairs of Aeons.

The first pair is Word and Life.

The second pair is Humanity and Church.

These pairs are described in the prologue of the Gospel of John.

Valentinian interpreters claimed that when John wrote:

“The Word existed in the Beginning” (John 1:1)

he was referring to the divine attributes Mind and Truth.

When John wrote:

“What was made had Life in union with the Word.” (John 1:4)

he referred to Word and Life.

And when he wrote:

“Life was the light of human beings.” (John 1:4)

he referred to Humanity and Church.

These eight Aeons together form what is called the Ogdoad—the first eight emanations of the divine fullness.

The texts explain their significance:

“The Eight are the root and substance of all things.” (Against Heresies 1:1:1)

From them proceed the remaining Aeons.

Ten Aeons proceed from Word and Life, and twelve Aeons proceed from Humanity and Church.

Together they form the complete set of thirty Aeons.

This structure represents the full manifestation of divine attributes within the Pleroma.

The Fall of Wisdom

Despite the harmony of the Pleroma, a crisis eventually occurs.

The Aeons desire to know the ultimate source from which they originated.

Valentinus describes this longing:

“The All went about searching for the one from whom they had come forth.” (Gospel of Truth 17:4-9)

This search leads to error.

The youngest Aeon, Wisdom (Sophia), attempts to comprehend the ultimate Father without the mediation of the Son.

This attempt produces a defective state of thought.

The text describes the result:

“ignorance of the Father caused agitation and fear.” (Gospel of Truth 17:10)

Sophia’s defective thought is described metaphorically as an abortion.

“she wished to be like the Father.” (Refutation of Heresies 30:6)

The defect is separated from the Pleroma through another boundary.

Sophia herself is restored to the fullness, but the defective thought remains outside the divine realm.

This defective state becomes the origin of the lower world.

The Lower Wisdom and the Material Realm

The defective thought remains in a realm of ignorance and suffering. This state is called the deficiency.

The lower Wisdom—often called Achamoth—represents the archetype of humanity trapped in ignorance.

She experiences grief, fear, and confusion while searching for the divine.

Eventually she repents and seeks help.

In response, the Savior descends into the deficiency.

As the text states:

“He emptied himself.” (Philippians 2:7)

Through the intervention of the Savior, Wisdom receives knowledge and is liberated from illusion.

From this encounter she produces spiritual seeds.

These seeds represent the spiritual element within human beings.

The Material Creation

The material world is then formed as a place where these spiritual seeds can develop.

Wisdom influences a figure called the Craftsman to create the universe.

Through him she forms the heavens and the earth.

The Craftsman creates seven heavens corresponding to the seven days of creation.

Human beings are formed in the image of the primordial Humanity within the Pleroma.

Each human contains multiple elements including the spiritual seed capable of receiving knowledge.

The ultimate restoration occurs when all spiritual seeds attain knowledge.

At that time the deficiency will disappear.

The text concludes with a dramatic description of the final transformation:

“the fire which is hidden in the world will blaze up and ignite and destroy all matter and consume itself at the same time and pass into nothingness.” (Against Heresies 1:7:1)

When this occurs the restoration of the Pleroma will be complete.





Who is Adam Kadmon?

Adam Kadmon 


Adam Kadmon, the architypal man was compounded of these qualities of the Spirit. Jesus, after his baptism, being the final repository of the Spirit, for it had rested in him, could now confer its several gifts on those who accepted him

Anthropos

A number of Hebrew and Greek terms refer to man. ´Adham´ means “man; human; earthling man; mankind” (generic); ´ish, “man; an individual; a husband”; ´enohsh´, “a mortal man”; ge´ver, “an ab
le-bodied man”; za·khar´, “a male”; a few other Hebrew words are also sometimes translated “man.” 

The Greek anthropos means “man; mankind” (generic); aner´, “a man; a male person; a husband.”

444. ἄνθρωπος anthropos anth’-ro-pos; from 435 and ωψ ops (the countenance; from 3700); man-faced, i.e. a human being: —  certain, man. 


 Elohim (the Powers) said: “Let us make man [´a·dham´] in our image, according to our likeness.” (Ge 1:26, 27; Pr 8:30, 31; compare Joh 1:1-3; Col 1:15-17.) 


Man was made "in the image" of the Elohim (Powers), and inasmuch as they are "sons of God," the image is divine (though the nature of man is not). James makes the point that "we are made after the similitude of God," "even the Father" (James 3:9).


"While image, then, hath reference to form or shape, 'likeness' hath regard to mental constitution, or capacity... Adam's mental capacity enabled him to comprehend and receive spiritual ideas, which moved him to veneration, hope, conscientiousness, the expression of his views, affections, and so forth. Seth was capable of the like display of intellectual and moral phenomena; and of an assimilation of character to that of his father. He was therefore in the likeness as well as in the image of Adam; and, in the same sense, they were both 'after the likeness of the Elohim.

Adam was made in the likeness of his heavenly counterpart the Adam Kadmon, the architypal man, who is the logos or the anointing spirit (Messiah or Christ)

Adam and Seth being two versions of the "Archetypal Man" or Anthropos

Ro 5:14  Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adam’s transgression, who is the figure of him that was to come.


The word ''figure" signifies type. Rotherham translates this: "Adam, who is a type of the coming one". The Greek word tupos describes a pattern, or mould, into which a final product is fitted or poured; an impression, or mark, which is made by percussion.

the One created the Anthropos in its own image, as an androgynous angel (i.e. male and female). This was the First Man Adam Kadmon,
"Adam Kadmon" (= אדם קדמון) and "Nakhash Kadmon" (= נחש קדמון), 

Anthrôpos is the pure mind a mind conceived hypostatically as emanating from God

the Anthropos -- an aeon in the Pleroma, one of the attributes of the Ultimate Oneness, 


Adam Kadmon












the Jewish concept of Adam Kadmon is the Christian concept of the “Mystical Body of Christ"

However the Christian understanding of Adam Kadmon is very different from the Jewish concept which is a primordial heavenly man. It is he that is the true “image of God,” a majestic vessel of divine glory, the ideal human (Deut. 4:32; PdRK 4:4, 12:1, Lev. R. 20:2). All earthly humans (Gen. 2-3) are in his image 


What is most striking to me is Paul’s insistence on the “order” of being. Paul pointedly states the “spiritual Adam” was not first.

So, too, it is written, "The first man, Adam, became a living being," the last Adam a life-giving spirit. But the spiritual was not first; rather the natural and then the spiritual. 

The first man was from the earth, earthly; the second man, from heaven. As was the earthly one, so also are the earthly, and as is the heavenly one, so also are the heavenly. 

Just as we have borne the image of the earthly one, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly one. (I Corinthians 15:45-50)

This indicates to me that Paul is both aware of and modified an already well-known doctrine of a “spiritual Adam” that people believed preceded the earthly Adam. Since Jesus came millenia after human creation, Paul finds it necessary for the spiritual Adam be the crowning moment of humanity, rather then its origin.

Jesus sometimes use the term "Son of man" not to refer Himself but the Heavenly Adam Kadmon, the perfect man the full grown Christ


Therefore the true Adam Kadmon is a Corporate Being the mystical body of Christ

Jesus is the head of this Adam Kadmon or son of man the true believers are the body of Adam Kadmon


“Now you are Christ’s body, and members individually,” in a spiritual sense. 1Co 12:27


Adam Kadmon also refers to a the higher state of consciousness which Jesus' atonited message produces. Jesus is the first fruits or prototype of this higher consciousness the Christ-consciousness. Jesus' aonited teachings put the body of Christ-consciousness in reach of us all.


Adam Kadmon is a Corporate Being called the Son of Man (Dan 7 Rev 1) others call it the mystical body of Christ it refers to large number/body of people who are in the Christ consciousness or the Corporate Being the Son of Man the multitudinous Christ






Wednesday, 4 September 2019

What is Repentance?

What is Repentance?





Repent is, in the original Greek, "change your mind."

repentance can mean a reformation from within see Mt 3:8  bear, therefore, fruits worthy of the reformationYoung's Literal Translation

Young's Literal Translation Mt 3:1 ¶  And in those days cometh John the Baptist, proclaiming in the wilderness of J
udea,
2  and saying, ‘Reform, for come nigh hath the reign of the heavens,’
3  for this is he who was spoken of by Isaiah the prophet, saying, ‘A voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, straight make ye His paths.’
4  And this John had his clothing of camel’s hair, and a girdle of skin round his loins, and his nourishment was locusts and honey of the field.
5  Then were going forth unto him Jerusalem, and all Judea, and all the region round about the Jordan,
6  and they were baptized in the Jordan by him, confessing their sins.
7 ¶  And having seen many of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming about his baptism, he said to them, ‘Brood of vipers! who did shew you to flee from the coming wrath?
8  bear, therefore, fruits worthy of the reformation,

Reformation The act of reforming, or the state of being reformed; change from worse to better; correction or amendment of life, manners, or of anything vicious or corrupt; as, the reformation of manners; reformation of the age; reformation of abuses. 

Jesus himself knew the heart of men and he knew that the revolution must come from within because defilement comes from within

Mark 7:17 When he had entered a house away from the crowd, his disciples began to question him about respecting this illustration.18 So he said to them, "Are you thus without understanding also? Do you not perceive that whatever enters a man from outside cannot defile him, 19 because it does not enter his heart but his stomach, and then goes out into the sewer.” 20 And he said, "What comes out of a man, that defiles a man. 21 For from within, out of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts, adulteries, fornications, murders, 22 thefts, covetousness, wickedness, deceit, lewdness, an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness. 23 All these evil things come from within and defile a man." 

The Greek word found in strong’s 3341 metanoia is translated "repentance," does not mean an admission to God of sorrow for past sin and a resolve to be good in the future. literally means is after-knowing (in contrast to foreknowing) and signifies a change in one’s mind, attitude, or purpose.

In Greek, two verbs are used in connection with repentance: me·ta·no·e´o and me·ta·me´lo·mai. The first is composed of me·ta´, meaning “after,” and no·e´o (related to nous, the mind, disposition, or moral consciousness), meaning “perceive, discern, mentally grasp, or be aware.” Hence, me·ta·no·e´o literally means afterknowing (in contrast to foreknowing) and signifies a change in one’s mind, attitude, or purpose. Me·ta·me´lo·mai, on the other hand, comes from me´lo, meaning “care for or have interest in.” The prefix me·ta´ (after) gives the verb the sense of ‘regretting’ (Mt 21:30; 2Co 7:8), or ‘repenting.’

Thus, repentance stresses the changed viewpoint or disposition, a rejecting of the past or intended course or action as undesirable. It is clear that the mission of John the baptist was to bring about a change of mind. The fundamental idea taught by the Scriptures is not that man must know sorrow, but rather that he must undergo a change, a change not merely of conduct but of the thinking and attitude.

Repentance means change of mind, transformation of the mind, change of thought and purpose.

A proper translation of the mission of John the baptist is: He came into all the region around the Jordan preaching submersion of reformation into a forgiveness of sins;





The Revolution of Consciousness is the FIFTH GOSPEL, we urgently need a radical, total and definitive change, and this is only possible through the Revolution of Consciousness. Intimate Self-Realization is only possible in isolated individuals with the help of adequate knowledge and methods. Such an intimate revolution can only occur within the individual and is in fact against the interests of Nature.

Wednesday, 28 August 2019

Symbolic Meaning to Henry Sulley's Temple

Symbolic Meaning to Henry Sulley's Temple

The squared circle has been a popular theme in the occult and in Alchemy for centuries and it still an important symbol within it. The square represents the physical world, because it represents the four elements, the four cardinal directions, the four seasons etc. The circle represents the spirit because it is infinite and it goes out in all directions. 

 In ICorinthians 6:19 and in II Corinthians 6:16 we learn that man's body is the temple or house of God

Ezekiel's Temple is a symbol of the spiritual body of man. when he attain it, he will never again leave. This enduring temple is built in the understanding of Spirit as the one and only cause of all things..



Here You can see a diagram of Henry Sulley's Temple it is a circle within a square 

Ezekiel 40-48:35. This section is in the tone of Love and it speaks of the city foursquare and the temple’s measurements.

The 4 corners of the square represents the 4 letter of the name of God YHWH Yahweh the divine name

The circle represents the fellowship of the believers and fellowship with God by sharing his divine nature 2 peter 1:4


The circle therefore represents infinite or the Pleroma 


A squared circle represents the perfection of spirit and flesh combined.


The altar is representative of the divine presence” - therefore it must be at the center


It represents the perfection of Man


The circle is the symbol of wholeness and completion


It is a symbol of the One becoming the Many without ever ceasing to be the One.



The Threefold Nature of Man

The Threefold Nature of Man
the flesh the soul and spirit





54 From Adam three natures were begotten. The first was the irrational, which was Cain's, the second the rational and just, which was Abel's, the third the spiritual, which was Seth's. Now that which is earthly is “according to the image,” that which is psychical according to the “likeness” of God, and that which is spiritual is according to the real nature; and with reference to these three, without the other children of Adam, it was said, “This is the book of the generation of men.” And because Seth was spiritual he neither tends flocks nor tills the soil but produces a child, as spiritual things do. And him, who “hoped to call upon the name of the Lord” who looked upward and whose “citizenship is in heaven” – him the world does not contain. (Extracts from the Works of Theodotus)


Man is a creation of the Demiurgus or the Elohim. He is formed from matter (hulê), receives a soul (psuchê) from the Demiurgus, and a spirit (pneuma) from Achamoth. The nature of man is thus a compound formed of three elements, Body, Soul, and Spirit.


Man has three natures spirit and soul and body


1 Thessalonians 5:23 May the very God of peace sanctify YOU completely. And sound in every respect may the spirit and soul and body of YOU [brothers] be preserved in a blameless manner at the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ. 24 He who is calling YOU is faithful, and he will also do it.



The “spirit” (Heb., ruach; Gr., pneuma) should not be confused with the “soul” (Heb., nephesh; Gr., psykhe´), for they refer to different things. Thus, Hebrews 4:12 speaks of the Word of God as ‘piercing even to the dividing of soul and spirit, and of joints and their marrow.’ (Compare also Php 1:27; 1Th 5:23.) As has been shown, the soul (nephesh; psykhe´) is the creature itself. The spirit (ruach; pneuma) generally refers to the life-force of the living creature or soul, though the original-language terms may also have other meanings.

The spirit is the mind of man the soul is the heart or emotions and of course the body is a physical nature

The “spirit” (Heb., ruach; Gr., pneuma) should not be confused with the “soul” (Heb., nephesh; Gr., psykhe´), for they refer to different things.





Definition: A Body is a physical or spiritual vessel. In other words a human or angelic body.

Definition: A Soul is a human body.

Definition: A Dead Soul is a dead body

Definition: A Spirit is a character, a personality. It is 'you'.



"Operating upon the brain [physical (body)], it [indwelling sin] excites the 'propensities' (the outward senses), and these set the 'intellect' [mental (spirit)], and 'sentiments' [moral (soul)] to work. The propensities are blind, and so are the intellect and sentiments in a purely natural state; when therefore, the latter operate under the sole impulse of the propensities, 'the understanding is darkened through ignorance, because of the blindness of the heart'". Ephesians 4:18


Man has three natures spirit and soul and body


The Flesh or hylics

hylics, also called somatics (from Gk σώμα (sōma) "body"),

An extension of the idea that flesh composes the visible, tangible parts of the body is the use of the word “flesh” to refer in a general way to the whole body. (Le 17:14; 1Ki 21:27; 2Ki 4:34) It is also used to refer to the person, or individual, as a human of flesh. (Ro 7:18; Col 2:1, 5

. “Flesh” is often used in the Bible to represent man in his imperfect state, ‘conceived in sin’ as an offspring of rebellious Adam. (Ps 51:5; Ro 5:12; Eph 2:3) In humans who are trying to serve God, ‘the spirit [impelling force emanating from the figurative heart] is eager, but the flesh is weak.’ (Mt 26:41) Within these servants of God there is a constant conflict; God’s holy spirit is a force for righteousness, but the sinful flesh continually wars against the spirit’s influence and exerts pressure to induce the individual to perform the works of the flesh. (Ro 7:18-20; Ga 5:17) The works of sinful flesh are contrasted with the fruitage of the spirit, at Galatians 5:19-23.

The Spiritual Man and The soulful.

The apostle contrasts the spiritual man with the physical man. He says: “But a physical [literally, soulical] man does not receive the things of the spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him.” (1Co 2:14) This “physical man” does not mean merely one living on earth, one with a fleshly body, for, obviously, Christians on earth have fleshly bodies. The physical man here spoken of means one who has no spiritual side to his life. He is “soulical” in that he follows the desires of the human soul to the exclusion of spiritual things.

Paul continues about the “physical man,” that he cannot get to know the things of the spirit of God “because they are examined spiritually.” Then he says: “However, the spiritual man examines indeed all things, but he himself is not examined by any man.” The spiritual man has understanding of the things God reveals; he sees also the wrong position and course of the physical man. But the spiritual man’s position, actions, and course of life cannot be understood by the physical man, neither can any man judge the spiritual man, for God only is his Judge. (Ro 14:4, 10, 11; 1Co 4:3-5) The apostle says by way of illustration and argument: “For ‘who has come to know the mind of Jehovah, that he may instruct him?’” No one, of course. “But,” Paul says of Christians, “we do have the mind of Christ.” By getting the mind of Christ, who reveals Jehovah and his purposes to Christians, they are spiritual men.—1Co 2:14-16.

James chapter 1 "A double minded man is unstable in all his ways" — The word "double-minded" is a translation of dipsuchos which signifies two-souled! One soul is for God, and one is for self! The double-minded man has feet in both camps. Jas 3:15 This wisdom is not one, from above, coming down, but is earthly, born of the soul, demoniacal!


Jude 1:19 These, are they who make complete separation, mere men of soul, Spirit, not possessing.

The Unknown God



Acts 17:23 For as I passed by, and beheld your devotions, I found an altar with this inscription, TO THE UNKNOWN GOD. Whom therefore ye ignorantly worship, him declare I unto you.

Justin Martyr says that men referred to Yahweh as "the completely hidden One."

The building of an altar to an unknown god indicated that the people of Athens desired to know God.

In his oration Paul said to the Athenians, “I found also an altar with this inscription, TO AN UNKNOWN GOD.” In intellectual consciousness what does this altar indicate? The dedication of an altar to the unknown God is an admission of ignorance, but it is often boasted of as indicative of tolerance and religious generosity. The broad-minded man with a devotional turn of mind points to his altar to the unknown God and says, “Although we know nothing about your omnipresent, spiritual God, this altar shows that we are not narrow; that we welcome all concepts of God.”

“An Unknown God,” thereby avoiding all cause for offense. At the same time, he awakened in his listeners a desire to know something of the real God, which their idol typified

The character of God as Absolute Being cannot be comprehended by the intellect. The Truth, therefore, makes a total denial of all beliefs about God of a temporal character. God does not require anything at our hands, being the source of all. Even personality is not recognized by the Divine Mind; he knows only unity and oneness in all men and all nations.



Saturday, 24 August 2019

Spiritual Evolution

Spiritual evolution





Image result for Spiritual evolution bible

evolution--comes from the word evolve meaning to develop gradually.

The development obtained by a believer through accurate knowledge of the law of Christ. It is the result of the development of the divine Logos in mind. What we are and what we are to be come is the result of the evolving of our consciousness, and this state of mind or new awareness is the result of seed spirit-word sown in the mind.


God implanted His perfect word--developed this seed word in each true believer.


Jesus said: Look, the sower went out, he filled his hand (and) cast (the seed). Some fell upon the road; the birds came, they gathered them. Others fell upon the rock, and struck no root in the ground, nor did they produce any ears. And others fell on the thorns; they choked the seed and the worm ate them. And others fell on the good earth, and it produced good fruit; it yielded sixty per measure and a hundred and twenty per measure.


Thus spiritual evolution is the unfolding in consciousness of that which God has implanted in a believer.


the evolving of our consciousness is the transforming of our mind


Romans 12:2 Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is--his good, pleasing and perfect will.


Therefore spiritual evolution, is the unfolding of the Spirit of God into action. The mind of a believer is the garden of God, of which the seed is the spirit-word sown into our mind and heart. The Christ consciousness or Christ mind evolution in a believer is plainly taught in the Scriptures as the most important realization of every believer.


1 Corinthians 2:16 For WHO HAS KNOWN THE MIND OF YAHWEH, THAT HE WILL INSTRUCT HIM? But we have the mind of Christ.


Romans 8:9 However, you are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if indeed the Spirit of God dwells in you But if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Him.



Colossians 3:10 and have put on the new man who is renewed in knowledge according to the image of Him who created him, 
11 where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcised nor uncircumcised, slave nor free, but Christ is all and in all.
12 Therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, put on tender mercies, kindness, humility, meekness, longsuffering; 
13 bearing with one another, and forgiving one another, if anyone has a complaint against another; even as Christ forgave you, so you also must do. 
14 But above all these things put on love, which is the bond of perfection.

Without some evidence in us of the Christ consciousness or the mind of Christ we are little better than animals. When through faith in the reality of things spiritual we begin conscious evolution there is great rejoicing; "we rejoice in hope of the glory of God."


The old man and the new man

The old man is the outward senses, the carnal mind, the thinking of the flesh, the ego or personality. The old man is separate in consciousness from God. This is a believer before he or she receives the new life that is in Christ.

We must crucify the old man and remove him out of our consciousness so that the Christ may be resurrected in us. This we do by the renewing of our mind.

Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind
and have put on the new self who is being renewed to a true knowledge according to the image of the One who created him

The "new man" is born of the word of God.  A birth is a coming into a state of being. The "new birth" is the coming into a higher state of being. The realisation by the believer of his or her spiritual identity, the Christ consciousness the real seal.

The contrast between the old man and the new man is similar to that which Paul draws in 1 Cor. 15:45 between the “first man”, Adam, and the “last” man, Christ. Therefore I suggest that the “old man” here is a reference to our status in Adam; by baptism we pass from that status to that of the “new man”, Christ. Eph. 4:22-24 exhorts baptized believers to put off the old man and put on the new man- i.e. to live out in practice the change in status which occurred in baptism.

“The new man” is composed of both Jew and Gentile (Eph. 2:15; Col. 3:10,11)- connecting with how Gal. 3:27-29 explains that baptism into Christ likewise gives us a status of “in Christ” which thereby removes any difference between Jew and Gentile. If “the old man” refers to our status in Adam which has now ended, been crucified, then we need no longer be phased by the fact that no baptized believer manages to totally avoid sinning; none of us have put to death the old manner of life in totality. All our days we seek to respond to the change of status which has occurred, living appropriate to that change.

We must " put off the old man" (Eph. 4:22); and yet " ye have put off the old man" (Col. 3:9). Have we, or haven't we? In God's eyes we have, in that the new man has been created, and the old man died in the waters of baptism. But of course we are still in the flesh; and the old man must yet be put off. What happened at our baptism must be an ongoing process; of laying the old man to rest in death, and rising again in the newness of life. The Gospel 'instructs us to the intent that, having once and for all put away ungodliness (i.e. in baptism) and worldly lusts, we should live in a holy manner' (Tit. 2:12 Gk.). Having put these things off in baptism, we must live a life of putting them off.

Thursday, 22 August 2019

Male and Female Demons The Gospel of Philip

Male and Female Demons The Gospel of Philip




The Gospel of Philip: 

The forms of evil spirit include male ones and female ones. The males are they which unite with the souls which inhabit a female form, but the females are they which are mingled with those in a male form, though one who was disobedient. And none shall be able to escape them, since they detain him if he does not receive a male power or a female power, the bridegroom and the bride. One receives them from the mirrored bridal chamber. When the wanton women see a male sitting alone, they leap down on him and play with him and defile him. So also the lecherous men, when they see a beautiful woman sitting alone, they persuade her and compel her, wishing to defile her. But if they see the man and his wife sitting beside one another, the female cannot come into the man, nor can the male come into the woman. So if the image and the angel are united with one another, neither can any venture to go into the man or the woman.
He who comes out of the world, and so can no longer be detained on the grounds that he was in the world, evidently is above the desire of the [...] and fear. He is master over [...]. He is superior to envy. If [...] comes, they seize him and throttle him. And how will this one be able to escape the great [...] powers? How will he be able to [...]? There are some who say, "We are faithful" in order that [...] the unclean spirits and the demons. For if they had the Holy Spirit, no unclean spirit would cleave to them. Fear not the flesh nor love it. If you fear it, it will gain mastery over you. If you love it, it will swallow and paralyze you.

in this part of the Gospel of Philip 65.1-66.7 the "evil spirit" and the "unclean spirits and the demons" are the passions of the flesh that is why Philip uses these expressions together "For if they had the Holy Spirit, no unclean spirit would cleave to them. Fear not the flesh nor love it. If you fear it, it will gain mastery over you. If you love it, it will swallow and paralyze you."


 thus unclean spirits are the thinking of the flesh and therefore we should not fear nor love the flesh only if we have the spirit of Christ (the Christ-Consciousness) can we fight against the flesh

male demons=wrath 
female demons=lust

The forms of evil spirit include male ones and female ones [evil spirits (thoughts and intents) are restricted to the “waters below” and therefore are male and female in form]. The males are they which unite with the souls which inhabit a female form [the physical female body], but the females are they which are mingled with those in a male form, though one who was disobedient [so these male forms were able to “hear the word” but fell out of the way - it seems to be more clearly explained below]. (Philip 46)

And none [who are “disobedient”] shall be able to escape them, since they detain him [“they do not go in yet hinder those who are from going in” this is about our personal battle between the spirit and the flesh] if he does not receive a male power [i.e. Christ in you”] or a female power [the “holy spirit”], the bridegroom and the bride [one needs both of these to unite in the bridal chamber (our heart) to conceive “regeneration” i.e. a son of God]. One receives them from the mirrored bridal chamber [the spiritual body (the image)]. When the wanton women [female demon] see a male [one who has the seed of Christ] sitting alone [not yet having received holy spirit (still using his own intellect and knowledge and not being guided by the spirit of truth)], they [the demons] leap down on him and play with him and defile him [they are able to subvert his mind towards the carnal nature]. So also the lecherous men [male demons], when they see a beautiful woman [one who has received holy spirit] sitting alone [has not yet received the seed of Christ (masculine seed) in them], they persuade her and compel her, wishing to defile her [they “wish to” but cannot for the holy spirit cannot be defiled – this one WILL eventually be drawn to and set-apart to Christ]. (Philip 47)

But if they see the man and his wife sitting beside one another [one who has both Christ (the masculine seed) in them and the holy spirit (truth and enlightenment of who and what you are) united as one in your heart] the female [demons] cannot come into the man, nor can the male [demons] come into the woman. So if the image [of God i.e. the heart of “man”] and the angel [holy spirit] are united with one another, neither can any venture to go into the man or the woman. (Philip 48) [Hence “What God has yoked together, let no man put asunder” – this is not the same as what men yoke together i.e. flesh to flesh – the Father yokes spirit to spirit (once you belong to Him it’s the end of the matter). Judas having not yet received holy spirit (true apprehension of who and what he is) was left vulnerable to the evil demon (the adversary which is that carnal nature which beguiles one into evil intent) who easily overcame him and used him for God’s own purpose – demons (evil thoughts and intentions) whether male (appealing to the brutish animal nature) of female (appealing to the emotions) are from within, they are the carnal and perverted nature of our subjective minds to the influences of others i.e. spiritual thievery and we all have these until they are destroyed (cast out of our hearts)]