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Friday, 14 December 2018
Know Thyself and the Devil Romans 7:18-21
Wednesday, 12 December 2018
The Second Emanation: The Creation of the Physical Universe
Dark Matter, Thick Darkness, and the Abode of God
Scripture repeatedly describes the dwelling of the Deity as “thick darkness” (Exodus 20:21; Deuteronomy 4:11; 1 Kings 8:12; Psalms 18:11; 97:2). This is not darkness as absence of light, but an impenetrable radiance that to mortal perception appears as obscurity. It may well be that what physicists call “dark matter” or “dark energy” is related to this reality — the invisible, pervasive substance of the divine realm, the very abode of the Deity and His spiritual sons. From this hidden dimension, the Spirit extends into all realms, ordering both the spiritual and the physical universes.
Thus the visible universe is not alien to the divine but rooted in it. Its atoms, forces, and structures are the outflow of divine power, sustained moment by moment by the Spirit that pervades all things. The second emanation is therefore not the production of something from nothing, but the shaping of what is seen from the unseen substance of the Deity, “so that what is seen has come to be out of things which are not visible” (Hebrews 11:3).
In this way, creation is a continuous testimony to the Father, the Source from whom, through whom, and for whom are all things. The physical universe is not a realm separate from God but an emanation from His very being, sustained by His Spirit, and destined to be filled with His glory.
“All the emanations from the Father, therefore, are Pleromas, and all his emanations have their roots in the one who caused them all to grow from himself.” The Gospel of Truth, The Nag Hammadi Library
There are two emanations the first emanation is to about the self-realization of the Uncreated Eternal Spirit the second emanation is the manifestation of creation both the spiritual universe and the physical universe
This study will deal with the the second emanation the creation of the the physical universe
GOD AND HIS SPIRIT IN RELATION TO THE UNIVERSE
What is the meaning of the word spirit? To what language does the word belong? It is a Latin word, as, “spiritus,” a blowing, from spiro, “to breathe, breathe out, exhale.” Hence Spirit is that also which is exhaled. In the Greek, the word which answers to spirit is pneuma, which signifies the same as spiro. In the Hebrew it is ruach. But these words, while they tell us that they stand for something radiated or exhaled, do not tell us what the essence or substance of the exhalation, or radiation, is. It may be air in motion, or wind, breath, electricity, or some other agent. What it is the word represents, depends upon something more than etymology can supply. The words ruach, pneuma, spiritus and spirit do not signify the same thing in all places where they occur; still, whatever the thing is, the radical idea is a motion outwards from, into.
The first place in the Bible where the word occurs is in Gen. i. 2. Here it is ruach Elohim, a principle going out of, or from, the Mighty Ones. What could this be? It may be known by its effects. “It brooded upon the face of the waters,”—of the waters which in the primeval state of the earth, covered its entire surface. This brooding principle covered the surface and penetrated its substance in all its atoms, so that it was only necessary for the word of command to go forth from the Mighty, and whatever might be commanded would be done.
Everything was made by this brooding principle as the executive of divine Wisdom. “By His spirit he hath garnished the heavens;” “He sendeth forth his spirit; they are created,” even all the things detailed by Moses. Hence, Job says, “the ruach of Ail hath made me, and the Nishmah of SHADDAI hath given me life. The Spirit is, therefore, formative. It is creative power. It made the light; it divided the vapours from the waters by an expanse; gathered the waters together in the place of seas; formed the vegetable world; established the astronomy of the heavens; developed the animal kingdom; and executed the whole so satisfactorily that the work was pronounced “very good.”
When we contemplate spirit through these results, we behold an Almighty power which is predicated of AIL—the spirit of Ail. But what is AIL? Etymologically, it is strength, might, power. Hence the Spirit of AIL is a powerful emanation, or breathing forth of power. ALMIGHTY POWER is the fountain and origin of the universe, “out of whom are all things” says Paul (1 Cor. viii. 6). He also tells us that the fountain of Omnipotence is a glorious and torrid centre; a centre that cannot be approached by man, and the dwelling place of an invisible, intelligent, and deathless being (1 Tim. vi. 16).
This is AIL—all-wise, all-powerful, all-seeing, and all-knowing. There is only one such in the wide-extended universe. He is life and incorruptibility, and never was anything else. Here is a wonderful being, corporeal intelligence that hath always existed, and out of whom, as “THE FATHER,” all things have been produced. But of what does his substance consist? What his nature? What is he?
“HE IS SPIRIT.”
These are the words of Jesus, who knew what he affirmed. AIL is spirit, and there is a spirit of AIL—the fountain and the stream are both spirit, and hold a like relation that radiant caloric does to iron glowing with a white heat. But what is the glowing substance of Deity? That which shall be manifested in the saints when they become spirit, for they shall be like him who is in the bosom of the Father. “Deity is spirit,” and to convey our conception to the reader of this substance, we would style it corporeal electricity.
We behold the lightning’s flash; we see its almighty effect upon rocks and trees, and we perceive its universality; still of its essence, we are ignorant. Our words and definitions leave this untouched. But whatever the essence may be, that corporeal essence is God, and the same incorporeal and radiant essence is the spirit of God.
Electricity or lightning is a Bible symbol for spirit. Ezekiel, son of man, priest and prophet, had visions of Elohim, who are, when manifested, spirit, being all of them post-resurrectionally begotten, and born out of spirit, and consequently consubstantial with the Father, who is spirit. In these visions of spirit, then, Ezekiel saw the living ones or Elohim come forth out of the midst of fire and brightness. His description in chap. i. 4, is symbolical of 1 Tim. vi. 16. What we call electricity, for want of a better word, in glowing combustion, he terms “fire and brightness.”
In beholding the electrically-generated beings born of the Ezekiel fire, he says “Whither the spirit was to go, they went,” because they will be spirit, so that wherever they may be, there, necessarily, corporeal-spirit will be. And, as for the likeness of the living creatures, says he, “their appearance was like burning coals of fire, and like the appearance of lamps; it went up and down among the living creatures; and the fire was bright, and out of the fire went forth lightning” or flaming electricity. “And the living creatures ran and returned as the appearance of a flash of lightning.”
In scriptural discourse, "electricity" is termed spirit, because it is radiated, or sent forth, from the substance of Almighty Power, after the tropical analogy of blowing, breathing, or exhaling. This idea is illustrated by the iron excited to white heat, or the magnet. These are solid substances, but within a certain radius, they are enveloped in an atmosphere of light and heat, or of magnetism. This atmosphere may represent the radiant power, or spirit, of the Deity; and the glowing iron and magnet, the radiating power, or substance, called DEITY.
Here, then, is spirit free, radiant, or uncombined ; and spirit in substance, corporeal, bodily existence. The latter is the original condition of spirit. It was not originally free or diffused through space, and at some particular epoch condensed, reduced to a bodily form, and individualized.
To affirm this, would be to affirm the existence of abstract intelligent power antecedent to the Hypostasis, or substance, the exact representation of which Jesus Anointed is declared now to be. No, the Substantial Father has always been substance, and has had no incorporeal predecessor in wisdom and power.
His nature is the substratum, or basis, of all conceivable existences, animate or inanimate, in all the universe ; for they are all created out of his spirit, and that spirit radiates out of his substance. It is always subordinate to His will; and accomplishes that only whereunto it is sent. Hence, it does not act independently of the radiating power. Nothing, therefore, happens by chance in the operation of the spirit.
The wisdom that ordains is in the Father; and the wisdom that executes is in the power radiating from him. This is illustrated by the fact (and we have verified the fact by experiment) that a man may simply will actions to be performed by another at a distance ; and his will, though unexpressed in words or gesture, will be done. If any action result, it will not be contrary to the will, nor can it be. It is impossible, likewise, for the spirit of the Deity to execute contrary to the will of the Deity. Hence, " THE SON," or Spirit- Emanation from the Father-Spirit-Substance, " can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do," or will; " for whatsoever he doeth," or wills," "these also doeth," or executeth, "the Son likewise"—John v. 19.
The distinction made by "philosophers" between "matter" and "spirit" is artificial, and does not obtain in scripture.The Father is matter, or substance, but he is spirit also; for that matter of which he consists, and which constitutes his nature, is spirit. This being the fact, matter is eternal. But this by no means implies that the forms of matter arc eternal likewise; for that would be to affirm that the Creator was not antecedent to his works. The dispute, then,, upon the question whether spirit existed before matter, or matter before spirit, is a vain controversy; and indicative of the ignoranee of the "philosophers" on both sides.
The one had no precedence of the other, being essentially the same. Hence matter is not essentially evil, or coiTupt and mortal; nor is it incapable of thought. The Divine Power is matter, but, though he creates evil, he is not evil, nor corruptible and mortal. There is,therefore, no force nor reason in the argument that a thing is immortal because it is immaterial, or not matter. Whatever exists is matter. Electricity is as much matter as a block of marble, the only difference is, that it is matter in a different form. Hence the immaterial is the non-existent, or nothing. To say, then, that a thing is immortal because it is immaterial, is to ailirm that it is immortal because it is nothing, or does not exist; which is the demonstration of the wisest thinking of the flesh—" the wisdom of the world " condemned as folly, working death in all that are deceived by it.
There is no part of the boundless universe where the spirit of the Divine Power is not. It pervades the atoms of all bodies and is everywhere. Hence the inquiry of Christ in prophecy, " Whither shall I go from thy spirit ? Or whither shall I flee from thy presence ? If I ascend into heaven thou art there; if I make my bed in the grave, behold thou art there. If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea; even there shall thine hand lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me. If I shall say surely the darkness shall cover me, even the night shall be light about me. Yea, the darkness hideth not from thec; but the night shineth as the day; the darkness and the light are both alike to thee."—Ps. exxxix. 7-14.
This proves what we have said, and teaches that, in a general sense, allcreatures are in the presence of the Creator; that they arc so in being contiguous to his spirit: for, as fish live, and move, and have their being in the waters, so all animals and men " live, and move, and have their being " in spirit of God. Upon this natural principle it is that Paul declared to the heathen philosophers that God is "not far from every one of us"; and that Jesus said," a sparrow shall not \ fall on the ground without the Father." Hence, in the natural or physical sense, all creatures have the spirit, and cannot live without it; so that as Job says, " If He gather to himself his spirit and his breath, all flesh shall perish together, and man shall turn again unto dust"—xxxiv. 14. Spirit develops the organism of all creatures, and preserves it from disorganization.
It is what pathologists term the vis medicatrix natwras; and physiologists, " the vital principle." When the spirit and breath of the Creator are withdrawn from a man or a sparrow, there remain no healing power and vitality in their several bodies; and the immediate tendency in them is to corruption and dust. Hence, all creatures in the air, earth, and seas, are spirit-farms. The types or patterns, after which they were created were all in the mind of Deity before they were created; and when they were formed, the formation was out of spirit-matter and by spirit according to pattern. Every creature is therefore a spirit in this sense; but not necessarily immortal because a spirit. The immortality of a spirit depends upon the constitution of the matter or substance of the peculiar form. A spirit form of a flesh and blood organization is essentially mortal and corruptible; for death and corruption are peculiar to that material constitution. The " spirits in prison " Peter speaks of, were flesh and blood organizations turned again into dust, consequent upon the Deity gathering to himself his spirit and breath. ·
His free spirit withdrawn, and the cohesive affinity of their substance departed, and its gaseous elements entered into new combinations, destructive of the forms, termed man, cattle, fowl, and so forth. Hence the Deity is styled by Moses in Numb, xxvii. 16, " YAHWEII, Elohim of the spirits of all flesh " : that is, the spirit self-styled HE SIIALL BE, is the powers of all flesh-emanations of hi9 power. The spirit-power of the lion is the power of Jehovah; and so of all other creatures. Hence the facility with wThich he can open and shut their fierce and voracious mouths, as in the case of Daniel and his persecutors. This universal diffusion of spirit places all created things in telegraphic communication with the will of the Deity. What he wills needs not batteries and wires for transmission. He has but to will and it is instantaneously responded to according to his purpose, though the locality where obedience is required be distant from his throne a hundred millions of miles. Take these two points, the throne of the Universe, and the earth we inhabit, as the two extremities of the line—the Deity at the one end, and we at the other. The intermediate space is filled with his " free spirit," radiant from his substance, and incarnately organic in all his creatures.
What we call "time" is unnecessary for the transmission of ideas. The Deity is not a being of time. He has not to move from where he is to be where he would be; for he is everywhere by spirit, and fills all. Hence his will at the throne is his will at the same instant on earth; for his intelligence and wisdom are as universal as his power and only require his will to be exercised for their manifestation in every part of his wide domain.
Now, in studying the subject of spirit we must consider it severally in its relations to things physical and natural; andto things intellectual and moral, or spiritual in a special sense. As we have seen, all mankind and animals generally are the subject of the operation of the spirit; but it is only a certain class of mankind that is operated upon in the special sense by which individuals are brought iilto harmony with the moral attributes of Deity.
The ideas and thoughts of the Deity are as much spirit as this physical power.His thoughts are moral power breathed forth in his words, and that is spirit, even as the lightning breathed forth, or radiant, from his substance is spirit. His thoughts breathed forth or revealed in any way he may determine constitute uthe truth1*, and therefore the truth is spirit. Hence, the Lord Jesus said,u My words arc spirit"; and the apostle John says, " The spirit is the truth." To produce physical results, such as raising the dead, curing the sick, speaking with tongues, speaking by inspiration, and so forth, material power or spirit is required; but when purely moml results are the things desired, the truth is the spirit that operates upon the heart.
Notes
hypostasis
(Colossians 1:15) He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation;
Heb 1:3 3 who being the brightness of the glory, and the impress of His subsistence (5287 ὑπόστασις hypostasis hoop-os’-tasis), bearing up also the all things by the saying of his might — through himself having made a cleansing of our sins, sat down at the right hand of the greatness in the highest,
5287 ὑπόστασις hypostasis hoop-os’-tasis
hypostasis
an underlying reality (pleroma) or substance, as opposed to attributes or to that which lacks substance (kenoma)
So the Deity has a substance this substance is spirit
Electricity
Deity is spirit that is corporeal energy or electricity or dark matter (Exodus 20:21) (Deuteronomy 4:11) (1Kings 8:12) (Psalms 18:11) (Psalms 97:2) (1 Corinthians 4:5) (Job 22:11-14)
from these texts above it appears that God resides in thick darkness and in heaven, so heaven arguably must equate to thick darkness.
dark matter and/or energy in our universe may actually be described as the abode of spiritual creation in the scriptures, i.e. the place where God and his spiritual sons actually live and from where they can observe and interact with us
The second holy spirit is a group of angels
The holy spirit is described by John as the helper:
26 But the helper, the holy spirit, which the Father will send in my name, that one will teach you all things and bring back to your minds all the things I told you (John 14).
But Adam's wife was described in the same way:
18 And Jehovah God went on to say: It is not good for the man to continue by himself. I am going to make a helper for him, as a complement of him (Genesis 2).
*Now we know that Yahweh is the husband to Israel and the lamb is the husband of the 144’000 Isa 54:5 Jer 31:32 Rev 19:8,9
So the holy spirit is a compound wife 'corporation', or 'incorporated' means a lot of people regarded as one body. that is a group Collective
In fact God's wife is likewise 144,000 sanctified angels who as a group make up the holy spirit, the house of God, his church.
13 But with reference to which one of the angels has he ever said: Sit at my right hand, until I place your enemies as a stool for your feet?
14 Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth on behalf of those who are going to inherit salvation? (Hebrews 1).
31 And he proceeded to fill him with the spirit of God in wisdom, in understanding and in knowledge and in every sort of craftsmanship (Exodus 35).
Since the holy spirit imparts wisdom it must be an intelligent being or beings. Likewise we can deduce that the holy spirit is a living intelligent thing because it can plead for us:
26 In like manner the spirit also joins in with help for our weakness; for the [problem of] what we should pray for as we need to we do not know, but the spirit itself pleads/intercedes for us with groanings unuttered (Romans 8).
The holy spirit does God's ministering and contains ministers, who are holy (sanctified) spirits plural. So the holy spirit is a group of angels.
Hence Paul said:
26 But the Jerusalem above is free, and she is our mother (Galatians 4).
The Jerusalem above is God's heavenly administration which is made up of all the archangels, which is all of the holy spirits. Paul explicitly states that these angels are our Mother, for they give birth to all the new angels. Now mother's plead with father's not to be too hard on errant sons. And that is precisely the meaning of Romans 8:26, the holy spirit interceding with God for the sanctified ones, is the mother interceding with the father for her sons
Heb 1: 14 Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?
Mt 12:50 For whosoever shall do the will of my Father which is in heaven, the same is my brother, and sister, and mother.
Lk 7:35 All the same, wisdom is proved righteous by all its children.”
Thus we can speak of the true believers who is conceived by the spirit-word and by the holy spirit, so as to give birth to the will of the Father, is the Mother of Jesus. And Isaiah tells us 62:5: “so shall thy sons marry thee.
The Jerusalem above is the Mother of us all (saints) including the King the Lord Jesus Christ in a spiritual sense for the Jerusalem above is made up of all true believers.
the brethren are the bride of Christ and the Mother is the Sarah Covenant styled “the Jerusalem above the Mother of us all” (Gal 4:26).
the newly born had been begotten by the spirit word (1Pet 1:23). after the birth (jn 3:3,5), it was the duty of the mother (Ecclesia) to nourish the new-born babe with the milk of the word (1Pet 2:2), supplementing it with stronger food as it developed
The Jerusalem above the Mother of us all including the King the Lord Jesus Christ is made up of all the true believers. And she is the worthy woman of Proverbs 31, of whom it is said: “Many daughters have done righteously, but you out shined them all.“
22 but ye are come unto mount Zion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to innumerable hosts of angels,
23 to the general assembly and church of the firstborn who are enrolled in heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect,
24 and to Jesus the mediator of a new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling that speaketh better than that of Abel.
God does refer to a whole nation of people as one person...
22 And you must say to Pharaoh: This is what Jehovah has said: Israel is my son, my firstborn (Exodus 4).
He also refers to the entire church as Jesus' wife, one person in the singular...
22 Let wives be in subjection to their husbands as to the Lord,
23 because a husband is head of his wife as the Christ also is head of the congregation, he being a savior of [that] body.
24 In fact, as the congregation is in subjection to the Christ, so let wives also be to their husbands in everything (Ephesians 5).
So the whole congregation is regarded as being one body, one wife.
Jesus said, "Whoever does not hate his father and his mother as I do cannot become a disciple to Me. And whoever does [not] love his father and his mother as I do cannot become a [disciple] to Me. For My mother [gave me falsehood], but [My] true [Mother] gave me life."
The Saviour himself said: Just now my mother, the Holy Spirit, took me by one of my hairs [an angel who ministered to Jesus after his sacrifice Jesus would have the promised headship of the holy spirit ] and carried me up to the great mountain, Tabor (Gospel of the Hebrews).
So the Holy Spirit is Jesus’ mum.
The Deep/Depth or Bythos Romans 11:33
First a reading from some Gnostic text
He transcends all wisdom, and is above all intellect, and is above all glory, and is above all beauty, and all sweetness, and all greatness, and any depth and any height. (The Tripartite Tractate)
The Greek word Bythos and bathos is used in the bible to describe the unfathomable ways, and nature of the Deity
Rom 11:33 O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!
The Deep or Depth Bythos
1037. βυθός buthos boo-thos’; a variation of 899; depth, i.e. (by implication) the sea: — deep.
1037. βυθός from 899 βάθος bathos bath’-os
899 βάθος from the same as 901; n n; TDNT-1:517,89; {See TDNT 118 }
AV-depth 5, deep 1, deep + 2596 1, deepness 1, deep thing 1; 9
1) depth, height
1a) of "the deep" sea
1b) metaph.
1b1) deep, extreme, poverty
1b2) of the deep things of God
899. βάθος bathos bath’-os; from the same as 901; profundity, i.e. (by implication) extent; (figuratively) mystery: — deep(-ness, things), depth.
The True Hebrew word corresponding to Bythos is Tehom (Hebrew: תְּהוֹם)
Rom 8:39 Nor height, nor depth <899>, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Rom 11:33 O the depth <899> of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!
God's judgments are a "great deep" (Psa 36:6). His "riches" refer to His abounding grace (Rom 9:23; 10:12). Cp also Eph 3:18,19: "...How wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, and to know this love that surpasses knowledge -- that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God."
Yahweh's children must manifest the same characteristic, revealing a depth of wisdom of such matters lodged in the heart (Deut. 10:16-19; Joel 2:12-13), not judging the issues of life through the "face" of the flesh
These are seen by a very careful examination of the divine excellence. The word "depth" (Gr. bathos signifies that which is profound; mysterious) indicates that which is vast and incomprehensible (see Psa. 36:6; ICor. 2:20). Mortal man cannot exhaust the greatness of the Almighty, as Job was reminded: ch. 38. The physical evidence of this majesty is seen as much in the vast expanse of the universe, as in the exquisite beauty of the tiniest flower petal.
1Cor 2:10 But God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep things <899> of God.
Psa 148:4 Praise him, ye heavens of heavens, and ye waters that be above the heavens.
Psa 92:5 O LORD, how great are thy works! and thy thoughts are very deep.
The Pleroma is both the abode of God and the essential nature of the True Ultimate God.
All those who came forth from him <who> are the aeons of the aeons, being emanations and offspring of <his> procreative nature, they too, in their procreative nature, have <given> glory to the Father, as he was the cause of their establishment. This is what we said previously, namely that he creates the aeons as roots and springs and fathers, and that he is the one to whom they give glory. (The Tripartite Tractate)
They were forever in thought, for the Father was like a thought and a place for them. When their generations had been established, the one who is completely in control wished to lay hold of and to bring forth that which was deficient in the [...] and he brought forth those [...] him. But since he is as he is, he is a spring, which is not diminished by the water which abundantly flows from it. While they were in the Father's thought, that is, in the hidden depth, the depth knew them, but they were unable to know the depth in which they were; nor was it possible for them to know themselves, nor for them to know anything else. (The Tripartite Tractate)
The Father brought forth everything, like a little child, like a drop from a spring, like a blossom from a vine, like a flower, like a <planting> [...], in need of gaining nourishment and growth and faultlessness. (The Tripartite Tractate)
The Supreme Power, or EL, is "Bythos the Springhead or source, fountain, or sole spring of Power. Moses and the prophets do not teach that "there are three persons, three essences, three somethings, or three anythings, in the One Deity; and that these three distinct units, or unities, constitute only one unit or one Unity -- and that that Tri-Unity is the God of Israel." They do not teach this.
By Bythos is meant the Springhead the source, or fountain of Deity -- the Divine Nature in its original pre-existence before every created thing. He teaches that this Springhead was a Unit --a Undivided Unit, undivided into thirds, or fractions.
Moses and the prophets teach "One" self-existent, supreme fountain of Power, EL who is Spirit, and self-named I SHALL BE, or Yahweh: that is ONE YAHWEH-SPIRIT POWER is "God" in the highest sense, and constitutes the "Bythos," or FATHER IN HEAVEN; and He is the Springhead of many streams, or rivers of spirit, which assume "organic forms," according to the will of the Yahweh-Spirit Power, and that when formed after the model, archetype, or the pattern, presented in HIS OWN HYPOSTASIS, or Substance, they become SPIRIT-ELOHIM, or sons of God; and are Spirit, because "born of the Spirit" -- Emanations of the formative Spirit being out of him. The Spirit-Elohim was also "God"; nevertheless they are created. They are formed and made out of and by that which is uncreated. They are Spirit-Forms, the substance of which (spirit) is eternal; while the forms are from a beginning. Each one is a God in the sense of partaking of THE DIVINE NATURE, and being therefore a Son of God.
Proverbs 8:22 ¶ Yahweh possessed me in the beginning of his way, before his works of old.
23 I was set up from everlasting, from the beginning, or ever the earth was.
24 When there were no depths Bythos, I was brought forth; when there were no fountains (Pleroma) abounding with water (Aeons). (As the ‘immeasurable deep’: “After these things there is another place which is broad, having hidden within it a great wealth which supplies the All. This is the immeasurable deep.)”
25 Before the mountains were settled, before the hills was I brought forth:
26 While as yet he had not made the earth, nor the fields, nor the highest part of the dust of the world.
27 When he prepared the heavens (Pleroma), I was there: when he set a compass upon the face of the depth (Bythos):
28 When he established the clouds above: when he strengthened the fountains of the deep:
29 When he gave to the sea his decree, that the waters should not pass his commandment: when he appointed the foundations of the earth:
The Untitled Text in the Bruce Codex
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 -
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.
http://www.gnosis.org/library/untitl.htm
From the Untitled Text in the Bruce Codex we can see that the deep has a number of different levels or it is structured as a hierarchy


