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FBAGMENTS OF A
FAITH FORGOTTEN
FRAGMENTS OF A
FAITH FORGOTTEN
SOME SHORT SKETCHES AMONG THE
GNOSTICS MAINLY OF THE FIRST TWO
CENTURIES— A CONTRIBUTION TO THE
STUDY OF CHRISTIAN ORIGINS BASED
ON THE MOST RECENTLY RECOVERED
MATERIALS— BY G. R. S. MEAD.
SECOND EDITION.
London and Benares
Theosophical Publishing Society
1906
So understand the Light, He answered, and make friends
with it.
HERMES THE THRICE-GREATEST.
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
THE second edition is practically a reprint of the
first. I have removed or altered a few words and
phrases, have added the newest-found Oxyrhynchus
logoi, endeavoured to bring the bibliography up-to-
date, and appended an index.
G. R. S. M.
CHELSEA, 1906.
PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION.
SOME years ago I published in magazine-form a series
of short sketches, entitled Amongst the Gnostics of
the First Two Centuries, drawn from the polemical
writings of the Church Fathers. I have since then
been asked repeatedly to rescue them from the oblivion
of the back -numbers of a Review, arid publish them
apart. This I was for long unwilling to do because
I had planned a large work, to comprise a number
of volumes, and to be called Round the Cradle of
Christendom, the materials of which I was collect
ing and gradually publishing in magazine articles,
with the intention of gathering them all finally
together, revising, and printing them in book-form.
This, however, would have meant the work of many
years, work that might never be completed (for no
man can count on the future), and which would,
therefore, have remained in the form of an apparently
disconnected mass of articles, without plan or purpose.
I have, therefore, decided to publish a pioneer sketch
—a programme as it were— the outlines of which I
hope to fill in with more detailed work in a series
of volumes, small or large as the importance of the
various subjects demands.
viii. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The second of the three main divisions of the
present volume, then, consists, for the most part, of
matter already published ; it has, however, been
throughout carefully revised. For the rest, I have
endeavoured to give the reader a bird's-eye view of
the whole field of early Gnosticism. I have, there
fore, added to the above-mentioned articles the main
material to be derived from the Uncanonical Acts
and the Coptic Gnostic works, and have prefaced
the whole with a general introduction, dealing mainly
with the background of the Gnosis. To all of this I
have appended a short conclusion and some biblio
graphical indications to help the student. The treat
ment of the subject is, therefore, new, in that no one
has previously attempted to bring the whole of these
materials together.
These sketches are not, however, primarily in
tended for the student, but are written for the
general reader. I have throughout endeavoured my
best to keep the interests of the latter always in
view, though I hope at the same time to have given
the student the assurance that the best authorities
have been invariably consulted. I have, therefore,
on the one hand, explained many things with which
the scholar is generally supposed to be already
familiar, and, on the other, have strenuously resisted
the temptation to learned annotation, to which the
subject readily lends itself in every paragraph, but
which would swell this volume to ten times its
present size. I have, then, written so that the man
of one language only may read from the first to the
PAGE
PREFACE. IX.
ranee of other tongues ; for I believe that the subject
is of profoundly human interest, and not one of
merely academical importance. It is true that the
difficulty of the subject is at times so great that even
with the best will in the world I have entirely failed
to make the matter clear; but this is also true of
every other writer in the field. The nature of these
sketches, however, is such that if one paragraph deals
with a subject which is beyond our comprehension,
another is simple enough for all to understand; so
that when the general reader comes to a difficult
passage he need not lose courage, thinking that
greater difficulty is to follow, for it frequently
happens that just the opposite is the case.
Above all things I would have it understood that
whatever views I have expressed in these pages, they
are all purely tentative; my main object has been to
hand on what the earliest Christian philosophers
and teachers wrote and thought. They seem to me
to have written many beautiful things, and I, for
my part, have learned through them to sense the
work of the Great Master in a totally new light.
G. R. S. M.
LONDON, 1900.
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS.
PAGE
INTRODUCTION 1-153
PROLEGOMENA ... ... ... 3—28
The Creed of Christendom ... ... 3
The New Era Two Thousands Years ago 4
The New Hope of To-day ... 5
Our Present Task ... ... ... 5
The One Religion ... ... 6
The Sunshine of its Doctrine ... ... 7
The Comparative Science of Religion ... 8
The True Scholar of Religion ... ... 9
The Just Method of Comparison ... 9
The Analysis of Religion ... ... 10
The Beginnings of Christianity ... 11
The First Two Centuries ... 12 v"
The "Higher Criticism" U
" Providentissimus Deus " ... ... 14
Its Immediate Result ... ... 16
The Force of Reaction ... 17
The Force of Progress 18
The Nature of Criticism ... ... 18
The Resultant 19
Xll. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PAGE
Nineteen Centuries Ago and Now ... 21
The Return of Souls ... ... ... 23
The Conditions of the Comparison ... 23
The Intensified Present ... ... 24
Occident and Orient ... ... ... 25
The Reconciliation of Science and Theology 25
The Coming and Going of Souls ... 26
The Birth and Death of Races ... 27
The Manhood of the Western World ... 28
SOME ROUGH OUTLINES OF THE
BACKGROUND OF THE GNOSIS 29—120
PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS ... ... 29 — 36
The Greatest Story in the World ... 29
The Need of a Background ... ... 30
The Main Means to a Recovery of the Outlines 30
The Gnostic Schools ... ... ... 32 V
Where to look for their Origins ... 32
The Nature of the Field to be Surveyed 33
The Soil of the Field... ... 34
Three Mother Streams ... ... 35
GREECE... ... ... ... ... 36 — 57
The Greece of 600 B.C. ... ... 36
The Precursors of Pythagoras ... ... 37
The Orphic Tradition... ... ... 39
Primitive Hellas ... ... ... 39
The Wavelets of Aryan Immigration ... 41
The Orphic Line ... 42
The Greece of " Homer " ... ... 43
" Orpheus " returns to Greece ... ... 44
The Mysteries ... ... ... 46
Their Corruption ... ... ... 47
The Reason of it 47
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS. Xlll.
PAGE
The Various Traditions ... ... 48
The Political Mysteries' ... ... 49
The Private Mysteries ... ... 49
The Orphic Communities ... ... 50
The Philosophic Mysteries ... ... 51
Pythagoras and Plato ... ... 51
Aristotle and Scepticism ... ... 53
East and West ... ... ... 54
Rome ... ... ... ... 55
The Mysteries of Mithras ... 55
EGYPT ... ... ... ... 57 — 65
The Wisdom of Egypt ... ... 57
The Blendings of Tradition ... 58
The Mystic Communities ... ... 60
The Therapeuts 60
The Earliest Christians of Eusebius ... 61
The Pseudo-Philo Theory 62
Its Death-blow ... 63
An Interesting Question of Date ... 64
The Title and Context ... ... 65
PHILO ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE LIFE ... 66 — 86
The Essseans ... ... 66
The Name Therapeut ... 66
Their Abandonment of the World ... 67
Their Retreats 68
The Mareotic Colony... ... ... 69
Their Dwellings ... 69
The Original Meaning of the Term Monastery 70
Their Prayers and Exercises ... ... 70
The Nature of their Books ... ... 71
Their Mode of Meeting ... ... 71
The Sanctuary ... 72
Their Rule . 72
xiv. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PAGE
Fasting ... ... ... ... 73
The Seventh-day Common Meal ... 73
Housing and Clothing ... 73
Their Sacred Feasts ... ... 74
The Banquet on the Fiftieth Day ... 75
Seniority ... ... ... 75
The Women Disciples 75
The Plain Couches ... ... 76
The Servers... ... ... 76
The Frugal Fare ... ... 77
The President ... 78
The Instruction ... ... ... 78
The Interpretation of Scripture ... 79
The Singing of Hymns ... ... 79
Bread and Salt ... ... ... 80
The Sacred Dancing ... ... ... 80
The Morning Prayer ... ... ... 82
A Note on the Sacred Numbers ... 82
Philo's Connection with the Therapeuts . . . 84
The Lay Disciples ... ... 85
The Variety of Communities ... ... 85
JEWRY ... ... ... ... ... 86—95
The Influence of Babylon ... ... 86
The Writing of Scripture-history ... 88
The Mythology of History ... 88
Honest Self-delusion ... ... ... 90
The Spiritualizing of Judaism ... ... 91
Zealotism ... ... ... ... 91
Pharisaism ... ... ... ... 92
The Chassidim and Essenes ... ... 93
The Inner Schools ... ... ... 94
ALEXANDRIA ... ... ... ... 95 — 120
A Bird's-eye View of the City... 96
SYNOPOSIS OF CONTENTS. XV.
PAGE
The Populace ... 100
The Library... ... ... 102
The Museum ... ... 106
The Schools of the Sophists ... ... 109
The Dawn-land ... 110
The New Religion ... 113
Jewish and Christian Schools ... 116
GENERAL AND GNOSTIC CHRISTIANITY 121—153
THE EVOLUTION OF CATHOLIC CHRISTIANITY ... 121 — 125
The Canon ... ... 121
The Gospels... 122
The Letters of Paul ... 123
The Gentilization of Christianity ... 124
THE EBIONITES ... ... ... 126—130
The Nazorseans ... ... ... 126
The Poor Men 127
The Ebionite Tradition of Jesus ... 128
THE ESSENES ... ... ... 131 — 136
Their Manner of Life ... 132
The Degrees of Holiness ... ... 133
Points of Contact with Christianity .. 134
THE TENDENCIES OF GNOSTICISM ... ... 136 — 142 k
The "Secularizing" of Christianity ... 136
Yahweh not "the Father" of Jesus ... 138
The Inner Teaching ... ... 138
Various Classes of Souls ... ... 139
The Person of Jesus ... ... ... 140
The Main Doctrines ... ... ... 141
THE LITERATURE AND SOURCES OF GNOSTICISM. 143 — 153
Literature ... ... ... ... 143
Indirect Sources ... ... ... 146
Direct Sources 151
XVI. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PAGE
THE GNOSIS ACCORDING TO ITS
FOES •- ... 155—449
SOME GNOSTIC FRAGMENTS RE
COVERED FROM THE POLEMICAL
WRITINGS OF THE CHURCH
FATHERS ... 157—414
No Classification possible ... ... 157
THE "SIMONIANS" ... ... 160—161
The Origin of the Name ... .. 160
DOSITHEUS ... ... ... ... 162 — 164
A Follower of John the Baptist 162
The Pre-Christian Gnosis ... ... 163
" SIMON MAGUS "... ... 164 174
The Ebionite "Simon" 165
The "Simonian" Literature ... ... 167
The "Simonian" System of Irenseus ... 168
The Great Announcement ... ... 170
The Hidden Fire ... 171
The Fire Tree ... ... 172
The ^Eons ... ... ... 173
MENANDER ... ... ... ... 175 177
His Date ... ... ... 175
His Doctrines ... ... ... 175
A Link with Zoroastrianism ... ... 177
SATURNINUS ... 177 180
The Chain of Teachers ... ... 177
Asceticism ... ... ... ... 17$
Summary of Doctrines ... ... 178
The Making of Man ... ... ... 180
THE "OPHITES"... ... ... ... 181 188
The Obscurity of the Subject ... 181
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS. xvii.
PAGE
The Term "Ophite" ... ... ... 182
The Serpent Symbol ... ... ... 183
The Myth of the Going-forth ... ... 186
Pseudo-philology ... ... ... 187
AN ANONYMOUS SYSTEM FROM IREN^US ... 188 — 193
The Spiritual Creation ... 188
Yahweh laldabaoth ... ... ... 189
O. T. Exegesis 189
Christology ... ... ... ... 191
Jesus ... ... ... ... 191
AN EARLY "OPHITE" SYSTEM ... ... 193—197
Justinus ... ... ... 193
The Book of Baruch ... ... 194
Baruch ... ... 196
Christology ... ... ... 197
THE NAASSENI ... ... 198—206
Their Literature ... ... ... 198
Their Mystical Exegesis ... ... 199
The Assyrian Mysteries ... ... 200
The Egyptian ... 201
The Greek ... ... ... 201
The Samothracian ... ... ... 202
The Phrygian ... ... 202
The Mysteries of the Great Mother ... 203
The Fragment of a Hymn ... ... 205
THE PERAT^Q ... ... ... ... 206 212
The Source of their Tradition ... ... 206
The Three Worlds ... ... 207
A Direct Quotation ... ... ... 208
The Meaning of the Name ... ... 209
Psychological Physiology ... ... 210
The Lost Books of Hippolytus... ... 212
XV111. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PAGE
THE SETHIANS ... ... ... ... 213—216
Seth ... ... ... ... 213
An Outline of their System ... ... 214
The Mysteries ... ... 215
THE DOCET^E ... ... 217—221
God ... ... ... ... 218
The ^ons ... ... ... ... 218
Cosmos and Man ... ... ... 219
The Saviour... ... ... ... 220
MONOIMUS ... ... ... «... 222 — 223
Number Theories ... ... ... 222
How to Seek after God ... ... 223
THE SO-CALLED CAINITES ... ... ... 224—229
The Obscurity of the Subject ... ... 224
The Enemies of Yahweh the Friends of God 225
Judas ... ... ... ... 226
A Scrap of History ... ... ... 228
THE CARPOCEATIANS ... ... ... 229—233
Their Idea of Jesus ... ... ... 230
Reincarnation ... ... ... 231
"EPIPHANES" ... ... 233—236
The Moon-god ... 234
Communism... ... ... ... 234
The Monadic Gnosis ... ... ... 236
CERINTHUS ... ... ... ... 237 — 238
The Scape-Goat for the " Pillar- Apostles " 237
The Over- Writer of the Apocalypse ... 238
NICOLAUS ... ... ... ... 239 — 240
"Which Things I hate" ... ... 239
CERDO ... ... ... ... ... 240—241
MARCION
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS.
XIX
MARCION
The Spread of Marcionism
The "Higher Criticism"
The Gospel of Paul ...
Eznik
A Marcionite System...
The Title Chrestos ...
APELLES
His Wide Tolerance ...
Philumene ...
Her Visions...
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS
Basilides and his Writings
Our Sources of Information
The Divinity beyond Being
Universality beyond Being
Ex Nihilo ...
The Sonship...
The Holy Spirit
The Great Ruler
The ^Etherial Creation
The Sub-lunary Spaces
Soteriology ...
The Mystic Gospel ...
The Sons of God
The Final Consummation
Jesus
Karman and Reincarnation
The Theory of " Appendages "
Moral Responsibility ...
A Trace of Zoroastrianism
The Spurious System . . .
PAGE
241—249
241
242
244
246
247
249
250—252
250
250
251
253—284
253
255
256
257
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
267
268
270
272
274
276
277
278
280
282
XX. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PAGE
THE VALENTINIAN MOVEMENT
The " Great Unknown " of Gnosticism . . . 284
"They of Valentinus " ... 285
The So-called Eastern and Western Schools 287
The Leaders of the Movement... 287
The Syntheticizing of the Gnosis
Sources of Information
VALENTINUS ... ... ••• 294 — 311
Biography ... ... ••• 294
Date ... 296
Writings ... ... ... 297
The Fragments that Remain ... 298
Concerning the Creation of the First Race
of Mankind ... 299
On the Pure in Heart ... 300
Concerning One of the Powers of the
Perfect Man ... 302
Ye are Sons of God ...
The Face of God ... ... 303
Concerning the People of the Beloved ... 305
The Galilseans ... ... 306
The Wisdom of the " Little One " 306
The Chain of Being ... ... 307
The Ariadne's Thread out of the Maze... 309
SOME OUTLINES OF ^EONOLO«Y ... 311 — 335
Towards the Great Silence
The Depth beyond Being 312
The J&on World ... ... 313
The Platonic Solids ... ... 314
A Living Symbolism ... 316
The " Fourth Dimension "
The Eternal Atom ... 320
The Law of Syzygy ...
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS. XXI
PAGE
The Law of Differentiation ... ... 322
The Three and the Seven ... ... 323
The Twelve and Ten ... ... 323
The Dodecahedron ... ... 325
The Decad ... ... 326
Chaos ... ... ... ... 328
Theos ... ... ... ... 329
Cosmos ... ... ... ... 331
Mythology ... ... ... ... 332
The Sophia-Myth us ... ... 333
The Mother of Many Names ... .... 334
HIPPOLYTUS' ACCOUNT OP ONE OF THE VARIANTS
OF THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS ... ... 335 — 357
The Father of All ... 335
The Parents of the ^ons ... ... 336
The Names of the l&ons ... ... 338
The World-Mother ... ... ... 389
The Abortion "... ... ... 340
The Term " Only-begotten " ... ... 341
The Cross ... ... ... ... 342
The Last Limit ... ... ... 343
The Mystic or Cosmic Jesus ... ... 345
The Grief of Sophia ... 346
The Sensible World ... ... ... 347
Its Demiurge ... ... 348
"Words" or Minds ... ... ... 351
Souls ... ... ... ... 851
Bodies ... ... ... ... 352
The New Man ... ... ... 353
The Mystic Body of the Christ ... 354
Soteriology ... ... ... ... 355
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS ... 358 — 882
Sources 358
XX11. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PAGE
Number-letters ... ... ... 359
Kabalism ... ... ... ... 361
The Great Name ... ... 363
The Echo of the Name 365
The Symbolic Body of the Man of Truth 366
The Numbers 869
Gospel Exegesis ... ... ... 370
The Creation of the Sensible World ... 372
The Tetraktys ... ... ... 373
Theological Arithmetic ... ... 375
Jesus the Master ... ... ... 376
The " Moving Image of Eternity " 378
From the Marcosian Ritual ... ... 380
PTOLEMY ... ... ... ... 383 — 390
The Letter to Flora ... ... ... 383
The "Higher Criticism" ... 385
The Source of Moses' Inspiration ... 387
The Proem to the Fourth Gospel ... 388
HEKACLEON ... ... ... ... 391 — 392
His Commentary on the Fourth Gospel... 391
BARDESANES ... ... ... ... 392 — 405
Biography ... ... ... ... 392
Writings ... ... ... ... 393
Indirect Sources ... ... ... 395
From His Hymns ... ... ... 396
The Book of the Laws of Countries ... 398
Karman ... ... ... ... 399
Fortune and Nature ... ... ... 400
The Right and Left ... 401
The Hymn of the Soul ... ... 403
THE HYMN OF THE ROBE OF GLORY . 406—414
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS. XX111.
PAGE
SOME TRACES OF THE GNOSIS IN THE
UNCANONICAL ACTS ... 415—449
FOREWORD ... ... ... ... 415 — 418
The Gnostic Acts ... ... ... 415
Catholic Over- Working ... ... 416
Early Collectors ... ... ... 417
FROM THE ACTS OF THOMAS ... ... 419 — 426
A Hymn to Wisdom... ... ... 419
Its Meaning... ... ... ... 421
Two Sacramental Invocations ... ... 422
A Note thereon ... ... 423
The Palace that Thomas built... ... 424
FROM THE ACTS OF JOHN ... ... ... 426 — 444
A Recently-published Fragment ... 426
The Rationale of Docetism ... ... 426
The Evolution of Tradition ... ... 427
Mystic Stories of Jesus ... ... 428
The Christ speaks with Jesus ... ... 429
An Early Form of One of the Great Miracles 430
A Ritual from the Mysteries ... ... 431
The Doxology ... ... ... 434
The Mystery of the Cross ... ... 435
The Interpretation thereof ... ... 437
The Initiation of the Cross ... ... 438
The Higher and Lower Selves... ... 439
A Prayer of Praise to Christ ... ... 440
John's Farewell Address to his Community 441
John's Last Prayer ... ... ... 442
The Story of John and the Bugs ... 443
FROM THE ACTS OF ANDREW ... ... 445 — 446
Address to the Cross... 445
XXIV. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PAGE
FROM THE TRAVELS OF PETER ... ... 446—449
The Descent of Man ... ... ... 446
The Mystic Redemption through the Cross 447
Afterword ... ... ... 449
THE GNOSIS ACCOEDING TO ITS
FRIENDS ... 451—602
SOME GREEK ORIGINAL WORKS IN
COPTIC TRANSLATION ... 453—592
THE ASKEW AND BRUCE CODICES ... ... 453 458
The Askew Codex ... ... 453
The Bruce Codex ... ... ... 454
Translations... ... ... 455
The Difficulty of the Subject ... ... 456
Programme ... ... ... ... 457
SUMMARY OF THE CONTENTS OF THE SO-CALLED
PISTIS SOPHIA TREATISE ... ... 459 506
The Teaching of the Eleven Years ... 459
The Mystic Transfiguration and Ascent in
the Twelfth Year 459
The Master Returns to His Disciples ... 460
The Mystic Incarnation of the Twelve ... 460
That the Soul of Elias is Born in John
the Baptist ... ... 461
Of His Own Incarnation ... ... 461
Concerning the Robe of Glory... 461
The Hymn of Welcome "Come unto Us" 462
The Three Vestures of Light ... ... 463
The Journey into the Height ... ... 464
The Master Robs the JEons of a Third of
Their Light ... ... 465
The Questions of Mary ... ... 466
Why the Rulers have been Robbed ... 466
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS. XXV.
PAGE
The Shortening of the Times ... 468
The Heaven- journey Continued 468
The Myth of Pistis Sophia ... 469
The Enmity of Arrogant
The Fall into Matter... 470
The Descent of the Soul 471
Its Repentance and Redemption 471
The Degrees of Purification ... 472
The Light-crown 473
The Final Victory ... 473
An Otherwise-unknown Story of the Infancy 474
Of the Glory of them of the Thirteenth Mon 476
The Scale of Light ... ... 477
The Perfect shall be Higher than the
Emanations of Light in the Kingdom 477
The " Last " shall be " First "... ... 478
The Three Supernal Spaces of the Light 478
The Inheritance of Light 479
The Mystery of the First Mystery ... 479
The Gnosis of Jesus, the Mystery of the
Ineffable ... 479
The Disciples lose Courage in Amazement
at the Glories of the Gnosis 4«0
The Highest Mystery is the Simplest of
them All ... ... 481
Concerning the One Word of the Ineffable 481
The Glory of Him who Receiveth the Mystery 483
Of the Thrones in the Light-kingdom ... 484
There are Other Logoi 484
The Degrees of the Mysteries ... 484
The Boons they Grant ... ... 485
The Limbs of the Ineffable ... ... 485
The Thousand Years of Light... ... 486
The Books of leou 487
XXVI. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PAGE
Ye are Gods ... ... ... 437
Of Souls in Incarnation ... 488
The Preaching of the Mysteries ... 489
The Burden of the Preaching ... ... 489
The Boundary Marks of the Paths of the
Mysteries ... ... ... 490
The After-death State of the Uninitiated
Righteous ... ... ... 490
Of those who Repent and again Fall Back 491
The Added Glories of the Saviours of Souls 492
Concerning the Irreconcilables . . . ... 492
Of the Infinite Compassion of the Divine 493
Of Those who Mimic the Mysteries ... 493
Can the Pains of Martyrdom be Avoided 494
The Mystery of the Resurrection of the
£>ead ... ... ... ... 494
The Transport of the Disciples ... 495
That this Mystery is to be Kept Secret 495
The Constitution of Man ... ... 496
The Evil Desire which Constraineth a
Man to Sin ... ... 497
The After-death State of the Sinner ... 497
And of the Initiated Righteous ... 498
" Agree with Thine Enemy" ... ... 499
The Stamping of the Sins on the Souls... 499
The Burning up of the Sins by the Fires
of the Baptism-Mysteries ... ... 500
The Infinite Forgiveness of Sins ... 501
But Delay Not to Repent ... ... 502
For at a Certain Time the Gates of the
Light will be Shut ... ... 502
" I know not whence ye are "... 503
The Dragon of Outer Darkness ... 503
The Draught of Oblivion ... ... 504
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS. XXV11.
PAGE
The Parents we are to Leave ... 504
The Books of leou Again ... 505
The Christ the First of this Humanity to
Enter the Light ... 506
Tis He Who Holds the Keys of the
Mysteries . . . 506
SUMMARY OF THE EXTRACTS FROM THE BOOKS OF
THE SAVIOUR ... ... ... 507—517
The Immanent Limbs of the Ineffable ... 507
The Christ is the Ineffable ... 507
The Gnosis of the Christ ... 508
The Initiation of the Disciples on the Mount 508
The First Veil is Drawn Aside 509
They Enter the Way of the Midst ... 510
The Ordering of the Fate-sphere is Described 510
All Mysteries up to the Light-treasure are
Promised them ... ... ... 511
The Punishments of the Ways of the Midst 512
The Duration of the Punishments ... 512
The Disciples Pray for Mercy to Sinners 513
They Enter an Atmosphere of Exceeding
Great Light ... ... 514
The Vision of the Baptism-Mysteries ... 514
They Return to Earth 515
The Celebration of the Mystic Eucharist 515
The Mysteries that are to be Revealed... 515
The Punishment of Sinners in the Lower
Regions and the Evil Bodies they
Receive when Reborn ... ... 516
The Cup of Wisdom ... ... ... 516
The Note of a Scribe 517
SUMMARY OF THE FRAGMENTS OF THE BOOK OF
THE GREAT LOGOS ACCORDING TO THE
MYSTERY ... 518 — 546
XXV111. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PAGE
The Book of the Gnoses of the Invisible God 518
The Hidden Wisdom... ... ... 518
A Dark Saying is Explained ... ... 519
The Flesh of Ignorance ... ... 520
The Mysteries of the Treasure of Light... 520
To be Revealed to the Worthy Alone ... 521
The Lesser Mysteries... ... ... 522
The Good Commandments ... ... 522
The Greater Mysteries ... ... 523
The Powers they Confer ... ... 523
The Mystic Rite of the Baptism of the
Water of Life ... ... ... 524
The Baptism of Fire ... ... 526
The Baptism of the Holy Spirit 526
The Mystery of Withdrawing the Evil of
the Rulers ... ... ... 527
The Powers the Lesser Mysteries Confer 527
The Mystery of the Forgiveness of Sins 528
The Powers it Confers ... ... 528
The Ordering of the Light-treasures ... 529
The Great Light .. ... ... 529
Invocation to the True God ... ... 530
Invocation to the Unapproachable ... 531
The Mystery of the Twelve ^ons ... 531
The Thirteenth ^Eon... ... 532
The Fourteenth ^Eon... ... ... 532
The Three Great Rulers ... ... 532
Concerning leou the Emanator of the
Middle Light-world ... ... 533
The Tetragrammaton ... ... ... 534
The Type of the Treasures ... ... 535
The Type of the True God leou 535
The Mystic Diagrams... ... ... 536
Cosmic Embryology ... ... 536
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS. xxix.
PAGE
The Seal on the Forehead of leou 537
General Characteristics of the Diagrams... 537
The Twelve the Order of Jesus 538
Hymn to the First Mystery sung in the
Thirteen
The Thirteenth Mon ...
The Sixty Treasures ... 540
The Little Idea ... 541
The Name of the Great Power 542
Hymn to the Unapproachable God sung
in the Seventh Treasure 543
The Great Logoi according to the Mystery 544
The Universal Idea ... 545
Hymn to the [1 First] Mystery 545
The Way of the Midst 546
SELECTIONS FROM THE UNTITLED APOCALYPSE
OF THE CODEX BRUCIANUS... . 547—566
The First Being ... 54?
The Second Being ... 547
The Supernal Cross ... 548
The Twelve Depths ... 548
The Primal Source ... ... 549
The Umnanifested ... 550
The Manifested, the Pleroma ... 550
Three-faced and Two-faced Space 551
The View of the Commentator 552
Marsanes, Nicotheus, and Phosilampes ... 553
The Creative Logos ... 553
The Descent of the Light-spark 554
The Spiritual Atom ... 554
Hymn to the Logos ...
The Christ ... ... ... 555
The Glorified of the Logos ... 556
XXX. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PAGE
The At-one-ment ... ... 556
Soteriology ... ... ... ... 557
The Ineffable Vesture ... ... 557
The Purification of the Lower Nature ... 558
The World-Saviour ... ... ... 558
The Promise... ... ... ... 559
The Powers of the Light-vesture ... 559
The Mothers of Men ... ... ... 560
The Song of Praise of the Mother Above 561
The Hidden Worlds ... ... 561
The Man ... ... 562
The Lord of Splendour ... ... 562
His Promise to Them who Believe ... 563
The Prayer of the Earth-born ... ... 564
The Powers of Discrimination are Given
them ... ... ... ... 564
The Ladder of Purification ... ... 565
The Son of God ... ... ... 565
Hymn to the Light ... ... ... 566
NOTES ON THE CONTENTS OF THE BRUCE AND
ASKEW CODICES ... ... ... 567 — 578
The Kinship of the Titled Treatises ... 567
Date 568
Authorship ... ... ... ... 568
The Titles ... ... ... ... 569
The Books of leou ... ... ... 569
The Probable Author... ... ... 570
The Obscurity of the Subject ... ... 570
The Original Pistis Sophia Treatise 572
The Coptic Translation 572
The Books of the Saviour 573
The Copyist... ... ... ... 573
The Scheme Pre-supposed in these Treatises 574
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS. XXXI.
PAGE
An Appreciation of the Untitled Treatise 576
Not to be Attributed to a Single Author 577
Its Apocalyptic Basis... ... 577
The Over-working ... ... 578
THE AKHMIM CODEX ... ... 579—592
The MS. and its Contents ... 579
The Gospel of Mary ... ... ... 580
The Wisdom of Jesus Christ ... 582
Irenseus quotes from The Gospel of Mary 582
An Examination of his Statements 583
The Father ... ... 583
The Mother... ... ... 584
The Pentad ... ... 584
The Decad ... 586
The Christ ... ... 587
The Egyptian Origin of the Treatise ... 588
The Opinion of Harnack ... 589
The Importance of the MS. ... 591
SOME FORGOTTEN SAYINGS ... ... 593—602
Rejected Logoi ... 593
The Oxyrhynchus Papyri 600
CONCLUSION -. 603-633
AFTERWORD ... ... ... 605—607
BIBLIOGRAPHIES ... ... 608—633
GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY ... ... 609 — 623
Early Works ... ... 609
Critical Studies prior to 1851 ... ... 610
Works subsequent to the Publication of
the Philosophumena in 1851 ... 613
XXxii. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PAGE
THE COPTIC GNOSTIC WORKS ... ... 624 — 627
REVIEWS AND ARTICLES IN ENGLISH AND
AMERICAN PERIODICALS ... ... 628 — 630
UNCANONICAL ACTS ... 630
GNOSTIC (?) GEMS AND ABRAXAS-STUDIES 631
GNOSTIC WORKS MENTIONED BY ANCIENT
WRITERS
THE MOST RECENT TEXTS OF THE H^ERESIO-
LOGICAL CHURCH FATHERS AND THEIR
ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS ... ... 631 — 633
INDEX.
Abdias, 418.
Aberamentho, 514, 519.
Abiram, 226.
Abortion, 225, 269, 329, 340,
356.
Aboulfatah, 162, 163.
Abrasax, 280, 281, 282, 283.
Abyss, 188, 308, 312.
Accretions, 276.
Acembes, 208.
Achamoth, 334.
Acts, Gnostic, 153, 415.
Acts, Leucian, 417.
Acts of Apostles, 128, 568.
Acts of Andrew, 445.
Acts of John, 426, 434, 443, 445.
Acts of Peter, 152, 417, 580.
Acts of Thomas, 403, 419, 422,
424.
Adam, 189, 190, 247, 299, 446,
447, 551 ; sons of, 599.
Adam, Book of, 126.
Adamant, 277, 406, 413.
Adamas, 465, 474, 510, 512;
Sabaoth, 521, 527.
Adembes, 208.
Adityas, 327.
Mon, 207 ; divine, 390 ; four
teenth, 532 ; incorruptible,
191 ; living, 311, 329, 344,
365 ; perfect, 218 ; of seons,
203; of night, 208; thir
teenth, 325, 466, 468, 476,
511, 515, 520, 522, 528, 531,
532, 539.
^Eons, 173, 218, 313 ; names of,
338; parents of, 336; seat
of, 440 ; ten, 337 ; treasures
of, 192 ; triacontad of, 341 ;
twelve, 337, 465, 511, 531.
^Eon- world, 313.
^Etherial, creation, 263 ; Jesus,
565.
^Ethers, 208.
After-death state, 490, 497, 516.
Agape, 235, 423.
Agathopus, 302.
Agrapha, 412, 593.
" Agree with thine adversary,"
231, 499.
Agrippa Castor, 147, 278.
Ahuramazda, 177.
Akasha, 204.
Akhmim Codex, 152, 579.
Alexander, 39, 97, 99, 279, 357.
Alexandria, 24, 53, 60, 69, 91,
95 295
All-Father, 41, 385, 549, 583.
All-Mother, 334, 375.
" All things depending," 307.
Allegories, 71, 79.
Alone-begotten, 218, 341, 388,
390, 553, 554, 555, 586.
Alone-born, 551.
Alpha, 530.
Anagamin, 370.
Ananias, 580.
Anatolic, 287, 288, 354.
Anaxagoras, 68.
Anaximander, 37.
Ancestral heart, 301.
XXXIV. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Ancient, of days, 348 ; of eter
nity, 397.
Andrew, 445, 487, 581.
Ani, 393.
Announcement, Great, 165, 167,
170, 173, 174.
Antioch, 175, 178, 288.
Antitheses, 226.
Ambrose, 64.
Amen, 365, 431 ; first, 527.
Amens, seven, 529 ; three, 523,
528.
Amru, 106.
Amshaspends, 177, 339.
Apelles, 250.
Aphredon, 551.
Aphrodite, 511, 512.
Apocalypse, untitled, 547.
Apocalypses, 94.
Apocrypha, 94.
Apollonius of Tyana, 55.
Apology, 381, 439, 483, 486,
499, 527, 600.
Appendages, 276, 277, 301.
Appended Soul, On an, 277.
Apostle, The, 245.
Arahat, 371.
Ararad, 505.
Archimedes, 108.
Ardesianes, 355.
Ares, 510.
Arian, 261.
Arithmetic, 223, 335, 375.
Aristobulus, 117.
Aristophanes, 109.
Aristotle, 53, 104, 107.
Arrogant, 468, 469, 470.
Ascension of pleroma, 478.
Asceticism, 178, 184, 248, 274.
Askew Codex, 151, 343, 423,
453, 529.
As Others saw Him, 412, 594.
Astrology, 207, 209, 283, 397.
Athos, Mount, 212, 273.
Atlantic Island, 39, 40.
Atom, 222, 223, 316, 318, 319,
320, 331, 554.
At-one-ment, 389, 556.
Attains, 104.
Augustine, 251.
Augustus, birthday of, 3.
Authentic, 304, 365, 504, 509,
512, 541, 542.
Axionicus, 288, 355.
B
Babe, 274, 307.
Babel, 407, 410, 411.
Babylon, 86, 89, 204.
Bacchi, 10.
Bacchic mysteries, 67, 81.
Bacchus, 534.
Balance, 512.
Baptism, 176, 238, 377 ; my
steries of, 499, 533, (vision of)
514, (fires of) 500; myth of
dove, 371 ; of fire, 522, 526 ;
of incense, 515 ; of Jesus,
278 ; of Holy Spirit, 515, 522,
526 ; of midst, 511 ; of right,
511 ; of water, 515, 522, (of
life) 524.
Baptismal consecration, 380.
Barbelo, 178, 334, 514, 515, 531,
583, 584, 585, 586.
Barbelo-Gnostics, 167, 568, 583,
589.
Barcabbas and Barcoph, 278.
Bardesanes, 288, 355, 392,-414,
420.
Bardesanites, 395.
Bar-Manu, 393.
Baruch, Book of, 193, 196.
Basilides, 253.
Basilisk, 474.
Baur, 166.
Beelzeboul, 349, 350.
Beloved, people of, 305.
Be-with-us, day, 343.
Bird, great, 473.
Birth, new, 203 ; of Horus, 60 ;
second, 191, 519 ; of spiritual
man, 60.
INDEX.
XXXV.
Births of joy, 550 ; of matter,
563.
Bitter, 215, 598.
Blossoms, 442.
Body, 496.
Book of Adam, 126.
Book of Baruch, 193.
Book of the Dead, 301, 343.
Book of Gnoses of Invisible God,
518.
Book of Great Logos according to
the Mystery, 152, 455, 457, 567.
Book of Laws of Countries, 394,
398.
Books of leou, 455, 487, 505, 533,
569.
Books of the Saviour, 151, 374,
507, 546, 567, 573.
Bosom, Abraham's, 351.
Boundary (see Limit) 307, 342,
343; great, 313, 379; high
est, 313.
Brahmarandhra, 205.
Brain, 211.
Breath, great, 330 ; of their
mouths, 467.
Bridal chamber, 419, 421.
Brooke, 391.
Brothel, 169.
Brother, Jesus my, 475 ; Paul
our, 568.
Bruchion, 98, 100, 103, 105.
Bubastis, 512.
Buddha, 7, 37.
Bugs, story of John and the,
443.
Burton, 145.
Bythus, 312, 321, 323, 325, 327.
Caduceus, 185.
Cain, 190, 224, 226.
Cainites, 198, 224.
Called, 47, 199.
Calligraphists, 103.
Callimachus, 109.
Canon, 121, 241, 243.
Canopus, 97, 103.
Capernaum, 244.
Capparatea, 175.
Caracalla, 393.
Caravanserai (see Inn), 301, 443.
Carpocrates, 229.
Cave, 435.
" Cease not to seek," 489.
Cecrops, 41.
Celbes, 208.
Celsus, 150, 183, 233, 589.
Cerdo, 240.
Cerebellum, 211.
Cerinthus, 237.
Chaldsean, influence on Jewry,
93 ; logia, 172 ; mysteries,
51, 58, 89 ; star-cult, 206 ;
tradition, 43, 94.
Chaos, 188, 208, 328, 469, 470,
471, 497 ; child of, 189.
Charinus, Lucius, 417.
Chads, 588, 595.
Charismatic, 124.
Chassidim, 93, 94.
Child, little, 406 ; of chaos, 189 ;
of the child, 523, 528.
Children, little, 598; of life,
303 ; of the fulness, 524 ; of
light, 521 ; of true mind, 519.
Chiliasm, 124.
Choiic, 199.
Chorizantes, 104.
Chosen, of God, 90/92 ; people,
87, 128.
Chrestos, 249.
Chrism, 205, 382, 515, 522.
Christ, 227, 273, 327, 378, 448,
542, 556, 586, 587 ; a, 484 ;
above, 190 ; and Holy Spirit,
341 ; distinguished from Jesus,
427 ; historic gnosis of,
508 ; invocation to, 380 ; is
the word, 448 ; Jesus, 368 ;
mystic body of, 354 ; name
of, 422; the, 507, 555; the
great master, 430.
XXXVI. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Christliche Welt, Die, 4.
Christs, 176, 343, 595, 599.
Circuits (Tours), 446.
City, 419, 421, 547, 557, 566,
602.
Citizens of heaven, 82.
Claps of hands, 79.
Claudius, 109.
Clay, 208, 351.
Clement of Alexandria, 119, 148,
418.
Clementine literature, pseudo,
162, 164, 166.
Cleobius, 164.
Cleopatra, 98, 99, 106, 110.
Closet, 70.
Coats of skin, 190.
Codex, Akhmim, 152, 579;
Askew, 151, 343, 423, 453,
529; Brucianus, 151, 192,
213, 303, 312, 374, 382, 421,
454, 515, 529, 591.
"Come unto us," 409, 462;
day of, 343.
Commandments, good, 522.
Commodus, 250.
Common fruit, 331, 345, 346,
349, 351, 352.
Communism, 234.
Communities, 30 ; mystic, 60 ;
Orphic, 50 ; variety of,
85.
Community, Mareotic, 85 ; of
friends, 305.
Compendium, 148 ; of Hippoly-
tus, 14, 149 ; of Justin, 178 ;
of Theodoret, 150.
Conception, 169, 173.
Concerning Fate, 394.
Concerning the Offspring of
Mary, 198.
Confucius, 37.
Conglomeration of seed-mixture,
262, 265, 272, 276.
Consummation, final, 270 ; of
first mystery, 503 ; gnostic,
405.
Conversion, 448, 449 ; of
spheres, 465, 466, 467.
Conybeare, 61.
Goran, 226.
Corners, four, 525, 542.
Corybantic mysteries, 67.
Counterfeit spirit, 276, 471, 496,
498, 499, 500, 504, 505.
Couch, 433 ; couches, 76.
Cratylus, 200.
Critias, 39.
Cross, 221, 330, 342, 343, 352,
371, 445, 446, 447, 548, 550,
559 ; address to, 445 ; bush
of, 435 ; initiation of the,
438 ; mystery of, 435 ; of
light, 435 ; redemption of,
447 ; of wood, 436 ; salva
tion of, 229 ; supernal, 548.
Crotona, 50.
Crucified in space, 330.
Crucifixion, 227.
Crucify the world, 303, 518.
Cube, 222, 317, 324.
Cumont, 279.
Cup, of life-giving water, 215 ;
of wisdom, 516.
Cureton, 394.
Cyprus, 296.
Cyrus, 89.
Daemonian hierarchies, 512 ;
powers, 190.
Dsemons, 59, 301.
Daevos, 59.
Daisan, 392.
Dance, 80, 433, 437 ; circular,
195 ; of initiation, 431.
Daniel, Book of, 25.
Darkness, 188, 390 ; dragon of,
490, 492, 503; outer, 490,
503, 546.
Darkness, The Light and the, 394.
Dathan, 226.
Daveithe, 588.
INDEX.
XXXV11.
David, 588.
Day Be-with-us, 343 ; great,
462 ; of light, 487 ; of perfect
forms, 349 ; sixth, 371.
Dead, 203 ; prayers for, 381,
494 ; resurrection of, 494,
495 ; raised him from, 354 ;
rise from, 176.
Death, face of, 304.
Decad, 82, 323, 324, 326, 378,
551, 586.
Decans, 510, 539.
Deficiency, 225, 265, 328, 343,
379.
De Legatione, 65.
Delights of world, 496.
Demiurge (see Workman), 180,
262, 264, 307, 348, 349, 355,
372, 381, 533.
Democritus, 68.
Depth, 313, 352, 547 ; beyond
being, 312 ; unutterable, 188.
Depths, twelve, 548.
Desert, 186.
Destiny, 496, 497, 498.
Destruction of False Doctrines,
246.
Deucalion, flood of, 40.
Devas, 59, 363.
Devi, 363.
Diabolus, 232, 349, 350, 384.
Diagram of man of truth, 367 ;
of Ophites, 589.
Diagrams, 536, 537.
Dialogues against the Marcion-
ites, 394.
Diaspora or Dispersion, 91, 135,
361.
Didascaleion, 119, 120.
Dionysus, 42, 49.
Docetism, 217, 302, 328, 426,
427.
Dodecad, 323, 324, 432, 536,
551.
Dodecahedron, 209, 222, 317,
325 ; rhombic, 325.
Dollinger, 64.
Door, 433, 436.
Dositheus, 162.
Dove, 377, 423, 424, 459;
baptism-myth of, 371 ; father
in form of, 238, 278, 354, 515.
Dragon, great, 490 ; of dark
ness, 490, 492, 503, 510.
Dry, shame of, 424.
Dwarf, 439, 598.
Eagle, 262, 410.
Earth, most beautiful, 194.
Ebion, 127, 237.
Ebionism, 126, 165, 226, 237.
Echo, 365, 373.
Economy, 373, 378.
Eden, 194, 204, 334.
Edessa, 392.
Egg, 185, 214, 320, 331.
Egypt, 407, 466 ; before flood,
40, 569 ; Persian conquest
of, 59 ; plagues of, 222 ; the
body, 186; wisdom of, 38,
57.
Egyptian, discipline, 237 ; my
steries, 51, 58.
Elect, 93, 199, 275, 303, 365,
468.
Eleleth, 588.
Element, scheme of the one,
367.
Eleven years, 459.
Eleusinia, 49, 50, 51, 202.
Eleutherus, 296.
Elias, soul of, 461 ; to come,
220.
Elkesai, 127.
Elohim, 189, 190, 194.
Embryology, 281, 505, 536.
Encratism, 178.
Energies, 436.
Enformation according to sub
stance, 329, 376; to know
ledge, 329, 376.
Ennads, 551.
XXXV111. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Enncea, 321, 323, 325.
Enoch, 487, 505, 569.
Ephemereuts, 75.
Ephraim, 395.
Epiphanes, 127, 233.
Epiphanius, 150, 589.
Epiphany, 234.
Epopteia, 355.
Erani, 50.
Eratosthenes, 108.
Erectheus, 41.
Esau, 226.
Essenes, 66, 84, 93, 94, 101,
131, 162, 227, 279.
Eta, 532.
Euclid, 108, 314.
Eucharist, 248, 423, 515, 526.
Eudsemonistic eschatology, 142.
Eulogius, 306.
Eumenes, 104.
Euphrates, 204, 208.
Eusebius, 61, 62, 64, 150.
Eve, 189, 190, 247, 351.
" Except a man be born of
water," 221.
Excommunication, 241, 295.
Exegetica, 254, 255, 274.
Ex Nihilo, 259.
Exodus (see Going-forth) myth,
186.
Exterior of exteriors, 462, 506.
Excerpts from Theodotus, 287,
292, 332, 356.
Ezekiel, vision of, 94.
Eznik, 246.
Face, 176, 303, 304, 422, 548.
Faces, authentic, 504.
Fall, into matter, 470 ; of
Sophia, 305 ; of the soul,
334.
Fate, 395, 397.
Fate, Concerning, 394.
Fate-sphere, 209, 465, 477, 498,
505, 510.
Father, alone good, 301 ; "he
who shall leave," 504, 509;
language of my, 533 ; -mother,
336, 337, 338.
Fatherhood, 368.
Fatherhoods, sixty, 544.
Fear, 361 ; mystery of their,
546 ; of the Lord, 267, 348.
Fifteenth year of Caesar, 278.
Fiftieth day, 74, 75.
Fifty, 82.
Fig-tree, 218.
Filioque, 261.
Fire, 171, 468, 490; at Alex
andria, 105, 109 ; baptism
of, 522, 526 ; finger of, 329 ;
flower of, 172 ; hidden, 171 ;
life-giving, 219 ; mist, 185 ;
tree, 172.
Firmament, 262, 263, 266, 311,
464.
First, born, 560, (sons of Satan),
13, 32, 174; last shall be,
478; man, 188, 190, 191,
371, 447, 448, 498, 584, 585 ;
statute, 463, 465 ; woman,
188.
Fish, 261, 270.
Five, books, 385 ; impressions,
529 ; limbs, 422, 423 ; sup
porters, 529 ; trees, 523, 529,
544 ; years' silence, 278, 282.
Flesh, of ignorance, 520 ; per
fect, 582 ; of rulers, 468 ; of
unrighteousness, 519 ; tongue
of, 438, 552, 578; word
made, 390.
Flood, 40, 505, 569.
Flora, Letter to, 383.
Foreknowledge, 585.
Forethought, 550, 585.
Forgiveness of sins, 501, 523,
527, 530, 531, 533.
Formlessness, 268, 270, 329.
" For this cause I bow my
knees," 352.
Fortune. 398, 399, 400.
INDEX.
XXXIX.
Forty-nine, 464, 465, 471, 506,
523.
Four, 374 ; great lights, 588 ;
holy ones, 377 ; quarters, 509,
525, 542 ; primal passions,
346 ; supernal, 363.
Four Quarters of the World,
167.
Four and twenty invisibles,
476.
Four and twentieth mystery,
462.
Fourteenth aeon, 532.
Fourth, dimension, 318 ; gospel,
260, 388, 391.
Freewill, 399.
Fruits of spirit, 338.
Gabriel, 377, 473.
Galileans, 306.
Galilee, 524, 582; mount of,
515.
Garment, one, 425 ; wedding,
405.
Gate, Canopic, 103 ; " I am
the true," 202 ; of the
heavens, 203 ; of the lord,
202 ; of truth, 204.
Gates, 538 ; of light, 502, 503 ;
of the powerful, 333 ; of the
treasure, 474.
Gazzah, 406.
Gennesaret, 430.
" Geometrizes, God," 314.
Gifts of spirit, 441.
Gitta, 164.
Glad tidings, 243, 256, 517.
Glaucias, 254.
Glorified of Logos, 556.
Glory, hymn of the robe of,
406, 419 ; king of, 421 ; robe
of, 460, 461, 464, 520 ; ves
tures of, 472.
Gnosis, 266, 446 ; Basilidian, 254,
577, (ethical side of), 273;
definition of, 32; glories of,
480; Jewish, 118; monadic,
236 ; outlines of background
of, 94 ; pre- Christian, 163,
183 ; supreme, 480 ; synthes
izing of, 289, 295; Syrian,
177 ; of all the gnoses, 484 ;
of Christ, 508 ; of gnosis of
ineffable, 508 ; of Jesus, 479 ;
of mystery of ineffable, 480 ;
of pleroma, 481, 484, 503 ; of
things that are, 32, 52.
"Gods, Ye are," 487.
Going-forth, myth of the, 185,
210.
Good, 67, 201 ; commandments,
522; deity, 195; God, 203,
243, 247, 441 ; land, 340 ;
"Why callest thou me,"
201.
Gorthaeus, 164.
Gospel, 266, 268.
Gospel according to Egyptians,
198, 200, 233, 249.
Gospel according to Hebrews, 126.
Gospel according to Mary, 580.
Gosyel according to Thomas, 198,
201.
Gospel of Eve, 198, 439.
Gospel of Judas, 226, 228.
Gospel of Mary, 152, 165, 199,
423.
Gospel of Paul, 244.
Gospel of Perfection, 198.
Gospel of Philip, 198, 439,
540.
Governors, 399, 401.
Grace, 390, 432, 434, 436, 440,
554, 555, 558.
Grasshoppers, 73.
Gratz, 342.
Great, bird, 473 ; body, 366 ;
boundary, 313, 379; breath,
330 ; consummation, 421 ;
day, 462; deep, 312 ; dragon,
490 ; elements, 188 ; firma
ment, 263, 311 ; harvest,
xl.
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
308 ; lao, 529 ; ignorance,
270, 271 ; invisible, 532 ;
invisible forefather, 469 ;
Jordan, 202 ; just one, 532 ;
king, 529 ; light, 474, 523,
529, 587 ; lights, 188 ; limit,
270, 272 ; logoi according to
the mystery, 544 ; logos,
544 ; man himself, 529 ;
master, 430 ; mercy, 270 ;
mind, 205 ; mother, 191 ;
name, 363, 514, 523, 542,
599 ; one, 378, 420 ; peace,
142 ; power, 164, 171, 173,
185, 543 ; receiver, 467 ;
ruler, 262, 266, 267, 272;
Sabaoth, 513, 529 ; sea, 40 ;
silence, 311 ; soul, 467 ; sup
porters, 479 ; teacher, 5 ;
thought, 173 ; unknown, 309 ;
wedding feast, 397.
Greatness, 352, 363, 372, 423,
424, 440.
Greatnesses, 368, 537.
Grief, 346.
" Greeks are but children," 111.
Grenfell and Hunt, 600, 602.
Guardians, 523, 528, 538.
H
Hades, 447.
Hair of his head, 548.
Hanging on the tree, 343.
Harmogen, 588.
Harmony, 365, 436.
Harmozel, 588.
Harnack, 4, 144, 589.
Harpocratians, 233.
Harvest, great, 308.
Healers, 61, 442.
Heart, ancestral, 301 ; of
eternities, 317 ; pure in,
300.
Heaven, citizens of, 82 ; jour
ney, 468 ; kingdom of, 201,
202, 203, 514, 602; man
from, 371 ; wars in, 208 ;
world, 347.
Heavens, seven, 396.
Heavenly man, 201, 202, 222,
300, 329, 330, 344, 423, 439,
566.
Hebdomad, 264, 266, 268, 269,
271, 272, 273, 280, 307, 323,
333, 348, 349, 371.
Hegesippus, 164.
Hell, 247.
Helen, 43 : myth of, 168.
Helena, 163, 168.
Hellenists, 117.
Hephaestus, 40.
Heracleon, 288, 391.
Hercules, 194, 196.
Heresies, On, 251.
Hermes, 57, 201, 222, 511 ;
first, 570 ; thrice-greatest,
440 ; shepherd of, 438.
Hermetic schools, 57.
Herodotus, 40.
Hesiod, 38, 43.
Hesychius, 388.
Higher criticism, 14, 25, 242,
385 ; ego, 471 ; self, 433 ;
selves, 421.
Hipparchus, 108, 211.
Hippolytus, 149, 212, 293, 590.
Hiranya-garbha, 320.
Historicized legends of initia
tion, 278.
Historicizing of mythology, 88.
Hittites, 101.
Holiness, degrees of, 133.
Holy, holy, holy, 554 ; of
holies, 374, 551 ; one, 434 ;
ones, 377 ; " Spirit shall come
upon thee," 269 ; table, 80 ;
women, 251.
Homer, 44.
Honestas, 55.
Hormuz, 339.
Horn, of plenty, 205, 222 ; one,
222.
Horos (Boundary), 308.
INDEX.
xli.
Horus, 233 ; birth of, 60.
Hort, 144, 250.
" Hour hath not yet come,
My," 271.
"How hath the lord of the
pleroma changed us," 464.
" How long shall I bear with
you," 487.
Hyksos, 58, 213.
Hyle, 139, 210, 246, 466, 471,
472, 474.
Hylics, 193.
Hymn, 431 ; Naassene, 205 ;
of Jesus, 431 ; of praise, 462 ;
of the powers, 464 ; of the
robe of glory, 406, 419 ; of
the soul, 403 ; of welcome
" Come unto us," 462 ; to
light, 566 ; to first mystery,
539, 545 ; to logos, 555 ; to
unapproachable god, 543 ; to
wisdom, 419.
Hymns, 394 ; against heresies,
395 ; of Bardaisan, 414, 420 ;
of Ephraim, 395 ; Orphic,
45 ; penitential, 471 ; sing
ing of, 79.
Hypatia, 96, 100.
Hyrcania, 412.
Hystera, 225.
Hysterema, 225.
Hyssop, 73, 77, 80, 342.
I
I am a wanderer," 220.
I am that man," 483.
I am that mystery," 502.
I am the god of Abraham,"
266.
I am the true gate," 202.
I am thou," 439, 598.
I become what I will," 201.
I came not to call the
righteous," 490.
I have recognised myself,"
540 ; " my sin," 268.
" I have torn myself asunder,"
488.
" I know myself," 382.
" I know thee who thou art,"
440.
" I recognised myself," 600.
" I will go into that region,"
470.
labe (lave), 534.
labraoth, 510, 527, 540.
lacchus (Yach), 534.
laldabaoth, 189, 191, 192, 470.
lao, 381, 509, 534; great,
529.
Ice, 490.
Icosahedron, 222, 317.
Idea, little, 537, 541, 543, 545.
Ideas, 334 ; greatnesses or,
537.
Idolatry, 247.
Idols, things sacrificed to, 239.
Idol-worship, 300.
leou, 465, 504, 505, 510, 512,
513, 524, 529, 533, 534, 535,
540, 544 ; books of, 455, 487,
505, 533, 569 ; seal on fore
head of, 537, 538 ; first man,
498 ; type of true god, 535.
leous, 537, 544.
lesssei, 126.
"If ye drink not my blood,"
202.
"If ye make not right like as
left," 448.
Ignorance, 377, 472 ; flesh of,
520 ; great, 270, 271 ; nature
of, 520.
Illumination, 377.
Illusionists, 217.
Illusory, 427.
Image, 180, 304, 313, 349, 387,
424, 471, 547, 584; images,
305, 328.
Imaging forth, 172.
Immovables, 529.
Impassables, 529, 545, 555.
Impressions, five, 529.
xlii.
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
" In the place where I shall be,"
484.
Incense, baptism of, 515.
Incorruptible aeon, 191 ; trea
sure of, 192 ; mystery-names,
511.
Incorruptibility, 440, 585.
India, 55.
Indian religion, 393.
Individuitatis, principium, 344.
Indivisible, 552, 554.
Indweller of light, 478.
Ineffable, 462, 463, 464, 486;
chrism, 205 ; first mystery of,
479 ; gnosis of gnosis of, 508 ;
limbs of the, 483, 485, 507 ;
mysteries of vestures of, 501 ;
mystery of, 481, 482, 494,
500, 507 ; name, 543 ; one
word of, 481 ; space of, 477,
479 ; tongue of, 482 ; ves
ture, 557.
Ineffables, 566.
Infancy, story of, 412, 474.
Inheritance of light, 477, 478,
479, 483, 487.
Iniquity, seed of, 504 ; wrath
of their, 512.
Initiation, 355, 370, 375, 380,
411, 423, 427, 462; cere
monies, 358 ; dance of, 431 ;
grades of, 182 ; historicized
legends of, 278 ; mountain
of, 598 ; of the cross, 438 ;
of the disciples, 508 ; robe of,
405.
Initiations, 382.
Inn, 352.
Intercourse, mystery of, 469,
510 ; with males, 501.
Interior of interiors, 460, 462,
464, 506.
Investiture, 462.
Ion, 41, 43.
Iota, 222.
Irenaeus, 147, 291, 582 ; unre
liability of, 280.
Isidorus, 273, 277, 301, 306.
Isis, 201, 323.
Italic, 287, 354.
Ithye, 403.
Jacob, 202, 225.
Jamblichus, 57, 58.
James, 580.
Jehovah, 534.
Jerome, 150.
Jerusalem, 557 ; above, 349,
351, 396, 421 ; below, 435,
447 ; celestial, 340 ; church
of, 119 ; destruction of, 92.
Jesus, 186, 199, 204, 221, 272,
302, 375, 353, 368, 376, 378,
472, 543, 565; a shepherd
boy, 197 ; the name a sub
stitute, 368 ; baptism of, 278 ;
Christ distinguished from, 427,
cosmic, 345 ; Ebionite tradi
tion of, 128 ; hymn of, 431 ;
Mary, mother of, 474 ; my
brother, 475 ; mysteries of,
532 ; our God, 442 ; person
of, 140 ; portrait of, 233 ;
son of Mary, 269 ; stories of,
428; the master, 376;
mystery of gnosis of, 479 ;
six-lettered name, 369 ; twin
of, 424.
Jeu (see leou), 534.
John, 237, 580, 581 ; Apocry-
phon of, 152, 580; farewell
address, 441 ; last prayer of,
442 ; the virgin, 484 ; the
baptist, 162, 461.
Jonah myth, 447.
Jordan, 185, 186, 202, 204,
221.
Joseph, 475.
Josephus, 118.
Joshua, 186.
Joy, 419 ; births of, 550.
Judas, 224, 226.
INDEX.
xliii.
Judas Thomas, 419, 424 ; Acts
of, 403.
Julian, 97.
Just, god, 243, 384 ; one, great,
532
Justin Martyr, 148, 178, 590.
Justinus, 193, 246.
K
Kabalism, 94, 133, 361.
Kalapatauroth, 505.
Karman, 232, 265, 274, 394,
397, 399.
Kenoma, 307, 313.
Kingdom, of heaven, 201, 602 ;
of light, 481, 506 ; of heavens,
202, 203, (keys of), 514 ; of
midst, 308 ; of mysteries,
491.
" Kin to me," 437.
" Knees, For this cause I bow
my," 352.
Knowledge, " falsely so called,"
384 ; motions of, 413 ; of
supermundane things, 254,
255 ; tree of, 487, 505.
Knowledges, 413.
Kolarbasus, 127.
Kostlin, 574.
Krishna, 7.
Kronos, 510.
Kundalim, 204.
Kushan, 406.
Lake Maroea, 69, 97.
Lamp, 433.
Land, milk and honey, 340 ;
god-bearing, 555 ; good, 340 ;
promised, 186 ; Siriadic, 58.
Laotze, 37.
" Last shall be first," 478.
Left, 334, 348, 436, 447, 448,
449, 465, 466, 477, 513, 515,
523, 528, 548.
Leibnitz, 320.
" Let there be light," 259.
Leucian Acts, 417, 426.
Levi, 581.
Library, of Alexandria, 96, 98,
102 ; of Aristotle, 104 ; of
Persepolis, 279.
Life, 389, 564; breath, 320;
children of, 303 ; divine, 372 ;
everlasting, 585 ; face of,
304 ; father of, 404 ; giving
fire, 219 ; giving water, 197 ;
of the father, 518 ; spark,
180 ; tree of, 446, 487, 505 ;
virgin of, 526 ; water of, 201,
565 ; word and, 374.
Light and the Darkness, 394.
Light, 320, 380, 387, 434, 446,
564 ; atmosphere of, 514 ;
beams, 75 ; boundless, 509,
525 ; children of, 521 ; col
lector of, 467 ; cross of, 435 ;
crown, 473 ; flames, 504 ;
day of, 487 ; fluid, 189 ;
gates of, 502, 503; great,
474, 523, 529, 587 ; hymn
to, 566; image of, 471, 544;
indweller of, 478 ; inherit
ance of, 477, 478, 479, 483,
487 ; kingdom of, 481, 484,
506 ; maiden, 397 ; mysteries
479 ; of the treasure, 512 ;
overseer of, 465 ; power, 470,
473, 496, 505; ray, 216;
realm, 460 ; receivers of,
491 ; robe, 382, 404, 460 ;
seven virgins of, 525 ; sons
of, 371, 511 ; spark, 179, 180,
189, 190, 303, 305, 329, 465,
548, 554, 562, 584, 586, 599 ;
sparks, 214, 461, 600 ; sphere,
322 ; spirit, 586 ; stream,
473, 483; streams of, 504;
three spaces of the, 478 ;
third of their, 465 ; treasure,
466, 468, 523, 530; treasure
of, 477, 478, 509, 511, 514,
xliv.
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
520, 522, 525, 527 ; vesture,
191, 468, 559; vesture of,
460, 463, 483, 499 ; virgin of,
476, 491, 497, 498, 499, 517 ;
water of pure, 584 ; world,
195, 311, 320, 322, 421, 459,
477, 540.
Lights, great, 188, 512, 588.
Limbs, 366, 437, 439, 445, 462,
482, 540, 547, 556, 600 ; five,
422, 423 ; of heavenly man,
566; of ineffable, 483, 485,
507.
Limit (see Boundary), great,
267, 270, 272, 343, 462, 463.
Limitary spirit, 262, 266, 267,
269, 272, 343.
Linus, 418, 446.
Lipsius, 150, 291, 415.
Little, child, 406 ; children, 598 ;
idea, 537, 541, 543, 545;
man, 439 ; midst, 531 ; one,
306 ; Sabaoth, 512, 516.
Liturgi, 539.
Living one, 380, 381, 382, 518,
520, 534, 554, 602.
Logia, Chaldaean, 172.
Logoi, or logia, 294, 484, 507,
508, 593 ; rejected, 593.
Logos (see Word), 56, 201, 207,
216, 330, 344, 368, 372, 373,
384, 388, 412, 433, 445, 535,
537, 544; creator, 553, 556;
doctrine of, 58 ; glorified of,
556 ; great, 544 ; hymn to
the, 555 ; mind- born, 566 ;
Osiris the, 59 ; perfect man
or, 215 ; second aspect of,
261.
Lot, 225.
Luminaries, 588.
M
Magdalene, 466, 484.
Magi, 271, 279.
Magic, 167, 175, 318, 466.
Magna Vorago, 331.
Magus, 167.
Maha-pralaya, 270.
Maiden, 419, 421.
Maimonides, 143.
Mainandros, 177.
Maishan, 407, 411.
Male-female, 173, 174, 199, 200,
218.
Malice, mystery of, 522.
Man, 273, 422, 433, 438, 439,
446, 547, 548, 550, 559, 562,
566 ; Adam the, 551 ; and
church, 323, 337, 374; con
stitution of, 496 ; descent of,
446 ; doctrine, 188 ; first,
188, 190, 191, 371, 498, 584,
585 ; from heaven, 371 ;
heavenly, 201, 202, 222, 300,
329, 330, 344, 423, 439 (limbs
of), 586 ; himself, great, 529 ;
" I am that," 483 ; inner,
351, 352 ; last, 371 ; little
and great, 439 ; new, 353 ;
of truth, 366, 367; perfect,
427 ; perfected, 354 ; powers
of, 302 ; second, 188 ; son
of, 189, 199, 202, 378, M ;
son of this, 222 ; sons of,
372 ; spiritual, 271 ; thy,
440; way of the first, 448;
woman, 334, 584.
Mandaites, 126.
Manetho, 40, 569.
Manichaeism, 392, 395, 416.
Mansel, 145.
Many, " called, few chosen," 47
"members, one body," 507
"thyrsus-bearers, few bacchi,'
10.
Marcians, 177, 288.
Marcion, 25, 175, 240, 241.
Marcionite, antitheses, 226 ;
churches 242 ; movement,
240.
Marcionites, Dialogues against
the, 394.
INDEX.
xlv.
Marcellina, 233.
Marcosian ritual, 380.
Marcosians, 288.
Marcus, 287, 590 ; number-
symbolism of, 358.
Mareotic community, 69, 85 ;
lake, 69, 97.
Mariamne, 199.
Marriage, 273 ; sacred, 420.
Marsanes, 553.
Martha, 589.
Martyrdom, 275 ; pains of,
494.
Martyrs, 249, 274; of Lyons,
292.
Mary, Concerning the Offspring
of, 198.
Mary, Genealogy of, 589.
Mary, Gospel of, 152, 165, 199,
423.
Mary, Gospel according to, 580.
Mary, Questions of, 198, 454,
466.
Mary, Greater and Lesser Ques
tions of, 199, 589.
Mary, 353, 461, 506, 511, 581,
589 ; the body, 269 ; Jesus,
son of, 269 ; Magdalene, 466,
484 ; mother of Jesus, 474.
Masbotheus, 164.
Mathematicians, 207, 361.
Mathesis, 294, 315.
Matrix, 334.
Matter, 466, 471, 554, 557, 558,
560, 576; births of, 563;
fall into, 470 ; devour their
own, 467 ; purgations of,
489 ; virgin of, 564.
Matthias, 254.
Max Miiller, 8.
Maya-vadins, 217.
Mayavi-rupa, 428.
Medulla, 211.
Melchizedec, 467, 512, 513, 526.
Members, 539, 550.
Memoirs of the Apostles, 162.
Menander, 175.
Mercury, rod of, 185 .
Mercy, great, 270 ; perfect, 422,
423.
Merinthians, 237.
Metempsychosis, 219.
Metensomatosis, 220.
Metropolis of Alone-begotten,
553.
Michael, 473.
Middle space, 173, 188, 334, 348,
540.
Midst, 308, 333, 488, 516;
baptism of, 511 ; earth be-
cometh, 519 ; little, 531 ;
way of, 490, 510, 511, 513,
514, 546.
Miltiades, 291.
Mind, 173, 185, 205, 334, 388,
518, 519, 551, 561.
Mind and truth, 323, 336.
Mineral nature of soul, 277.
Miriam, 81.
Mirror, 433.
Miscellanies, The, 287.
Mithras, 55, 56, 279.
Mixture, 488, 496.
Moist essence, 204, 208.
Mohammed, 7.
Monad, 67, 222, 318, 335, 373,
548, 549, 550, 551, 555, 557.
Monadic gnosis, 236.
Monadity, 374.
Monadology, 320.
Monastery, 70, 71.
Money-changers, 596.
Monoiimus, 222.
Montanist, 251.
Moon, 263, 473,. 510.
Moses, 81, 185, 196, 222, 225,
266, 387 ; of Chorene, 393.
Mosheim, 234.
Mother, above, 191, 396, 561 ;
breath, 330 ; mysteries of
great, 203 ; of all, 169, 185 ;
of compassion, 422 ; of many
names, 334 ; of living, 334 ;
of thirty names, 379 ; of
xlvi.
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
your mother, 382 ; shining,
334 ; virgin, 58.
Mount, 370, 429, 430, 435, 439,
508, 598; Athos, 212, 273;
of Galilee, 515; of Olives,
435, 459.
Mountain, Secret Sermon on the,
440.
Mysteries, 46, 411, 431, 4:^3;
Assyrian, 200 ; Bacchic and
Corybantic, 67 ; boundary
marks of, 490 ; Chaldsean, 51,
58 ; degrees of, 484 ; Egyp
tian, 51, 58, 201 ; Eleusinian,
51 ; greater, 203, 522 ; Greek,
201 ; keys of, 506 ; kingdom
of, 491 ; lesser, 203, 215, 522,
527 ; mimics of, 493 ; Mith-
riac, 55, 56, 279 ; of baptism,
499, 514, 533 ; of embryology,
281 ; of Jesus, 532 ; of Seth,
58 ; of sex, 184 ; of great
mother, 203; Orphic, 51,
216 ; philosophic, 50, 51 ;
Phrygian, 201, 202 ; preach
ing of, 489 ; private, 49 ;
political, 49 ; ritual from,
431 ; Samothracian, 202 ;
state, 49; Thracian, 202;
twelve, 485.
Mystery, 356, 437 ; according
to the, 152, 455, 457, 544,
567 ; cultus, 49 ; drama,
433 ; fires of baptism, 500 ;
first, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463,
464, 465, 472, 473, 474, 477,
478, 479, 482, 493, 500, 502,
503, 506, 507, (hymn to) 539,
545, (mystery of) 479, (outer
space of), 479 ; four-and-
twentieth, 462 ; " I am that, ' '
502 ; kept secret, 495 ; last,
462, 463; looking within,
486 ; myths, 191 ; names,
511 ; of breaking of seals,
498 ; of every nature, 447 ;
of intercourse, 469, 510; of
cross, 435 ; of forgiveness of
sins, 523, 527, 530, 531, 533 ;
of ineffable, 479, 480, 481,
482, 494, 500, 507 ; of light
of thy father, 515 ; of resur
rection of dead, 494, 495 ; of
spiritual chrism, 522 ; of
twelve aeons, 531 ; of their
fear, 546 ; of withdrawing evil,
522, 527 ; relative of the,
552 ; that was unknown, 269,
353 ; type of race, 471 ;
world beyond, 462 ; 'twixt
heaven and earth, 439 ;
wisdom declared in, 268.
Myrrh, 420.
Myrtle, 420.
Mysticse voces, 365.
Myth, Exodus, 185, 186, 210;
Jonah, 447 ; of Helen, 168 ;
of Pistis Sophia, 469 ; of
Valentinus, 306.
Mythologizing of history, 88.
Mythology, 332.
Muesis, 355.
Mulaprakriti, 258.
N
Naas, 196.
Naasseni, 198.
Naassene, document, 198 ; hymn,
205.
Nadi's, 597.
Nahashirama, 392.
Nail of discipline, 449.
Name, 300, 304, 377, 381, 440,
462, 516, 565 ; authentic, 541,
542 ; echo of, 365 ; great,
363, 514, 523, 542, 599;
ineffable, 543 ; " Jesus " a
substitute, 369; of Christ,
422 ; of great power, 542 ;
of power, 282 ; of the father,
509; of truth, 380; six-
lettered, 368.
Names, 374, 550; authentic,
INDEX.
xlvii.
365, 509, 512; imperishable,
545, 546 ; mother of many,
334, (of thirty), 379; of
ssons, 338.
Narrow place, 560, 564.
Nativity, 400, 402.
Nature, 399, 400 ; seven-robed,
210 ; upper, 437.
" Naught was," 257.
Nazaraean, 580.
Nazaraeans, 126.
Neander, 144, 236.
Net, 440.
" Never grow old," 176.
Nicolaitans, 213, 239.
Nicopolis, 100.
Nicotheus, 553.
Night, 208.
Nile, heavenly, 204.
Nine times greater, 476.
Ninefold, 548, 559.
Nineveh, 447.
Nirvana, 142, 236, 474.
Nirvanic, atom, 319 ; ocean, 330.
Nitrian valley, 101.
Noah, 190.
Nochaitse, 198.
Noetic world, 320.
Nomina barbara, 339.
No-number, 373, 374.
Norton, 145.
Noughtness, 373.
Nuhama, 392.
Number, letters, 359 ; nuptial,
83 ; of perfect souls, 467, 486,
502, 503 ; permutations, 375 ;
symbolism, 358 ; theories,
222.
Numbers, 82, 516.
Oaths of secrecy, 416.
Oblivion, 496 ; draught of, 504,
516.
Ocean, 186, 202, 326, 330, 509,
545.
Octahedron, 222, 317, 324.
Ode to Sophia, 419.
Odes, of Basilides, 255; of
Solomon, 470, 572.
Ogdoad, 266, 268, 269, 271, 280,
307, 322, 323, 324, 333, 344,
345, 349, 350, 376, 396, 432,
587.
Omar, 106.
Omega, 530, 532.
Omphale, 197.
On an Appended Soul, 277.
On Heresies, 251.
On Justice, 234.
On the Soul, 251.
One, 67, 374 ; and all, 321 ;
and only one, 486, 531, 556,
561, 562, 565; word, 482;
garment, 425 ; great, 378,
(just), 532 ; holy, 434 ; horn,
222; in a thousand, 282,
506 ; little, 306 ; living, 380,
381, 382, 518, 520, 534, 554,
602 ; virgin, 218 ; word,
481.
Oneness, 373.
Only-begotten, 341.
Onamacritus, 38.
" Open unto us," 503.
Ophiani, 183.
Ophites, 181, 193 ; diagram of,
589.
Ophitism, 158.
Orgeones, 50.
Origen, 149.
Oroiael, 588.
Orpheus, 42, 44, 331.
Orphic, 49, 192 ; communities,
50, 54 ; hymns, 45 ; life, 50 ;
line, 42 ; mysteries, 51, 216,
411 ; poems, 38 ; songs, 45 ;
tradition, 39.
Osiris, 59, 201, 323, 438.
Osirified, 600.
Osymandyas, 103.
Outline of face, 548.
Outlines, The, 292.
xlviii. FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Overseer, 547, 551 ; of light,
465.
Ovum, 331, 536.
Oxyrhynchus, 600.
Pallas Athene, 41.
Pantaenus, 294.
Paradise, 189, 190, 247, 334,
396, 487, 505.
Paraphrase of Seth, 213.
Paraplex, 513.
Parchment, 104.
Parents, of seons, 336 ; we are
to leave, 504.
Parentless, 337, 524, 529.
Passion, 371, 378, 390, 434, 438,
446.
Passions, 346, 347.
" Pass-not," ring, 311.
Pastes, 421.
Paul, 176, 248, 252, 499;
Ascent of, 226 ; Apocalypse of,
227 ; churches of, 165 ; gospel
of, 244 ; letters of, 123 ; our
brother, 568 ; Vision of, 227.
Pearl, 407, 440.
Pelasgi, 40.
Pentad, 423, 551, 584.
Pentateuch, 388.
Peratse, 186, 198, 206.
Perfect, seon, 218 ; deity, 387 ;
flesh, 582 ; freedom, 557 ;
man, 215, 302, 354, 427;
mercy, 422, 423 ; mind, 551 ;
number of, 467, 486, 502,
503 ; triangle, 74, 82.
Perfection, god of, 495 ; Gospel
of, 198 ; seal of, 423.
Pergamus, 105, 239.
Persepolis, 279.
Person, 210 ; of Jesus, 140.
Peter, 176, 501, 581 ; Acts of,
152, 417, 580; Circuits of,
164, 166 ; interpreter of, 254 ;
Martyrdom of, 446.
Petro-Pauline controversy, 128,
166, 245.
Petro-Simonian controversy, 166.
Pharisaism, 92, 93.
Pharos, 97.
Pherecydes, 37.
Philaster, 150.
Philip, 466 ; Gospel of, 198, 439,
540.
Philo, 55, 117 ; and wisdom-
lovers, 60, 84 ; autobiography,
84 ; On the Contemplative Life,
61 ; pseudo, 62.
Philosophumena, 273.
Philoxenus, 397.
Philumene, 250.
Phlium, 216.
Phosilampes, 553.
Phronesis, 588.
Phrygian mysteries, 201, 202.
Pineal gland, 211.
Pistis Sophia (Faith-Wisdom),
339, 468, 470, 565 ; myth of,
469.
Pistis Sophia, 151, 199, 208,
281, 283, 290, 297, 303, 312,
343, 374, 382, 397, 398, 405,
409, 412, 449, 454, 529, 538,
567, 571, 578, 591 ; system
of, 192, 574 ; translation of,
456 ; treatise, original, 572.
Plagiarism by anticipation, 117.
Plagues of Egypt, 222.
Plain, cities of, 226; of truth, 230.
Plato, 39, 45, 49, 51, 53, 314.
Plato, Nuptial Number of, 83.
Platonic solids, 222, 314.
Pleroma, 207, 225, 311, 389,
461, 547, 550, 566 ; ascension
of, 478 ; boundary of, 342 ;
common fruit of, 331, 345,
346, 349, 351, 352 ; configura
tion of, 551 ; drama, 327 ;
emanation of, 499, 505 ;
gnosis of, 481, 484, 503;
lord of, 464 ; lords of, 501 ;
seed of, 377 ; sons of, 511.
INDEX.
xlix.
Pleromata, 305, 365.
Plough, 440.
Plutarch, 55, 56, 57.
Pneumatics, 139, 421, 468.
Point, 218.
Polarity, 321.
Polyhedra, 314.
Polyhedric origin of species,
322.
Poor men, 126, 127, 166, 227,
427.
Porphyry, 25, 393.
Portrait of Jesus, 233.
Poseidon, 40, 99.
Power, 547 ; above, 334, 447 ;
boundless, 173 ; daemonian,
190; demiurgic, 349, 372;
great, 164, 171, 173, 185, 542,
543 ; name of, 282 ; of high
est, 269, 353, 377 ; robe of,
343, 344 ; super-celestial, 381.
Powers, 462 ; cruel, crafty,
474; forty-nine, 516, 523;
of perfect man, 302 ; song of
the, 409, 464; triple, 468,
469.
Pralaya, 344.
Prayer, John's last, 442 ; morn
ing, 82 ; of the earth-born,
564.
Prayers of Therapeuts, 70 ; for
dead, 381, 494 ; sacramental,
422.
Pre-Christian gnosis, 163, 183.
Preuschen, 567.
Principalities, 436.
Proasteioi up to Mfher, 209, 280.
Proclus, 314.
Proculus, 291.
Prodigal son, parable of, 405.
Prophets, schools of the, 86, 94.
Prouneikos, 334.
Providence, 274, 275.
" Providentissimus Deus," 14.
Pseudepigraphs, 85, 94.
Pseudo -Clementines, 162, 164,
166.
Ptolemseus, 288, 590 ; to Flora,
293.
Ptolemies, 57.
Ptolemy, 108, 383; I. (Soter),
98, 102, 104; II. (Phila-
delphus), 104, 116; III.
(Euergetes), 105.
Pullulation, 259.
Puranas, 204.
Purgations of matter, 468, 488,
489.
Purgatorial spheres, 381.
Purification, degrees of, 472 ;
ladder of, 565.
Purusha, 301.
" Put not off," 502.
Pythagoras, 37, 39, 45, 51,
314.
Pythagorsean communities, 50,
54 ; triangle, 82.
Pythagorseans, 51, 82, 84.
Queen of East, 405, 411
Questions of Mary, 198, 199,
454, 466, 589.
R
Rabbis of south, 94.
Race, 69, 437, 447, 564 ; elect,
303 ; mystery type of, 471 ;
of mind, 518 ; righteous,
519.
Ragadouah, 99.
Raguel, 588.
Reasonings, 250.
Rebirth, 205, 220, 230, 354, 371,
381, 407, 504, 548.
Receiver, great, 467.
Receivers, 486, 498, 499, 511,
521 ; of light, 491 ; of wrath,
491, 497.
" Recognised myself, I have,"
540, 600.
Red Sea, 81, 186.
L
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Redemption, 265, 381, 471 ;
angelic, 380 ; of Sophia, 334 ;
of cross, 447.
Reflections, self-born, 565.
Refutatorii Sermones, 167.
Regeneration, 371, 372, 376,
445.
Reign of 1000 years, 92.
Reincarnating entity, 301.
Reincarnation, 167, 192, 231,
232, 274, 276, 404, 516.
Relative of mystery, 552.
" Remedy of Soul," 103.
Reminiscence, 230, 236, 474.
Renunciation of world, 481, 485,
489.
"Repent, Delay not to," 502.
Repentance, 446, 449, 471 ;
place of, 565 ; songs of, 470.
Repentances, 470, 471.
Resch, 412, 593.
Restitution of all things, 364.
Restoration, 265, 268, 270, 271,
273, 380.
Resurrection, 254, 404, 440,
548 ; of body, 176 ; of dead,
494, 495.
Rhacotis, 99, 100.
Rhapsodists, 38.
Rheinhardt, 579.
Rhodon, 250, 251.
Right, 264, 334, 348, 357, 401,
411, 436, 447, 448, 449, 465,
466, 477, 478, 483, 488, 511,
512, 548, 563.
" Right like as the left," 448.
Righteous, 490, 498, 519, 551.
Ritual, from mysteries, 431 ;
Marcosian, 380.
Rivers of Eden, 194.
Robe, of glory, 460, 461, 464,
520, (hymn of), 406, 419 ; of
initiation, 405 ; of power,
343, 344.
Rod, 201, 222; Moses' 222;
of Mercury, 185.
Root, aeons, 218 ; lower, 436 ;
of deathlessness, 440 ; uni
versal, 171.
Rudras, 327.
Ruler, 264, 439, 498; great,
262, 266, 267, 272.
Rulers, 230, 467, 469, 497, 498 ;
evil of 526 ; flesh of the,
468 ; seventy-two evil, 522 ;
three great, 532.
Sabaoth, Adamas, 521, 527 ;
great, 513, 529; little, 512,
516.
Sacrifices, 93.
Sadducees, 163.
Sais, 39.
Sakadagamin, 370.
Salmon, 236, 246, 424, 443.
Salome, 233, 598.
Salt, 73, 77, 80, 440; bread
and, 80 ; with, 425.
Samaritan Chronicle, 162.
Same, 234.
Samothracian mysteries, 202.
Samsara, 197, 303, 381.
Sarbug, 407, 410.
Satan, 436 ; sons of, 13, 32, 174.
Saturninus, 177.
Saviour, 58, 207, 271, 273, 505 ;
Books of the, 374, 454, 507,
546, 567, 573; first, 485;
of truth, 381 ; words of, 385.
Saviours, 176 ; of souls, 492 ;
twelve, 461 ; twin, 529.
Schmidt (Carl), 159, 538, 545,
552, 567, 574, 577, 579, 588.
Schwartze, 146, 281.
Seals, 214, 219, 317, 423, 498,
499, 537, 538.
Secularizing of Christianity, 136.
Secundus, 287, 357.
Seed-mixture, 263 ; conglomera
tion of the, 262, 265 ; of all
universes, 258 ; of iniquity,
504 ; of pleroma, 377.
INDEX.
li.
Selene, 163, 168.
Seniority, 75.
Septuagint, 104.
" Sepulchres, Ye are whitened,"
203.
Serapeum, 97, 99, 105, 106.
Sermon on the, Mountain, Secret,
440.
Serpent, 189, 206, 215 ; and
egg, 185, 331 ; flying, 331 ;
formed, 189, 190 ; legend,
167 ; rod, 185 ; symbol, 183.
Serpentine force, 185, 222.
Servant, dress of a, 215, 216 ;
form of a, 247.
Servers, 76.
Seth (or Set), 58, 59, 213 ; my
steries of, 58, 59 ; Para
phrase of, 213.
Setheus, 213, 551, 553.
Sethians, 213.
Seven, 74, 82, 323, 422 ; amens,
529; Elohim, 190; heads,
474 ; heavens, 396 ; num
bered greatness, 372 ; pillars,
333; robed Isis, 323,
(nature), 201 ; spheres, 379,
396 ; stars, 398 ; times,
491 ; virgins of light, 525 ;
voices, 516, 523, 524, 526,
529 ; women disciples, 582 ;
years, 201.
Seventh day common meal, 73.
Seventy, 116, 375, 522.
Severians, 251.
Shakti, 363, 432, 595.
Shame, of the dry, 424 ; ves
ture of, 598.
Sheep, 270 ; lost, 169.
Sheol, 447.
Shepherd boy, Jesus a, 197.
Sibylline Oracles, 126.
Siddhis, 302.
Sige, 327. *
Silence, 173, 313, 336, 341, 377,
378, 423, 548, 564; great,
311 ; of five years, 278, 282.
Silences, 524, 529.
Simon, 583 ; Magus, 168, 164 ;
of Cyrene, 283.
Simonian literature, 167.
Simonians, 160, 423.
" Sinned, He has not," 275.
Sinope, 241.
Sins on souls, stamping of, 499.
Siriadic land, 58.
Sirius, 58.
Sithians, 198.
Sixty, fatherhoods, 544 ; trea
sures, 540.
Skemmut, 505.
Skin, coats of, 190.
Slime, abysmal, 208.
Smith and Wace, 144.
Solomon, 557 ; odes of, 470 ;
seal of, 317 ; Wisdom of,
298.
Solon, 39, 40.
Son, alone-begotten, 390 ; of
God, 269, 565; of man,
189, 191, 199, 202, 378, 581 ;
of father, 60 ; of living, 404 ;
Sons, of Adam, 599 ; God, 5,
266, 268, 303, 353, 354;
light, 371, 511; Satan, 174;
the man, 372 ; the pleroma,
511.
Sonship, 259, 260, 264, 354,
555 ; saviour of the, 262 ;
second, 261 ; third, 262, 263,
265, 272, 303.
Sophia, 188, 189, 298, 304, 339,
561 ; fall of, 305 ; grief of,
346; mythus, 306, 333, 335,
469 ; ode to, 419 ; redemp
tion of, 334.
Soria y Mata, 314, 322.
Soteriology, 355 ; of Basilides,
265.
Sothis, 58.
Soul, 277, 387, 496; clothed
with a proper, 272 ; descent
of, 334, 471 ; great, 467 ;
hymn of the, 403 ; of Elias,
lii.
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
461 ; On an Appended, 277 ;
On the, 251 ; plantal nature
of, 277 ; mineral nature of,
277.
Souls, breathed out, 219 ; classes
of, 139 ; coming and going
of, 26; frenzied, 495; in
incarnation, 488 ; return of,
23 ; saviours of, 492.
Space, blessed, 261 ; crucified
in, 330; first, 492; limit,
267 ; middle, 173, 334, 348 ;
of first mystery, inner, 478,
479 ; of ineffable, 477, 479 ;
of twelve aeons, 465 ; sun, 263.
Spaces, of light, three supernal,
478 ; three, 529 ; three-faced
and two-faced, 551 ; twin,
463, 477 ; sublunary, 264,
268.
Spermatozoon, 331, 536.
Sphere, fate, 209; first, 464;
second, 465.
Spheres, conversion of, 465,
466, 467 ; purgatorial, 381 ;
seven, 379, 396.
Spider, 259.
Spiral, 331.
Spirit, 434, 475 ; baptism, 515,
522; counterfeit, 276, 496,
498, 499, 500, 504, 505;
excellent, 305 ; fruits of,
338; gifts of the, 441;
holy, 260, 261, 262, 278, 327,
353, 377, 378, 397, 422, 526 ;
like a dove, 354 ; limitary,
266, 267, 269, 272, 343;
living, 420; "shall come
upon thee," 269 ; virginal,
203, 531, 583, 584.
Spirits, 276 ; mind-born, 563 ;
mundane, 236.
Splendour, lord of, 562.
Srotapanna, 370.
Standing one, 163.
Statute, 440, 564, 565; first,
463, 465.
Sublunary regions, 263 ; spaces,
264, 268.
Sun, 473 ; disk of, 510 ; in
its true form, 476 ; light of,
498, 510 ; space, 263 ; wor
ship of the, 55.
Superfluity of naughtiness, 524.
Supersubstantial, 566.
Supplementary development,
259.
Suppliant, 65.
Supplication, 346.
Supporters, 525 ; five, 529 ;
great, 479.
Synesis, 588.
Syrian gnosis, 177.
Syzygy, 305, 423, 468, 472;
law of, 321.
Sweat of bodies, 467.
Tabor, 597.
" Take courage," 460.
Tantra, 367.
Tau, 438.
Tears of their eyes, 467.
Tehuti (Thoth), 57.
Teii, 323 ; asons, 337 ; tribes,
89.
Tertullian, 149, 293, 590;
pseudo, 149.
Tetrad, 323, 375, 377.
Tetrads, 357, 378.
Tetragrammaton, 132, 534.
Tetrahedron, 222, 317.
Tetraktys, 350, 373, 390.
Thalatth (Tiamat), 209.
Thales, 37.
That-which-is, 553.
Thebaid, 101.
Thebes, 103.
Thelesis, 588.
Theocritus, 109.
Theodas, 294.
Theodoret, 150.
Theodotus, 288, 292, 294, 357 ;
INDEX.
liii.
Extracts from, 287, 292, 332,
356.
Theophrastus, 104, 223.
Theos, 329.
Therapeut, name, 66 ; order,
62.
Therapeutse, 62, 66, 101.
Therapeutrides, 66.
Therapeuts, 60, 63, 64; books
of the, 71 ; lay-pupils of the,
84 ; Philo's connection with,
84 ; prayers, of 70 ; rule, 72.
Theudas, 294.
Thiasi, 50.
Thieves and robbers, 353.
Third, of their light, 465 ; ven
tricle, 211.
Thirteenth seon, 325, 466, 468,
476, 511, 515, 520, 522, 528,
531, 532, 539.
Thirty hours, 460 ; two, 419 ;
aeons, 421.
Thirtyfold, 328.
Thomas, 602 ; Acts of, 419, 422,
424 ; palace of, 424 ; Gospel
according to, 198, 201 ; Judas,
419, 424.
Thoth, 57.
Thousand, one in a, 506 ; years
of light, 486.
Thrace, 42.
Thracian mysteries, 202.
Three times accomplished, 474.
Thrice -spiritual, 524, 529.
Thrones, 484.
Thyrsus, 185 ; bearers, 10.
Timceus, 39, 299.
Titus, 92.
Tobe (see Tybi), 278.
Tone, 547.
Tongue, of flesh, 438, 552, 578 ;
of the ineffable, 482 ; wis
dom's, 421.
Torments, 504.
" Torn myself asunder," 488,
505.
Transcendentalists, 186, 209.
Transfiguration, 459 ; story,
370.
Transmigration, 169, 276, 488,
499, 498, 503.
Treasure, 267 ; gates of, 474 ;
house, 172 ; light of the, 512 ;
of light, 477, 478, 509, 511,
514, 520, 522, 525; veil of,
468, 469 ; purgations of, 488 ;
second light, 530.
Treasurers, 412.
Treasures, 172 ; of light, 527 ;
of incorruptible, 192 ; sixty,
540 ; type of, 535.
Treasury, 406.
Tree, 221 ; fig, 218 ; fire, 172 ;
hanging on, 342 ; life-giving,
446 ; of knowledge, 487, 505 ;
of life, 487, 505.
Trees, 172, 194, 196 ; five, 523,
529, 544.
Triangle, 207 ; perfect, 74, 82.
Trismegistic literature, 57, 58,
223, 441.
Trismegistus, Hermes, 58, 440.
Trojan war, 43, 44, 168.
True God, 530, 533, 534, 535,
537, 542, 559, 587 ; gods,
543.
True Word, 150, 183.
Truth, 419, 549 ; body of, 366 ;
diagram of, 367 ; father of,
377 ; gate of, 204 ; god of,
304, 367, 485, 486, 508;
name of, 380 ; plain of, 230 ;
saviour of, 381.
Twelve, 323, 420, 422, 461,
500; aeons, 337, 465, 511,
531 ; depths, 548 ; incarna
tion of the, 460 ; mysteries,
485 ; saviours, 461 ; the,
538, 542 ; tribes, 202 ; years,
523.
Twin, of Jesus, 424 ; saviours,
529 ; spaces, 463, 477.
Twins, 423.
Tybi, 278, 459.
liv.
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Typhon, 59.
Tyrants, 474, 465, 468.
Tubingen school, 166.
Turmoil, 276.
u
Unapproachable, 543, 544 ; god,
521, 528 ; god, hymn to the,
543 ; one and only, 531.
Uncontainables, 521, 529, 530,
545, 555, 566.
Under-meaning, 71, 79.
Unguent, 261, 262.
Unknowable, invisible, 565.
Unknown, great, 309.
Universality beyond being, 257.
Unstainables, 529, 564.
Untitled Apocalypse, 547.
Unutterable depth, 188.
Upanishads, 204, 301, 302, 307,
320, 439.
Valentinianism, 285, 286 ;
schools of, 287.
Valentinus, 284, 289, 290, 294,
570, 578 ; gospel of, 298 ;
myth of, 306; "they of,"
285, 571 ; Wisdom of, 298 ;
writings of, 297.
Vasus, 327.
Veil, 322 ; first, 509.
Veils, 538 ; of thirteenth aeon,
468 ; of treasure, 468, 469.
Ventricle, third, 211.
Vesture, 547, 566 ; ineffable,
557 ; of light, 460, 483, 499 ;
of shame, 598 ; of power,
558.
Vestures, 562; of glory, 472;
of light, 463 ; of ineffable,
501.
Vine, true, 446.
Vineyard, 475.
Virgin, 191, 377, 558; John
the, 484 ; made body, 221 ;
mother, 58 ; of life, 526 ;
of light, 476, 491, 497, 517,
(the judge), 498, 499 ; matter,
564; one, 218; with child,
203 ; womb, 215, 225.
Virginal spirit, 203, 531, 583,
584.
Virginity, 75, 520.
Virgins, 251 ; of light, seven,
525.
Vision, 328 ; of Ezekiel, 94 ;
of Jacob, 202 ; of Paul, 227 ;
of baptism mysteries, 514.
Voice, 435, 448 ; and name, 171.
Voices, seven, 516, 523, 524,
526, 529 ; three, 536, 541.
Volkmar, 234.
Vortex, 329, 331.
w
" Wake thou that sleepest," 201.
" Wanderer, I am a," 220.
Water, 210 ; above, living, 200 ;
baptism of, 515, 522 ; " Ex
cept a man be born of," 221 ;
image of, 424 ; life-giving,
197, 216, 515; of life, 201,
565, (baptism of), 524 ; of
pure light, 584 ; whirl, 323.
Waters of Jordan, 185, 204.
Way, 433, 448 ; of error, 448 ;
of the first man, 448 ; of midst,
498, 510, 511, 513, 514, 546;
to god, 3, 32, 223.
Wedding, feast, great, 397 ; gar
ment, 405.
" When two shall be one," 595.
" Where is he ? " 475.
" Where, then, O Egypt," 466.
" Which things I hate," 239.
Whirlpool, vast, 331.
Whirlwind, mighty, 185.
" Why callest thou me Good,"
201.
Wiedemann, 301.
INDEX.
Iv.
Wine, jars of, 524.
" Wing or thought," 260.
Winged globe, 473.
Wings, 260.
Wisdom, 27, 37, 169, 226, 331,
333 ; above, 375, 396 ; below,
376, 396 ; Chaldsean, 89, 94 ;
cup of, 516 ; declared in a
mystery, 268 ; god of, 57 ;
goddess of, 41 ; harmony of,
436 ; hymn to, 419 ; lovers,
60; of deity, 9; of Egypt,
38, 57 ; of Jesus Christ, 152,
580, 582, 589 ; of Solomon,
298 ; of Valentinus, 298 ;
Within, looking, 473, 474, 486.
Womb, impure, 215 ; virgin,
215, 225 ; world, 225.
Women disciples, 75, 251, 582.
Word (see Logos), 363, 368, 434,
435, 438, 448, 587 ; and life,
323, 336, 374 ; Christ is the,
448 ; made flesh, 390 ; one
and only, 482.
Words, 354, 442, 507, 508; of
the Lord, 138 ; of Saviour,
385 ; of truth, 485 ; or angels,
352 ; or minds, 351 ; un
speakable, 269.
Workman (see Demiurge), 349,
350, 351, 353.
Worm, 180, 189.
Wrath, 436 ; of their iniquity,
512 ; receivers of, 491, 497 ;
workmen of, 497.
Wreath, 442, 555, 557.
Wreaths, 556.
X
Xerxes, 38.
Yahoo, 534.
Yahweh, 92, 138, 179, 534;
friends of God, enemies of,
225.
Yantras, 367.
Yhvh, 534.
Yoga, 302.
Yogins, 429.
Yod, 222.
Zahn, 417.
Zama, zama, 462.
Zealot, 94.
Zealotism, 91, 92, 97.
Zeus, 511, 512 ; all-father, 41.
Zodiac, signs of, 209, 325, 379,
448.
Zoroaster, 7.
Zoroasters, last of the, 37.
Zoroastrian logia, 172 ; tradi
tion, 87.
Zoroastrianisrn, 91, 177, 278.
Zorokothora (Melchizedec), 512,
525, 526.
INTRODUCTION.
The whole creation groaneth and travaileth together
waiting for the manifestation of the Sons of God.
PAUL (according to Gnostic tradition.)
PROLEGOMENA.
MYSTERIOUS Time is once more big with child and
labouring to bring forth her twentieth babe, as the The Creed of
Western world counts her progeny ; for, according
to the books, just nineteen children of her centen
arian brood have lived and died since He appeared
to whom all Christians look as Teacher of the Way
to God. The common conscience of the General
Church flows not only from the fact that all
believe He is the Teacher of the Way, but from
the faith, He is that Way itself. This is the
common bond of Christians the world over, and
this has been the symbol of their union through
out the centuries. Some nineteen hundred years
ago the Illuminator appeared and light streamed
forth into the world — such is the common creed
of the adherents of the great religion of the
Western world.
As the honorific inscriptions said of the birth
day of the Roman Emperor Augustus, so said
after them all Christians of the natal day of
Jesus :
3
4 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
" This day has given the earth an entirely new
aspect. The world would have gone to destruction
had there not streamed forth from him who is
now born a common blessing.
" Rightly does he judge who recognises in this
birth-day the beginning of life and of all the
powers of life ; now is that time ended when men
pitied themselves for being born.
" From no other day does the individual or the
community receive such benefit as from this natal
day, full of blessing to all.
" The Providence which rules over all has filled
this man with such gifts for the salvation of the
o
world as designate him as Saviour for us and for
the coming generations ; of wars he will make an
end, and establish all things worthily.
" By his appearing are the hopes of our fore
fathers fulfilled; not only has he surpassed the
good deeds of earlier time, but it is impossible
that one greater than he can ever appear.
" The birth-day of God has brought to the world
glad tidings that are bound up in him.
" From his birth-day a new era begins."
So runs the most perfect of a number of
inscriptions lately found in Asia Minor and set up
to commemorate the introduction of the Julian
Calendar by the Emperor Augustus. It bears a
date corresponding to our B.C. 9 (See Harnack's
article in Die christliche Welt, Dec. 1899).
The hope of the adherents of the Emperor-
cult was speedily shattered ; the expectation of
PROLEGOMENA. 5
Christendom remains in great part unfulfilled, for
the nineteen centuries which have passed away have The New
severally grown old in years of bitter strife, of ivday.
internecine and most bloody wars, of persecution
and intolerance in things religious which no other
period in the world's known history can parallel.
Will the twentieth century witness the fulfilment
of this so great expectation; can it be said
of the present time that "the whole nature
travaileth together waiting for the manifestation
of the Sons of God"?
Can any who keenly survey the signs of the
times, doubt but that now, at -the dawn of the
twentieth century, among Christian nations, the
general nature of thought and feeling in things
religious is being quickened and expanded, and as
it were is labouring in the pains of some new
birth? And if this be so, why should not the
twentieth century witness some general realization
of the long deferred hope by the souls that are to be
born into it ? Never in the Western world has the
general mind been more ripe for the birth of
understanding in things religious than it is to-day;
never have conditions been more favourable for the
wide holding of a wise view of the real nature of
the Christ and the task He is working to achieve
in the evolution of His world-faith.
Our present task will be to attempt, however
imperfectly, to point to certain considerations which Our Presen
may tend to restore the grand figure of the Great
Teacher to its natural environment in history and
tradition, and disclose the intimate points of
6 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
contact which the true ideal of the Christian
religion has with the one world-faith of the most
advanced souls of our common humanity — in brief,
to restore the teaching of the Christ to its true
spirit of universality. Not for one instant would
we try to lessen the reverence and the love of
any single soul for that Great Soul who watches
over Christendom ; our task will rather be to point
to a soil in which that love can flourish ever more
abundantly, and ever more confidently open its heart
to the rational rays of the Spiritual Sun. That soil
is rich enough for the full growth of the man-plant ;
it is part of the original soil, and gives nourish
ment to every branch of man's nature, emotional
and moral, rational and spiritual.
With many others we hold there is but One
The One Religion for humanity ; the many faiths and
creeds are all streams or streamlets of this great
river. This may perhaps seem a hard saying
to some, but let us briefly consider its meaning.
The Sun of Truth is one. His rays stream
forth into the minds and hearts of men; surely
if we believe anything at all, we hold this
faith in the Fatherhood of God ! Must we
not then believe that our common Father is no
respecter of persons and that at all times, in all
lands, He has loved and loves and will love His
children ? We should be dull scholars indeed if
nineteen hundred years of the teaching of the
Christ had not taught us this. And yet how few
really believe it ? The whole history of the Churches
of Christendom is a record of disbelief in this
PROLEGOMENA. 7
fundamental dogma of universal religion, and no
greater foe has dogged the footsteps of Christainity
than the evil genius of Jewish particularism, which
has ever instigated it to every outbreak of intolerance
and persecution. This same spirit also infused itself
into Mohammedanism, and we can trace the results
in the bloody pages of its history.
It may possibly be that this crude particularism
and exclusiveness in religion is a necessary factor The Sons!
in the development of certain classes of souls, and Doctrine.
that it is used for ultimate good purpose by the
Wisdom that guides the world; but is not a greater
portion of our Father's blessing possible to us now ?
Can we not see that it matters not whether a man
have learned of the Path from the teaching of
Krishna or of the Buddha, of Mohammed or
Zoroaster, or of the Christ, — provided he but set his
foot upon that Path, it is all one to our common
Father? He it was who sent Them all forth and
illumined Them, that all might through Them have
the spiritual food suited to their needs. Words fail
even to hint at the sublimity of this conception, at
the glorious glimpse into the stupendous reality of
God's providence which this illuminating doctrine
opens up. And to realise this — not to believe it in
some half-hearted way and practically deny it by
our other beliefs — how great the growth of the heart !
It is in the sunshine of this most blessed doctrine
of all the world-saviours that we would ask our
readers to approach the consideration of the many
forms of faith of earliest Christendom with which we
shall have to deal in these pages. In this sunshine
8 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
"heresy" and "false religion" frequently wear so
changed an aspect that they seem quite beautiful
alongside of the " orthodoxy " and " true religion " of
their unsympathetic opponents.
But let us be on our guard against all exaggera
tion and strive to get things in their true propor
tions, for it is only thus that we can realise the
eternal providence of God, who by His Messengers
in His own good time ever adjusts the balance. It
has been said by Professor Max Miiller that we
should not speak of the comparative science of
religion, but should rather employ the phrase, com
parative science of theology. This is quite true of
the work that has so far been done, and done well,
by official scholarship; the main effort has been to
discover differences, and exaggerate the analysis of
details. So far there has been, outside of a small
circle of writers, little attempt at synthesis.
We are not, however, prepared to abandon the
term comparative science of religion; we believe
there is such a science — the noblest perchance to
which any man can set his hand. But it is one of
the most difficult. It requires not only an intimate
experience of human nature as well as a wide
knowledge of history, but also a deep sympathy
with the hopes and fears of the religious conscience,
and above all things an unshakable faith in the
unwinking providence of God in all human affairs.
Supposing it possible that a man could love and
revere all the great Teachers known to history as
deeply and earnestly as each exclusive religionist
reveres and loves his own particular Master ;
PROLEGOMENA. 9
supposing that he could really believe in the
truth of each of the great religions in as full The True
Scholar
measure, though without exclusiveness, as the of Religion,
orthodox of each great faith believes in the truth
of his own revelation; supposing finally he could
sense the Wisdom of Deity in active operation in
all these manifestations, — what a glorious Religion
would then be his ! How vast and strong his
Faith when supported by the evidences of all the
world-bibles and the exhortations of all the world-
teachers ! Persuaded of the fact of re-birth, he
would feel himself a true citizen of the world and
heir presumptive to all the treasures of the sacred
books. Little would he care for the gibes of
" eclectic " or " syncretist " flung at him by the
analysers of externals and seekers after difference,
for he would be bathing in the life-stream of
Religion, and would gladly leave them to survey
its bed and channels, and scrutinize the mud of
its bottom and the soil of its banks; least of all
would he notice the cry of " heretic " hurled after
him by some paddlers in a pool on the shore.
Not, however, that he would think little of
analysis or less of orthodoxy, but his analysis
would be from within as well as from without,
and he would find his orthodoxy in the life of the
stream and not in the shape of the banks.
The One Religion flows in the hearts of men
and the Light-stream pours its rays into the |5eth£a of
soil of human nature. The analysis of a religion ComPanson
is therefore an analysis of human-kind. Every
great religion has expressions as manifold as
10
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the minds and hearts of its adherents. The
manifestation of its truth in the life and words
of a great sage must differ widely from the feeble
reflection of its light which is all the dull intellect
and unclean life of the ignorant and immoral can
express. It is true that its light and life are free
for all ; but as there are grades of souls, all at
different stages of evolution, how can it be that
all can equally reflect that light ? How un
wise is it then to compare the most enlightened
views of one set of religionists with the most
c5
ignorant beliefs and most superstitious practices of
another set ! And yet this is a very favourite pas
time with those who seek to gratify themselves
with the persuasion that their own faith is superior
to that of every other creature. This method will
never lead us to a comprehension of true Religion
or an understanding of our brother man.
Analyse any of the great religions, and you find
the same factors at work, the same problems of
human imperfection to be studied, the many who
are " called " and the few who are " chosen," — there
are in each religion, as there ever have been,
" many Thyrsus-bearers but few Bacchi." To
compare the Bacchi of one religion with the
Thyrus-bearers of another is mere foolishness.
All Hindus, for instance, are not unintelligent
worshipers of idols and all Christians fervent
imitators of the Christ. If we compare the two at
all, let us put the image-adoration of the
Roman Church or eikon-worship of the Greek
Church alongside of the worship of four-faced
PROLEGOMENA. 11
Brahma and the rest of the figures of the
pantheon; but if we would find the proper
parallel to the holy life and best theology of
Christendom, then we must go to the best theology
and holiest livers among the Brahmans.
So then if we analyse a religion, we find that
the lowest of the people know little of it and cling
desperately to many misconceptions and superstitions,
and that from this travesty of what it really is, rises
grade after grade of higher intelligence and less
erroneous expression of it, until we arrive at that
class of souls who consciously seek to welcome the
light in all its fulness and make this the one
object of their lives. It is within this class of
minds that we must seek for the true nature of
a religion. Here then we expect to find the real
points of contact between the religion and its
sister-faiths, and here we sense the presence of
the glorious Spiritual Sun, the parent of all the
Rays of Light poured into the world.
Now of all the great religions none can be of
greater interest to any student of the comparative The
science of religion in the West than the Christian Christian!
Faith. It presses on him at every turn; it is
a problem he cannot escape. He is amazed at the
general ignorance of everything connected with
its history and origins. How few are there who
have ever really studied the subject, outside of
the comparatively small body of scholars whose
profession is to deal with such researches — and even
among them how few have thrown any real light
on the subject, in spite of their admirable industry.
12 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Indeed it is difficult for any one possessed of
the ideas we have endeavoured to express above,
filled with enthusiasm for the unity of religion
and with a living faith in the truly universal
nature of the Christ's teaching, to gain much real
help from the studies of either rationalists
or apologists. For long he is confronted with
libraries of books filled with mutually contradictory
opinions, and only valuable as a means of sifting
out material for future use. He finds as he
prosecutes his studies, that every one of his
preconceptions as to early times has to be con
siderably modified, and most of them indeed to be
entirely rejected. He gradually works his way to
a point whence he can obtain an unimpeded view
of the remains of the first two centuries, and
gazes round on a world that he has never heard
of at school, and of which no word is breathed
from the pulpit.
Is this the world of the Primitive Church of
which he has read in the accepted manuals and
been told of by pastors and masters ? Is this the
picture of the single and simple community of the
followers of Jesus; this the one doctrine which he
had been led to believe has been handed down in
unbroken succession and in one form since the
beginnings ? He gazes round on a religious world
of immense activity, a vast upheaval of thought
and a strenuousness of religious endeavour to which
the history of the Western world gives no parellel.
Thousands of schools and communities on every
hand, striving and contending, a vast freedom of
PROLEGOMENA. 13
thought, a mighty effort to live the religious life.
Here he finds innumerable points of contact with
other religions; he moves in an atmosphere of
freedom of which he has previously had no
experience in Christian tradition. Who are all
these people — not fishermen and slaves and the
poor and destitute, though those are striving too —
but these men of learning and ascetic life, saints
and sages as much as many others to whom the
name has been given with far less reason ? They
are all heretics, say later Church writers, very
pestilent folk and enemies of the True Faith which
we have now established by our decrees and councils.
But the student prefers to look to the first two
centuries themselves instead of listening to the
opinions and decisions of those who come after,
who, as farther away from the origins, can hardly
be expected to know more of them than those they
anathematised after their death.
Now it is remarkable that, though such abundantly
minute and laborious research has been expended on
the problem of the origins of Christianity by the
analysis of canonical documents, so little critical
attention has been bestowed on the writings of these
" heretics," although by their means great light may
be thrown on many of the obscure problems con
nected with the history of the beginnings ; it is only
of comparatively late years that the utility of their
evidence has been recognised and that attempts have
been made to bring them into court. The "general
voice" of the Catholic Church since its ascendancy
has stigmatised these " heretics " as the " first-born
14 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
sons of Satan," and the faithful have believed un-
questioningly that that voice was " Sancto Spiritu
suggerente" But for Protestantism at least such
crude opinions can no longer satisfy the liberal
mind in things religious at the beginning of the
twentieth century.
For upwards of one hundred years liberal
Christendom has witnessed the most strenuous and
courageous efforts to rescue the Bible from the hands
of an ignorant obscurantism which had in many
ways degraded it to the level of a literary fetish
and deprived it of the light of reason. This policy
of obscurantism is really one cf despair, of want of
confidence in the living and persisting presence of
inspiration in the Church, a tacit confession that
inspiration had ceased in the infancy of the Faith.
As is well known, the dogma of the verbal and
literal inspiration by the Holy Ghost, in the fullest
sense of the terms, of every canonical document
was but lately universally held, and is still held
by the majority of Christians to-day. The famous
encyclical of Leo XIII. (" Providentissimus Deus " —
1893) formulates the orthodoxy of Roman Catholic
Christendom in the following counsel of despair :
"It is absolutely wrong and forbidden, either to
narrow inspiration to certain parts only of Holy
Scripture, or to admit that the sacred writer has
erred. For the system of those who, in order
to rid themselves of these difficulties, do not
hesitate to concede that Divine inspiration regards
the things of faith and morals, and nothing
beyond, because (as they wrongly think) in
PROLEGOMENA. 15
the question of the truth or falsehood of
a passage, we should consider not so much what
God has said as the reason and purpose which He
had in mind in saying it — this system cannot be
tolerated, for all the books which the Church
receives as sacred and canonical are written wholly
and entirely, with all their parts, at the dictation
of the Holy Ghost; and so far is it from being
possible that any error can co-exist with inspiration,
that inspiration not only is essentially incompatible
with error, but excludes and rejects it as absolutely
and necessarily as it is impossible that God Himself,
the supreme truth, can utter that which is not true.
This is the ancient and unchanging faith of the
Church, solemnly defined in the Councils of Florence
and Trent, and finally confirmed and more expressly
formulated by the Council of the Vatican. . . .
Hence because the Holy Ghost employed men as
His instruments, we cannot therefore say that it
was these inspired instruments who, perchance, have
fallen into error, and not the primary author. For,
by supernatural power, He so moved and impelled
them to write — He was so present to them — that
the things which He ordered, and those only, they,
first rightly understood, then willed faithfully to
write down, and finally expressed in apt words and
with infallible truth. Otherwise it could not be
said that He was the author of the entire Scripture.
Such has always been the persuasion of the Fathers.
. ,>ti . It follows that those who maintain that an
error is possible in any genuine passage of the
sacred writings, either pervert the Catholic notion
16 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of inspiration, or make God the author of such
error."
This encyclical is not a curious literary relic of
medievalism ; it is the most solemn and authoritative
voice of the Head of by far the largest and most
powerful Church of Christendom, binding on all the
faithful, and circulated broadcast at the end of the
nineteenth century, in which we boasted ourselves
to be so much better than our fathers.
It is, of course, perfectly patent that such a
Its pronouncement is unavoidable by the Head of a
Result. Church which has given in its adhesion to the
dogma of infallibility, and whose life depends on
the maintenance of its unquestioned authority.
The consequence, however, is that in order to
reconcile this dogma with reason, its scholars have
to resort to a casuistical method which is
exceedingly distasteful to those who are nurtured
in the free air of scientific research, and which
unfortunately renders the writings of Roman
Catholic critics open to the charge of insin
cerity. We need not, however, necessarily, doubt
their sincerity, for in the domain of religion the
commonest phenomenon is faith doing violence to
reason; as students of life, therefore, we watch
with keenest interest this tragedy of the human
reason struggling in the bonds of a self-imposed
authority, and as believers in Providence have
confidence that the force thus generated will even
tually be used for good, though at present it seems
to many of us an unmixed evil.
This is one side of the picture, and indeed a
PROLEGOMENA. 17
most interesting one for the student of human
nature. Indubitably many millions still believe The Force
most firmly as they are bidden to believe by the
Holy Father, and with a slight difference of contents
and edition many millions of Protestants, who spurn
the Pope's authority far from them, believe as blindly
in this view of inspiration and are even more fervent
bibliolaters than their Roman Catholic brethren.
This conservative and reactionary force is apparently
still necessary; it is the pressure which insists on ever
greater and greater thoroughness from those who are
clearing a way for the acceptance of a living doctrine
of inspiration, to replace what for an ever-growing
number appears to be the fossil of a lifeless dogma.
This conservatism, we believe, will not prove an evil
for Christendom in the long run, for it is largely
dictated by a faith — though a blind one — in the
reality of inspiration, in the sublimity of the " things
not seen," which refuses to have its positive place in
the human heart filled by what seems to it at present
a negation of its most cherished convictions. But
could such believers open the eyes of their under
standing, they would see that the busy souls who
are clearing away the obscurations of centuries of
misunderstanding, are filled with as lively a faith
as their own — and by their devotion to truth are
doing God's work in preparing the way for a fuller
realization of His eternal Wisdom and a deeper
understanding of human nature. True, in order to
achieve this task these energetic souls are filled
with an enthusiasm for criticism which is perhaps
exaggerated, but which nevertheless is the necessary
18 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
yoke-fellow of blind conservatism. It is the child of
these twain that will bring light.
For if we turn to the other side of the picture,
o?Pro°ress we ^nc^ ^e keen an(^ trained mind of the scientific
intellect scrutinizing every word and letter of
Scripture to test the assertions of blind faith.
Textual or the Lower Criticism has for ever shattered
the pretension of the Council of Trent, to settle the
question of a " Textus Receptus." The Received Text
is proved to have suffered in its tradition so many
misfortunes at the hands of ignorant scribes and
dogmatic editors that the human reason stands
amazed at the spectacle. Can it be possible, it asks,
that any soul possessed of God's good gift of reason
can believe the literal inspiration of such a collection
of protean changes of words ?
It is perhaps a mistake to have given the name
Teh?,^t?re of Criticism to such research, because the ordinary
of Criticism.
person looks on the term as implying something
hostile and inimical ; the original meaning of the
word, however, did not convey such an idea, but
simply the sense of examining and judging well.
But the wise man will not be dismayed by a term ;
he will look at the thing itself, and so far from
finding anything impious in so admirable an art as
that of textual criticism, will regard it as a most
potent means for removing human error.
But Criticism does not end with the investigation
of the text; it proceeds to a higher branch and
busies itself with research into the date and history
of the sacred books, the analysis and comparison of
their several contents, and their relations with other
PROLEGOMENA. 19
writings ; in brief, it surveys the whole field of
Biblical literature as to contents in all its parts.
The results of this investigation are so stupendous,
that we seem to enter a new religious land. But
before we enter the sun -lit waters of the harbour
of this new country, we must have battled through
many storms which no bark of blind faith will
ever survive; the only vessel that can live through
them is the ship of a rational faith.
In brief, the method of criticism is rational,
it is that of private judgment; though indeed I
doubt if there be any class of men who have sought
more earnestly for help and guidance in their task
than the great Critics of Christendom. It is this
fact, the high moral worth of our Critics and their
deep religious sense, which makes their work so
valuable. It is the best in Christendom criticising
itself — not a band of enemies without, trying to
compass its discomfiture. A religion whose adherents
can do this, is alive, and so long as this spirit
exists cannot die. This spirit is as much the
inspiration of the Holy Ghost as is the conviction
of blind faith in the "credo quid absurdum" of
the Roman tradition of verbal inspiration.
But we must not suppose that Criticism is an
end in itself; it is but a means towards a new The
definition of the eternal problems of religion — a
most potent means indeed, because these problems
can now be defined with an intelligence and a
knowledge of human nature which infinitely adds
to their interest, and demands more pressingly than
ever their solution; but Criticism cannot solve
20 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
them, their solution depends on a still higher
faculty, a faculty that will pass beyond the science
of things seen to the gnosis of things unseen.
This is the child that will come to birth from the
congress of the two great forces of progress and
reaction of which we have been speaking.
For, granting that the Bible is a library of books
for the most part composed of scraps of other
documents, of very various dates edited and re-edited ;
that the older deposits of the Jewish portion draw
largely from the mythology of other nations and
falsify history to an incredible extent; are in their
oldest deposits profuse in unmoral doctrine and
patent absurdities, and paint the picture of a God that
revolts all thinking minds; that the more recent
deposits of the Hebrew Scriptures, though breathing
a far loftier spirit, are still open to many objections ;
and that the books of the Christian portion are
equally called in question on numerous points ; — still
there is so much of beauty and lofty conception in the
teachings of the Bible, and it has for so many
centuries been regarded as the vehicle of God's
revelation to man, that the problem of inspiration,
instead of being lessened by these facts, becomes all
the more pressing for solution.
What is the nature of this higher faculty which
transcends the reason ; and why are the records of its
activity marred with imperfection and absurdities
which the reason can so clearly detect ?
This the scientist as scientist, the scholar as
scholar, can never fully explain. Equally so the mystic
as mystic cannot throw full light on the problem
PROLEGOMENA. 21
What is required is the nature born of the union
of the two — a nature so hard to find that it may
almost be said to ba non-existent. The mystic
will not submit himself to the discipline and
training of science : the scholar refuses to attach
any validity to the methods of the mystic. And
yet without the union of the two the child of
understanding cannot be born.
For some three hundred ye&rs the Western
world has been evolving a wonderful instrument Nineteen
Centuries
of natural research, a subtle grade of mind trained Ago and
in what we call the scientific method; it has been
developing in this instrument numerous new senses,
and chief among them the sense of history. Its
conquests are so brilliant that men are disposed
to believe that never have such things been before:
we are scornful of the past, impatient of its
methods, unsympathetic to its ideas, and little
inclined to profit by the lessons it can teach.
As has ever been the case with nations in their
prime, we think that " we are the people, and
wisdom will die with us." All this is perfectly
natural and even necessary for the proper develop
ment of this keen intellectual instrument, this
grade of mind of which we are all so proud.
But the student of human nature and the scholar
of the science of life keeps looking to the past in
order that he may the better forecast the future;
his sense of history extends beyond the domain
of the " Higher Criticism " and strives to become
clairvoyant.
We have had three hundred years or so of
22 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
cataloguing and criticism, analysis and scepticism,
of most brilliant physical research in all depart
ments; the pious have feared for the overthrow
of religion, and positivists have longed for the
downfall of superstition. What has it all meant;
for what good purpose is this sifting; how
does the strife exemplify the wise providence of
God?
Perhaps it may not be so difficult as it appears
at first sight, to point to the direction in which
the answers to these questions may be to some
extent anticipated. That similar phenomena recur
in the natural world is the unvarying experience
of mankind; that time is the ever-moving image
of eternity, and that the wheel of genesis is ever
turning, is testified to by the wiser minds of
humanity. Whither, then, should we look in the
history of human affairs for phenomena similar to
the happenings of these last three hundred years ?
Whither else more certainly than to the history of
the times which witnessed the birth of the religion
of the Christ ? The many striking parallels between
the social and religious aspects of the civilization
of that critical epoch and of our own times have
been already sketched by a few writers, but no
general notice has been taken of their endeavours,
least of all has any practical lesson been learned
from the review of this experience of the past. For
the experience of humanity is our own experience,
if we have but wit enough to understand.
The soul of man returns again and again to
learn the lessons of life in this great world-school,
PROLEGOMENA. 23
according to one of the great doctrines of general
religion. If this be so, it follows that when similar The Return
conditions recur a similar class of souls returns to
continue its lessons of experience. It may well be
even that many of the identical souls who were
embodied in the early centuries of Christianity are
continuing their experience among ourselves to-day.
For why otherwise do the same ideas recur, why do
the same problems arise, the same ways of looking at
things ? They cannot fall into our midst from the
" Ewigkeit " ; must it not be that they have been
brought back by minds to whom they have already
been familiar ?
It would of course be exceedingly unwise to
stretch even a single one of our parallels into an The
Conditions
identity ; we must bear in mind that though many of of the
Comparison.
the conditions are strikingly resemblant, some factors
in great prominence in the civilization of the Grseco-
Romaii world are only very faintly outlined in our
present civilization, while some strongly marked
features of our own times are but imperfectly
traceable in that age.
We must further remember that the records of
that time are frequently very imperfect, while the
history of our own is inscribed in painful detail ; and
that though we can review the main outlines of the
whole of that phase of civilization, we can only
survey a portion of our own, for its cycle is not
ended and the records of the future are not yet
open to our understanding.
Finally, we must remember that the general
quality of the life and mind-texture of our own age
24 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
is generally far more subtle than it was nineteen
hundred years ago — for humanity evolves.
All these considerations must be kept in mind
if we would anticipate the future from a survey of
the history of the past. But indeed it requires no
great effort of the imagination for even the most
superficial student of history to see a marked
similarity between the general unrest and searching
after a new ideal that marked the period of brilliant
intellectual development which preceded the birth of
Christianity, and the uncertainty and eager curiosity
of the public mind in the closing years of the
nineteenth century.
The tendency is the same in kind though not in
The degree ; the achievements of the scientists and
Present. scholars of Alexandria (to take the most conspicuous
example) during the three hundred years which
preceded the Christian era, have been vastly trans
cended by the conquests of their successors in our
own time. To-day life is more intense, thought more
active, experience more extended, the need of the
solution of the problem more pressing. The modern
mind took birth in Greece some two thousand five
hundred years ago, and developed itself by intimate
contact with the ancient East, a contact made
physically possible by the " world-conquest " of
Alexander, and subsequently by the organising
genius of Rome.
But to-day it is not the conquests of an Alexander
or the power of Rome which have built the ways
of communication between the nations; it is the
conquests of physical science which have in truth
PEOLEGOMENA. 25
united the ends of the earth, and built up an
arterial and nervous system for our common Occident
and Orient
mother which she has never previously possessed.
It is no longer the speculative mind of Greece and
the practical genius of Rome that meet together, it
is not even the mind of the then confined Occident
meeting with the enthusiasm and mysticism of the
then Orient; it is the meeting of the great waters,
the developed thought and industrious observation
of the whole Western world of to-day meeting
with the old slow stream of the ancient and
modern East.
The great impetus which the study of oriental
languages and tongues long since dead has received Jhe
Reconcihai
during the last hundred years, has led to the of Science
. J and Theok
initiation of a comparative science of ancient
literature — of the world-bibles — and of religion
which is slowly but surely modifying all our pre
conceptions. To-day it is not a Porphyry who
disproves the authenticity of the Book of Daniel
or a Marcion who makes havoc of what afterwards
became the New Testament canon, but it is the
" Higher Criticism " which has struck the death
blow to unreasoning bibliolatry. The conflict
between religion (or, if you will, theology) and
science has produced a generation that longs and
searches for a reconciliation. That reconciliation will
come; Heaven and Earth will once more kiss each
other. It came in the past for those souls who were
searching for it, and it will come for those who seek
it to-day. If the human heart seek the Light the ,
Light will pour into it. It was so nineteen hundred [
26 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
years ago ; men sought for the Light and the Light
came in answer to their prayers. And if this view
may at first appear strange to those who have been
taught to regard the state of affairs before the coming
of the Christ as one of unmixed depravity, the '
reading of these pages may perhaps lead them to a
more reasonable view of the conditions which called
for the coming of so great a Soul for the helping of
mankind.
The Light was received by men in proportion to
rhe Coming their capacity to understand it, and the Life was
if Souls. poured into them as their natures were capable of
expansion. And if the subsequent history of the
times, when the dark cloud of ignorance and in
tolerance settled down on Christendom for so many
centuries, makes it appear as if that Life had
been poured out in vain, and that Light radiated
to no purpose, we should remember that they
were lavished on souls and not on bodies; that
the path of individual souls is not to be traced
in the evolution of racial bodies. The souls in
carnated into the civilisation of Greece and Eome
who were capable of receiving the Light, were far
different from the souls who were incarnated into
the half barbarous hordes which destroyed that
civilization, and out of which the new races were
to be developed. The old races which supplied the
conditions for the experience of the more advanced
souls, were to disappear gradually, and new races
were to be developed, which in their childhood could
not supply the necessary conditions for the incarna
tion of such subtle intellects, but which in their
PROLEGOMENA. 27
manhood would attract to them still higher souls
perchance. This of course did not take place with
suddenness, it was all very gradual, there was much
overlapping o£ races, as the old units and atoms
were slowly replaced by new ones.
But how is it to be expected that Vandal and
Goth could understand the great problems which The Birth
and Death
delighted the minds of the philosophers and mystics ofKaces.
of Greece and Rome ? And further, must it not
all have been foreseen and provided for by the
Wisdom that watches over human affairs ?
Races and nations are born, and die, as men
are born and die ; they may be long-lived or
short-lived, they may be good, bad, or indifferent.
But whatever their characters and characteristics
as compared with other races, their early period
is that of childhood, their middle period that
of manhood, and their later period that of old
age.
It follows then that as a general rule the class
of souls which seeks experience in them in their
childhood, is not the same as the grade of souls
which incarnates in them in their middle age, or
in their old age. Of course there are numerous
individual exceptions, for the above is the merest
outline of the elements of the problem; the details
are so complicated, the permutations and com
binations so innumerable, that no mind can fully
grasp them.
Moreover races and nations so overlap and blend,
their origins and disappearings so shade off into
other nations and races, that the analogy of their
28 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
lives with the lives of men must not be over
strained. The moment of birth and the moment
of death is very hard to detect in the case of a
race, and the embryonic period and stages of dis
integration cannot be clearly defined. Nevertheless
we can trace the main moments of their evolution
and perceive the differences in their main periods
of age.
Our Western world, the vehicle of the modern
'he mind, has had its period of childhood; it was born
fthe from the womb of Greek and Roman civilisation,
Vorld™ and i^s lusty childhood was a natural period of
ignorance and passion. Such considerations will
enable us better to understand the otherwise sad
spectacle of the dark and middle ages in Europe;
they were the natural concomitants of childhood,
and were followed by the intellectual development
of youth and early manhood. The Western world
is apparently just coming of age, and in the future
we may hope it will think and act as a man and
put away childish things.
The problems which will in future occupy the
attention of its developed intelligence were fore
shadowed in the womb of its parent, and our more
immediate task will be to deal with some of the
outlines of that foreshadowing.
SOME ROUGH OUTLINES OF THE BACK
GROUND OF THE GNOSIS.
PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS.
THE familiar story of the origins of Christianity
which we have all drunk in as it were with our The
Greatest
mothers' milk, may be said to be almost a part story in
of the consciousness of the Western world. It is
interwoven with our earlist recollections ; it has
been stamped upon our infant consciousness with a
solemnity which has repressed all questioning ; it has
become the " thing we have grown used to." It has
upon its side that stupendous power of inertia, the
force of custom, against which but few have the
strength to struggle. But once let the ordinary man
desire to know more about the greatest story in the
world, as all its tellers assert, and he must begin the
struggle. Previously he has been led to believe not
only that the story is absolutely unique, but that it is
entirely supernatural. In brief, if he analyses his
own understanding of the story he finds it violently
divorced from all historical environment, a thing of
30 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
itself, standing alone, in unnatural isolation. His
picture has no background.
Moreover he will find it very difficult to fill in
that background, no matter how industriously he
may labour. He may read many books on the " Life
and Times of our Lord," only to find that for the
most part the environment has been made to fit
the story and its main features have been taken from
it; in brief, he does not feel that he has been put
in contact with the natural environment for which
he is seeking.
There are of course a few works which are not of
this nature, but the general reader seldom hears of
them, for they are generally regarded as " dangerous "
and " disturbing."
But even if we go deeper into the matter and
make a special study of the history of the origins,
with the largest of libraries at our disposal, we find
that no writer has as yet given us a really sufficient
sketch of the environment, and without this it is
impossible to have a real comprehension of the nature
of infant Christianity and the full scope of its
illumination; without it we shall never understand
its real naturalness and its vast power of adaptation
to that environment.
For if we look back to the evidence of the first two
rhe Mam centuries of our era (and to our mind no evidence with
Means to a
Recovery of regard to the origins subsequent to this period is of
Dutlines. any validity) for an understanding of the actual state
of affairs, instead of one Church and one form of
faith, we find innumerable communities and innumer
able modes of expression — communities united for
PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS. 31
the living of a Life and systems striving to express
the radiance of a Light. In many of these com
munities and these expressions we find intimate
points of contact with the life and faith of the best
in universal religion, and a means that will help
us to fill in the outlines of the background of
the origins with a greater feeling of confidence
than we had previously thought possible.
So far from finding the sharp divorcement
between science (or philosophy) and religion (or
theology) which has characterised all later periods
of the Christian era up to our own day, it was
just the boast of many of these communities that
religion was a science; they boldly claimed that
it was possible to know the things of the soul
as definitely as the things of the body; so far
from limiting the illumination which they had
received to the comprehension of the poorest
intellect, or confining it to the region of blind
faith, they claimed that it had supplied them
with the means of formulating a world-philosophy
capable of satisfying the most exacting intellect.
Never perhaps has the world witnessed more
daring efforts to reach a solution of the world-
problem than were attempted by some of these
mystic philosophers and religio-scientists. That
their attempts are for the most part incomprehensible
to the modern mind is partly owing to the fact that
our record of them is so imperfect, and partly due to
the natural impossibility of expressing in human
language the stupendous realities to which they
aspired; nevertheless their "heaven-storming," when
32 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
we can understand its nature, is a spectacle to move
our admiration and (if we cast aside all prejudice)
make us bow our heads before the Power which
inspired their efforts.
They strove for the knowledge of God, the science
Fhe Gnostic of realities, the gnosis of the things-that-are ; wisdom
was their goal ; the holy things of life their study.
They were called by many names by those who
subsequently haled them from their hidden retreats
to ridicule their efforts and anathematise their
doctrines, and one of the names which they used
for themselves, custom has selected to be their
present general title. They are now generally
referred to in Church history as the Gnostics,
those whose goal was the Gnosis, — if indeed that
be the right meaning; for one of their earliest
existing documents expressly declares that Gnosis
is not the end — it is the beginning of the path,
the end is God — and hence the Gnostics would be
those who used the Gnosis as the means to set
their feet upon the Way to God.
The question which at once presses itself upon
Where to the attention of the student of history is : Whence
bheir C did these men come ? Did they arise suddenly
Origma. jn ^|ie jnidst of a worid that cared not for these
things; were they entirely out of touch with the
past ; had they no predecessors ? By no means ;
those who so bitterly opposed them, who — boasting
themselves to be the only legitimate inheritors of
the illumination of the Christ — in their most angry
mood, stigmatised the Gnostics as " the first-born
of Satan," may help us to set our feet in the
PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS. 33
direction where we shall find some materials on
which to base an answer. In less bitter mood,
the Church Fathers tell us that the doctrines of
the Gnosis are of Plato and Pythagoras, of Aristotle
and of Heracleitus, of the Mysteries and Initiations
of the nations, and not of Christ. Let us then try
for a brief space to follow this lead and fill in
some rough outlines of the background of the
Gnosis; we shall then be better able to say whether
or no we join our voices to the hue and cry of the
heresy-hunters.
In what follows we shall only attempt the
vaguest indications of the vast field of research The Nature
in which the student of the Christian origins has to to be
labour, before he can really appreciate the nature
of the soil in which the seed was sown. The
political history and social conditions of the time
have to be carefully studied and continually borne
in mind, but the most important field to be
surveyed is the nature of the religious world,
especially during the three centuries prior to our
era. How is it possible, we ask ourselves, as we
gaze upon the blendings of cult, the syncretism
of theogonies and cosmogonies and the mixtures
of faith which abounded in these centuries, to
separate them into their original elements ? The
problem seems as hopeless as the endeavour to trace
the mixtures of races and sub-races, of nations and
families, which were the material means of these
blendings of cult and religion. Where can we begin ?
For if we begin where known history fails (as is
usually the case), and imagine that we have here
34 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
reached a state of things primitive, we are forced to
be ever revising our hypotheses by each new archae
ological and ethnological discovery. Tribes which
we have regarded as primitive savages are found to
be the decaying remnants of once great nations, their
superstitions and barbarous practices are found
blended with the remnants of high ideas which no
savagery could evolve; where shall we seize a
beginning in this material of protean change ? Surely
we cannot trace it on the lines of material evolution
alone? May it not be that there is the "soul of a
people " as well which has to be reckoned with ?
Just as the bodies of men are born from other
The Soil of bodies, so are nations born from nations. But if the
physical heredity of a man is difficult to trace
(since the farther it is pushed back the more it
ramifies), far more difficult is the heredity of a
nation, for whereas a man has but two parents a
nation may have many, and whereas the bodies of
a man's parents at death are hidden away to decay
in the earth, [the bodies of nations decay in the
sight of all, and persist mingled with their children
and grand-children, and all the family-tree which
they share with other nations. Nations may have
certain distinguishing characteristics, but they are
not individualised in the same way as a man is
individualised; and the problem of their inner
heredity is more difficult to solve than even that of
the nature of the animal soul, for it is on a vaster
scale.
Such then being the nature of the physical vehicle
of the general religious consciousness, it is not
PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS. 35
surprising to find that the history of the evolution of
religious ideas is one of the most difficult of studies.
If we bear all these presuppositions in mind, it
requires the greatest courage to venture on any
attempt at generalization ; we feel that every state
ment ought to be qualified by so many other con
siderations that we are almost disgusted with its
crudity, and know that we are only tracing the bones
of skeletons when we ought to be clothing them with
flesh, and making them vibrant with life.
But to return to the antecedents of the special
period and movement we have in view.
Three main streams mingle their waters together
in the tumbling torrent that swirls through the land
in these critical centuries.
Three main elements are combining their substance
and transmuting their natures in the seething crucible
of the first centuries of the Christian era.
Greece, Egypt, and Jewry receive the child in their
arms, suckle the body of the new born babe, and Three
watch round its cradle. The irrational soul of it is streams
like to the animal souls of its nurses ; its rational soul
is of like heredity with their minds, but the spirit
within it is illumined by the Christ. It is the
heredity of its rational and spiritual soul, however, to
which we shall pay the greatest attention ; for in this
is to be found the inner side of the religions of Jewry,
Egypt, and Greece.
We have then to search most carefully in the
direction in which this can be found; we shall not
find it in the cult and practice of the people, but in
the religion and discipline of the philosopher and
36 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
sage, of the prophet and priest. For antiquity, there
were as many degrees in religion as there were grades
in human nature ; the instruction in the inner degrees
was reserved to those who were fit to comprehend ;
mystery-institutions and schools of initiation of every
degree were to be found in all great nations, and to
them we must look for the best in their religions —
not infrequently, alas, for the worst as well, for the
worst is the corruption of the best ; but of this we
will speak elsewhere.
Let us then first turn our attention to the religion
of the intelligence of Greece.
GREECE.
IF we turn to the Greece of the sixth century prior
The Greece to our era, we can perceive the signs of the birth
of a new spirit in the Western world, the beginning
of a great intellectual activity ; it is, so to speak, the
age of puberty of the Greek genius, new powers
of thought are coming into activity, and the old-time
myths and ancient oracular wisdom are receiving new
expression in the infant science of empirical physics
and the birth of philosophy.
This activity is part and parcel of a great
quickening, an outpouring of power, which may be
traced in other lands as well ; it is an intensification
of the religious consciousness of the nations, and it
intensified the religious instinct of Greece in a
remarkable manner. Its most marked characteristic
GREECE. 37
is the application of the intellect to things religious,
owing to the accelerated development of this faculty
in man.
The greatest pioneers of this activity were men
whose names still live in the temple of fame. In the
far East we have Confucius and Laotze, in India
Gautama the Buddha, in Persia the last of the
Zoroasters, in Greece Pythagoras ; there were others
doubtless elsewhere who acted as messengers of the
Light, but our existing records are too imperfect to
permit us to trace their paths.
Can any who believe in the providence of Wisdom
in human affairs, doubt but that this was part of
some great plan for man's advancement ? If there
be a Providence " that shapes our ends," where can
we see its hand more clearly than in such great
happenings ?
But to confine ourselves to Greece ; we must not
suppose that Pythagoras was without predecessors ; The
for though his later followers would have us think Pythagoras,
that all philosophy flowed from him, we cannot believe
in this so sudden appearance of it, and we doubt not
that Pythagoras regarded himself as the enunciator of
old truths and but one of the teachers of a line of
doctrine. He had Pherecydes and Anaximander and
Thales before him in Asia Minor, and other teachers
in Egypt and Chaldsea and elsewhere. Indeed in
these early days it is almost impossible to separate
philosophy from mythology and all the ancient
ideas connected with it. If we look to the times of
Thales, who is regarded as the herald of the first
elements of philosophy in the Grecian world, and
38 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
who lived a century earlier than Pythagoras, we
find a state of affairs somewhat as follows.
The educated and travelled of the Greeks of the
time regarded Egypt as the centre of all learning and
culture and their own forbears as of no account in
such matters. The rhapsodists of the Homeric poems
flattered their vanity by singing of the prowess of
their ancient heroes, but could tell the intelligent
nothing of religion ; as for Hesiod and his theogany
and the rest, they could make but little of them. He
was doubtless more intelligible than the archaic
fragments of the Orphic poems which enshrined the
most ancient elements of the religious tradition of
Hellas. But he fell far short of the wisdom of Egypt.
As for the Orphic fragments, they were the relics of
their barbarous ancestors, and no one believed in
them but the superstitious and ignorant.
But a nation that is to be something of itself and
not a mere copier of others must have confidence in
its past traditions, and we find about this time that
there arose a growing interest in these old fragments,
which gradually led to their collection and translation
into the Greek of the period. This took place at the
end of the sixth century, and the name identified most
closely with this activity to recover the fragments of
the old tradition was that of Onomacritus.
It is interesting to notice how that this was done
just prior to the period when Greece cast back the
invading hosts of Xerxes from the shores of Europe.
The effort seems to have been to revive in Greece the
memory of its past by recovering the channel of
its ancient inspiration, and at the same time to
GREECE. 39
let her feel the strength of her peculiar genius in
thinking out the old oracular wisdom in terms of
her fresh intellect, that so she might feel courage
to hurl back the invading forces of the East, and
pave the way to her future conquests of that
same East in the days of Alexander.
At this period, then, we notice the rise of
philosophy and the revival of the Orphic tradition. mted2|phic
But this is not all ; the leaven is working within
as well as without, and we find an enormously
increased activity in those most sacred institutions
of the religious life of Greece — the Mysteries.
But before we proceed to consider briefly this
perhaps the most important point of all, let us
try to take a hasty retrospect along the line of
the Orphic tradition; for those who studied such
matters in later Greece more deeply than the rest,
assert with one voice that the line of their descent
was from Orpheus through Pythagoras and Plato.
The Greeks known to history seem to have
formed part of one of the waves of immigration Primitive
into Europe of the great Aryan stock. Of the
main wave there were doubtless many wavelets.
If we may venture to believe that some germ
of history underlies the records of the priests of
Sai's communicated to Solon and preserved to us
by Plato in his Critias and Timceus; according to
them, so long ago as ten thousand years before
our era, Attica was occupied by the long-forgotten
ancestors of the Hellenes. Then came the great
flood when the Atlantic Island was destroyed,
and the shores of the Mediterranean rendered
40 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
uninhabitable by seismic disturbances of which the
great cataclysm was but one of a number, the
third it is said before the "Flood of Deucalion."
It was the time of Egypt " before the flood " of which
we have mention in the writings of Manetho.
If this be true, we can imagine how the
wavelet of the conquering Aryan race which then
occupied Hellas — the overlords of the " autochthones "
of the period — was driven back, and how the
country was left for long to the occupation of
these same " autochthones " whom Herodotus calls
" Pelasgi." They were to the Greeks, what the
Dravidians were and are to the Indo-Aryans,
" autochthones " if you will, but with a long history
of their own if we could recover their records.
The polity of the ancient Greek inhabitants of
Attica, according to the notes of Solon, bears a
striking resemblance to the polity of the ancient
Aryans in India, and doubtless their primitive
religious traditions came from a common stock.
As for the " Pelasgi," who knows their traditions,
or the blendings of races that had taken place before
the remains of them could be classed as an indis
criminate mass ? We are told, that they were ruled
over by chiefs from the Atlantic Island who busily
pushed its conquests to the most distant shores of the
Great Sea (the Mediterranean), and that the ancient
Hellenes disputed the lordship with this dominant
race. What enormous possibilities of cult-mixtures
myth-blending, and theocrasia have we here ! It was
these Atlanteans who introduced the cults of Poseidon
and Hephsestus (Vulcan), the mighty powers of the
GREECE. 41
sea and of subterranean fire, which had destroyed
their fathers.
For the Aryan Hellenic stock there was All-father
Zeus and the Goddess of Wisdom, Pallas Athene, who
was also a warrior goddess, as befitted a warlike race.
What the Greek religion was at this period, who shall
say ? But it is not so wild a guess to suppose that it
may have been of a bardic nature — hymn-bursts
suited to warriors, of which we have relics in the
legends of Druid and Bard and in all those ancient
traditions of the Celt, in the mythology of the Teuton
and Norseman, and even in the legend-lore preserved
by the ancient Slavs.
We may imagine how in these early years, as the
strong current of the Aryan flood swept them onward, The Wavelets
of Aryan
wavelet overlapped wavelet, horde fought with horde, Immigration.
and that the smiling land of Hellas was a rich prize
for the strongest. We may imagine how when the
effects of the " floods " had subsided and in course of
many many years seismic disturbances had lessened,
the Hellenic stock reoccupied the ground again, not
only in Greece itself but also on the shores of Asia
Minor. But how many wavelets of immigration
flowed in until Homeric times who shall say ?
Perhaps some day it may be possible to sift out
from the myths some deposit of history, and perceive
how a Cecrops, an Erectheus, and an Ion did not
follow each other in rapid succession, but were great
leaders who established kingdoms separated by long
periods of time.
May it not further be that with these conquering
kings came bards to advise and encourage, and supply
42 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
what of religion was thought good for them ? May
we not seek for the prototype of Orpheus here, and to
one of the later wavelets trace the archaic fragments
of the most ancient religious poems ? We may almost
see some religious pomp of the time passing down the
Sacred Way to Eleusis, ever the most sacred spot
in Greece, with some Orpheus of the time rousing
the warriors to enthusiasm by his songs, harp in
hand, with his grey locks streaming in the breeze,
while the regular march of the warriors kept time
to the strain, and emphasized it by the rhythmic
clashing of their shields.
It would be vain to look for any intellectual
The Orphic presentation of religion along this line ; whatever
it was, it must have been inspirational, prophetical,
and oracular ; and indeed this is the peculiar
characteristic of the Orphic tradition.
But even in these early days was the tradition
a pure one ? Scarcely ; the various races must have
fought their way through other races, and settled for
a time among them before they reached Hellas, and
the main line of their march seems to have been
round the south shores of the Black Sea and through
Thrace.
In Thrace they would meet with the cult of
Dionysus and absorb some of its traditions ; not that
Thrace was the home of this cult, its origins appear
to reach eastwards and back into time — a wide-
spreading cultus with its roots in the soil of an
archaic Semitism, the traces of which are hard to
discover in the obscure and fragmentary records that
we now possess. Moreover there is some mixture
GREECE. 43
of the Chaldean tradition in the Orphic line, but
whether it existed at this period or was superadded
later is hard to say.
What the precise religion of the earlier of these
successive wavelets was like, when they had settled
in the rich lands of Greece, and became more civilized,
we can no longer say, for we have no records, but
doubtless they were watched over and sufficient
inspiration given them for their needs.
If we now turn to the Greece of Homer, and try to
find traces of Orpheus, we are doomed to disappoint- The Greece
. of Homer.
ment ; but this is not altogether inexplicable. Homer
sings of a Greece that seems to have entirely forgotten
its ancient bards, of heroes who had left their religion
at home, as it were. The yellow-haired Greeks who
won the supremacy subsequent to Ion's time, were
a stock that paid little attention to religion ; they
give one the impression of being some sort of Viking
warriors who cared little for the agricultural pursuits
in which their predecessors were engaged, if we
can judge from the tradition preserved by Hesiod.
We see a number of independent chieftains occupying
the many vales of Greece, whose idea of providing
^ for an increasing population is by foray and
Qj) conquest.
There may have been a fickle Helen and a too
gallant Paris who violated the hospitality of his
hosts, but the Trojan War was more probably a foray
of these warriors to gain new lands, — a foray not
against an alien race, but against those of their own
general kin ; for the Trojans were^jjrreeks, somewhat
orientalised in their customs perhaps, by settlement in
44 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
contact with the nations of Asia, but for all that
Greeks, — dark-haired Greeks, with a cult like the cult
of the fair-haired ones, and with perchance for the
most part as little understanding concerning it.
It is, however, just this absence of the priest, or
the very subordinate position he holds, which is an
indication of the germ of that independence of
thought which is the marked characteristic of the
Greek mind that was subsequently developed, and of
which the Greece of history was the special and
carefully watched depository, that it might evolve
for the world-purpose for which it was destined.
It was good for men to look the gods manfully in
the face and battle with them if need be.
" Homer " was the bard of these Viking heroes ;
but the bard of their predecessors (who were equally
Greeks) of the Hellenic stock which they had
dominated, was " Orpheus." The descendants of the
heroes of Troy naturally looked to " Homer " as the
singer of the deeds of their forefathers, and as the
recorder of their customs and cult ; they were too
proud to listen to "Orpheus " and the old "theologers "
who had been the bards of the conquered ; so the old
songs and sagas of this bardic line, the lays and
legends of this older Greece, were left to the people
and to consequent neglect and lack of understanding.
Such was the state of affairs when philosophy
1 Orpheus " arose in the seventh century ; it was then found by
eturns to * ' J
Jreece. the few that Homer could not suffice for the religious
needs of thinking men ; there was nothing in Homer
to compare with the religious traditions of Egypt and
Chaldaea; the Greeks apparently had nothing of
GREECE.
religion, their ancestors were barbarians. Then it
occurred to some to collect and compare the ancient
oracles and religious myths of the people — the frag
ments of the Orphic songs — and therein they found
proofs of an ancient Greek tradition of things unseen
that could be favourably compared with much that
Egypt and Chaldaea could tell them. Greece had
a religious tradition ; their forebears were not
barbarous.
Those who busied themselves with such matters
at this critical period, we may believe, were not left
without guidance; and poets and thinkers were
helped as they could receive it. The fragments of
this activity in Orphic poesy which have come down
to us, show signs of this inspiration ; we do not refer
to the late " Orphic Hymns," some eighty in number,
which may be read in English in Taylor's translation,
but to the ancient fragments scattered in the works
of classical and patristic writers.
Many of these were based on the archaic frag
ments of the pre-Homeric times, and looked back to
this archaic tradition as their foundation. But the
mystic and mythological setting of these poems, their
enthusiastic and prophetic character, though all-
sufficient for many, were not suited to the nascent
intellectuality of Greece which was asserting itself
with such vigour. Therefore the greatest leaders of
that thought sought means to clothe the ideas which
were enshrined in myth and poesy, in modes more
suitable to the intellectuals of the time ; and we have
the philosophy of a Pythagoras and subsequently of
a Plato.
46 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
But alongside of the public cults and popular
traditions there existed an inner organism of religion
and channels of secret traditions concealed within
the Mystery-institutions. If it is difficult to form
any precise notion of the evolution of popular
religious ideas in Greece, much more difficult
is it to trace the various lines of the Mystery-
traditions, which were regarded with the greatest
possible reverence and guarded with the greatest
possible secrecy, the slightest violation of the oath
being punishable by death.
The idea that underlay the Mystery-tradition
in Greece was similar to that which underlay all
similar institutions in antiquity, and it is difficult
to find any cult of importance without this inner
side. In these institutions, in the inner shrines of
the temple, were to be found the means of a more
intimate participation in the cult and instruction in
the dogmas.
The institution of the Mysteries is the most
interesting phenomenon in the study of religion.
The idea of antiquity was that there was something
to be known in religion, secrets or mysteries into
which it was possible to be initiated ; that there was
a gradual process of unfolding in things religious ; in
fine, that there was a science of the soul, a knowledge
of things unseen.
A persistent tradition in connection with all
the great Mystery-institutions was that their
several founders were the introducers of all the
arts of civilization; they were either themselves
gods or were instructed in them by the gods —
GREECE. 47
in brief, that they were men of far greater
knowledge than any who had come after; they
were the teachers of infant races. And not only
did they teach them the arts, but they instructed
them in the nature of the gods, of the human
soul, and the unseen world, and set forth how the
world came into existence and much else.
We find the ancient world honey-combed with
these institutions. They were of all sorts and Their
Corruption.
kinds, from the purest and most noble down to
the most degraded; in them we find the best
and worst of the religion and superstition of
humanity. Nor should we be surprised at this,
for when human nature is intensified, not only
is the better in it stimulated but also the worse
in it finds greater scope.
When knowledge is given power is acquired,
and it depends on the recipients whether or no
they use it for good or evil. The teachers of
humanity have ever been opposed by the innate
forces of selfishness, for evolution is slow, and
mankind wayward ; moreover, men cannot be forced,
they must come of their own free-will, "for love
is the fulfilling of the law " ; and so again though
"many are the 'called/ few are the 'chosen.'"
It is said that these earliest teachers of humanity
who founded the Mystery-institutions as the most The Reason
efficient means of giving infant humanity instruction
in higher things, were souls belonging to a more
highly developed humanity than our own. The
men of our infant humanity were children with
minds but little developed, and only capable of
48 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
understanding what they distinctly saw and felt.
In the earliest times, according to this view, the
Mysteries were conducted by those who had a
knowledge of nature-powers which was the acquisi
tion of a prior perfected humanity not necessarily
earth-born, and the wonders shown therein such
that none of our humanity could of themselves
produce. As time went on and our humanity
more and more developed the faculty of reason,
and were thought strong enough to stand on their
own feet, the teachers gradually withdrew, and
the Mysteries were committed to the care of the
most advanced pupils of this humanity, who had
finally to substitute symbols and devices, dramas
and scenic representations, of what had previously
been revealed by higher means.
Then it was that corruption crept in, and man
was left to win his own divinty by self-conquest
and persistent struggling against the lower elements
in his nature. The teachers remained unseen, ever
ready to help, but no longer moving visibly
among men, to compel their reverence and worship.
So runs the tradition.
If, as we have seen, the origin and evolution
The Various of the popular cults of Greece are difficult to
>ns" trace, much more difficult are the beginnings
and development of the Greek Mystery-cultus.
The main characteristic of the Mysteries was
the profound secrecy in which their traditions
were kept; we therefore have no adequate materials
upon which to work, and have to rely mainly on
hints and veiled allusions. This much, however, is
GREECE. 49
certain, that the Mystery-side of religion was the
initiation into its higher cult and doctrine; the
highest praise is bestowed upon the Mysteries by the
greatest thinkers among the Greeks, who tell us that
they purified the nature, and not only made men live
better lives here on earth but enabled them to depart
from life with brighter hopes of the future.
What the primitive Mystery-cultus traditions
along the lines of Orphic, Dionysiac, and Eleusinian
descent may have been, it is unnecessary to speculate
in this rough outline sketch ; but if we come down to
the days of Plato we find existing Mystery-institutions
which may be roughly characterised as political,
private, and philosophic.
The political Mysteries — that is to say the State-
Mysteries — were the famous Eleusinia, with their
gorgeous external pageants and their splendid Mysteries.
inner rites. At this period almost every respectable
citizen of Athens was initiated, and we can easily
see that the tests could not have been very
stringent, when so many were admitted every year.
In fact, these State-Mysteries, though providing for
a grade or several grades of advancement along
the path of right living and of right comprehension
of life, had become somewhat perfunctory, as all
departments of a State-religion are bound to
become in time.
Alongside of the Eleusinia there existed certain
private Mysteries, not recognised by the State, the The Private
number of which subsequently increased enormously, ys
so that almost every variety of Oriental Mystery-
cultus found its adherents in Greece, as may be seen
50 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
from a study of the religious associations among the
Greeks known as Thiasi, Erani, and Orgeones ; among
private communities and societies of this kind
there were to be found naturally many undesirable
elements, but at the same time they satisfied the
needs of many who could derive no spiritual
nourishment from the State-religion.
Among these private foundations were communities
of rigid ascetics, men and women, who gave them
selves entirely to holy living; such people were
said to live the " Orphic life " and were generally
known as Orphics. Of course there were charlatans
who parodied them and pretended to their
purity and knowledge, but we are at present
following the indications of those whose conduct
squared with their profession.
These Orphic communities appear to have been
the refuges of those who yearned after the religious
life, and among them were the Pythagorean schools.
Pythagoras did not establish something entirely new
in Greece when he founded his famous school at
Crotona; he developed something already existing,
and when his original school was broken up and its
members had to flee they sought refuge among
the Orphics. The Pythagorean schools disappear into
the Orphic communities.
It is in the Pythagorean tradition that we see
the signs of what I have called the philosophic
Mysteries; it is, therefore, in the best of the
Orphic and Pythagorean traditions that we have
to find the indications of the nature of the real
Mysteries, and not in the political Eleusinia
GREECE. 51
or in the disorderly elements of the Oriental
cults.
In fact the Orphics did much to improve the
Eleusinia and supported them as a most necessary Th?
1 * . Philosophic
means for educating the ordinary man towards a Mysteries,
comprehension of the higher life. It stands to reason,
however, that the Mysteries which satisfied the aspira
tions of Orphics and Pythagoreans were somewhat
higher than the State-Mysteries of the ordinary
citizen. These Pythagoreans were famous throughout
antiquity for the purity of their lives and the loftiness
of their aims, and the Mysteries they regarded with
such profound reverence must have been something
beyond the Eleusinia, something to which the Eleusinia
were but one of the outer approaches.
We have then to seek for the innermost religious
life of Greece in this direction, and to remember Pythagoras
and Plato.
that the inner experiences of this life were kept
a profound secret and not paraded on the house
tops. Pythagoras is said to have been initiated
into the Egyptian, Chaldsean, Orphic, and Eleusinian
Mysteries ; at the same time he was one of the
chief founders of Greek philosophy. His philosophy
however, was not a thing of itself, but the
application of his intellect — especially of his
mathematical genius — to the best in these Mystery-
traditions ; he saw that it was necessary to attempt
to lead the rapidly evolving intellectuality of Greece
along its own lines to the contemplation of the
inner nature of things; otherwise in the joy of its
freedom it would get entirely out of hand and
reject the truths of the ancient wisdom.
52 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Plato continued this task, though on somewhat
different lines; he worked more in the world than
Pythagoras, and his main effort was to clear the
ground from misconceptions, so that the intellect
might be purified and brought into a fit state to
contemplate the things-that-are. He spent his
life in this task, building up not so much a system
of knowledge, as clearing the way so that the
great truths of the Gnosis of things-that-are, as
Pythagoras termed it, might become apparent of
themselves.
It is a mistake to suppose that Plato formulated
a distinctly new system of philosophy ; his main con
ceptions are part and parcel of the old wisdom
handed down by the seers of the Mysteries; but he
does not formulate them so much as clear the ground
by his dialetical method, so that the mind may be
brought into a fit state to receive them.
Therefore are the conclusions of his dialogues
nearly always negative, and "only at the end of his
long life, probably against his better judgment and
in response to the importunity of his pupils, does
he set forth a positive document in the Timceus,
composed of scraps from the unpublished writings
of Pythagoreans and others.
Unfortunately most of those who immediately
followed him, imagined that his dialectical method
was an end in itself, and so instead of living the
life of philosophy and seeking the clear vision of
true initiation, they degenerated into empty argument
and ended in negation.
Aristotle followed with his admirable method
GREECE. 53
of analysis and exact observation of phenomena,
and as he treated of the without rather than of Aristotle
the within he was from one point of view better Scepticism,
understood than Plato, but from another more mis
understood, in that his method also was taken as
an end in itself rather than as a means simply.
And so we come to the three centuries prior to
the present era, when the intellectual life of Greece
was centred at Alexandria.
It was a far more extended Greece than the
Hellas of Plato ; it was a Greece whose physical
prowess had conquered the Orient, and which boasted
itself that its intellectual vigour would conquer the
world. Everywhere it matched its vigorous intellect
against the ancient East, and for a time imagined
that victory was with it.
Its independence of thought had given rise to
innumerable schools warring with each other, and the
spectacle it offers us is very similar to the spectacle
of modern Europe during the last three hundred
years.
We see there at work, though on a smaller scale —
in germ as it were — the same intellectual activity
which has charcterized the rise of the modern
scientific method, and with it the same breaking
down of old views, the same unrest, the same spirit
of scepticism.
If we look to the surface of things merely, we
might almost say that Greece had entirely forgotten
the Mystery-tradition and gloried solely in the
unaided strength of her intellect. But if we look
deeper we shall find that this is not the case. In
54 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the days of Plato the Orient and Egypt were brought
to Greece so to speak, whereas later on Greece went
to Egypt and the East.
Now the ancient wisdom had its home in Egypt
West anc^ Chaldsea and the Orient generally, so that
though the Orphic and Pythagorean communities
of Plato's time imported into Greece a modified
Orientalism which they adapted to the Greek genius
along the lines of their own ancient wisdom-tradition,
when the Greeks in their thousands went forth into
the East, those of them who were prepared by contact
with these schools, came into closer intimacy with
the ancient wisdom of the East, and drank it in
readily.
As for the generality, just as the introduction of
Orientalism into Greece among the people brought
with it abuses and enthusiastic rites of an undesirable
character, while at the same time it intensified the
religious life and gave greater satisfaction to the
religious emotions, so the Greek conquest of the
Orient spread abroad a spirit of scepticism and
unbelief, while sharpening the intellectual faculties.
But all this was a very gradual process, and the
more scepticism increased, the intenser became the
desire of numbers to withdraw from the warring
CT
clash of opinions, and seek refuge in the contem
plative life that offered them knowledge. Oriental
thinkers and mystics became Hellenized along the
lines of Pythagorean and Platonic philosophy, and
Greek philosophers became Orientalized by contact
with members of the many communities that honey
combed not only Egypt and the rest of the
GREECE. 55
"barbarian" nations subject to Greece, but also Asia
Minor and even Hellas herself. How numerous were
these communities in the first century may be seen
from a study of the writings of Philo Judseus and
the life of Apollonius of Tyana, and from the picture
of mystic Greece which may be recovered from the
ethical and theosophical essays of Plutarch, and also
from the many recently discovered inscriptions
relating to the innumerable Religious Associations
in Greece.
When the Greek kingdoms of the Successors of
Alexander were in their turn humbled beneath Rome.
the conquering power of Rome, the organizing
Italic genius policed the world, somewhat in a
similar way to the fashion of the present British
occupation of India. The legal mind and practical
I genius of Rome was never really at home in the
£/ metaphysical subtleties of Greek philosophy, or the
mysticism of the East. In literature and art she
.could only copy Greece ; in philosophy she sought for
-f iirale of conduct rather than a system of knowledge,
and so we find her, in the persons of her best men,
the follower of Stoic naturalism, which summed up
its code of ethics in the ideal of " honestas"
Nevertheless Rome could no more than Greece
avoid religious contact with the East, and we The
^11 ii i ji • Mysteries
find her passing through the same experiences as Of Mithras.
Greece, though in much more modified form.
The chief point of contact among the many
religions of the Roman Empire was in the
common worship of the Sun, and the inner core
of this most popular cult was, from about B.C. 70
56 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
onwards, to be found in the Mysteries of
Mithras.
"The worship of Mithras, or of the sun-god,
was the most popular of heathen cults, and
the principal antagonist of the truth during the
first four centuries of our period." Such is the
statement of one who looks at it from the point
of view of a Christian ecclesiastic, and indeed the
Church Fathers from the time of Justin Martyr
onward have declared that the Devil, in the
Mysteries of Mithras, had plagiarized their most
sacred rites by anticipation.
The Mithriac Mysteries represented the esoteric
side of a great international religious movement,
which the uniting together of many peoples into the
Grseco-Roman world had made possible, and which
resulted from the contact of Greece and Rome with
the thought of the East.
National and local cults were gradually influenced
by the form of symbolism employed by the modi
fied Chaldseo-Persian tradition; the worship of the
Spiritual Sun, the Logos, with the natural symbol of
the glorious orb of day, which was common in one
form or other to all great cults, and the rest of the
solar symbolism, gradually permeated the popular
indigenous forms of religion. In course of time,
Mithra, the visible sun for the ignorant, the Spiritual
Sun, the Mediator between the Light and Darkness,
as Plutarch tells us, for the instructed, caused his
rays to shine to the uttermost limits of the Roman
Empire. And just as his outer cult dominated the
restricted forms of national worship, so did the
GREECE. 57
tradition of his Mysteries modify the Mystery-cultus
of the ancient Western world.
EGYPT.
LET us now turn to Egypt and cast a glance on
the vista which has to be surveyed, before the
outlines of this part of the background of the
Gnosis can be filled in.
In spite of her reserve and immeasurable contempt
for the upstart Greek genius, Egypt had, even in the Th®
times of the earliest Ptolemies, given of her wisdom
to Greece. There had been an enormous activity of
translation of records and documents, the origin of
which is associated with the name of Manetho. It is
very probable that Plutarch in his treatise on the
Mysteries of Isis drew the bulk of his information
from Manetho, and it is very evident that the
doctrines therein set forward as the traditional
wisdom of Egypt have innumerable points of contact
with the Greek Trismegistic literature, those mystic
and theosophic treatises which formed the manuals
of instruction in the inner Hermetic schools, mystic
communities which handed on the wisdom-tradition
of Thoth, or Tehuti, the God of Wisdom, whose name,
• * -**- ^
as Jamblichus tells us, was " common to all priests,"
that is to say, was the source of inspiration of the
wisdom-tradition in all its branches.
The Greeks, finding in their own Hermes some
points of similarity with the charactistics of Tehuti,
called him by that name, with the added title
58 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Trismegistus, or Thrice-greatest, because of his great
wisdom. That the contents, though not the form, of
the oldest treatises of this Trismegistic literature
were largely Egyptian is further evidenced by
Jamblichus in his treatise on the Mysteries of the
Egyptians and Chaldseans.
Along these lines of contact between Egypt and
Greece we can proceed to inspect the Egyptian
wisdom on its own soil, and find in it many doctrines
fully developed which without this investigation we
should have considered as entirely indigenous to
purely Christian soil. Indeed, in the Trismegistic
literature we find a number of the distinctive
doctrines of Gnostic Christianity but without the
historic Christ ; and all of these doctrines are seen
to have existed for thousands of years previously in
direct Egyptian tradition — especially the doctrines of
the Logos, of the Saviour and Virgin Mother, of the
second birth and final union with God.
But as in the case of Greece, so in the case of
The Egypt, within the Egyptian tradition itself there are
of en all manners of conflation of doctrines, of syncretism
and blendings, not only in the external popular cults
but also in the inner traditions.
To take a single instance, there was a strong
Semitic blend dating from the line of the Hyksos
(2000-1500 B.C.). At that time Seth, perchance
identical with the title of the Supreme in the
tongue of the Semitic conquerors, was a name
of great honour. It was identified with Sothis,
Sirius, the guardian star of Egypt, the Siriadic
Land ; and the Mysteries of Seth were doubtless
EGYPT. 59
blended in some fashion with those of Osiris.
After the hated Hyksos were expelled it is true
that Seth or Set was gradually identified with
Typhon, the opponent of Osiris, the Logos ; but this
no more affects the real doctrines of the Mysteries of
Seth, than the fact that the Iranian Aryans used
the name Daevos to designate evil entities, destroyed
the beneficent nature of the Devas of the Indo-
Aryans; it simply registers a rivalry of cult and
race and points to a previous epoch when there was
intimate contact between the races and their religions.
Equally so the Christian use of the term Demon does
not dispose of the fact that the Daimones of the
Greeks were beneficent beings ; witness the Daimon
of Socrates " who prevented him if he were about to
do anything not rightly."
The ancient close political relations between
Chaldsea and Egypt disclosed by archaeological
research, and the later Persian conquest of Egypt,
must also have discovered points of contact in the
domain of religion, especially in the Mystery-
traditions, and future researches in the many hitherto
un worked fields of Egyptology will doubtless throw
fresh light on the mixed heredity of religion in
Egypt, which is perhaps even more complicated than
that of the cults of Greece.
In any case we cannot but feel the sublimity of
many of the conceptions of the inner religion of
Egypt, in spite of our present inability to classify
them in a satisfactory manner. The vast and
mysterious background of the cults of Egypt, the
sonorous phrases and grandiose titles which we sift
60
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The Mystic
Commun
ities.
The
Therapeuts.
out from the present unintelligibility of myth and
symbol, persuade us that there was something great
working within, and we find the innermost strivings
of the mystics devoted to the "Birth of Horus," a
shadowing forth of that greatest of all mysteries,
the spiritual birth of man, whence man becomes a
god and a son of the Father.
The Egyptians themselves, according to Greek
writers, looked back to a time when their initiated
priesthood was in possession of greater wisdom
than was theirs in later times; they confess that
they had fallen away from this high standard and
had lost the key to much of their knowledge.
Nevertheless the desire for wisdom was still strong
in many of the nation, and Egypt was ever one
of the most religious countries of the world. Thus
we find the Jew Philo, in writing of the wisdom -
lovers about A.D. 25, declaring that "this natural
class of men is to be found in many parts of
the inhabited world, both the Grecian and non-
Grecian world, sharing in the perfect good. In
Egypt there are crowds of them in every province,
or nome as they call it, and especially round
Alexandria."
These wisdom-lovers Philo calls by the common
name of Therapeuts, either because they professed
an ar^ Q£ healing superior to that in ordinary
use, for they healed souls as well as bodies,
or because they were servants of God. He
describes one of their communities, which evidently
belonged to the circle of mystic Judaism; but the
many other communities he mentions were also
EGYPT. 61
devoted to the same ends, their members were
strenuous searchers after wisdom and devoted prac-
tisers of the holy life. These secret brotherhoods left
no records; they kept themselves apart from the
world, and the world knew them not. But it is just
these communities which were the immediate links in
the chain of heredity of the Gnosis.
We must, therefore, make the most we can of
what Philo has to tell us of these Healers; in order
to do this thoroughly, it would of course be necessary
to search through the whole of his voluminous works
and submit the material thus collected to a critical
examination — a task outside the scope of these short
sketches. But as the matter is of vital importance,
we cannot refrain from presenting the reader with
a translation of the main source in Philo's writings
from which we derive our information. But before
giving this translation it is necessary to prefix a few
words by way of introduction.
The appearance in 1895 of Conybeare's admir
able edition of the text of Philo's famous treatise On The
Earliest
the Contemplative Life has at length set one of the Christians
of Eusebius.
ingeniously inverted pyrammds of the origins
squarely on its base again.
The full title of this important work is: Philo
about the Contemplative Life, or the Fourth Book of
the Treatise concerning the Virtues, — critically edited
with a defence of its genuineness by Fred C. Cony-
beare, M.A. (Oxford, 1895). This book contains a most
excellent bibliography of works relating to the subject.
The survival of the voluminous works of Philo
through the neglect and vandalism of the Dark and
62 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Middle Ages is owing to the fact that Eusebius, in his
efforts to construct history without materials, eagerly
seized upon Philo's description of the externals of the
Therapeut order, and boldly declared it to be the
earliest Christian Church of Alexandria.
This view remained unchallenged until the rise
of Protestantism, and was only then called in question
because the Papal party rested their defence of the
antiquity of Christian monkdom on this famous
treatise.
For three centuries the whole of the batteries of
Protestant scholarship have been turned on this main
position of the Roman and Greek Churches. For if
the treatise were genuine, then the earliest Church
was a community of rigid ascetics, men and women ;
monkdom, the bete noire of Protestantism, was coeval
with the origins.
These three centuries of attack have finally
ThePseudo- evolved a theory, which, on its perfection by Gratz,
Theory. Nicolas, and Lucius, has been accepted by nearly
all our leading Protestant scholars, and is claimed
to have demolished the objectionable document for
ever. According to this theory, "the Therapeutae
are still Christians, as they were for Eusebius; but
no longer of a primitive cast. For the ascription
of the work to Philo is declared to be false, and
the ascetics described therein to be in reality monks
of about the year 300 A.D. ; within a few years of
which date the treatise is assumed to have been
forged " (op. cit., p. vi.).
The consequence is that every recent Protestant
Church history, dictionary, and encyclopaedia, when
EGYPT. 63
treating of the Therapeuts, is plentifully besprinkled
with references to the ingenious invention, called the
" Pseudo-Philo."
This pyramid of the origins was kept propped
upon its apex until 1895, when Conybeare's work its Death-
was published, and all the props knocked from
under it. Strange to say, it was then and only
then that a critical text of this so violently attacked
treatise was placed in our hands. At last all the
MSS. and versions have been collated. With
relentless persistence Conybeare has marshalled his
Testimonia, and with admirable patience paralleled
every distinctive phrase and technical expression with
voluminous citations from the rest of Philo's works,
of which there is so " prevalent and regrettable an
ignorance." To this he has added an extensive
Excursus on the Philonean authorship of the tract.
If Philo did not write the De Vita Contemplativa
then every canon of literary criticism is a delusion;
the evidence adduced by the sometime Fellow of
University College for the authenticity of the treatise
is irresistible. We have thus a new departure in
Philonean research.
The danger to certain orthodox presumptions
which a thorough study of the rest of Philo's works
would threaten, is evidenced by the concluding
paragraph of Conybeare's preface, where he writes:
" It is barely credible, and somewhat of a reproach
to Oxford as a place of learning, that not a single line
of Philo, nor any work bearing specially on him, is
recommended to be read by students in our Honour
School of Theology; and that, although this most
64 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
spiritual of authors is by the admission, tacit or
express, of a long line of Catholic teachers, from
Eusebius and Ambrose in the fourth century down
to Bull and Dollinger in modern times, the father
not only of Christian exegesis, but also, to a great
extent, of Christian dogmatics " (op. cit, p. x.).
It is thus established that the De Vita Contempla-
An tiv a is a genuine Philonean tract. As to its date, we
Interesting
Question of are confronted with some difficulties ; but the expert
opinion of Conybeare assures us that " every
reperusal of the works of Philo confirms my feeling
that the D.U.C. is one of his earliest works " (op. cit.,
p. 276). Now as Philo was born about the year
30 B.C., the date of the treatise may be roughly
ascribed to the first quarter of the first century.
("About the year 22 or 23 "—op. cit, p. 290). The
question naturally arises : At such a date, can the
Therapeuts of Philo be identified with the earliest
Christian Church of Alexandria ? If the accepted
dates of the origins are correct, the answer must
be emphatically, No. If, on the contrary, the
accepted dates are incorrect, then a vast problem
is opened up, of the first importance for the
origins of the Christian faith. Be this as it may,
the contents of the D.V.C. are of immense importance
and interest as affording us a glimpse into those
mysterious communities in which Christians for so
many centuries recognized their forerunners. The
Therapeuts were not Christians ; Philo knows
absolutely nothing of Christianity in any possible
sense in which the word is used to-day. Who,
then, were they ? The answer to this question
EGYPT. 65
demands an entire reformulation of the accepted
history of the origins. The Title
The treatise bears in some MSS. the super- Context,
scription, " The Suppliants, or Concerning the Virtues,
Book IV., or Concerning the Virtue of the Suppliants,
Book IV." By " Suppliant " Philo tells us he means
"one who has fled to God and taken refuge with
Him." (De Sac. Ab. et C., i. 186, 33). It is highly
probable that our tract formed part of the fourth
book of Philo's voluminous work De Legatione,
fragments only of which have survived.
" Time and Christian editors have truncated the
De Legatione in a threefold way. Firstly, a good
part of the second book has been removed, perhaps
because it ran counter to Christian tradition con
cerning Pontius Pilate. Secondly, the entire fourth
book was removed, as forming a whole by itself;
and the first part of it has been lost, all except
the scrap on the Essenes which Eusebius has
preserved to us in the Prceparatio Evangelica ;
while the account of the Therapeutae was put by
itself and preserved as a separate book. . . Thirdly,
the palinode which formed the fifth book has been
lost" (op. cit.y p. 284).
But to the tractate itself.
66 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
PHILO ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE LIFE.
"As I have already treated of Essseans who
The assiduously practise the [religious] life of action,
E S68B3. T) 6 .
carrying it out in all, or, not to speak too pre
sumptuously, in most of its degrees, I will at once,
following the sequence of my subject, proceed to
say as much as is proper concerning those who
embrace [the life of] contemplation; and that too
without adding anything of my own to better the
matter — as all the poets and history-writers are
accustomed to do in the scarcity of good material —
but artlessly holding to the truth itself, for even
the most skilful [writer], I know, will fail to speak
in accordance with her.
" Nevertheless the endeavour must be made and
we must struggle through with it; for the greatness
of the virtue of these men ought not to be a cause of
silence for those who deem it right that no good
thing should be kept silent.
" Now the purpose of our wisdom-lovers is
The Name immediately apparent from their name. They are
Therapeut, called Tterapg^ and Therapeutrides [men and
women] in the original sense of the word ; either
because they profess an art of healing superior
to that in use in cities (for that only heals
(OepcLTrevei) bodies, whereas this [heals our] souls
as well when laid hold of by difficult and scarce
curable diseases, which pleasure and desire, and
grief and fear, selfishness and folly, and injustice, and
PHILO ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE LIFE. 67
the endless multitude of passions and vices, inflict
upon them), or else because they have been schooled
by nature and the sacred laws to serve (Qepa-Treveiv)
That which is better than the Good and purer
than the One and more ancient than the Monad."
Philo here indulges in a digression, contrasting
the unintelligent worship of externals by the mis-
instructed in all religions with the worship of true
Deity by those who follow the contemplative life.
Those who are content to worship externals are
blind; let them then remain deprived of sight.
And he adds significantly, that he is not speaking
of the sight of the body, but of that of the soul,
by which alone truth and falsehood are distinguished
from each other.
" But as for the race of devotees [the Therapeuts],
who are ever taught more and more to see, let
them strive for the intuition of That which is; let
them transcend the sun which men perceive [and
gaze upon the Light beyond], nor ever leave this
rank [order, space, or plane], which leads to perfect
blessedness. Now they who betake themselves to
[the divine] service [do so], not because of any
custom, or on some one's advice or appeal, but
carried away with heavenly love, like those initiated
into the Bacchic and Corybantic Mysteries; they
are afire with God until they behold the object of
their love.
" Then it is that, through their yearning for
that deathless and blessed Life, thinking that their Their
mortal life is already ended, they leave their
possessions to their sons and daughters, or, may
68 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
be, other relatives, with willing resolution making
them their heirs before the time; while those who
have no relatives [give their property] to their
companions and friends."
In a digression Philo points out the difference
between the sober orderly abandonment of property
to follow the philosophic life, which he praises, and
the wild exaggerations of the popular legends, which
told how Anaxagoras and Democritus, when seized
with the love of wisdom, allowed all their estates
to be devoured by cattle.
" Whenever then [our wisdom-lovers] take the
step of renouncing their goods, they are no longer
enticed away by any one, but hurry on without once
turning back, leaving behind them brethren, children,
wives, parents, the multitudinous ties of relationship,
and bonds of friendship, their native lands in which
they have been born and reared ; for the habitual
is a drag and most powerful allurement.
" Nor do they emigrate to some other city (like
Their illused or worthless slaves who, in claiming purchase
Retreats.
from their owners, only procure for themselves a
change of masters and not freedom), for every
city, even the best governed one, is full of
innumerable tumults, forms of destruction, and
disorders which would be insupportable to a man
who has once taken wisdom as a guide.
" But they make their abode outside the walls
in [shut in] woods or enclosed lands in pursuit
of solitude, [and this] not to indulge any feeling
of churlish dislike to their fellow-men, but from a
knowledge that continual contact with those of
PHILO ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE LIFE. 69
dispositions dissimilar to their own is unprofitable
and harmful.
"Now this natural class of men [lit. race] is
to be found in many parts of the inhabited world,
both the Grecian and non-Grecian world sharing
in the perfect good.
" In Egypt there are crowds of them in every
province, or nome as they call it, and especially The
Mareotie
round Alexandria. For they who are in every way Colony.
[or in every nome] the most highly advanced come
as colonists, as it were, to the Therapeutic father
land, to a spot exceedingly well adapted for the
purpose, perched on a fairly high terrace [small
plateau or group of small hills] overlooking Lake
Marea or Lake Mareotis immediately south of
Alexandria, in a most favourable situation both for
security and mildness of temperature. Security [sci.
from robbers] is ensured by the belt of homesteads
and villages [which surrounds the terrace], and the
mildness of temperature is due to the continual
breezes sent up by the lake, which opens into the
sea, and from the proximity of the open sea itself.
The breezes from the sea are light, while those
from the lake are heavy, and their combination
produces a most healthy condition [of the atmos
phere].
"The dwellings of the community are very
simple, merely providing shelter against the two Their
greatest necessities, — the extreme heat of the sun
and the extreme cold of the air. The dwellings
are not close together as those in towns, for
neighbourhood is irksome and unpleasing to those
70
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The
Original
Meaning
of the Term
Monastery.
Their
Prayers and
Exercises.
who are seeking for solitude; nor are they far
apart, because of the intercourse which is so dear
to them, and also for mutual help in case of attack
by robbers.
"In each dwelling is a sacred place, called a
shrine or monastery [a small chamber, closet, or
cell], in which in solitude they perform the
mysteries of the holy life, taking into it neither
drink, nor food, nor anything else requisite for the
needs of the body, but only the laws and inspired
sayings of prophets, and hymns, and the rest,
whereby knowledge and devotion grow together
and are perfected.
" Thus they preserve an unbroken memory of
God, so that even in their dream-consciousness
nothing is presented to their minds but the glories
of the divine virtues and powers. Hence many of
them give out the rhythmic doctrines of the sacred
wisdom, which they have obtained in the visions
of dream -life.
" Twice a day, at dawn and even, they are
accustomed to offer up prayers; as the sun rises
praying for the sunshine, the real sunshine, that
their minds may be filled with heavenly Light,
and as it sets praying that their soul, completely
lightened of the lust of senses and sensations, may
withdraw to its own congregation and council-
chamber, there to track out truth.
"The whole interval from dawn to sunset they
devote to their exercises. Taking the sacred writings
they spend their time in study [lit. philosophise],
interpreting their ancestral code allegorically, for
PHILO ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE LIFE. 71
they think that the words of the literal meaning
are symbols of a hidden nature which is made
plain [only] by the under-meaning.
" They have also works of ancient authors who
were once heads of their school, and left behind The
Nature of
them many monuments of the method used in their Books.
their allegorical works; taking these as patterns,
as it were, they imitate the practice of their
predecessors. They do not then spend their time
in contemplation and nothing else, but they compose
songs and hymns to God in all sorts of metres
and melodies, outlined necessarily upon [a back
ground of] the more solemn numbers [lit. rhythms].
" For six days on end every one remains apart
in solitude with himself in his 'monastery,' as it Their
Mode of
is called, engaged in study, never setting foot out Meeting.
of door, or even looking out of window. But
every seventh day they come together as it were
to a general assembly, and take their seats in
order according to their 'age' [that is, the length
of their membership in the order], in the prescribed
attitude, with their hands palms downwards, the
right between the breast and chin, the left by
the side. Then he who is the senior most skilled
in the doctrines comes foward and discourses, with
steadfast eyes and steadfast voice, with reason and
thoughtfulness, not making a display of word-
cleverness, as the rhetoricians and sophists of to
day, but examining closely and explaining the
precise meaning in the thoughts, a meaning which
does not merely light on the tips of the ears, but
pierces the ear and reaches the soul and steadfastly
72
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The
Sanctuary.
Their
Rule.
abides there. The rest all listen in silence, signifying
their approval merely by a look in the eye or a nod
of the head.
" Now this general sanctuary in which they
assemble every seventh day consists of two
enclosures : one separated off for men, and the other
for women. For women too habitually form part of
the audience, possessing the same eager desire and
having made the same deliberate choice [as
the men].
"The division, however, between the two halls
is only partly built up, some three or four cubits
from the floor, like a breast-work, the rest of it, to
the roof, being left open, and this for two reasons :
in the first place for the preservation of that modesty
which so becomes woman's nature, and in the second
that sitting within earshot they may hear easily,
since there is nothing in the way of the speaker's
voice.
"Now [our Therapeuts] first of all lay down
continence as a foundation, as it were for the soul,
and then proceed to build up the rest of the
virtues upon it. Accordingly none of them would
think of taking food or drink before sundown,
for they consider that the practice of philosophy
deserves the light, while the necessities of the
body [may content themselves with] darkness; hence
they assign the day to the former, and a brief
portion of the night to the latter.
" A number of them, in whom the thirst for
wisdom is implanted to a greater degree, remind
themselves of their food but once in three days,
PHILO ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE LIFE. 73
while a few are so cheered and fare so sumptuously Fasting,
at wisdom's banquet of teachings which she so
richly and unstintingly sets before them, that they
can last for twice the time, and even after six days
barely take a mouthful of the most necessary food,
being trained to live on air, as they say the
grasshoppers do [Plato, Phaedr.], their needs made
light by their singing methinks.
" Since then they regard the seventh day as all- The
hallowed and high festival, they consider it worthy common
of special honour, and on it, after paying due
attention to the soul, they anoint the body, giving
it, as also indeed they do their cattle, respite from
continual labour. Still they partake of no dainty
fare, but plain bread with salt for seasoning, which
the gourmands supplement with an extra relish of
hyssop ; while for drink they have water from the
spring. Thus in mollifying those tyrants which
nature has set over the mortal race — hunger and
thirst, they offer them nothing to tickle their
vanity, but only such bare necessities as make life
possible. Accordingly they eat only to escape
hunger, and drink only to escape thirst, avoiding
satiety as an enemy of and a plotter against both
soul and body.
" Now there are two kinds of covering — clothes
and house. As to their dwelling I have already Housing
stated above that it is anything but beautiful to clothing,
look at, and put together anyhow, being made to
answer only its most absolutely necessary purpose;
and as to their clothing, it is equally of the
plainest description, just to protect them from cold
74 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
and heat; in winter a thick mantle instead of
a woolly hide, and in summer a sleeveless robe of
fine linen.
" For in everything they practise simplicity,
knowing that vanity has falsehood for its origin,
but simplicity truth, each of them containing the
innate power of its source ; for from falsehood
stream forth the manifold kinds of evils, while
from truth come the abundant blessings of good
both human and divine.
"I would also touch upon the general meetings
in which they pass the time in greater festivity
than usual banqueting together, contrasting them
with the banquets of others."
Philo here indulges in a long digression in
which he paints in the strongest colours the
debauchery and extravagance of the banquets of
voluptuaries, in order to contrast them as much as
possible with the sacred feasts of the Therapeuts.
" In the first place they all come together at
the end of every seventh week, for they reverence
not only the simple period of seven days, but also
the period of the power [or square] of seven, since
they know that the 'seven' is pure and ever-
virgin. Their seventh day festival then is only
a prelude to their greatest feast, which is assigned to
the fiftieth, the most holy and natural of numbers,
[the sum] of the powers of the [perfect] right-
angled triangle, which has been appointed as the
origin of the generation of the cosmic elements.
"When then they have assembled together, clad
in white robes, with joyous looks and with the
PHILO ON THE COMTEMPLATIVE LIFE. 75
greatest solemnity, at sign from one of the Ephe-
mereuts for the day (for this is the usual name The
for those who are engaged in such duties), and before On the
, . i ,-, • Fiftieth
sitting down, standing one beside the other in Day.
rows in a certain order, and raising their eyes and
hands to heaven — their eyes, since they are trained
to gaze on things worthy of contemplation ; and
their hands, since they are pure of gain, unstained
by any pretence of money-making affairs — they
offer prayer unto God that their banquet may be
pleasing and acceptable.
" After prayers the seniors sit down to table,
following the order of their election. For they do Seniority.
not regard as seniors merely those who are advanced
in years and have reached old age (nay, they regard
such as quite young children if they have only
lately fallen in love with the higher life), but
such as have grown up and arrived at maturity in
the contemplative part of philosophy, which is
unqestionably its fairest and most divine portion.
"And women also share in the banquet, most of
whom have grown old in virginity, preserving their The Women
jT Disciples.
purity not from necessity (as some or the
priestesses among the Greeks), but rather of their
own free-will, through their zealous love of wisdom,
with whom they are so keenly desirous of spending
their lives that they pay no attention to the
pleasures of the body. Their longing is not for
mortal children, but for a deathless progeny which
the soul that is in love with God can alone bring
forth, when the Father has implanted in it
those spiritual light-beams, with which it shall
76 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
contemplate the laws of wisdom. There is, however,
a division made between them in their places at
table, the men being apart on the right, and the
women apart on the left."
(It should be remembered that it was the custom
in the Greco-Roman world to recline at table,
leaning on the left elbow with a cushion under the
arm. The person reclining to the right of another
was said to lie on the latter's breast (avaKeicrOat ev
rw /CO'ATTO)). Cf. the canonical phrase, "the disciple
who lay on His breast at meat.")
" Perhaps you suspect that cushions, if not luxu
rious at any rate of tolerable softness, are provided
for people well-born and well-bred and students
of philosophy, whereas they have nothing but
mattresses of the more easily procurable material
(the papyrus of the country), over which [they
throw] the plainest possible rugs, slightly raised
at the elbow for them to lean upon. For on the
one hand they somewhat relax their [usual] Spartan
rigour of life [on such occasions], while on the
other [even at the banquets] they always study
the most liberal frugality in everything, rejecting
the allurements of pleasure with all their might.
" Nor are they waited upon by slaves, since
they consider the possession of servants in general
to be contrary to nature. For nature has created
all men free ; but the injustice and selfishness of
those who strive after inequality (the root of all
evil), have set the yoke of power on the necks of
the weaker and harnessed them to [the chariots of]
the stronger.
PHILO ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE LIFE. 77
" So in this holy banquet there is no slave, as
I have said, but it is served by free men who
perform the necessary service, not by compulsion,
or waiting for orders, but of their own free-will
anticipating the requests [of the guests] with
promptitude and eagerness. For they are not
chance free men who are appointed for such service,
but juniors of the order who have been selected in
order of merit with every possible care, who (as
those noble and well-born and anxious to reach the
summit of virtue should) with affectionate rivalry,
as though they were their legitimate children, wait
upon these fathers and mothers of theirs, regarding
them as their common parents, bound to them with
closer ties than their parents by blood : since, for
those who think, there is no closer tie than virtue
and goodness. And they come in to serve ungirdled,
with their robes let down, so that no resemblance
to a slave's dress may be introduced.
" I know that some of my readers will laugh at
such a banquet as this ; but such laughter will bring
them weeping and sorrow.
" Nor is wine brought in on these occasions, but
the clearest water, cold for the majority, and The
warmed for those of the older men whose tastes
are delicate. The table moreover contains nothing
that has blood in it, for the food is bread with
salt for seasoning, to which hyssop is added as an
extra relish for the gourmands. For just as right
reason bids priests make offerings free from wine
and blood, so does it bid these sages live. For wine
is a drug that brings on madness, and costly
78
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
seasonings rouse up desire, the most insatiable of
beasts. So much, then, for the preliminaries of
the banquet.
"Now, after the guests have taken their places
in the ranks I have described, and the waiters have
taken their stand in order, ready to serve, when
complete silence is gained— (and when is there not ?
you may say ; but then there is deeper silence than
before, so that no one ventures to make a sound or
even breathe at all hard) — the president searches
out some passage in the sacred scriptures or solves
some difficulty propounded by one of the members,
without any thought of display, for he does not
aim at a reputation for cleverness in words, but is
simply desirous of getting a clearer view of some
points [of doctrine]; and when he has done so,
•he unselfishly shares it with those who, though
they have not such keen vision as himself, never
theless have as great a longing to learn.
' The president for his part employs a somewhat
leisurely method of imparting instruction, pausing at
intervals and stopping for frequent recapitulations,
impressing the ideas on their souls. (For when, in
giving an interpretation, one continues to speak
rapidly without pausing for breath, the mind of
the hearers is left behind unable to keep up the
pace, and fails to comprehend what is said.)
While they, on their side, fixing all their attention
upon him, remain in one and the same attitude
listing attentively, showing their understanding and
comprehension [of his words] by nod and look;
praise of the speaker by a pleased expression and
PHILO ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE LIFE. 79
the thoughtful turning to him of their faces, and
hesitation by a mild shake of the head and a
motion of the forefinger of the right hand. And
the juniors who stand at service are just as
attentive as the seniors at table.
"Now the interpretation of the sacred scriptures
is based upon the under-meanings in the allegorical The Inter-
, , , ill: pretation of
narratives; for these men look upon the whole or Scripture.
their law-code as being like to a living thing,
having for body the spoken commands, and for
soul the unseen thought stored up in the words
(in which thought the rational soul [of the student]
begins to contemplate things native to its own
nature more than in anything else) — the inter
pretation, as it were, in the mirror of the names,
catching sight of the extraordinary beauties of the
ideas contained in them, unwrapping and unrobing
the symbols from them, and bringing to light the
naked inner meanings, for those who are able with
a little suggestion to arrive at the intuition of
the hidden sense from the apparent meaning.
"When then the president seems to have dis
coursed long enough, and the discourse, according
to its range, to have in his case made good practice
at the points aimed at, and in theirs [to have met
with due] attention, there is a burst of applause
from the company, as though they would offer their
congratulations, but this is restricted to three claps
of the hands.
" Then the president, rising, chants a hymn which
has been made in God's honour, either a new one The
which he has himself composed, or an old one of of Hymns.
80
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the ancient poets. For they have left behind them
many metres and tunes in trimetric epics, proces
sional hymns, libation odes, altar-chants, stationary
choruses, and dance-songs, [all] admirably measured
off in diversified strains.
" And after him the others also in bands, in
proper order, [take up the chanting], while the rest
listen in deep silence, except when they have to
join in the burden and refrains ; for they all, both
men and women, join in.
Then when hymns are over, the juniors bring
Bread and in the table, which was mentioned shortly before,
with the all-pure food upon it, leavened bread,
with flavouring of salt mingled with hyssop, out
of respect to the holy table set up in the holy
place of the temple. For on this table are loaves
and salt without seasoning ; the loaves are unleavened
and the salt unmixed with anything else ; for it
was fitting that the simplest and purest things
should be allotted to the most excellent division
of the priests, the reward of their ministry, while
the rest should strive after things of similar purity,
but abstain from the same food [as the priests],
in order that the more excellent should have this
privilege.
"After the banquet they keep the holy all-night
^ Sacred festival. And this is how it is kept. They all stand
up in a body, and about the middle of the entertain
ment they first of all separate into two bands,
men in one and women in the other, And a leader
is chosen for each, the conductor whose reputation
is greatest and the one most suitable for the post.
Dancing.
PHILO ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE LIFE. 81
They then chant hymns made in God's honour in
many metres and melodies, sometimes singing in
chorus, sometimes one band beating time to the
answering chant of the other, [now] dancing to its
music, [now] inspiring it, at one time in processional
hymns, at another in standing songs, turning and
returning in the dance.
" Then when each band has feasted [that is, has
sung and danced] apart by itself, drinking of God-
pleasing [nectar], just as in the Bacchic rites men
drink the wine unmixed, then they join together,
and one chorus is formed of the two bands, in
imitation of the joined chorus on the banks of the
Red Sea because of the wonderful works that had
been there wrought. For the sea at God's command
became for one party a cause of safety and for the
other a cause of ruin."
(Philo here refers to the fabled dance of triumph
of the Israelites at the destruction of Pharaoh and
his host, when Moses led the men and Miriam the
women in a common dance ; but the Therapeuts all
over the world could not have traced the custom to
this myth.)
" So the chorus of men and women Therapeuts,
being formed as closely as possible on this model,
by means of melodies in parts and harmony — the
high notes of the women answering to the deep
tones of the men — produces a harmonious and most
musical symphony. The ideas are of the most
beautiful, the expressions of the most beautiful, and
the dancers reverent; while the goal of the ideas,
expressions, and dancers is piety.
82
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The
Morning
Prayer.
" Thus drunken unto morning's light with this
fair drunkenness, with no head-heaviness or drowsi
ness, but with eyes and body fresher even than
when they came to the banquet, they take their
stand at dawn, when, catching sight of the rising
sun, they raise their hands to heaven, praying for
sunlight and truth and keenness of spiritual vision.
After this prayer each returns to his own sanctuary,
to his accustomed traffic in philosophy and labour
in its fields.
"So far then about the Therapeuts, who are
devoted to the contemplation of nature and live in
it and in the soul alone, citizens of heaven and the
world, legitimately recommended to the Father and
Creator of the Universe by their virtue, which
procures them His love, virtue that sets before it
for its prize the most suitable reward of nobility
and goodness, outstripping every gift of fortune,
and the first comer in the race to the very goal of
blessedness."
With regard to the mystic numbers 7 and 50
A Note on mentioned in the text above, it may be of interest to
Numbers. remark that Philo elsewhere (Leg. Alleg., i. 46) tells
us that the Pythagoreans called the number 7 the
ever-virgin, because "it neither produces any of the
numbers within the decad [i.e., from 1 to 10] nor
is produced by any of them." The power or square
of 7 is 49, and the great feast therefore took place
every fiftieth day. The number 50 is based on the
proportioned of the sides of the " perfect " right-
angled triangle, the famous Pythagorean triangle,
PHILO ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE LIFE. 88
so often referred to by Plato. (Of. The Nuptial
Number of Plato, by James Adam, M.A., Cambridge,
1891 ; the best work on the subject.) The sides of
this triangle bear the proportions of 3, 4, and 5, and
32 4- 42 - 52, or 9 + 16 - 25 ; and 9 + 16 + 25 = 50.
In another treatise (Qu. in Gen., iii. 39) we
get some further interesting information concerning
the 50. Philo speaks of two series, which he calls
triangles and squares, namely 1, 3, 6, 10, and 1,
4, 9, 16. At first sight it is difficult to discover
why Philo should call the first series of numbers
triangles, but it has occurred to me that he had in
mind some such arrangement as the following.
Many interesting correspondences may be made
out from the study of the apparently simple ordering
of these points, monads, or atoms, but we are at
present only engaged on the consideration of the
number 50.
With regard to the triangular series, 1, 3, 6, 10,
it is to be noticed that 1 = 1; 3 =1 + 2; 6 = 1 + 2
+ 3 ; and 10-1 + 2 + 3 + 4.
With regard to the square series, 1, 4, 9, 16,
we see at once that 1 = I2 ; 4 = 22 ; 9 = 32 ; and 16
= 42. Moreover 1 + 3 + 6 + 10 = 20 ; and 1 + 4 +
9 + 16 = 30; and finally 20 + 30 = 50.
84
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Philo'a
Connection
with the
Therapeuts.
Much more could be said ; but our space is limited,
and those who are interested in the matter can easily
work out details for themselves.
In reading this treatise and the rest of the
references to the Therapeuts scattered through
Philo's writings, the chief questions that naturally
arise are : What was Philo's connection with them ;
and how far can we rely on his account ? There
is an important passage in his writings which
gives us the critical point of departure in seeking
an answer. Philo (Leg. Alleg., i. 81) writes:
" I too have ofttimes left my kindred and my
friends and country, and have gone into the wilder
ness [or into solitude] in order to comprehend the
things worthy to be seen, yet have profited nothing ;
but my soul was scattered or stung with passion,
and lapsed into the very opposite current."
We learn from this interesting item of autobio
graphy that Philo had himself enjoyed no success in
the contemplative life. This accounts for his great
reverence and high respect for those who had
succeeded in comprehending the things " worthy to
be seen." Now as Philo never abandoned his
property, he could therefore not have been a full
accepted member of one of these brotherhoods. In
all probability he belonged to one of their outer
circles. As was the case with the Pythagoreans and
Essenes, the Therapeuts had lay-pupils who lived in
the world and who perhaps resorted to the community
now and again for a period of "retreat," and then
returned again to the world.
That these lay-disciples were men of great ability
PHILO ON THE CONTEMPLATIVE LIFE. 85
and insight is amply shown by the works of Philo The Lay
himself, but that there was a large literature of
a still loftier and more inspired character is also
evident from what Philo has to say of his teachers.
What has become of all these works, commentaries,
interpretations, hymns, sermons, expositions, apoca
lypses — works which aroused the admiration of so
distinguished a writer as Philo ? It seems to me
that though we may have some scraps of them
embedded in the Jewish Pseudepigrapha which have
come down to us, many of them belonged to the
now lost precursors of the fragments of the Gnostic
literature which have survived.
But were the Therapeuts Jews, as Philo would
lead us to believe in his apology for that nation ?
It is evident from his own statements that the
community which he describes, and with which he
was probably connected as lay-pupil, was but one of
a vast number scattered all over the world. Philo
would have us believe that his particular community
was the chief of all, doubtless because it was mainly
Jewish, though not orthodoxly so, for they were
" sun- worshippers."
It is therefore reasonable to conclude that there
were at this time numerous communities of mystics The
and ascetics devoted to the holy life and sacred Commun-
itjfls
science scattered throughout the world, and that
Philo's Mareotic community was one of these.
Others may have been tinged as strongly with
Eygptian, or Chaldsean, or Zoroastrian, or Orphic
elements, as the one south of Alexandria was
tinged with Judaism. It is further not incredible
86 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
that there were also truly eclectic communities
among them who combined and synthesized the
various traditions and initiations handed down
by the doctrinally more exclusive communities,
and it is in this direction therefore that we must
look for light on the origins of Gnosticism and
for the occult background of Christianity. These
communities did not at this time propagandize,
though they may have indirectly been at the
back of some of the greatest propagandist efforts,
as in the case of Philo. I also think that the
later Gnostic communities did not propagandize
directly, and that whatever works they may have
put foward for lay-pupils or by lay-pupils were
only a small part of their literature. For the
people there were the Law and the Prophets and
the Gospel; for the lay-pupils, the intermediate
literature ; and for those within, those most highly
mystical and abstruse treatises that none but the
trained mystics could possibly understand or were
expected to understand.
JEWRY.
THE third stream which poured into the matrix of
The the Christian origins, was that of Jewry. Even
Influence °
of before the Exile the undisciplined tribes composing
this peculiar nation had had their "Schools of the
Prophets," small communities holding themselves
apart and recruited by seers and visionaries. Up
to this time the traditions of the Jews and their
JEWRY. 87
conceptions of religion had been mostly of a very
crude nature compared to those of the more highly
civilized nations which surrounded them, although
of course they were distinguished by the particularism
of a nascent exclusive monotheism and a growing
detestation of idolatry.
In Babylon, however, they came into intimate
contact with a great and very ancient civilization,
and the impression it made upon them can be
clearly traced in the history of their subsequent
religious development.
Most of the nation remained contentedly in
Babylon, while the leaders of those who returned
set to work to rewrite their old traditions and
reformulate their religious conceptions, by the light
of the wider views they had absorbed — all of which
is to be clearly traced in the various stages of
evolution of their national scripture, the various
deposits of which are revealed to us by the patient
researches of scientific Biblical scholars and the ever
new discoveries of archaeology.
The Jewish writers appropriated to themselves
the traditions of the great Semitic race and of the
nations of Chaldsea and of Babylon, and used them
for the glorification of their own origins and history,
in the strange conviction that they all applied to
them as the " chosen people " of God. The elaborate
doctrine of purity on which the Persian Zoroastrian
tradition laid such stress was eagerly adopted by
their priesthood, and we perceive in their library of
religious books the gradual elimination of the cruder
ideas of Deity and the gradual development of far
88
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
History.
higher conceptions in (at times) most wonderful
poetic outbursts.
It must not be supposed, however, that the
re-writers and editors of the old traditions were
forgers and falsifiers in any ordinary sense of
the word. Antiquity in general had no conception
of literary morality in its modern meaning, and
all writing of a religious character was the outcome
of an inner impulse. The wealth of technical
terms bestowed on these ancient writers and their
methods by modern Biblical critics forces the
student almost unconsciously to read into those
times ideas and standards that had then no existence.
Again, a common fault is to endow these ancient
worthies of the Jews with motives of action and
refinements of belief which only belong to the best in
Christendom ; and so we not only do grave injustice
to their memories, but we read into their history an
atmosphere of too great refinement for the actual Jew
of the period to have lived in. It should also be
remembered that the mythologizing of history and
the historicizing of mythology were not peculiar to
the Jews, but common to the times; what was
peculiar to them was their fanatical belief in Divine
favouritism and their egregious claim to the monopoly
of God's providence.
Now the Jews, as all children of the desert,
The had ingrained in them an invincible longing for
of History, freedom, and at the same time they had the innate
poetic imagination of all those who live in close
contact with nature.
The two "kingdoms" that were always fighting
JEWRY. 89
among themselves and with their neighbours, " Israel "
and "Judah," were successively deported by the
Assyrian authorities, to remove a centre of perpetual
disturbance.
The "ten tribes" who were the first to be deported,
consisting as they did of elements more adaptable to
their surroundings than the Judaeans, settled down in
Babylonia and gradually adapted themselves to their
new environment; it would be interesting to know
what development occurred in the schools of their
prophets in contact with the ancient Chaldaean wisdom,
and the subsequent history of that " Israel " which
not only thus settled in Babylon, but remained there.
When the more turbulent Judaean tribes were
subsequently in their turn deported, some of them
followed the example of their kinsfolk ; but most of
the Judseans refused to adapt themselves to the new
conditions, they pined for their freedom, and in spite
of their being surrounded by the monuments of a
great civilisation, looked back to their poor settlement
of Jerusalem as though it had been in the land of
Paradise, and its meagre homes the palaces of
kings. The fathers wove for the children stories of
the beauty and richness of their native land, of the
glories of its palaces, and the great deeds of their
ancient sheiks ; above all things they insisted on their
peculiar destiny as men who had made a compact
with a God who had promised them victory over all
foes. The fathers, who had gradually grown to
believe their own stories, died before the conqueror
Cyrus, in gratitude for their help against the
Assyrian power, granted the return of the Judesan
90 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
folk. Those who returned were of the next
generation, and they reoccupied the ruins of
Jerusalem with ideas of a former greatness which
existed in the poetic imagination and love of
freedom of their sires rather than in actual
history.
Filled with an enthusiasm for the past, they wrote
what their fathers had told them, expanding the old
records into a splendid "history," and bringing into
it all that they had developed of religion by
controversy with the Babylonians and Persians a
controversy which consisted in persistently main
taining that their religion was better than their
opponents', claiming the best in their opponents'
position or tradition as their own, and ever-
asserting that they had something still higher as well.
Now the Jew had such a firm conviction that
Honest he was the Chosen of God that he probably really
Self- v v i n , . - J
delusion. elievect all his assertions; in any case the sense
of history did not exist in those days, and there
was no one to check the enthusiasm of these early
scribes.
They probably argued : We are the chosen people
of God ; our religion is better than any other
religion, in fact all other religions are false, all
other Gods false ; the palmy days of our religion
were before the Captivity ; those times must have
been greater than the best times in other nations,
our temple must have been grander, our sacrifices
greater than any other in the world ; our fathers
have said it and we feel -it is true. In such a
frame of mind and with the innate poetic fervour
JEWRY. 91
of their nature they felt impelled to write, and by
their writing transformed the old records out of
all historic recognition, and from such beginnings
gradually evolved a literature which future genera
tions received without question, not only as a precise
record of fact but as a divinely written scripture
verbally inspired.
The development of this literature was a natural
growth, though the distinct factors which played a
part in it are somewhat difficult to disentangle ; but
there are distinct signs of repeated modifications of
cruder conceptions, and of the leavening of the nation
by a steadily developing spiritual force. Whence came
this persistent spiritualizing of the old conceptions ?
In vseeking for an answer to this question, the
point of departure may be found in the fact that the The
majority of the nation did not return ; and not only j
this, but that the majority of the Jews in course of Juda
time preferred to live among the Gentiles. In fact
the members of the nation gradually became the
great traders of the ancient world, so that we find
colonies of them scattered abroad in all the great
centres ; for instance, shortly after the founding of
Alexandria we hear of a colony of no fewer than
40,000 Jews planted there. These Jews of the
Diaspora or Dispersion were in constant contact
with their Palestinian co-religionists on the one side,
and on the other in intimate contact with the great
civilizations in which they found a home.
The expectation of the salvation of the race
and of a Saviour of the race, which the Jews Zealotism.
absorbed from Zoroastrianism, they adapted to
92 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
their own needs and to the conviction that Israel
was the Chosen of God. This expectation was for
long entirely of a material nature ; they looked
for a king who should restore them to freedom and
tread under foot the nations of the world, when
he would reign for one thousand years in Jerusalem.
All this was to be effected by the direct interposition
of Yahweh, their God. For some four hundred years,
up to the final destruction of Jerusalem by Titus,
we are presented with the spectacle of a most
determined struggle for freedom ; for the Jews were
ever disappointed of their hopes, and had to submit
to the successive overlordship of Greece and Rome.
But hope ever sprang up again and again after
every new disappointment, and we find in their
literature the record of a determined opposition to
the conqueror, fanned into fever heat by the fiery
exhortations and denunciations of a pseudoprophetical
character which has no parallel in the history of the
world. If in the Greek genius was centred the
struggle for the freedom of the intellect, in the
Jewish nation was centred the struggle for personal
freedom: and in the Roman Empire, after the
destruction of Jerusalem, Jewry finally became the
centre of all disaffection and revolutionary ideas.
At the back of all of this was the peculiarly
Pharisaism, exclusive faith which the Jew had evolved, and
which from a Roman point of view constituted
him "the hater of mankind." But this fanatical
Zealotism, although it was directly nourished by the
more unbalanced pronouncements of the religious
writers and prophets, became more and more dis-
JEWRY. 93
tasteful to the better elements in the nation. These
better elements we find represented by the more
spiritual views that by degrees worked into the sacred
literature, and the nation was gradually leavened
by Pharisaism, which, though running to the extreme
of minute ceremonial and the most elaborate rules
of external purity, was nevertheless a most potent
factor in the widening of the religious horizon.
The external side of Pharisaism is fairly well
known to us ; but the inner side of this great
movement, to which all the most learned of the
Jews belonged, is but little understood.
Pharisaism was in course of time divided into
numerous schools, the strictest of which led the life
of rigid internal purity. Leading such a life, it
could not but be that their ideas became of a
more spiritual nature; indeed Pharisaism had its
origin in Babylon, and it represented the main
stream of Chaldsean and Persian influence on Jewry.
Along this line of tradition we find gradually
evolved a far more spiritual view of the Messiah- The
doctrine; Israel was not the physical nation of and833
the Jews, but the Elect of God chosen out of all E88ene8'
nations ; the servants of God were those who served
Him with their hearts and not with their lips;
the God of this Israel abhorred their blood sacrifices.
But such views as these, although they indirectly
influenced the public scripture of the nation, could
not be boldly declared among a people that had
ever stoned its prophets and delighted in blood-
sacrifice. Such views could only be safely discussed
in private, and we find numerous records of the
94 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
existence of schools of Chassidim and those whom
Josephus calls Essenes, among whom were the most
pure and learned of the Jews, the " Rabbis of the
South," living apart and in retirement.
These schools and communities seem to have
looked back to the stern physical discipline of the
Schools of the Prophets on the one hand, and to
have been in contact with the spiritual ideas of
the Babylonian wisdom-discipline on the other.
In Babylon we see how one of the nation's seers
The Inner contacted part of the Chaldsean wisdom-tradition, and
the famous " Vision of Ezekiel " was subsequently
invoked as canonical authority for all that range of
ideas which we find revived so many hundreds of
years later in Mediaeval Kabalism. But in order to
understand the nature of the studies and inner
experiences of the members of these mystic schools of
Chassidim and their imitators, it is necessary to have
a critical acquaintance with non-canonical Jewish
writings, especially the wisdom-literature and
those numerous apocrypha, and apocalypses, and
apologies for unfulfilled prophecy — a mass of
pseudepigraphs which were so busily produced in
the last centuries preceding our era and in its
earliest centuries. It is true we possess only the
fragmentary remains of this once enormous literature,
most probably only the works that were written for
general circulation, and principally by those members
of these communities who were still obsessed by the
Zealot conception of Israel; but enough remains to fill
in some very necessary outlines of the background
of the Gnosis, and to enable us to realise how
JEWRY. 95
earnestly men were striving for a purer life and
greater knowledge of God in those early days.
These mystic schools of Jewish theosophy had
an enormous influence on nascent Christianity;
the innermost schools influenced the inner schools
of Christendom, and the general literature of the
intermediate circles left a deep mark on general
Christianity.
Most of these mystic schools and communities,
whether of Greek or Egyptian or Jewish descent,
when they came in contact with each other, gave and
received. True that some of them refused to mix in
person or doctrine, and there were rigidly conserva
tive mystic schools of all three lines of descent;
others, however, if not in their corporate capacity, at
any rate in the persons of their individual members,
gave and received, and so modified their preconcep
tions and enlarged their horizon. Indeed, in the
last two centuries prior to and first two centuries
of our era there was an enormous enthusiasm for
syncretism and syntheticism among the members of
such schools, the effects of which are plainly traceable
in the fragments of the Gnosis preserved to us by the
polemical citations of the heresiologists of later
orthodoxy.
ALEXANDRIA.
The rough outlines of the background of the
Gnosis which we have endeavoured to sketch, are
of necessity of the vaguest, for each of the many
96 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
subjects touched upon is deserving of a volume or
several volumes. Our intention has only been to
give some general idea of the manifold lines along
which its complicated heredity has to be traced.
But our sketch is so vague that perhaps it may
be as well, before proceeding further, to give the
reader some notion of the more immediate outer
conditions in which the Christian Gnosis lived and
— we will not say died, but — disappeared. Insistence
upon some of the points already touched upon and
a few more details may serve to make the matter
clearer ; and the best spot from which to make our
observation is Alexandria, and the best time for
a retrospect is the epoch when General Christianity
had definitely won its victory and driven the Gnosis
from the field.
It should be remembered that in the following
sketch we shall attempt to depict only the outer
appearances of things; within, as we have already
suggested and as we shall show in the sequel, there
was a hidden life of great activity. If there was an
enormous public library at Alexandria, there were
also many private libraries of the inner schools dealing
with the sacred science of unseen things. It was
precisely from these private circles that all mystic
writings proceeded, and we can see from the nature
of the Gnostic and other works of this kind which
have reached us, that their authors and compilers
had access to large libraries of mystic lore.
Let us then carry our minds foward to the
A Bird's-eye last quarter of the fourth century of the present
City*C era, when Hypatia was a girl, after the hopes
ALEXANDRIA. 97
of the School that traced its descent through Plato
and Pythagoras from Orpheus, had received so
rude a shock from the early death of Julian,
the emperor-philosopher; just in time to see the
Serapeum still standing, unviolated by the icono
clastic hands of a fanaticism that was the
immediate progeny of Jewish Zealotism and
entirely foreign to the teaching of the Christ.
Let us ascend the great lighthouse, 400 feet high,
on the island off the mainland, the world-famous
Pharos, and take a bird's-eye view of the intellectual
centre of the ancient Western world.
The city lies out before us on a long ribbon of
land or isthmus, between the sea front and the
great lake towards the south, Lake Mareotis. Far
away to the left is the most westerly mouth of
the Nile, called the Canopic, and a great canal winds
out that way to Canopus, where is the sacred shrine
of Serapis. Along it, if it were festival-time, you
would see crowds of pilgrims, hastening, on gaily
decorated barges, to pay their homage to certain
wise priests, one of whom about this time was a
distinguished member of the later Platonic School.
The great city with its teeming populace stretches
out before us with a sea-frontage of some four or
five miles; in shape it is oblong, for when Alex
ander the Great, hundreds of years ago, in 331 B.C.,
marked out its original walls with the flour his
Macedonian veterans carried (perhaps according to
some national rite), he traced it in the form of
a chlamys, a scarf twice as long as it was broad.
Two great streets or main arteries, in the form
M
98 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of a cross, divide it into four quarters. These
thoroughfares are far wider than any of our modern
streets, and the longer one, parallel to the shore,
and extending through the outlying suburbs, has a
length of three leagues, so that the Alexandrians
consider it quite a journey to traverse their city.
Where these streets cross is a great square sur
rounded with handsome buildings, and adorned with
fountains, statues and trees. There are many other
squares and forums also, but none so vast as the
great square. Many pillars and obelisks adorn the
city; the most conspicuous of them being a flat-
topped pillar of red stone, on a hill near the shore,
and two obelisks on the shore itself, one of which
is the present Cleopatra's Needle.
The island on which we are standing is joined to
the main-land by a huge mole almost a mile long,
with two water-ways cutting it, spanned with bridges,
and defended with towers. This mole helps to form
the great harbour on our right, and the smaller and
less safe harbour on our left. There is also a third
huge dock, or basin, in the north-west quarter of the
city, closed also by a bridge.
The two main thoroughfares divide Alexandria
into four quarters, which together with the first
suburb of the city were originally called by the first
five letters of the alphabet. The great quarter on
our left is, however, more generally known as the
Bruchion, perhaps from the palace Ptolemy Soter set
aside to form the nucleus of the great library. It is
the Greek quarter, the most fashionable, and archi
tecturally very magnificent. There you see the vast
ALEXANDRIA. 99
mausoleum of Alexander the Great, containing the
golden coffin in which the body of the world-conquer
ing hero has been preserved for hundreds of years.
There, too, are the splendid tombs of the Ptolemies,
who ruled Egypt from the time of the division of
Alexander's empire till the latter part of the first
century B.C. when the Romans wrested the kingdom
from Cleopatra. Observe next the great temple of
Poseidon, god of the sea, a favourite deity of the
sailor populace. There, too, is the Museum, the centre
of the university, with all its lecture rooms and halls,
not the original Museum of the Ptolemies, but a later
building. Baths, too, you see everywhere, thousands
of them, magnificent buildings where the luxurious
Alexandrians spend so much of their time.
On the right is the Egyptian quarter, the north
western, called Rhacotis, a very old name dating back
to a time when Alexandria did not exist, and an old
Egyptian burg, called Ragadouah, occupied its site.
The difference in the style of achitecture at once
strikes you, for it is for the most part in the more
sombre Egyptian style ; and that great building you
see in the eastern part of the quarter is the far-famed
Serapeum ; it is not so much a single building as
a group of buildings, the temple of course being the
chief of them. It is a fort-like place, with plain
heavy walls, older than the Greek buildings, gloomy
and severe and suited to the Egyptian character ;
it is the centre of the " Heathen " schools, that
is to say, the Barbarian or non-Greek lecture
halls. You will always remember the Serapeum
by its vast flights of steps bordered with
100 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
innumerable sphinxes, both inside and outside the
great gate.
If you could see underneath the buildings, you
would be struck with the network of vaults and
crypts on which the whole city seems to have been
built ; these vaults are used mostly as underground
cisterns for the storage of water — a most necessary
provision in so poorly rain-fed a country as Egypt.
The south-eastern quarter, behind the Bruchion,
is the centre of the Jewish colony, which dates back
to the days of Alexander himself, and has never
numbered less than 40,000 Hebrews.
The great open space to the left of the Bruchion
is the Hippodrome or race-course, and further east
still along the shore is the fashionable suburb of
Nicopolis, where perchance Hypatia lives. On the
other side of the city, beyond Rhacotis, is a huge
cemetery adorned with innumerable statues and
columns, and known as Necropolis.
But the various styles of architecture and distinct
The characteristics of the various quarters can give but
Populace.
little idea of the mixed and heterogeneous populace
assembled on the spot where Europe, Asia, and Africa
meet together. First you have the better class
Egyptians and Greeks, mostly extremely refined,
haughty and effeminate ; of Romans but a few—
the magistrates and military, the legionaries of the
guard who patrolled the city and quelled the frequent
riots of religious disputants ; for all of whom, Jew or
Christian, Gnostic or Heathen, they had a bluff and
impartial contempt.
In the more menial offices vou see the lower-class
ALEXANDRIA. 101
mixed Egyptians, the descendants of the aboriginal
populace, perchance, crowds of them. Thousands of
Ethiopians and negroes also, in the brightest possible
colours.
There, too, you see bands of monks from the
Thebaid, many from the Nitrian Valley, two or three
days' journey south into the desert, beyond the great
lake ; they are easily distinguishable, with their
tangled unkempt locks, and skins for sole clothing —
for the most part at this time a violent, ignorant, and
ungovernable set of fanatics. Mixed with them are
people in black, ecclesiastics, deacons and officers of
the Christian churches.
Down by the harbours, however, we shall come
across many other types, difficult to distinguish for
the most part because of the interblending and
mixture. Thousands of them come and go on the
small ships which crowd the harbours in fleets.
Many are akin to the once great nation of the so-
called " Hittites " ; Phoenician and Carthaginian
sailor-folk in numbers, and traders from far more
distant ports.
Jews everywhere and those akin to Jews, in all
the trading parts ; some resembling Afghans ; ascetics,
too, from Syria, descended from the Essenes, per
chance, or Therapeutae, paying great attention to
cleanliness. Also a few tall golden-haired people,
Goths and Teutons perchance, extremely contemp
tuous of the rest, whom they regard as an effeminate
crowd — big, tall, strong, rough fellows. A few
Persians also, and more distant Orientals.
Perhaps, however, you are more interested in the
102 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Christian populace, a most mixed crowd without and
within. The city ecclesiastics are busied more with
politics than with religion ; the rest of the faithful
can be divided into two classes, offering widely
different presentments of Christianity.
On the one hand, the lowest classes and many of
the monks, bigoted and ignorant, contemptuous of all
education, devoted to the cult of the martyrs, thirsting
for the blood of the Jews, and wild to overthrow
every statue and raze every temple to the ground.
On the other hand, a set of refined disputants, philo
sophical theologians, arguing always, eager to enter
the lists with the Pagan philosophers, spending their
lives in public discussions, while the crowds who come
to hear them are mostly indifferent to the right or
wrong of the matter, and applaud every debating
point with contemptuous impartiality, enjoying the
wrangle from the point of view of a refined
scepticism.
But we must hasten on with our task, and
The complete our sketch of the city with a brief reference
to two of its most famous institutions, the Library
and Museum. Even if most of us have had no
previous acquaintance with the topography of
Alexandria, and are perfectly ignorant of the
history of its schools, we have at any rate all
heard of its world-famed Library.
When the kingdom of Alexander was divided
among his generals, the rich kingdom of Egypt fell
to the lot of Ptolemy I., called Soter, the Saviour.
Believing that Greek culture was the most civilising
factor in the known world, and Greek methods the
ALEXANDRIA. 103
most enlightened, Soter determined not only to make
a small Greece in Egypt, but also to make his court at
Alexandria the asylum of all the learning of the
Grecian world. Fired with this noble ambition he
founded a Museum or University, dedicated to the
arts and sciences, and a Library. Had not Aristotle
the philosopher taught his great leader, Alexander,
the art of government; and should not the chief
of his generals therefore gather together all the
works that dealt with so useful a science ? For
tunately, however, the original plan of a purely
political library was speedily abandoned and more
universal views prevailed. It is, however, not
unlikely that Ptolemy, as an Egyptian ruler, did
but found a new library for his capital in emulation
of the many libraries already existing in that ancient
land. We have only to recall the vast collection of
Osymandyas at Thebes, the " Remedy of the Soul,"
to be persuaded of the fact. Therefore, though the
Alexandrian Library was the first great public
Grecian library, it was by no means the first in
Egypt. Nor was it even the first library in Greece;
for Poly crates of Samos, Pisistratus and Eucleides
of Athens, Nicocrates of Cyprus, Euripides the poet,
and Aristotle himself, had all large collections of
books.
To be brief ; the first collection was placed in
the part of the royal palaces near the Canopic Gate,
the chief of these palaces being called the Bruchion,
close to the Museum. A librarian and a staff were
appointed — an army of copyists and calligraphists.
There were also scholars to revise and correct the
104 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
texts, and chorizontes (xwptfrvres) to select the
authentic and best editions; also makers of cata
logues, categories and analytics.
Under the first Ptolemies the collecting of books
became quite a mania. Ptolemy Soter had letters
sent to all the reigning sovereigns begging for
copies of every work their country possessed,
whether of poets, logographers, or writers of sacred
aphorisms, orators, sophists, doctors, medical philoso
phers, historians, etc. Ptolemy II. (Philadelphus)
commissioned every captain of a vessel to bring
him MSS., for which he paid so royally that many
forgeries were speedily put on the market. Attalus
and Eumenes, kings of Pergamus, in north-west Asia
Minor, established a rival library in their capital, and
prosecuted the search for books with such ardour that
the library of Aristotle, bequeathed to Theophrastus
and handed on to Neleus of Scepsis, had to be buried
to escape the hands of their rapacious collectors, only
to find its way, however, to Alexandria at last.
Philadelphus accordingly issued an order against the
exportation of papyrus from Egypt, and thus the
rival collectors of Pergamus had to be content with
vellum; hence, some say, pergamene, parchemin,
parchment. The commerce of MSS. was carried on
throughout all Greece, Rhodes and Athens being
the chief marts.
Thus Alexandria became possessed of the most
ancient MSS. of Homer and Hesiod and the Cyclic
poets ; of Plato and Aristotle, of ^Eschylus, Sophocles
and Euripides, and many other treasures.
Moreover, large numbers of translators were
ALEXANDRIA. 105
employed to turn the books of other nations into
Greek. The sacred books of the nations were trans
lated, and the Septuagint version of the Hebrew
Bible was added to the number, not without miracle,
if we are to believe the legend recounted by Josephus.
Even by the time of Ptolemy III. (Euergetes) the
Bruchion could not contain all the books, and a fresh
nucleus was established in the buildings of the Sera-
peum, on the other side of the city, but not in the
temple itself with its four hundred pillars, of all of
which Pompey's Pillar alone remains to us.
What a wealth of books in so short a time ! Even
in the times of the first three Ptolemies, we read of
400,000 rolls or volumes. What then must have been
the number in later years ? Some say they exceeded
a million rolls and papyri. Let us, however, remem
ber that a " book " or " roll " was generally not a
volume as with us, but rather the chapter of a work.
We read of men writing " six thousand books " ! The
rolls had to be comparatively small, for the sake of
convenience, and a work often had as many rolls as
it contained books. We must, therefore, bearing
this in mind, be on our guard against exaggerating
the size of the great Library.
The Serapeum, however, soon contained as many
books as the Bruchion, and all went well till 47 B.C.,
when the great fire which destroyed Csesar's fleet,
burnt the Bruchion to the ground. An imaginative
versifier, Lucian, asserts that the glow of the con
flagration could be seen as far as Rome !
So they had to rebuild the Bruchion, and put into
the new building the famous library of Pergamus,
106 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTE .
which the city had bequeathed to the Senate, and
which the infatuated Mark Antony handed over to
Cleopatra, last of the Ptolemies.
When the glory of Alexandria began to depart, its
library began to share its fate. Julian, the emperor
(360-363), took many volumes to enrich his own
library ; when the " Christian " fanatics in 387
stormed the Serapeum, they razed the temple to its
foundation, and nothing of the library was left but
the empty shelves. Finally in 641 Amru, general
of Omar, second in sucession to the Prophet, fed the
furnaces of the 4000 baths of Alexandria for full
six months with the Bruchiori's priceless treasures.
If what the rolls contained were in the Koran, they
were useless, if what they taught were not in the
Koran, they were pernicious ; in either case, burn
them ! Some Mohammedan apologists have lately
tried to whitewash Omar and deny the whole
story; but perhaps he is as little to be excused
as the "Christian" barbarians who devastated the
shelves of the Serapeum.
Such was the written material on which the
The scholars, scientists and philosophers of Alexandria
had to work. And not only was there a library,
but also a kind of university, called the Museum,
dedicated to the arts and sciences, and embracing
among other things an observatory, an amphitheatre
of anatomy, a vast botanical garden, an immense
menagerie, and many other collections of things useful
for physical research.
It was an institution conceived on a most liberal
plan, an assembly of savants lodged in a palace,
ALEXANDRIA. 107
richly endowed with the liberality of princes, exempt
from public charges. Without distinction of race
or creed, with no imposed regulations, no set plan
of study or lecture lists, the members of this
distinguished assembly were left free to prosecute
their researches and studies untrammelled and
unhampered. In their ranks were innumerable
poets, historians, geometricians, mathematicians,
astronomers, translators, critics, commentators,
physicians, professors of natural science, philolo
gists, grammarians, archaeologists ; in brief, savants
of all sorts laying the first foundations of those
researches which have once more in our own time,
after the lapse of centuries, claimed the attention
of the world. True, the Museum of Alexandria
made but faltering steps where we to-day stride
on with such assurance ; but the spirit and method
were the same, feeble compared to our strength,
but the same spirit now made strong by palin
genesis.
Very like was the temper then, in the last
three centuries before the Christian era, to the
temper that has marked the last three centuries
of our own time. Religion had lost its hold on the
educated ; scepticism and " science " and misunder
stood Aristotelian philosophy were alone worthy
of a man of genius. There were " emancipated
women " too, " dialectical daughters," common enough
in those latter days of Greece.
Had not, thought these schoolmen, their great
founder, Alexander, conquered the political world by
following the advice of his master Aristotle ? They
108 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
also, would follow the teaching of the famous
Stagirite, who had mapped out heaven and earth
and all things therein, and soon they too would
conquer what else of the world there was to be
conquered, both natural and intellectual. It seemed
so probable then, so simple and logical. It seems to
be probable even now — to some minds !
So they set to work with their commenting, and
criticizing, their philologizing, their grammar, and
accentuation, their categorizing and cataloguing.
They set to work to measure things ; being pupils of
Euclid, they attempted to measure the distance of the
sun from the earth ; and Eratosthenes, by copper
armillse, or circles for determining the equinox,
calculated the obliquity of the ecliptic, and by further
researches calculated the circumference of the earth ;
he also mapped out the world from all the
books of travel and earth-knowledge in the great
Library. In mechanics, Archimedes solved the mys
teries of the lever and hydrostatic pressue which are
the basis of our modern statics and hydrostatics.
Hipparchus too thought out a theory of the heavens,
upside down in fact, but correct enough to calculate
eclipses and the rest ; and this, three hundred years
later, under the Antonines, was revamped by a certain
Ptolemy, a commentator merely and not an inventor,
the patent now standing in his name. Hipparchus
was also the father of plane and spherical trigo
nometry.
But enough has already been said to give us an
idea of the temper of the times, and it would be too
long to dwell on the long list of famous names in
ALEXANDRIA. 109
other departments — encyclopaedists and grammarians
like Callimachus and Aristophanes; poets such as
Theocritus.
Thus with the destruction of the building in the
fire of Caesar's fleet and with the Roman conquest the
first Museum came to an end. It is true that a new
Museum was established in the reign of Claudius
(41-50 A.D.), but it was a mere shadow of its former
self, no true home of the Muses, but the official
auditorium of the wearisome writings of an emperor-
scribbler. Claudius had written in Greek, Tnagis
inepte quam ineleganter, as Suetonius remarks, eight
books of a history of Carthage, and twenty books of
a history of Etruria. He would, therefore, establish
a Museum and have his precious writings read to
sycophant professordom once a year at least. Thus
passed away the glory of that incarnation of scholar
ship and science; it was a soulless thing at best,
marking a period of unbelief and scepticism, and
destined to pass away when once man woke again to
the fact that he was a soul.
And what of the outer schools of so-called
philosophy during that period ? They, too, were The Schoola
barren enough. The old sages of Greece were sophists,
no more. Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle
had passed from the sight of mortals. The men
who followed them were for the most part word-
splitters and phrase-weavers. Dialectic arguers
of the Megaran school, Eristics or wranglers,
Pyrrhonists or doubters, Cyrenaics who believed in
the senses alone as the only avenues of knowledge,
pessimists and annihilationists, a host of later
110 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Sceptics, Cynics, Epicureans, Academics, Peripatetics
and Stoics — Epicureans who sought to live comfort
ably; Stoics who, in opposition to Plato's doctrine of
social virtues, asserted the solitary dignity of human
individualism.
After the three great reigns of the first Ptolemies,
Alexandria fell morally, together with its rulers; for
one hundred and eighty years " sophists wrangled,
pedants fought over accents and readings with the
true odium grammat-icum" till Cleopatra, like Helen,
betrayed her country to the Romans, and Egypt
became a tributary province. So far there had been
no philosophy in the proper sense of the word ; that
did not enter into the curriculum of the Museum.
Hitherto Alexandria had had no philosophy of
The Dawn- her own, but now she is destined to be the
crucible in which philosophic thought of every
kind will be fused together; — and not only
philosophy, but more important still, religio-philosophy
and theosophy of every kind will be poured into
the melting pot, and many strange systems
and some things admirably good and true will
be moulded out of the matter cast into this
seething crucible. So far the Grecian genius
has only thought of airing its own methods and views
before the East. Into Egypt, Syria, Persia, into India
even, it has flitted and sunned itself. It has taken
many a year to convince Greek complacency that the
period of world-genius is not bounded on one hand by
Homer and on the other by Aristotle. Slowly but
remorselessly it is borne in upon Hellenic ingenuity
that there is an antiquity in the world beside which
ALEXANDRIA. Ill
it is a mere parvenu. The Greek may despise the
Orientals and call them mere " barber " or Barbarians,
because they are strangers to the Attic tongue; but
the Barbarian is to laugh last and laugh best after all,
for he has a carefully guarded heirloom of wisdom,
which he has not yet quite forgotten. The Greeks
have had the tradition, too, and have even revived it,
but have now forgotten again ; the sceptics have
replaced Orpheus by Homer, and Pythagoras and the
real Plato by Aristotle. Their Mysteries are now
masonic and no longer real — except for the very
very few.
And if the Greek despised the Barbarian, the
Barbarian, in his turn, thought but little of the Greek.
" You Greeks are but children, O Solon," said the wise
priest of Sais to the Attic law -giver. You Greeks
misunderstand and change .the sacred myths you have . "Tg^
jidogted, fickle and careless, and superficial in things
religious. Such was the criticism of the ancient
Barbarian on the young and innovating Greek.
Slowly but surely the wisdom of the Egyptians,
of the Babylonians and Chaldaeans, and its reflection
in some of the Jewish doctors, of Persia, too, and
perhaps even of India, begins to react on the centre
of Grecian thought, and religion and all the great
problems of the human soil begin to oust mere
scholasticism, beaux arts and belles lettres, from the
schools ; Alexandria is no longer to be a mere literary
city, but a city of philosophy in the old sense of the
term : it is to be wisdom-loving ; not that it will
eventually succeed even in this, but it will try to
succeed.
112 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
There is to be a new method too. The concealed
and hidden for so many centuries will be discussed
and analyzed ; there will be eclecticism, or a choosing
out and synthesizing ; there will be syncretism and a
mingling of the most heterogeneous elements into
some sort of patchwork ; there will be analogeticism
or comparison and correspond encing ; efforts to dis
cover a world-religion ; to reconcile the irreconcilable ;
to synthesize as well science, philosophy and religion ;
to create a theosophy. It will apparently fail, for the
race is nearing its end ; it is the searching for truth
at the end of a long life with an old brain, with too
many old tendencies and prejudices to eradicate. The
race will die and the souls that ensouled it will go out
of incarnation, to reappear in due time when the
wheel has turned. The old race is to be replaced
with new blood and new physical vigour ; but the
mind of the new race is incapable of grasping the
problems of its predecessors : Goths, Teutons, Vandals,
Huns, Celts, Britons, and Arabs are bodies for a far
less developed batch of souls. True the new race will
also grow and develop and in its turn reach to man
hood and old age, and far transcend its predecessor in
every way ; but when a child it will think as a child,
when a man as a man, and when aged as the aged.
What could the barbarian Huns and Goths and Arabs
make of the great problems that confronted the
highly civilised Alexandrians ?
For the new race a new religion therefore, suited
to its needs, suited perchance to its genius, suited to
its age. What its actual historic origins were are
so far shrouded in impenetrable obscurity; what
ALEXANDRIA. 113
the real history of its Founder was is impossible to
discover.
This much, however, is certain, that a new key
note was struck for the tuning up of the new The New
instrument. It is always a dangerous thing to
generalize too freely, and paint the past in too
staring splashes of colour, for in human affairs
we find nothing unmixed ; good was mixed with
evil in the old method, and evil with good in
the new. The new method was to force out into
the open for all men a portion of the sacred Mysteries
and secret teachings of the few. The adherents of
the new religion itself professed to throw open
" everything"; and many believed that it had revealed
all that was revealable. That was because they
were as yet children. So bright was the light to
them that they perforce believed it came directly
from the God of all gods — or rather from God alone,
for they would have no more of gods ; the gods were
straightway transmuted into devils. The "many"
had begun to play with psychic and spiritual forces,
let loose from the Mysteries, and the "many" went
mad for a time, and have not yet regained their
sanity. Let us dwell on this intensely interesting
phenomenon for a few moments.
It is true that in the Roman Empire, which had
now reduced the " world " to its sway, and thus
politically united so many streams of ancient civilisa
tion and barbarism into one ocean, things were in a
very parlous state, morally and socially. The ancient
order was beginning to draw to an end. Political
freedom and independence were of the past, but
114 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
intellectual and religious tolerance were still
guaranteed, for so far the ancient world knew not the
meaning of intolerance.
States were politically subordinated to the control
of the Caesars, but the religious institutions of such
states, on which their social life and national existence
depended, were left in absolute freedom. Neverthe
less the spirit of reality had long left the ancient
institutions; they were still maintained as part
and parcel of statecraft, and as necessary for the
people, who must have a cult, and festivals, and
religious shows, then as now ; but few took the
matter really seriously. For the educated there
was philosophy, and the shadow of the ancient
Mysteries.
But these things were not for the people, not for
the uneducated ; the priestly orders had forgotten
their duties, and, using their knowledge for self-
aggrandisement, had now almost entirely forgotten
what they once had known. It is an old, old story.
The ancient church was corrupt, the ancient state
enslaved. There must be a protest, partly right,
partly wrong, as usual good and evil protesting
against evil and good.
It is true that the Mysteries are free and open
to all — who are worthy.
It is true that morals and virtues are absolutely
essential pre-requisites — but not these alone.
It is true that there is One God — but Yahweh
is not that Deity.
It is true that there are grades of being and
intelligence between the Supreme and man — but
ALEXANDRIA. 115
the gods are not the work of men's hands or
devils, while the angels are creatures of light.
It is true that philosophy alone cannot solve
the problem — but it must not be neglected.
It is true that all men will be " saved " — but
not rather the poor than the rich, the ignorant
than the learned.
In protestantism in things religious there is no
middle ground among the uninstructed. They fly to
the opposite pole. Therefore, when the new impulse
seizes on the people, we are to have a breaking down
of old barriers and a striving after a new order of
things, but at the same time a wild intolerance, a
glorification of ignorance, a wholesale condemnation ;
a social upheaval, followed by a political triumph.
One thing, however, is acquired definitely, a new
lease of life for faith.
It was good for the people to believe with all
their heart after so much disbelief; it was good
for them to make virtue paramount as the first
all-necessary step to a knowledge of God. It was
good to set aside the things of the body and love
the things of the soul ; it was good to bring reality
of life once more into the hearts of men.
What might have been if more temperate counsels
had prevailed, who can say ?
The main fact was that one race was dying and
another being born. The memories of the past
crowded into the old brain, but the new brain was
unable to register them except in their cruder forms.
The memory which succeeded in eventually impressing
itself with most distinctness on the new brain, was
116 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
perchance the most suited to the vigorous and warlike
races that were to replace the old races of the
Roman Empire; this memory was the tradition of
the Jew.
We are of course in this only looking at the
popular and outer side of the great movement which
transformed the general religious consciousness of
the ancient world. Within was much of great
excellence, only a portion of which could be under
stood by the young brain of the new race. But now
that the race is growing into manhood it will
remember more of it; it has already recovered its
memory of science and philosophy, and its memory
of religion will doubtless ere long be brought
through.
We are still, however, looking at the outer con-
Jewisband ditions among which the Gnosis was working. At
Alexandria, ever since its foundation, the Jews had
been an important element in the life of the city.
Though the translation of the Hebrew scriptures j
by the so-called "Seventy" had been begun in the
reign of Ptolemy Philadelphus, it does not seem
to have attracted the attention of the Greek official
savants. Jewish ideas at Alexandria were at that
time confined to Jews, — and naturally so, for in
the beginning these most exclusive and intolerant
religionists kept their ideas to themselves and
guarded them jealously from the Gentiles. Later
on the Jewish schools at Alexandria were so
esteemed by their nation throughout the East, that
the Alexandrian Rabbis were known as the "Light
of Israel," and continued to be the centre of
ALEXANDRIA. 117
Jewish thought and learning for several centuries.
Within these it was that the Jews perfected their
theories of religion and worked out what they had
gleaned of " kabalistic " lore from the Chaldseans and
Babylonians, and also from the wisdom-traditions of
Egypt.
Many of the Hebrew doctors, moreover, were
s^^ students of Grecian thought and literature, and are
"" TUtLriP''^
/ therefore known as Hellenists. Some of these wrote
in Greek, and it was chiefly through their works
that the Grecian world derived its information on
things Jewish.
Aristobulus, whose date is unknown, but is
conjecturally about B.C. 150, had endeavoured to
maintain that the Peripatetic philosophy was derived
from Moses — a wild theory that was subsequently
developed and expanded to a ludicrous extent, and
(Plato being substituted for Aristotle) was in the
greatest favour even among such enlightened Church
Fathers as Clement of Alexandria and Origen. This
theory of Aristobulus was the forerunner of the still
more fantastic theory, invented by Justin Martyr,
that the wisdom of antiquity, wherever found, was a
"plagiarism by anticipation" of the Devil, in order
to spite the new religion; and this pitiful hypothesis
has been faithfully reproduced by Christian apologists
almost down to our own time.
Philo (circa B.C. 25 — A.D. 45), however, is the most
renowned of the Hellenists. He was a great admirer
of Plato, and his work brings out many similarities
between Rabbinical religious thought and Greek
philosophy. It is true that Philo's method of alle-
118 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
gorical exegesis, whereby he reads high philosophical
conceptions into the crude narratives of the myths of
Israel, is no longer regarded as legimitate; but his
writings are nevertheless of great value. Philo
believed not only that the Old Covenant documents
were inspired in every part, but also that every name
therein contained a hidden meaning of highest import.
In this way he strove to explain away the crudities
of the literal narrative.
But though Philo's method — whereby he could
invoke the authority of " Moses " for the ideas of his
school — is scientifically inadmissible, when the Bible
documents are submitted to the searching of historic
and philological criticism, nevertheless his numerous
tractates are of great importance as supplying us
with a record of the ideas which were current in the
circles or schools with which Philo was in contact.
They are a precious indication of the existence of
communities who thought as Philo thought, and
a valuable means of becoming acquainted with
the scope of the Jewish Gnosis in a propagandist
form.
Josephus (A.D. 37 — 100), the famous historian, also
wrote in Greek, and so made known his nation far
and wide throughout the Grseco-Roman world.
Here, therefore, we have indications of the direct
points of contact between Greek and propagandist
Jewish thought. Now Christianity in its popular
origins had entirely entangled itself with the popular
Jewish tradition of religion, a tradition that was
innocent of all philosophy or kabalistic mysticism.
The Gentiles who were admitted into the new faith,
ALEXANDRIA. 119
however, soon grew restive at the imposition of the
rite of circumcision, which the earliest propagandists
insisted upon; and so the first "heresy" arose, and the* ''
" Church of Jerusalem," which remained essentially
Jewish in all things, speedily resolved itself into a
narrow sect, even for those who regarded Judaism
as the only forerunner of the new faith. As time
went on, however, and either men of greater educa
tion joined their ranks, or in their propaganda they
were forced to study themselves to meet the objections
of educated opponents, wider and more liberal views
obtained among a number of the Christians, and the
other great religious traditions and philosophies con
tacted the popular stream. All such views, however,
were looked upon with great suspicion by the
" orthodox," or rather that view which finally became
orthodox. And so as time went on, even the very
moderate liberalism of Clemens and Origen was
regarded as a grave danger ; and with the triumph
of narrow orthodoxy, and the condemnation of
learning, Origen himself was at last anathematized.
It was the Alexandrian school of Christian philo
sophy, of which the most famous doctors were the
same Clemens and Origen, which laid the first
foundations of General Christian theology; and that
school owed its evolution to its contact with Grecian
thought. There is a pleasant story of its first
beginnings to which we may briefly refer. Towards
the end of the first century the Christians established
a school in Alexandria, the city of schools. It was a
Sunday-school for children, called the Didascaleion.
With courageous faith it was established hard by the
120 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
door of the world-famous Museum, from whose chairs
the general Christians, owing to their ignorance of
art and science and philosophy, were excluded. From
that same Sunday-school, however, arose the vast
fabric of Catholic theology ; for the teachers of the
Didascaleion were forced to look to their laurels, and
they soon numbered in their ranks men who had
already received education in the Grecian schools of
thought and training.
Such is a brief sketch of Alexandria and her
schools, and it was in outer contact with such a
seething world of thought and endeavour, that some
of the greatest of the Gnostic doctors lived. They
were found of course elsewhere in the world — in
Syria, Asia Minor, and Italy, in Gaul and Spain ; but
the best picture of the ancient world with which
they were in outer contact, is to be sketched in the
city where Egypt and Africa, Rome and Greece, Syria
and Arabia met together.
'
GENERAL AND GNOSTIC CHRISTIANITY.
THE EVOLUTION OF CATHOLIC
CHRISTIANITY.
THE historical origins of Christianity are hidden in
impenetrable obscurity. Of the actual history of The
the first half of the first century we have no
knowledge. Of the history of the next hundred
years also we have for the most part to rely
on conjecture. The now universally received
canonical account was a selection from a mass of
tradition and legend; it is only in the second half
of the second century that the idea of a Canon of the
New Testament makes its appearance, and is gradually
developed by the Church of Rome and the Western
Fathers. The early Alexandrian theologians, such
as Clement, are still ignorant of a precise Canon.
Following on the lines of the earliest apologists of a
special view of Christianity, such as Justin, and using
this evolving Canon as the sole test of orthodoxy,
Irenseus, Tertullian and Hippolytus, supported by the
Roman Church, lay the foundations of "catholicity,"
121
122 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
and begin to raise the first courses of that enormous
edifice of dogma wKich is to-day regarded as the
only authentic view of the Church of Christ.
The first two centuries, however, instead of
confirming the boast of the later orthodox, " one
church, one faith, always and everywhere," on the
contrary present us with the picture of many lines
of evolution of belief, practice, and organisation.
The struggle for life was being fiercely waged, and
though the "survival of the fittest" resulted as
usual, there were frequent crises in which the final
" fittest " is hardly discernible and at times disappears
from view.
The view of the Christian origins which eventually
The became the orthodox tradition based itself mainly
Gospels. J
upon Gospel-documents composed, in all probability,
some time in the reign of Hadrian (A.D. 117-138).
The skeleton of three of these Gospels was pre
sumably a collection of Sayings and a narrative
of Doings in the form of an ideal life, a sketch
composed by one of the " Apostles " of the inner
communities and designed for public circulation.
Round this nucleus the compilers of the three
documents wove other matter selected from a vast
mass of myth, legend, and tradition ; they were
evidently men of great piety, and their selection of
material produced narratives of great dignity, and
cast aside much in circulation that was foolish and
fantastic, the remains of which we have still preserved
in some of the apocryphal Gospels. The writer of
the fourth document was a natural mystic who
adorned his account with a beauty of conception
EVOLUTION OF CATHOLIC CHRISTIANITY. 123
and a charm of feeling that reflect the highest
inspiration.
At the same time the canonical selection most
fortunately preserved for us documents of far greater
historic value.
In the Letters of Paul, the majority of which are
in the main, I believe, authentic, we have the earliest i1 Letters
historic records of Christianity which we possess.
The Pauline Letters date back to the middle of the
first century, and are the true point of departure
for any really historic research into the origins.
On reading these Letters it is almost impossible
to persuade ourselves that Paul was acquainted
with the statements of the later historicized account
of the four canonical Gospels ; all his conceptions
breathe a totally different atmosphere.
Instead of preaching the Jesus of the historicized
Gospels, he preaches the doctrine of the mystic
Christ. He not only seems to be ignorant of the
Doings but even of the Sayings in any form known
to us; nevertheless it is almost certain that some
collection of Sayings must have existed and been
used by the followers of the public teaching in his
time. Though innumerable opportunities occur in his
writings for reference to the canonical Sayings and
Doings, whereby the power of his exhortations would
have been enormously increased, he abstains from
making any. On the other hand, we find his Letters
replete with conceptions and technical terms which
receive no explanation in the traditions of General
Christianity, but are fundamental with the handers-on
of the Gnosis.
124 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The picture which the letters of Paul give us
of the actual state of affairs in the middle of the
first century is that of an independent propagandist,
with his own illumination, in contact with the
ideas of an inner school on the one hand, and with
outer communities of various kinds on the other.
Whatever the inner schools may have been, the outer
communities among which Paul laboured were Jewish,
synagogues of the orthodox Jews, synagogues of the
outer communities of the Essenes, communities which
had received some tradition of the public teaching of
Jesus as well, and understood or misunderstood it as
the case may have been.
Paul's mission was to break down Jewish
The exclusiveness and pioneer the way for the gentiliza-
isationof tion of Christianity. The century which followed
u y' this propaganda of Paul (50-150) is, according
to Harnack, characterised by the following features :
(i) The rapid disappearance of Jewish (that is to
say, primitive and original) [popular] Christianity.
(ii) Every member of the community was supposed
to have received the u Spirit of God " ; the teaching
was "charismatic," that is to say, of the nature of
" spiritual gifts."
(iii) The expectation of the approaching end of
the age, and the reign of Christ on earth for a
thousand years — " chiliasm " — was in universal
favour.
(iv) Christianity was a mode of life, not a dogma.
(v) There were no fixed doctrinal forms, and
accordingly the greatest freedom in Christian preach
ing.
EVOLUTION OF CATHOLIC CHRISTIANITY. 125
(vi) The Sayings of the Lord and the Old
Testament were not as yet absolute authorities ; the
" Spirit " could set them aside.
(vii) There was no fixed political union of the
Churches; each community was independent.
(viii) This period gave rise to " a quite unique
literature, in which were manufactured facts for the
past and for the future, and which did not submit to
the usual literary rules and forms, but came forward
with the loftiest pretensions."
(ix) Particular sayings and arguments of assumed
" Apostolic Teachers " were brought forward as being
of great authority.
At the same time, besides this gentilizing tendency,
which was always really subordinated to the Jewish
original impulse, though flattering itself that it had
entirely shaken off the fetters of the " circumcision,"
there was a truly universalizing tendency at work in
the background ; and it is this endeavour to uni
versalize Christianity which is the grand inspiration
underlying the best of the Gnostic efforts we have to
review. But this universalizing does not belong to the
line of the origins along which General Christiaity
subsequently traced its descent.
126 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
THE EBIONITES.
Epiphanius would have it that the Christians were
The first called lesssei, and says they are mentioned under
Nazoraeans. ... .
this name m the writings of Philo. The followers
of the earliest converts of Jesus are also said
to have been called Nazoraei. Even towards the
end of the fourth century the Nazoraeans were
still found scattered throughout Ccele-Syria, Decapolis,
Pella (whither they fled at the destruction of
Jerusalem), the region beyond Jordan, and far
away to Mesopotamia. Their collection of the
logoi was called The Gospel according to the
Hebrews, and differed greatly from the synoptic
accounts of the Canon. Even to this day a remnant
of the Nazoraeans is said by some to survive in the
Mandaites, a strange sect dwelling in the marshes of
Southern Babylonia, but their curious scripture, The
Book of Adam, as preserved in the Codex Nasarceus,
bears no resemblance whatever to the known
fragments of The Gospel according to the Hebrews,
though some of their rites are very similar to
the rites of some communities of the "Righteous"
referred to in that strange Jewish pseudepigraph
The Sibylline Oracles.
Who the original lessaeans or Nazoraeans were,
is wrapped in the greatest obscurity ; under another
of their designations, however, the Ebionites or
" Poor Men," we can obtain some further information.
These early outer followers of Jesus were finally
ostracized from the orthodox fold, and so completely
THE EBIONITES. 127
were their origin and history obscured by the subse
quent industry of heresy-hunters, that we finally
find them fathered on a certain Ebion, who is as
non-existent as several other heretics, such as
Epiphanes, Kolarbasus and Elkesai, who were
invented by the zeal and ignorance of fourth-century
haeresiologists and "historians." Epiphanes is the
later personification of an unnamed " distinguished "
(epiphanes) teacher ; Kolarbasus is the personification
of the "sacred four" (kol-arba), and Elkesai the
personification of the "hidden power" (elkesai).
So eager were the later refutators to add to their
list of heretics, that they invented the names of
persons from epithets and doctrines. So with Ebion.
The Ebionites were originally so called because
they were " poor " ; the later orthodox subsequently The
added "in intelligence" or "in their ideas about PoorMen-
Christ." And this may very well have been the case,
and doubtless many grossly misunderstood the public
teaching of Jesus, for it should not be forgotten that
one of the main factors to be taken into account in
reviewing the subsequent rapid progress of the new
religion was the social revolution. In the minds of
the most ignorant of the earliest followers of the
public teaching, the greatest hope aroused may well
have been the near approach of the day when the
" poor " should be elevated above the " rich." But
this was the view of the most ignorant only ;
though doubtless they were numerous enough.
Nevertheless it was Ebionism which preserved
the tradition of the earliest converts of the public
teaching, and the Ebionite communities doubtless
128 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
possessed a collection of the public Sayings and based
their lives upon them.
It was against these original followers of the
public teaching of Jesus that Paul contended in his
efforts to gentilize Christianity. For many a long
year this Petro-Pauline controversy was waged with
great bitterness, and the Canon of the New Testament
is thought by some to have been the means adopted
to form the basis of a future reconciliation ; the
Petrine and Pauline documents were carefully edited,
and between the Gospel portion and the Pauline
letters was inserted the new-forged link of the Acts
of the Apostles, a carefully edited selection from a
huge mass of legendary Acts, welded together into
a narrative and embellished with speeches after the
manner of Thucydides.
How then did the original Ebionites view the
The person and teaching of Jesus ? They regarded their
Tradition leader as a wise man, a prophet, a Jonas, nay even
a Solomon. Moreover, he was a manifestation
of the Messiah, the Anointed, who was to come,
but he had not yet appeared as the Messiah ; that
would only be at his second coming. In his birth
as Jesus, he was a prophet simply. The New
Dispensation was but the continuation of the Old
Law ; all was essentially Jewish. They therefore
expected the coming of the Messiah as literally
prophesied by their men of old. He was to come
as king, and then all the nations would be subjected
to the power of the Chosen People, and for
a thousand years there would be peace and
prosperity and plenty on earth.
THE EBION1TES. 129
Jesus was a man, born as all men, the human son
of Joseph and Mary. It was only at his baptism, at
thirty years of age, that the Spirit descended upon
him and he became a prophet. They, therefore,
guarded his Sayings as a precious deposit, handing
them down by word of mouth. The Ebionites knew
nothing of the pre-existence or divinity of their
revered prophet. It is true that Jesus was " christ,"
but so also would all be who fulfilled the Law. Thus
they naturally repudiated Paul and his new doctrine
entirely ; for them Paul was a deceiver and an
apostate from the Law, they even denied that he
was a Jew.
It was only later that they used The Gospel
according to the Hebrews, which Jerome says was the
same as The Gospel of the Twelve Apostles and The
Gospel of the Nazarenes, that is to say, of the
Nazorseans. It should be remembered that these
Nazorseans knew nothing of the Nazareth legend,
which was subsequently developed by the " in order
that it might be fulfilled " school of historicizers.
The Ebionites did not return to Jerusalem when
the ernperor permitted the new colony of ^Elia
Capitolina to be established in 138, for no Jew was
allowed to return. The new town was Gentile.
Therefore, when we read of "the re-constitution of
the mother church " at ^Elia Colonia, in Church
historians, little reliance can be placed upon such
assertions. The " mother church." based on the
public teaching, was Ebionite and remained Ebionite,
the community at ^Elia Colonia was Gentile and
therefore Pauline,
130 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Christianity, as understood by the Ebionites,
being an essentially national doctrine, Paulinism
was a necessity if any public attempt at univer
sality was to be made ; therefore it was that the
true historical side of popular Christianity (the
orginal Ebionite tradition) became more and more
obscured, until finally it had so completely dis
appeared from the area of such tradition, that a
new " history " could with safety be developed to
suit the dogmatic evolution inaugurated by Paul.
The later forms of Ebionism, however, which
survived for several centuries, were of a Gnostic
nature, and reveal the contact of these outer com
munities of primitive Christendom based on the
public teaching with an inner Jewish tradition,
which evidently existed contemporaneously with
Paul, and may have existed far earlier.
THE ESSENES. 131
THE ESSENES.
BASING themselves on the Sayings preserved in the
canonical Gospels and on the description of the
communities given in the Acts, many have supposed
that Jesus was a member of or intimately acquainted
with the doctrines and discipline of the Essene
communities. Who then were these Essenes or
Healers ?
For centuries before the Christian era Essene
communities had dwelt on the shores of the Dead Sea.
These Essenes or Essseans, in the days of Philo and
Josephus, were imbued with the utmost reverence for
Moses and the Law. They believed in God, the
creator, in the immortality of the soul, and in a future
state of retribution. Finding it impossible to carry
out in ordinary life the minute regulations of the
laws of purity, they had adopted the life of ascetic
communism. Their chief characteristic was the
doctrine of love — love to God, love of virtue, and love
of mankind — and the practical way in which they
carried out their precepts aroused the admiration of all.
Their strict observance of the purificatory
discipline enacted by the Levitical institutions thus
compelled them to become a self-supporting com
munity ; all worked at a trade, they cultivated their
own fields, manufactured all the articles of food and
dress which they used, and thus in every way avoided
contact with those who did not observe the same
rules. They also appear in their inner circles to have
been strict celibates.
132 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Their manner of life was as follows: they rose
Their before the sun, and no word was uttered until they
ofaLifer had assembled together and, with faces turned
towards the dawn, offered up prayers for the renewal
of the light. Each then went to his appointed task
under the supervision of the stewards or overseers
(" bishops ") elected by universal suffrage. At eleven
o'clock they again assembled and, putting off their
working clothes, performed the daily rite of baptism
in cold water; then clothing themselves in white
linen robes, they proceeded to the common meal,
which they regarded as a sacrament ; the refectory
was a " holy temple." They ate in silence, and the
food was of the plainest — bread and vegetables.
Before the meal a blessing was invoked, and at the
end thanks were rendered. The members took their
seats according to seniority. They then went forth
to work again until the evening, when they again
assembled for the common meal. Certain hours of
the day, however, were devoted to the study of
the mysteries of nature and of revelation, as well
as of the powers of the celestial hierarchies, the
names of the angels, etc. ; for they had an inner
instruction, which was guarded with the utmost
secrecy.
This was the rule for the week-days, while the
Sabbath was kept with extreme rigour. They had,
however, no priests, and any one who was " moved "
to do so, took up the reading of the Law, and the
exposition of the mysteries connected with the
Tetragrammaton, or four-lettered mystery-name of
the Creative Power, and the angelic worlds. The
THE ESSENES. 133
Essenes, therefore, were evidently in contact with
Chaldaean " kabalism " and the Zoroastrian tradition
of the discipline of purity ; logic and metaphysics, how
ever, were eschewed as injurious to a devotional life.
There were four degrees in the community:
(i.) novices; (ii.) approachers; (iii.) new full members,
or associates; (iv.) old members, or elders.
(i.) After the first year the novice gave all his
possessions to the common treasury, and received
a copy of the regulations, a spade (for the purpose
described in Moses' camp-regulations), and a white
robe, the symbol of purity ; but the novice was still
excluded from the lustral rites and common meal.
(ii.) After two years more, the novice shared in
the lustral rites, but was still excluded from the
common meal.
(iii.) The associates were bound by the most
solemn assurances, and in case of any delinquency
could only be judged by the "assembly," consisting
of one hundred members.
Essenism is said by some to have been an
exaggerated form of Pharisaism; and it may be a The
, , , , Degrees of
matter of surprise to those whose only knowledge Holiness.
of the Pharisees is derived from canonical docu
ments, to learn that the highest aim of this
enlightened school of Judaism was to attain to
such a state of holiness as to be able to perform
miraculous cures and to prophesy. The "degrees
of holiness " practised by the Pharisees are said
to have been: (i.) the study of the Law and
circumspection; (ii.) the noviciate, in which the
apron was the symbol of purity; (iii.) external
134
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
purity, by means of lustrations or baptisms; (iv.)
celibacy ; (v.) inward purity, purity of thought ;
(vi.) a higher stage still, which is not further defined ;
(vii.) meekness and holiness; (viii.) dread of every
sin ; (ix.) the highest stage of holiness ; (x.) the stage
which enabled the adept to heal the sick and raise
the dead.
We should, however, remember that the Healers
absolutely refused to have anything to do with the
blood-sacrifices of the Temple-worship, and refused
to believe in the resurrection of the physical body,
which the rest of the Pharisees held as a cardinal
doctrine.
In this brief sketch it is of course impossible to
point out the striking similarities between the dis
cipline of the Essenes and that of the Therapeutae
of Egypt and of the Orphic and Pythagorean
schools. Every subject referred to in these essays
requires a volume or several volumes for its proper
treatment ; we can only set up a few finger-posts,
and leave the reader to make his own investigations.
But before leaving this most interesting theme,
it will be necessary to point to the identity between
many of the Essene regulations and the Gospel
teachings and traditions.
Converts were required to sell their possessions
and give to the poor, for the laying up of treasure
was regarded as injurious to a spiritual life. Not
ity"8tian only did tne Essenes despise riches, but they lived a
life of self-imposed poverty. Love of the brotherhood
and of one's neighbour was the soul of Essene life,
and the basis of all action ; and this characteristic of
Points of
Contact
with
THE ESSENES. 135
their discipline called forth universal admiration.
The members lived together as in a family, had all
things in common, and appointed a steward to
manage the common bag. When travelling they
would lodge with brethren whom they had never
seen before, as though with the oldest and most
intimate friends ; and thus they took nothing with
them when they went on a journey. All members
were set on the same level, and the authority of one
over another was forbidden ; nevertheless mutual
service was strictly enjoined. They were also great
lovers of peace, and so refused to take arms or
manufacture warlike weapons ; moreover they pro
scribed slavery. Finally, the end of the Essenes was
to be meek and lowly in spirit, to mortify all sinful
lusts, to be pure in heart, to hate evil but reclaim
the evildoer, and to be merciful to all men. More
over, their yea was to be yea, and their nay, nay.
They were devoted to the curing of the sick, the
healing of both body and soul, and regarded the
power to perform miraculous cures and cast out evil
spirits as the highest stage of discipline. In brief,
they strove to be so pure as to become temples of
the Holy Spirit, and thus seers and prophets.
To these inner communities were attached outer
circles of pupils living in the world, and found in
all the main centres of the Diaspora.
Philo distinguishes the Essenes from the Thera-
peuts by saying that the former were devoted to
the " practical " life, while the latter proceeded to
the higher stage of the " contemplative " life, and
devoted themselves to still higher problems of
136 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
religion and philosophy, and it is in this direction
that we must look for the best in Gnosticism.
THE TENDENCIES OF GNOSTICISM.
BUT here again accurate historical data are out of
The the question, and we have for the most part to deal
izing"of with what the Germans call " Tendenz." Harnack
ity.nS speaks of the tendency, which by long convention is
generally called Gnostic, as the "acute secularizing
of Christianity." What then is the meaning of this
phrase ? Catholic dogma is said to be the outcome
of the gradual hellenizing of general Christianity,
that is to say, the modification of popular tradition
by the philosophical and theological method. All
evolution of popular beliefs takes time, and the
results arrived at by the general mind only after
centuries, are invariably anticipated by minds of
greater instruction generations before. The Galileos
of the world are invariably condemned by their
contemporaries. The Gnostic mind rapidly arrived
on the one hand at many conclusions which the
Catholics gradually adopted only after generations
of hesitation, and on the other at a number of
conclusions which even to our present generation
seem too premature. All theosophic students are, in
matters of religion, centuries before their time, for
the simple reason that they are endeavouring by
every means in their power to shorten the time of
normal evolution and reach the mystic goal, which at
every moment of time is near at hand within, but
THE TENDENCIES OF GNOSTICISM. 13*7
for the majority is far distant along the normal
path of external evolution.
The phrase "acute secularizing of Christianity,"
then, represents the rapid theologizing and systema
tizing of Christianity; but I doubt whether this
altogether accounts for the facts. The Gnosis was
pre-Christian ; the Christ illumined its tradition, and
by His public teaching practically threw open to all
what had previously been kept "secret from the
creation of the world " — to speak more accurately, the
intermediate grades of the Mysteries. The leaven
worked, and in course of time much that had been
previously kept for the " worthy " alone, was forced
into publicity and made common property. It was
forced out by the stress of circumstances, inaugurated
by the propaganda of Paul, and intensitied by subse
quent hseresiological controversy. The Gnostics
claimed that there were two lines of tradition — the
public sayings, and the inner teachings which dealt
with things that the people in the world could not
understand. This side of their teaching they kept at
first entirely to themselves, and only gradually put
forth a small portion of it; the rest they kept in
closest secrecy, as they knew it could not possibly be
understood.
The Gnostics were, then, the first Christian
theologists, and if it is a cause for reprehension that
the real historical side of the new movement was
obscured in order to suit the necessities of a religion
which aspired to universality, then the Gnostics are
the chief culprits.
Catholicism finally, by accepting the Old Testa-
138 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
ment Canon in its literal interpretation, adopted
not*" the ^^e Beliefs °^ popular Judaism and the Yahweh-
Father " cult, DUt in the earlier years it had been inclined
of Jesus.
to seek for an allegorical interpretation. Gnosticism,
on the contrary, whenever it did not entirely
reject the Old Covenant documents, invariably
adopted not only the allegorical method, but
also a canon of criticism which minutely classified
the " inspiration " and so sifted out most of the
objectionable passages from the Jewish Canon.
Thus, in persuit of a universal ideal, the tribal
God — or rather, the crude views of the uninstructed
Jewish populace as to Yahweh — was, when not
entirely rejected, placed in a very subordinate
position. In brief, the Yahweh of the Elohim was
not the Father of Jesus; the Demiurgos, or creative
power of the world, was not the Mystery God
over all.
Arid just as this idea of the true God transcended
The inner the popular notions of deity, so did the true teaching
Teaching. o£ ^ Gnosis illumine the enigmatical sayings
or parables. The ethical teachings, or " Words of
the Lord," and the parables, required interpretation;
the literal meaning was sufficient for the people,
but for the truly spiritual minded there was an
infinite vista of inner meaning which could be
revealed to the eye of the true Gnostic. Thus
the plain ethical teaching and the unintelligible
dark sayings were for the uninstructed; but
there was a further instruction, an esoteric or
inner doctrine, which was imparted to the worthy
alone. Many gospels and apocalypses were thus
THE TENDENCIES OF GNOSTICISM. 139
compiled under the inspiration of the " Spirit," as
it was claimed — all purporting to be the instruction
vouchsafed by Jesus to His disciples after the
"resurrection from the dead," which mystical phrase
they mostly represented as meaning the new birth
or Gnostic illumination, the coming to life of the
soul from its previous dead state. But even these
Gnostic treatises did not reveal the whole matter ;
true, they explained many things in terms of
internal states and spiritual processes; but they still
left much unexplained, and the final revelation was
only communicated by word of mouth in the body,
and by vision out of the body.
Thus it was a custom with them to divide
mankind into three classes: (a) the lowest, or Various
» -111 Classes of
" hyhcs, were those who were so entirely dead Souls.
to spiritual things that they were as the hyle,
or unperceptive matter of the world; (b) the
intermediate class were called " phychics," for
though believers in things spiritual, they were
believers simply, and required miracles and signs
to strengthen their faith ; (c) whereas the " pneu
matics," or spiritual, the highest class, were those
capable of knowledge of spiritual matters, those
who could receive the Gnosis.
It is somewhat the custom in our days in extreme
circles to claim that all men are " equal." The modern
theologian wisely qualifies this claim by the adverb
" morally." Thus stated the idea is by no means
a peculiarly Christian view — for the doctrine is
common to all the great religions, seeing that it
simply asserts the great principle of justice as one
140 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of the manifestations of Diety. The Gnostic view,
however, is far clearer, and more in accord with the
facts of evolution; it admits the "morally equal,"
but it further asserts difference of degree, not only
in body and soul, but also in spirit, in order to
make the morality proportional, and so to carry
out the inner meaning of the parable of the talents.
This classification obtained not only among men,
but also among powers ; and the prophets of the Old
Testament as instruments of such powers were, as
stated above, thus sorted out into an order of dignity.
The personality of Jesus, the prophet of the new
Person of tidings proved, however, a very difficult problem for
Jesus. ^ne Gnostic doctors, and we can find examples
of every shade of opinion among them — from
the original Ebionite view that he was simply a
good and holy man, to the very antipodes of
belief; that he was not only a descent of the
Logos of God — a familiar idea to Oriental antiquity
—but in deed and in his person very God of very
God, a necessity forced upon faith by the boastful
spirit of an enthusiasm which sought to transcend
the claims of every existing religion.
The person of Jesus was thus made to bear the
burden of every possibility of the occult world and
every hidden power of human nature. In their
endeavours to reconcile the ideas of a suffering man
and of a triumphant initiator and king of the universe
(both sensible and intellectual), they had recourse to
the expedient of Docetism, a theory which could cover
every phase of contradiction in the sharp juxtaposition
of the divine and human natures of their ideal. The
THE TENDENCIES OF GNOSTICISM. 141
docetic theory is the theory of "appearance." A
sharp distinction was made between Christ, the divine
geon or perfected " man," and Jesus the personality.
The God, or rather God, in Christ, did not suffer, but
appeared to suffer; the lower man, Jesus, alone
suffered. Or again, Christ was not really incarnated
in a man Jesus, but took to himself a phantasmal body
called Jesus. But these were subsequent doctrinal
developments on the ground of certain inner facts:
(a) that a phantasmal body can be used by the
" perfect," be made to appear and disappear at will,
and become dense or materialised, so as to be felt
physically ; and (6) that the physical body of another,
usually a pupil, can be used by a master of wisdom as
a medium for instruction. Such underlying ideas
occur in Gnostic treatises and form an important part
of their christology, especially with regard to the
period of instruction after the "resurrection."
In fact no problem appeared too lofty for the
intuition of the Gnostic philosopher ; the whence, The Main
whither, why, and how of things, were searched
into with amazing daring. Not only was their
cosmogony of the most sublime and complex
character, but the limits of the sensible world
were too narrow to contain it, so that they sought
for its origins in the intellectual and spiritual
regions of the immanent mind of deity, wherein
they postulated a transcendent aeonology which
pour tray ed the energizings of the divine ideation.
Equally complex was their anthropogony, and equally
sublime the potentialities which they postulated of
the human soul and spirit.
142 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
As to their soteriology, or theory of the salvation
or regeneration of mankind, they did not confine the
idea to the crude and limited notion of a physical
passion by a single individual, but expanded it into a
stupendous cosmical process, wrought by the volition
of the Logos in His own nature.
Their eschatology, or doctrine of the " last things/'
again painted for mankind at the end of the world -
cycle a future which gave "nirvana" to the "spiritual"
and seonian bliss to the " psychic," while the " hylic "
remained in the obscuration of matter until the end
of the "Great Peace" — a picture somewhat different
from the crude expectation of the good feasting time on
earth of the " Poor Men," which Harnack technically
refers to as a " sensuous eudsemonistic eschatology."
Finally, the whole of their doctrine revolved round
the conception of cyclic law for both the universal
and the individual soul. Thus we find the Gnostics
invariably teaching the doctrine not only of the
preexistence but also of the rebirth *of human souls ;
and though a chief feature of their dogmas was the
main doctrine of forgiveness of sins, they nevertheless
held rigidly to the infallible working out of the great
law of cause and effect. It is somewhat curious that
these two main doctrines, which explain so much in
Gnosticism and throw light on so many dark places,
have been either entirely overlooked or, when not
unintelligently slurred over, despatched with a few
hurried remarks in which the critic is more at pains
to apologize for touching on such ridiculous super
stitions as "metempsychosis" and "fate," than to
elucidate tenets which are a key to the whole position.
LITERATURE AND SOURCES OF GNOSTICISM. 143
THE LITERATURE AND SOURCES OF
GNOSTICISM.
THE study of Gnosticism has so far been almost
entirely confined to specialists, whose works cannot be
understand ed of the people ; the ordinary reader is
deterred by the wealth of detail, by the difficulty of
the technical terms, by the obscurity of theological
phraseology, and by the feeling that he is expected to
know many things of which he has never even heard.
It is to be hoped that ere long some competent
English scholar, endowed with the genius of lucid
generalization, may be induced to write a popular
sketch of the subject, in order that thinking men and
women who have not enjoyed the advantages of a
technical training in Church history and dogmatics,
may understand its importance and absorbing interest.
Meantime our present essay may, perhaps, to some
extent serve as a " guide to the perplexed," yet not
conceived on the plan or carried out with the ability
of a Maimonides, but rather the mere jotting down of
a few notes and indications which may spare the
general reader the years of labour the writer has
spent in searching through many books.
First, then, as to books ; what are the best works
on Gnosticism ? The best books without exception Literature,
are by German scholars. Here, then, we are
confronted with our first difficulty, for the general
reader as a rule is a man of one language only. For
the ordinary English reader, therefore, such works
are closed books, and he must have recourse to
144 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
translations, if such exist. Unfortunately only two
of such works are procurable in English dress.
The second volume of the translation (Bohn, new
ed., 1890) of Neander's Church History (1825, etc.),
deals with the Gnostics, but the great German
theologian's work is now out of date.
The best general review of Gnosticism by the light
of the most recent researches, is to be found in
Harnack's admirable History of Dogma, in the first
volume, translated in 1894.
For a more detailed account, Smith and Wace's
Dictionary of Christian Biography (1877-1887) is
absolutely indispensable. The scheme of this useful
work contains a general article, with lengthy articles
on every Gnostic teacher, and shorter articles on
a number of the technical terms of the Gnosis.
Lipsius, Salmon, and Hort are responsible for the
work, and their names are a sufficient guarantee
of thoroughness.
The last two works are all that are necessary
for a preliminary grasp of the subject, and are
the outcome of profound scholarship and admirable
critical acumen. It is a pleasure to subscribe one's
tribute of praise to such work, although the point
of view assumed by these distinguished scholars
is not sufficiently liberal for one who is deeply
convinced that the inspiration of every honest
effort to formulate the inner truth of things is
really from above.
Of other English works we may mention King's
Gnostics and their Remains (2nd ed., 1887), a work
intended for the general reader. King strongly
LITERATURE AND SOURCES OF GNOSTICISM. 145
insists on a distinct Indian influence in Gnosticism,
and deals with a number of interesting points; but
his work lacks the thoroughness of the specialist.
He is, however, far removed from "orthodoxy," and
has an exceeding great sympathy for the Gnostics.
The weakest point of King's work is the side he
has brought into chief prominence ; the so-called
" remains " of the Gnostics, amulets, talismans, etc.,
in which King as a numismatologist took special
interest, are now stated by the best authorities to
have had most probably no connection with our
philosophers. Nevertheless King's book is well worth
reading.
Mansel's posthumous work, The Gnostic Heresies
of the First and Second Centuries (18*75), is not
only unsympathetic, but for the most part does
grave injustice to the Gnostics, by insisting on
treating their leading ideas as a metaphysic to be
judged by the standard of modern German philo
sophical methods, the Dean having himself once
held a chair of philosophy.
Norton, in his Evidences of the Genuineness of
the Gospels (1847), devotes his second volume to
the Gnostics, but the value of his work is small.
Burton's Inquiry into the Heresies of the
Apostolic Age (1829) might have been written by
an early Church Father. The Bampton lecturer's
effort and Norton's are now both out of date;
moreover their books and that of Mansel are only
procurable in the second-hand market.
So much for works in English dealing directly
with Gnosticism.
146 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The student will find in Harnack brief but
discriminating bibliographies after each chapter, in
which all the best works are given, especially those
of German scholars ; in Smith and Wace's Dictionary
each article is also followed by a fair biblio
graphy. A short general bibliography, and also a
list of nearly all the latest work done on the only
direct documents of Gnosticism which we possess,
is to be found in the Introduction to my translation
of the Gnostic treatise Pistis Sophia (1896); and a
classified bibliography of all the most important works
is appended to this essay. The student will be
surprised to see how unfavourably the paucity of
information in English compares with the mass of
encyclopaedic work in German, and how France also
in this department of Church history and theological
research runs England very close. But the con
sideration of these works does not fall into the
plan of this short essay.
So much, then, for the general literature of the
indirect subject in English; we have now to consider briefly
the indirect and direct documents of Gnosticism.
By " indirect " documents I mean the polemical
writings of the Fathers of what subsequently
established itself as the orthodox Catholic Church.
These indirect documents were practically the only
sources of information until 1853, when Schwartze's
translation of the Pistis Sophia was published. By
" direct" documents I mean the few Gnostic treatises
which have reached our hands through the medium
of Coptic translation.
Our indirect sources of information, therefore.
LITERATURE AND SOURCES OF GNOSTICISM. 147
come through the hands of the most violent
opponents of the Gnosis ; and we have only to
remember the intense bitterness of religious con
troversy at all times, and- especially in the early
centuries of the Church, to make us profoundly
sceptical of the reliability of such sources of informa
tion. Moreover, the earlier and more contemporaneous,
and therefore comparatively more reliable, sources are
to be found mostly in the writings of the Fathers
of the Western Church, who were less capable
of understanding the philosophical and mystical
problems which agitated the Eastern communities.
The Roman and occidental mind could never really
grasp Greek and oriental thought, and the Western
Fathers were always the main champions of
" orthodoxy."
We should further remember that we have extant
no contemporary " refutation " of the first century
(if any ever existed), or of the first three quarters of
the second. The great " store-house of Gnosticism "
is the Refutation of Irenaeus, who wrote at Lyons
in Gaul, far away from the real scene of action, in
about the penultimate decade of the second century.
All subsequent refutators base themselves more or
less on the treatise of Irenseus, and frequently copy
tho work of the Gallic bishop. If, then, Irenaeus
can be shown to be unreliable, the whole edifice of
refutation is endangered by the insecurity of its
foundation. This important point will be considered
later on.
Prior to Irenseus a certain Agrippa Castor, who
flourished late in the reign of Hadrian, about 135 A.D.,
148 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
is said by Eusebius to have been the first to write
against heresies. His work is unfortunately lost.
Justin Martyr, the apologist, also composed a work
against heresies; this Syntagma or Compendium is
also unfortunately lost. Judging from Justin's account
of the Gospel-story in his extant works, it would
appear that the " Memoirs of the Apostles " to which
he repeatedly refers, were not identical with our
four canonical Gospels, though it may well be that
these Gospels were assuming their present shape at
this period. It may therefore be supposed that his
work upon heresies threw too strong a light on
pre-canonical controversy to make its continued use
desirable. This may also be the reason of the
disappearance of the work of Agrippa Castor. Justin
nourished about 140-160 A.D.
Clement of Alexandria, whose greatest literary
activity was from about 190-203 A.D., lived in the
greatest centre of Gnostic activity, and was personally
acquainted with some of the great doctors of the
Gnosis. His works are for the most part free from
those wholesale accusations of immorality with which
the general run of Church Fathers in after years
loved to bespatter the character of the Gnostics of the
first two centuries. All the critics are now agreed
that these accusations were unfounded calumnies as
far as the great schools and their teachers were
concerned, seeing that the majority were rigid
ascetics. But this point will come out more clearly
later on.
Clement is supposed to have dealt with the higher
problems of Gnosticism in his lost work, The Outlines,
LITERATURE AND SOURCES OF GNOSTICISM. 149
in which he endeavoured to construct a complete
system of Christian teaching, the first three books of
which bore a strong resemblance to the three stages
of the Platonists : (i.) Purification, (ii.) Initiation,
(iii.) Direct Vision. This work is also unfortunately
lost. It was the continuation of his famous
Miscellanies, in which the Christian philosopher
laboured to show that he was a true Gnostic
himself.
Tertullian of Carthage (fl. 200-220 A.D.), whose
intolerance, " fiery zeal," and violently abusive
language are notorious, wrote against heresies, mostly
copying Irenseus. For the Marcionites, however, he
is an independent authority. Part of the treatise
against heresies ascribed to Tertullian is written by
some unknown refutator, and so we have a Pseudo-
Tertullian to take into consideration.
Hippolytus, Bishop of Portus at the mouth of the
Tiber, was the disciple of Irenseus. He wrote a
Compendium against all heresies, based almost
entirely on Irenseus, which is lost ; but a much
larger work of the same Father was in 1842
discovered at Mount Athos. This purported to be
a Refutation of All Heresies, and adds considerably
to our information from indirect sources ; for the work
is not a mere copy of Irenseus, but adds a large mass
of new matter, with quotations from some Gnostic
MSS. which had fallen into Hippolytus' hands. The
composition of this work may be dated somewhere
about 222 A.D.
About this time also (225-250) Origen, the great
Alexandrian Father, wrote a refutation against a
150 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
certain Celsus, who is supposed to have been the first
opponent of Christianity among the philosophers,
and who lived some seventy-five years before Origen's
time. In this there are passages referring to some
of the Gnostics. If then we include Origen's work
against The True Word of Celsus, we have mentioned
all the Fathers who are of any real value for the
indirect sources of Gnosticism in the first two
centuries
Philaster, bishop of Brescia in Italy, Epiphanius,
bishop of Salamis in Cyprus, and Jerome, fall about
the last quarter of the fourth century, and are
therefore (unless, of course, they quote from earlier
writers) too late for accuracy with regard to the
things of the first two centuries. Philaster, moreover,
is generally put out of court owing to his over
weening credulity; and the reliability of Epiphanius
is often open to grave suspicion, owing to his great
faculty of inventing or retailing scandals and all
kinds of foulness.
Eusebius is fifty years earlier, but there is little
to be gleaned from him on the subject, and his
reputation for accuracy has been called into question
by many independent historical critics.
Theodoret's Compendium, based on his predecessors
and dating about the middle of the fifth century, is
far too late to add to our knowledge of the first two
centuries.
The study of these indirect documents has
exercised the ingenuity of the critics and resulted in
a marvellously clever feat of scholarship. Lipsius
has demonstrated that Epiphanius, Philaster, and
LITERATURE AND SOURCES OF GNOSTICISM. 151
Pseudo-Tertullian all draw from a common source,
which was the lost Syntagma or Compendium of
Hippolytus, consisting mainly of notes of the lectures
of Irenseus ; that is to say, in all probability, of the
polemical tractates which the bishop read to his
community, and on which he based his larger
work. Thus reconstructing the lost document, he
compares it with Irenseus, and infers for both
a common authority, probably the lost Syntagma
of Justin.
We thus see that our main source is Irenaeus.
The Refutation of Irenseus is the "store-house of
Gnosticism "—according to the Fathers — for the first
two centuries. Irenseus lived far away in the wilds
of Gaul ; is his evidence reliable ? Setting aside the
general presumption that no ecclesiastical writer at
such a time could, in the nature of things, have
been fair to the views of his opponents, which he
perforce regarded as the direct product of the prince
of all iniquity, we shall shortly see that fate has
at length — only a few years ago — placed the final
proof of this presumption in our hands.
But meantime let us turn our attention to our Direct
Sources.
direct sources of information. We have now no
less than three Codices containing Coptic translations
of original Greek Gnostic works.
(i.) The Askew Codex, vellum, British Museum,
London : containing the Pistis Sophia treatise and
extracts from The Books of the Saviour.
(ii.) The Bruce Codex (consisting of two distinct
MSS.), papyrus, Bodleian Library, Oxford : containing
a series of lengthy fragments under the general
152 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
title The Book of the Great Logos according to the
Mystery ; another treatise of great sublimity but
without a title; and a fragment or fragments of yet
another treatise.
(iii.) The Akhmim Codex, papyrus, Egyptian
Museum, Berlin : containing The Gospel of Mary (or
Apocryphon of John), The Wisdom of Jesus Christ,
and The Acts of Peter.
The Akhmim Codex was only discovered in 1896.
Prior to 1853, when the Askew Codex was translated
into Latin, nothing of a practical nature was known
of its contents, while the contents of the Bruce Codex
were not known till 1891-1892, when translations
appeared in French and German. We have to reflect
on the indifference which allowed these important
documents to remain, in the one case (Cod. Ask.) for
eighty years without translation, and in the other
(Cod. Bruc.) one hundred and twenty years ! The
first attempt at translation in English appeared only
in 1896 in my version of Pistis Sophia.
It will thus be seen that the study of Gnosticism
from direct sources is quite recent, and that all but
the most recent research is out of date. This new
view is all the more forced upon us by the latest
discovery which in the Akhmim MS. places in our
hands the means of testing the accuracy of Irenseus,
the sheet-anchor of hseresiologists. The Gospel of
Mary is one of the original sources that Irenseus
used. We are now enabled in one case to control the
Church Father point by point — and find that he has
so condensed and paraphrased his original that the
consistent system of the school of Gnosticism which
LITERATURE AND SOURCES OF GNOSTICISM. 153
he is endeavouring to refute, appears as an incom
prehensible jumble.
This recent activity among specialists in Gnostic
research, at a time when a widespread interest in a
revival of theosophic studies has prepared the way
for a reconsideration of Gnosticism from a totally
different standpoint to that of pure criticism or
refutation, is a curious coincidence.
From the above considerations it is evident that so
far are the Gnostics and their ideas from being buried
in that oblivion which their opponents have so
fervently desired and so busily striven to ensure, that
now at the opening of the twentieth century, at a
time when Biblical criticism is working with the
reincarnated energy and independence of a Marcion,
the memory of these universalizers of Christianity is
coming once more to the front and occupying the
attention of earnest students of religion.
In addition to these indirect and direct sources
there is also another source that may yield us some
valuable information, when submitted to the searching
of an enlightened criticism. The legends and traditions
preserved in the Gnostic Acts deserve closer attention
than they have hitherto received, as we shall hope to
show in the sequel by quotations from several of them.
THE GNOSIS ACCORDING TO
ITS FOES,
Oh that mine adversary had written a book !
Job (according to the Authorised Version).
SOME GNOSTIC FRAGMENTS RECOVERED
FROM THE POLEMICAL WRITINGS
OF THE CHURCH FATHERS.
WE shall now proceed to introduce the reader to
the chief teachers and schools of Gnosticism, as far No
...... Classification
as they are known to us from the polemical writings Possible.
of the Church Fathers. Unfortunately we are not
in a position to present the student with a satisfactory
classification of the Gnostic schools ; every classifi
cation previously attempted has completely broken
down, and in the present state of our knowledge
we must be content to sift the different phases of
development out of the heap as best we can.
Clement of Alexandria, at the end of the second
century, tried the rough expedient of dividing these
schools of Christendom into ascetic and licentious
sects ; Neander at the beginning of the present
century endeavoured to classify them by their friendly
or unfriendly relations to Judaism ; Baur followed
with an attempt which took into consideration not
itr
158 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
only how they regarded Judaism, but also their
attitude to Heathenism ; Matter adopted a geographi
cal distribution into the schools of Syria, Asia Minor,
and Egypt ; and Lipsius followed with a more
general division into the Gnosticism of Syria and
of Alexandria.
All these classifications break down on many
important points; and we are thus compelled to
follow the imperfect indications of the earliest
Patristic hseresiologists, who vaguely and uncritically
ascribed the origin of Gnosticism to " Simon Magus."
It is, however, certain that the origin of Gnostic
ideas, so far from being simple and traceable to an
individual, was of a most complex nature ; some
have thought that it has to be sought for along
the line of so-called " Ophitism," which is a general
term among the hseresiologists for almost everything
they cannot ascribe to a particular teacher. But the
medley of schools and tendencies which the Fathers
indiscriminately jumble together as Ophite, contains
the most heterogeneous elements, good and bad. The
name Ophite, or " serpent- worshipper," is simply a
term of abuse used solely by the refutators, while the
adherents of these schools called themselves generally
" Gnostics," and were apparently the first to use the
term.
We shall, therefore, first of all follow the so-called
" Simonian " line of descent until the first quarter of
the second century ; then plunge into the indefinite
chaos of the " Gnostics " ; next retrace our steps along
a Gnostic phase of the Ebionite tradition ; and finally
treat of the most brilliant epoch of Gnosticism known
SOME GNOSTIC FRAGMENTS. 159
to us — when Basilides, Valentinus, and Bardesanes
lived and worked and thought, and Marcion amazed
infant orthodoxy with a " higher criticism " which for
boldness has perhaps not yet been equalled even in
our own day. It was an epoch which gave birth to
works of such excellence that, in the words of Dr.
Carl Schmidt (in the Introduction to his edition of
the Codex Brucianus), " we stand amazed, marvelling
at the boldness of the speculations, dazzled by the
richness of thought, touched by the depth of soul of
the author" — "a period when Gnostic genius like a
mighty eagle left the world behind it, and soared in
wide and ever wider circles towards pure light, towards
pure knowledge, in which it lost itself in ecstasy."
We should, however, in studying the lives and
teachings of these Gnostics always bear in mind that
our only sources of information have hitherto been
the caricatures of the hgeresiologists, and remember
that only the points which seemed fantastic to the
refutators were selected, and then exaggerated by
every art of hostile criticism ; the ethical and general
teachings which provided no such points, were almost
invariably passed over. It is, therefore, impossible to
obtain anything but a most distorted portrait of men
whose greatest sin was that they were centuries
before their time. It should further be remembered,
that the term " heresy " in the first two centuries, did
not generally connote the narrow meaning assigned
to it later on. It was simply the usual term for a
school of philosophy ; thus we read of the heresy of
Plato, of Zeno, of Aristotle. The Gnostics, and the
rest of Christendom also, were thus divided into a
160 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
number of schools or " heresies," which in those early
times were more or less of equal dignity and
authenticity.
THE « SIMONIANS."
THERE is no reason to suppose that the Gnostics
The Origin whom the Church Fathers call " Simonians " would
Name have themselves answered to the name, or have
recognized the line of descent imagined for them
by their opponents as founded on any basis in
fact. As early as Justin Martyr (c. 150 A.D.),
" Simon " assumed a prominence out of all proportion
to his place in history. Evidently Justin regarded
him with great detestation, and accused the Romans
of worshipping him as a god, on the strength of
an inscription on a statue at Rome. Justin gives
the inscription as " Simoni Deo Sancto " - " To
Simon, the holy God." But (alas ! for the reputation
of Justin's accuracy when engaged in controversy)
archaeology has discovered the statue — and finds it
dedicated to a Sabine deity, " Semo Sancus " ! Justin's
assertion, however, was received without question by
subsequent haeresiologists, as all such assertions were
in that uncritical age.
Now it is very probable that Justin, in his
innumerable controversies in defence of his par
ticular view of Christianity, was met with some
argument in which Simon was quoted as an example.
It may have been that Justin argued that the
THE "SIMONIANS." 161
miracles of Jesus proved all that Justin claimed on
His behalf, and was met by the counter-argument
that Simon also was a great wonder-worker, and
made great claims, so that miracles did not prove
Justin's contentions. Thus it may have been that
Justin grew to detest the memory of Simon, and saw
him and his supporters everywhere, even at Rome
in a statue to a Sabine godling.
It may well have been that some wonder-worker
called Simon may have astonished people in Samaria
with his psychological tricks, and that stories were
still in Justin's time told of him among the people.
But what did most to stereotype the legend that
Simon was the first heretic, was the insertion of
his name in one of the stories included in the sub
sequently canonical Acts of the Apostles. This took
place later than Justin, and so we have the first
moments in the evolution of the legend of the origin
of heresy (and therefore, according to the Fathers,
of Gnosticism). What then is told us about
" Simon " and the " Simonians," is only of interest
for a recovery of some of the ideas which the
subsequently Catholic party was striving . to con
trovert; it has no value as history.
162 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
DOSITHEUS.
The legendary background of the Pseudo-Clemen-
A Follower ^ne polemic informs us that the precursor of
of John the . .
Baptist. " Simon Magus " was a certain Dositheus. He is
mentioned in the lists of the earliest hseresiologists,
in a Samaritan Chronicle, and in the Chronicle of
Aboulf atah (fourteenth century) ; the notices, however,
are all legendary, and nothing of a really reliable
character can be asserted of the man. That however
he was not an unimportant personage is evidenced
by the persistence of the sect of the Dositheans
to the sixth century; Aboulfatah says even to
the fourteenth. Both Dositheus and " Simon Magus "
w'ere, according to tradition, followers of John
the Baptist; they were, however, said to be
inimical to Jesus. Dositheus is said to have
claimed to be the promised prophet, "like unto
Moses," and "Simon" to have made a still higher
claim. In fact, like so many others in those days,
both were claimants to the Messiaship. The
Dositheans followed a mode of life closely resembling
that of the Essenes ; they had also their own secret
volumes, and apparently a not inconsiderable
literature.
Dositheus (Dousis, Dusis, or Dosthai) was
apparently an Arab, and in Arabia, we have every
reason to believe, there were many mystic com
munities allied to those of the Essenes and Therapeuts.
One of the Gospels used by Justin, under the general
title "Memoirs of the Apostles," states that the "wise
DOSITHEUS. 163
men " came from Arabia. One legend even claims
Dositheus as the founder of the sect of the Sadducees !
Later tradition assigned to him a group of thirty
disciples, or to be more precise twenty-nine and a-half
(the number of days in a month), one of them being
a woman. That is to say, the system of Dositheus
turned on a lunar basis, just as subsequent systems
ascribed to Jesus turned on a solar basis, the twelve
disciples typifying the solar months or zodiacal signs,
or rather certain facts of the wisdom-tradition which
underlie that symbolism. Dositheus is said to have
claimed to be a manifestation of the " Standing One "
or unchanging principle, the name also ascribed to
the supreme principle of the " Simonians." The one
female disciple was Helena (the name of the moon or
month, Selene, in Greek), who appears also in the
legend of Simon.
On the dim screen of Dosithean tradition we can
thus see shadows passing of the sources of a The Pre-
pre-Christian Gnosis — Arab, Phoenician, Syrian, Gnosis.
Babylonian shadows. More interesting still, we can
thus, perhaps, point to a source to which may be
traced, along another line of descent, the subsequent
thirty aeons of the Valentinian pleroma or ideal world,
with the divided thirtieth, Sophia (within and with
out, above and below), the lower aspect of which
constituted the World-soul or the primordial substance
of a world-system.
It is also to be observed that Aboulfatah places
Dositheus 100 years B.C. Of course only very qualified
credence can be given to this late chronicler, but still
it is possible that he may have drawn from sources
164 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
no longer accessible to us. The statement is
interesting as showing that the chronicler recognized
the fact of a pre-Christian Gnosis; though how he
reconciles this John the Baptist date with the
orthodox chronology is a puzzle. Can he have been
influenced by the Talmudic tradition of the date
of Jesus, which places him a century prior to our
era ? Together with Dositheus and " Simon,"
Hegesippus (according to Eusebius) also mentions
Cleobius, Gorthseus, and Masbotheus as prominent
leaders of primitive Christian schools.
"SIMON MAGUS."
" SIMON MAGUS, " as we have already said, is
mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles, a document of
the New Testament collection, said not to be quoted
prior to 177 A.D. Irenseus and his successors repeat
the Acts legend. Justin Martyr (c. 150) speaks of a
certain Simon of Gitta whom nearly all the Samaritans
regarded with the greatest reverence ; this Simon, he
said, claimed to be an incarnation of the " Great
Power," and had many followers. Justin, however,
makes no reference to the Acts story, and so some
have assumed two Simons, but this does not seem to
be necessary. The Justin account is the nucleus
of the huge Simonian legend which was mainly
developed by the cycle of Pseudo-Clementine litera
ture of the third century, based on the second
century Circuits of Peter.
Hippolytus alone, at the beginning of the -third
" SIMON MAGUS." 165
century, has preserved a few scraps from the
extensive literature of the " Simonians " ; the bishop
of Portus quotes from a work entitled The Great
Announcement, and so we are able to form some
idea of one of the systems of these Gnostics. The
scheme of the Gnosis contained in this document, so
far from presenting a crude form, or mere germ, of
Gnostic doctrine, hands on to us a highly developed
phase of Gnostic tradition, which, though not so
elaborated as the Valentinian system, nevertheless
is almost as mature as the Barbelo scheme, referred
to so cursorily by Irenseus, and now partly recovered
in the newly-discovered Gospel of Mary.
In the earliest times to which Catholic Christians
subsequently traced the origin of their traditions, TheEbionite
J (i Simon."
there were, as we know from various sources,
numerous movements in and about Palestine of
a prophetical and reformatory nature, many prophets
and teachers of ethical, mystical, religio-philosophical,
and Gnostic doctrines. The Ebionite communities
found themselves in conflict with the followers of
these teachers on many points, and Ebionite tradition
handed on a garbled account of these doctrinal
conflicts. Above all things, the Ebionites were in
bitterest strife with the Pauline churches. Later
on General Christianity set itself to work to reconcile
the Petrine and Pauline differences, principally by
the Acts document; and in course of time Ebionite
tradition was also edited by the light of the new view,
and the name of Simon substituted for the great
"heretic" with whom the Ebionites had striven.
And so the modified Ebionite tradition, which was
166 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
presumably first committed to writing in the Circuits
of Peter, gradually evolved a romance, in which the
conflicts between Simon Peter the Ebionite, and
Simon the Magician, are graphically pourtrayed, the
magical arts of the Samaritan are foiled, and his false
theology is exposed, by the doughty champion of the
" Poor Men." The latest recension of this cycle of
romance gave the whole a Roman setting, and so we
find Simon finally routed by Peter at Rome (to suit
the legend of the Roman Church that Peter had come
to Rome), but in earlier recensions Peter does not
travel beyond the East, and Simon is finally routed
at Antioch.
A close inspection of the Pseudo-Clementine
literature reveals a number of literary deposits or
strata of legend, one of which is of a very remarkable
nature. Baur was the first to point this out, and his
followers in the Tubingen school elaborated his views
into the theory that Simon Magus is simply the
legendary symbol for Paul. The remarkable similarity
of the doctrinal points at issue in both the Petro-
Simonian and Petro-Pauline controversies cannot be
denied, and the scholarly reputation of the Tubingen
school puts out of court mere a priori impossibility.
Although, of course, it would not be prudent to take
the extreme view that wherever Simon Magus is
mentioned, Paul is meant, nevertheless we may not
unclearly distinguish this identity in at least one of
the strata of the legend.
The " Simonian " systems, as described by the
Fathers, reveal the main features of the Gnosis :
the Father over all, the Logos-idea, the aeon-world,
"SIMON MAGUS." 167
or ideal universe, its emanation, and its positive
and negative aspects represented as pairs or The
syzygies; the world-soul represented as the thought Literature.
or female aspect of the Logos; the descent of the
soul; the creation of the sensible world by the
builders; the doctrines of reincarnation, redemp
tion, etc.
The main characteristic of the " Simonians " is
said to have been the practice of "magic," which
" Simon " is reported to have learned in Egypt, and
which gave rise to most of the fantastic stories
invented by their opponents. But it is very probable
that the title Magus covers much more than the story
of the Samaritan wonder-worker, and puts us in
touch with a Gnostic link with Persia and the
Magi; and indeed the fire-symbolism used in the
MS. quoted from by Hippolytus amply confirms
this hypothesis.
In other respects the " Simonian " Gnosis was on
similar lines to the Barbelo-Gnostic and Basilido-
Valentinian developments ; this is to be clearly seen
in the fragments of The Great Announcement pre
served by Hippolytus.
The rest of the "Simonian" literature has
perished; one of their chief documents, however,
was a book called The Four Quarters of the World,
and another famous treatise contained a number of
controversial points (Refutatorii Sermones) ascribed
to "Simon," which submitted the idea of the God
of the Old Testament to a searching criticism,
especially dealing with the serpent-legend in Genesis.
The main symbolism, which the evolvers of the
168 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Simon-legend parodied into the myth of Simon and
Helen, appears to have been sidereal ; thus the Logos
and his Thought, the World-soul, were symbolized as
the Sun (Simon) and Moon (Selene, Helen); so with
the microcosm, Helen was the human soul fallen into
matter and Simon the mind which brings about her
redemption. Moreover one of the systems appears
to have attempted to interpret the Trojan legend
and myth of Helen in a spiritual and psychological
fashion.
This is interesting as showing an attempt to invoke
the authority of the popular Greek " Bible," the cycle
of Homeric legend, in support of Gnostic ideas. It was
the extension of the method of the Jewish allegorizers
into the domain of Greek mythology.
The detractors of the " Simonians," among the
Church Fathers, however, evolved the legend, that
Helen was a prostitute whom Simon had picked up
at Tyre. The name of this city presumably led Baur
to suggest that the Simon (*#ftt#, Sun) and Helen
(SeA^i/j/, Moon) terminology is connected with the
Phoenician cult of the sun and moon deities which
was still practised in that ancient city. Doubtless
the old Phoenician and Syrian ideas of cosmogony
were familiar to many students of religion at that
period, but we need not be too precise in matters so
obscure.
Ireneeus gives the following outline of the system
The he ascribes to the " Simonians." It is the dramatic
" Simoniaii"
System of myth of the Logos and the World-soul, the Sophia,
Irenaeus. TTT. ,
or Wisdom. Irenseus, however, would have it that
it was the personal claim of Simon concerning
"SIMON MAGUS." 169
Helen; he evidently bases himself on a MS. in
which the Christ, as the Logos, is represented as
speaking in the first person, and we shall there
fore endeavour to restore it partially to its original
form.
" ' Wisdom was the first Conception (or Thought)
of My Mind, the Mother of All, by whom in the
beginning I conceived in My Mind the making of
the Angels and Archangels. This Thought leaping
forth from Me, and knowing what was the will
of her Father, descended to the lower regions and
generated the Angels and Powers, by whom also
the world was made. And after she had generated
them, she was detained by them through envy, for
they did not wish to be thought the progeny of
any other. As for Myself, I am entirely unknown
to them.'
"And Thought," continues Irenaeus, summarising
from the MS., " was made prisoner by the Powers
and Angels that had been emanated by her. And
she suffered every kind of indignity at their hands,
to prevent her reascending to her Father, even to
being imprisoned in the human body and trans
migrating into other female [?] bodies, as from one
vessel into another. ... So she, transmigrating
from body to body, and thereby also continually
undergoing indignity, last of all even stood for hire
in a brothel ; and she was the ' lost sheep.'
" ' Wherefore, also, am I come to take her away
for the first time, and free her from her bonds; to
make sure salvation to men by My Gnosis.'
" For as the Angels," writes the Church Father,
170 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
" were mismanaging the world, since each of them
desired the sovereignty, He had come to set matters
right; and He had descended, tranforming Himself
and being made like to the Powers and Principalities
and Angels ; so that He appeared to men as a man,
although He was not a man; and was thought to
have suffered in Judsea, although He did not really
suffer. The prophets, moreover, had spoken their
prophecies under the inspiration of the Angels who
made the world."
All of these doctrines proceeded from circles who
believed in the mystical Christ, and are common to
many other systems ; if Irenaeus had only told us the
history of the document which he was summarizing
and glossing, if he had but copied it verbally, how
much labour would he have saved posterity ! True,
he may have been copying from Justin's controversial
writings, and Justin had already done some of the
summarizing and commenting; but in any case a
single paragraph of the original would have given us
a better ground on which to form a judgment than
all the paraphrazing and rhetoric of these two ancient
worthies who so cordially detested the Gnostics.
Fortunately Hippolytus, who came later, is more
The Great correct in his quotations, and occasionally copies
verbally portions of the MSS. which had come into
his hands. One of these he erroneously attributes to
" Simon " himself, presumably because he considered
it the oldest Gnostic MS. in his possession; most
critics, however, consider it a later form of the Gnosis
than the system summarized by Irenseus, but there
is nothing to warrant this assumption. By this time
Announce
ment.
" SIMON MAGUS."
the legend that " Simon " was the first heretic had
become " history " for the hseresiologists, and no
doubt Hippolytus felt himself fully justified in
ascribing the contents of the MS. to one whom he
supposed to be the oldest leader of the Gnosis.
The title of the MS. was The Great Announce
ment, probably a synonym for The Gospel, in the
Basilidian sense of the term ; and it opened with the
following words : " This is the Writing of the
Revelation of Voice-and-Name from Thought, the
Great Power, the Boundless. Wherefore shall it be
sealed, hidden, concealed, laid in the Dwelling of
which the Universal Root is the Foundation."
The Dwelling is said to be man, the temple of
the Holy Spirit. The symbol of the Boundless The Hidden
Power and Universal Root was Fire. Fire was
conceived as being of a twofold nature — the concealed
and the manifested ; the concealed parts of the Fire
are hidden in the manifested, and the manifested
produced by the concealed. The manifested side
of the Fire has all things in itself which a man can
perceive of things visible, or which he unconsciously
fails to perceive ; whereas the concealed side is
everything which one can conceive as intelligible,
even though it escape sensation, or which a man
fails to conceive.
Before we come to the direct quotation, however,
Hippolytus treats us to a lengthy summary of the
Gnostic exposition before him, from which we may
take the following as representing the thought of
the writer of the MS. less erroneously than the rest.
" Of all things that are concealed and manifested,
172 FKAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the Fire which is above the heavens is the treasure-
The Fire house, as it were a great Tree from which all flesh
Tree.
is nourished. The manifested side of the Fire is
the trunk, branches, leaves, and the outside bark.
All these parts of the great Tree are set on fire
from the all-devouring flame of the Fire and des
troyed. But the fruit of the Tree, if its imaging
has been perfected and it takes shape of itself, is
placed in the store-house (or treasure), and not cast
into the Fire. For the fruit is produced to be
placed in the store-house, but the husk to be
committed to the Fire ; that is to say, the trunk,
which is generated not for its own sake but for that
of the fruit."
This symbolism is of great interest as revealing
points of contact with the " Trees " and " Treasures "
of the elaborate systems recoverable from the Coptic
Gnostic works, and also with the line of tradition of
the Chaldsean and Zoroastrian Logia, which were the
favourite study of so many of the later Platonic
school. The fruit of the Fire-tree and the " Flower of
Fire" are the symbols of (among other things) the
man immortal, the garnered spiritual consciousness
of the man-plant ; but the full interpretation of this
graphic symbolism would include both the genesis
of the cosmos and the divinizing of man.
Man (teaches the Gnosis we are endeavouring to
recover from Hippolytus) is subject to generation and
suffering so long as he remains in potentiality; but,
once that his "imaging forth" is accomplished, he
becomes like unto God, and, freed from the bonds of
suffering and birth, he attains perfection. But to our
"SIMON MAGUS." 173
quotation from The Great Announcement, taken
apparently from the very beginning of the treatise,
immediately following the superscription :
" To you, therefore, I say what I say, and write
what I write. And the writing is this:
" Of the universal ^Eons there are two growths,
without beginning or end, springing from one The
Root, which is the Power Silence invisible,
inapprehensible. Of these one appears from
above, which is the Great Power, the Universal
Mind, ordering all things, male ; and the other from
below, the Great Thought (or Conception), female,
producing all things.
" Hence matching each other, they unite and
manifest the Middle Space, incomprehensible Air
[Spirit], without beginning or end. In this [Air] is
the [second] Father who sustains and nourishes all
things which have beginning and end.
"This [Father] is He who has stood, stands and
will stand, a male-female power, like the pre-existing
Boundless Power, which has neither beginning nor
end, existing in oneness. It was from this Boundless
Power that Thought, which had previously been
hidden in oneness, first proceeded and became twain.
" He [the Boundless] was one ; having her in
Himself, He was alone. Yet was He not ' first,'
though ' pre-existing,' for it was only when He was
manifested to Himself from Himself that there was
a ' second.' Nor was He called Father before
[Thought] called Him Father.
"As, therefore, producing Himself by Himself,
He manifested to Himself His own Thought, so
174 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN-
also His manifested Thought did not make the
[manifested — the second] Father, but contemplating
Him hid him — that is, His power — in herself and
is male-female, Power and Thought.
" Hence they match each other, being one ; for
there is no difference between Power and Thought.
From the things above is discovered Power, and from
those below Thought.
"Thus it comes to pass that that which is mani
fested from them, though one, is found to be two,
male-female, having the female in itself. Equally
so is Mind in Thought; they really are one, but
when separated from each other they appear as two."
So much for The Great Announcement of "Simon."
That some document may yet be discovered which
will throw fresh light on the subject is not an
impossibility; in the meantime we can reserve our
judgment, and regard all positive statements that
"Simon" was the "first-born son of Satan" as foreign
to the question.
MENANDER. 1"75
MENANDER.
ONE of the teachers of the " Simonian " Gnosis who
was singled out by Justin for special mention, because
of his having led " many " away, even as Marcion
was gaining an enormous following in Justin's own
time, is Menander, a native, we are told, of the
Samaritan town Capparatea. The notice in Justin
shows us that Menander was a man of a past
generation, and that he was specially famous because
of his numerous following. We know that the dates
of this period are exceedingly obscure even for Justin,
our earliest authority. For instance, writing about
150 A.D., he says that Jesus lived 150 years before his
time. His " Simon " and Menander dates are equally
vague ; Menander may have lived a generation or four
generations before Justin's time, or still earlier.
The centre of activity of Menander is said to have
been at Antioch, one of the most important commercial Sis
r Doctrines.
and literary cities of the Grseco-Roman world, on
the highway of communication between East and
West. He seems to have handed on the general
outlines of the Gnosis ; especially insisting on the
distinction between the God over all and the creative
power or powers, the " forces of nature." Wisdom, he
taught, was to be attained by the practical discipline
of transcendental " magic " ; that is to say, the Gnosis
was not to be attained by faith alone, but by definite
endeavour and conscious striving along the path of
cosmological and psychological science. Menander
professed to teach a knowledge of the powers of
176 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
nature, and the way whereby they could be subjected
to the purified human will ; he is also said to have
claimed to be the Saviour sent down by the higher
Powers of the spiritual world, to teach men the sacred
knowledge whereby they could free themselves from
the dominion of the lower Angels.
o
It is, however, almost certain that Menander made
no more claim to be the Saviour (in the Catholic
meaning of the term) than did " Simon." The Saviour
was the Logos, as we have seen above. The claim of
the Gnostics was that a man might so perfect himself
that he became a conscious worker with the Logos ;
all those who did so, became " Christs," and as such
were Saviours, but not in the sense of being the
Logos Himself.
The neophyte on receiving " baptism," that is to
say, on reaching a certain state of interior purification
or enlightenment, was said to " rise from the dead " ;
thereafter, he " never grew old and became immortal,"
that is to say, he obtained possession of the unbroken
consciousness of his spiritual ego. Menander was
especially opposed to the materialistic doctrine of the
resurrection of the body, and this was made a special
ground of complaint against him by the Patristic
writers of the subsequent centuries.
The followers of Menander were called Men-
andrists, and we can only regret that no record has
been left of {hem and their writings. As they seem
to have been centralized at Antioch — seeing that
tradition assigns the founding of the Church of
Antioch to Paul, and assigns to it Peter as its first
bishop ; seeing again that the " withstanding to the
SATURNINUS. 177
face " incident is placed by the Acts tradition in
the same city — it may be that their writings would
have thrown some light on these obscure traditions.
I would, however, suggest that Mainandros should
be placed far earlier than " Simon," and that we
should see in him one of the earliest links between
Gnosticism and the Magian tradition. It may be
even that the Gnostics traced the tradition of their
aeon-lore to this disciple of the Magi, for the root
of their aeonology is to be found in the Zoroastrian
Amshaspends, the personal emanations of Ahura-
mazda, as Mills and others have shown; though I
myself would seek the origin of the aeon-doctrine
in Egypt.
SATURNINUS.
SATURNINUS, or more correctly Satornilus, is generally
regarded as the founder of the Syrian Gnosis, but The Chain of
J Teachers.
there is every reason to suppose that Gnosticism was
widespread in Syria prior to his time. Justin Martyr
(Trypho, xxxv.), writing between 150 and 160, speaks
of the Satornilians as a very important body, for he
brackets them with the Marcians ( ? Marcionites),
Basilidians and Valentinians, the most important
schools of the Gnosis in his time. Saturninus,
Basilides and Valentinus were separated from each
other respectively by at least a generation, and
Saturninus may thus be placed somewhere about the
end of the first and the beginning of the second
century ; but this assignment of date rests entirely
upon the Patristic statements that Menander was the
178 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
teacher of Saturninus, Saturninus of Basilides, and
Basilides of Valentinus. It is, however, not improb
able that, with regard to the first two, a general
similarity of doctrine alone was sufficient reason for
the hseresiologists to father the origin of Saturninus'
system upon Menander himself, whereas in reality a
generation or two may have elapsed between them,
and they may have never as a matter of fact met face
to face.
Saturninus is said to have taught at Antioch, but
Asceticism. (as is almost the invariable case with the Gnostic
doctors) we have no information as to his nationality
or the incidents of his life. He was especially dis
tinguished for his rigid asceticism, or encratism.
His followers abstained from marriage and from
animal food of all kinds, and the rigidity of their
mode of life attracted many zealous adherents.
Salmon says that Saturninus seems to have been the
first to have introduced encratism " among those who
called themselves Christians." Protestant theologians
especially regard encratism as a heretical practice;
but there seems no sufficient reason for assuming
that so common a feature of the religious life can
be traced to any particular teacher.
Our information as to the Saturninian system
Doctrines °f *s unf ornately exceedingly defective ; the short
summary of Irenseus is presumably based on, or
a copy of, the lost Compendium of Justin. This
is all the more regrettable as fuller information
O
would have probably enabled us to trace its
connection with the " Ophite " and " Barbelo "
developments, and to define the relations of all three
SATURNINUS. 179
to thet Gnosticism of Basilides and Valentinus.
The main features are of the same nature as those
of the " Simonian " and Menandrian Gnosis ; we
should, however, always bear in mind that these
early systems, instead of being germinal, or simple
expressions, may have been elaborate enough. The
mere fact that Irengeus gives a summary which
presents comparatively simple features, is no guarantee
that the systems themselves may not have been full
and carefully worked out expositions. We may with
safety regard the summary of the bishop of Lyons
as a rough indication of heads of docHne, as
a catalogue of subjects deprived of their content.
Thus we learn that Saturninus taught the Unknown
Father ; the great intermediate hierarchies, arch
angels, angels, .and powers ; the seven creative spheres
and their rulers ; the builders of the universe and
the fashioners of man. There were numerous
inimical hierarchies and their rulers, and a scheme
of regeneration whereby a World-saviour in the
apparent form of man, though not really a man,
brings about not only the defeat of the evil
powers, but also rescues all who have the light-
spark within them, from the powers of the creative
hierarchies, among whom was placed the Yahweh
of the Jews. The Jewish scriptures were imper
fect and erroneous; some prophecies being inspired
by the creative angels, but others by the evil
powers.
The most interesting feature of the system which
Irenseus has preserved for us, is the myth of the
creation of man by the angels, or rather the fabri-
180 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
cation of man's external envelope by the hierarchies
of the builders.
The making of man was on this wise. A shining
ima£e or tyPe was snown by the Logos to the
demiurgic angels ; but when they were unable to
seize hold upon it, for it was withdrawn immediately,
they said to one another : " Let us make man
according to [this] image and likeness." They
accordingly endeavoured to do so, but the nature-
powers could only evolve an envelope or plasm,
which could not stand upright, but lay on the
ground helpless and crawling like a worm. Then
the Power Above, in compassion, sent forth the
life-spark, and the plasm rose upright, and limbs
developed and were knit together, that is to say,
it hardened or became denser as race succeeded
race ; and so the body of man was evolved, and
the light-spark, or real man, tabernacled in it. This
light-spark hastens back after death to those of its
own nature, and the rest of the elements of the
body are dissolved.
Here we have in rough suggestion the same theory
of the evolution of the bodies of the early races as we
find advanced, from totally different sources and an
entirely different standpoint, by a number of modern
writers on theosophic doctrines — and, therefore, we
all the more regret that the orthodox prejudices of
Irenaeus or his informant have treated Saturninus
and his " heresy " with so scant notice.
THE "OPHITES." 181
THE "OPHITES."
THE task we have now to attempt is, by far the
most difficult which can be undertaken by the student The ., c
Obscurity of
of Patristic Gnosticism. When we have the name fche Subject.
of an individual teacher to guide us, there is at
least a point round which certain ideas and state
ments may be grouped; but when we have no such
indications, but only scraps of information, or
summaries of " some say " and " others maintain,"
as in Irenseus ; or vague designations of widespread
schools of various periods, as in Hippolytus; when
further we reflect that among such surroundings
we are face to face with one of the main streams
of evolving Gnosticism, and realize the complete
absence of any definite landmarks, where all should
have been carefully surveyed — a feeling almost of
despair comes over even the most enthusiastic
student.
It has been supposed that up to the time of
Irenaeus Gnostic documents were freely circulated ;
but that by the time of Hippolytus (that is to say,
after the lapse of a generation or more) orthodoxy
had made such headway that the Gnostic documents
were withdrawn from circulation and hidden, and
that this accounts for the glee of Hippolytus, who
taunts the Gnostics with his possession of some of
their secret MSS. I am, however, convinced that
the most recondite and technical treatises of the
Gnostics were never circulated; the adherents of
the Gnosis were too much imbued with the idea
182 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of a "secret doctrine" and grades of initiation to
blazon their inner tenets forth on the house-tops.
Also I doubt exceedingly whether these inter
twined schools and phases of doctrine were separated
from one another in any very precise fashion, or
that the Basilidians, Valentinians, and the rest,
distinguished themselves by such designations.
Gnosticism was a living thing, no crystallized
system or dead orthodoxy ; each competent student
thought out the main features of the Gnosis in his own
fashion, and generally phrased it in his own terms.
In treating this part of our essay also another
difficulty presents itself; we are writing for those
who are presumably but slightly acquainted with the
subject, and who would only be confused by a mass
of details. It is, however, precisely these details
which are of interest and importance, and therefore
a summary must at best be exceedingly imperfect
and liable to misconstruction. We have thus to set
up our finger-posts as best we may.
As stated above, the term "Ophite" is exceedingly
heTerm^ erroneOus ; it does not generally describe the schools
Upiiite.
of which we are treating; it was not used by the
adherents of the schools themselves, who mostly
preferred the term Gnostic ; even where the
symbolism of the serpent enters into the exposition
of their systems, it is by no means the characteristic
feature. In brief, this term, which originated in the
fallacy of taking a very small part for the whole — a
favourite trick of the haeresiologist, whose main
weapon was to exaggerate a minor detail into a main
characteristic — has been used as a vague designation
THE " OPHITES." 183
for all exposition of Gnostic doctrine which could not
be ascribed to a definite teacher. It is in this
foundling asylum, so to say, that we must look
for the general outlines which form the basis of
the teachings of even Basilides and Valentinus, each
of whom, like the rest of the Gnostics, modified the
general tradition in his own peculiar fashion.
This " Ophite " Gnosticism is said by Philaster to
be pre-Christian; Irenseus, after detailing a system,
which Theodoret when copying from him calls
" Ophite," says that it was from the Valentinian
school. Celsus, the Pagan philosopher, in his True
Word, writing about the third quarter of the second
century, makes no distinction between the rest of the
Christian world and those whom Origen, almost a
century afterwards, in his refutation of Celsus, calls
" Ophiani."
The latest criticism is of opinion that Philaster
has blundered, but the statement is sufficient evidence
that there was a body of pre-Christian Gnosis, that
the stream flowed unbrokenly and in ever-increasing
volume during the first two centuries, and that the
erroneous designation " Ophite " still marks out one
of its main channels.
The serpent-symbol played a great part in the
Mysteries of the ancients, especially in Greece, Egypt, The Serpent
and Phoenicia; thence we can trace it back to Syria,
Babylonia, and farther East to India, where it still
survives and receives due explanation. It figured
forth the most intimate processes of the generation of
the universe and of man, and also of the mystic birth.
It was the glyph of the creative power, and in its
184 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
lowest form was debased into a phallic emblem.
Physical procreation and the processes of conception
are lower manifestations of the energizing of the
great creative will and the evolutionary world -process.
But the one is as far removed from the other, as
man's body is from the body of the universe, as
man's animal desire from the divine will of deity.
The mysteries of sex were explained in the adyta
of the ancient temples ; and naturally enough the
attempt to get behind the great passion of mankind
was fraught with the greatest peril. A knowledge
of the mystery led many to asceticism ; a mere
curious prying into the matter led to abuse. Illumina
tion, seership, and spiritual knowledge, were the
reward of the pure in body and mind; sexual excess
and depravity punished the prying of the unfit. This
explains one of the most curious phenomena in
religious history; the bright and dark sides are
almost invariably found together; whenever an
attempt is made to shed some light on the mystery
of the world and of man, the whole nature is
quickened, and if the animal is the stronger, it
becomes all the more uncontrolled owing to the
quickening. Thus we find that some obscure groups
of dabblers in the mystery-tradition fell into grave
errors, not only of theory but of practice, and that
Patristic writers of the subsequent centuries tried by
every means to exaggerate this particular into a
general charge against " error " ; whereas, as a
matter of fact, it is in the writings of the Gnostics
themselves that we find the severest condemnation
of such abuses.
THE "OPHITES." 185
As man was generated in the womb from a
" serpent " and an " egg," so was the universe ; but
the serpent of the universe was the Great Power, the
Mighty Whirlwind, the Vast Vortex, and the egg was
the All-Envelope of the world system, the primordial
" fire-mist." The serpent was thus the glyph of the
Divine Will, the Divine Reason, the Mind of Deity,
the Logos. The egg was the Thought, the Conception,
the Mother of All. The germinal universe was figured
as a circle with a serpent lying diagonally along its
field, or twined a certain number of times round it.
This serpentine force fashioned the universe, and
fashioned man. It created him; and yet he in his
turn could use it for creation, if he would only cease
from generation. The Caduceus, or Rod of Mercury,
and the Thyrsus in the Greek Mysteries, which
conducted the soul from life to death, and from death
to life, figured forth the serpentine power in man,
and the path whereby it would carry the " man "
aloft to the height, if he would but cause the " Waters
of the Jordan " to " flow upwards."
The serpent of Genesis, the serpent-rod of Moses,
and the uplifting of the brazen serpent in the
wilderness, were promptly seized upon by Jewish
Gnostics as mythological ideas similar to the myths
of the Mysteries. To give the reader an insight into
their methods of mystical exegesis, which looked to
an inner psychological science, we may here append
their interpretation of what may be called " The Myth
of the Going-forth."
The Myth was common to a number of schools, but
Hippolytus ascribes it to an otherwise unknown
186 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
school called the Peratae, supposed to mean Trans-
The Myth cendentalists, or those who by means of the
Going-forth. Gnosis had "passed beyond" or "crossed over."
Thus then they explained the Exodus-myth.
Egypt is the body; all those who identify them
selves with the body are the ignorant, the
Egyptians. To " come forth " out of Egypt is to
leave the body; and to pass through the Red
Sea is to cross over the ocean of generation, the
animal and sensual nature, which is hidden within
the blood. Yet even then they are not safe ; crossing
the Red Sea they enter the Desert, the intermediate
state of the doubting lower mind. There they are
attacked by the "gods of destruction," which Moses
called the " serpents of the desert," and which plague
those who seek to escape from the "gods of genera
tion." To them Moses, the teacher, shows the true
serpent crucified on the cross of matter, and by its
means they escape from the Desert and enter the
Promised Land, the realm of the spiritual mind,
where there is the Heavenly Jordan, the World-
soul. When the Waters of the Jordan flow
downwards, then is the generation of men; but
when they flow upward, then is the creation of the
gods. Jesus (Joshua) was one who had caused the
Waters of the Jordan to flow upwards.
Many of the ancient myths had a historico-
legendary background, but their use as myths, or
religious and mystic romances, had gradually effaced
the traces of history. Those instructed in the
Mysteries were practised in the science of mythology,
and thus the learned Gnostics at once perceived the
THE "OPHITES." 187
mythological nature of the Exodus and its adapta
bility to a mystical interpretation. The above
instance is a very good example of this method of
exegesis ; a great deal of such interpretation, however,
was exceedingly strained, when not decidedly silly.
The religious mind of the times loved to exercise
its ingenuity on such interpretations, and the differ
ence between Gnostic exegesis and that of the
subsequent Orthodox, is that the former tried to
discover soul-processes in the myths and parables
of scripture, whereas the Orthodox regarded a
theological and dogmatic interpretation as alone
legitimate.
Judged by our present knowledge of language,
the " silliest " element which entered into such pious Pseudo-
philology.
pastimes was the method of word-play, or pseudo-
philology, which is found everywhere in the writings
of the Babylonians, Egyptians, Indians, Jews, and
Greeks. Among the Gnostic and Patristic writers,
therefore, we find the most fantastic derivations of
names, which were put forward in support of theo
logical doctrines, but which were destitute of the
most rudimentary philological accuracy. Men, such
as Plato, who in many other respects were giants
of intellect, were content to resort to such methods.
It is, however, pleasant to notice that the nature
of the soul and the truths of the spiritual life were
the chief interest for such ancient "philologists,"
and not the grubbing up of " roots " ; nevertheless,
we should be careful when detecting the limitation
of such minds in certain directions, to guard against
the error of closing our eyes to the limitations of
188 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
our own modern methods in directions where the
ancients have done much good work.
We will now proceed to give a brief sketch of
the main outlines of one of the presentations of
general Gnostic ideas preserved by Irenseus.
AN ANONYMOUS SYSTEM FROM IRENJEUS.
IN the Unutterable Depth were two Great Lights,
The the First Man, or Father, and his Son, the Second
Creation. Man; and also the Holy Spirit, the First Woman,
or Mother of all living. Below this triad was a
sluggish mass composed of the four great " elements,"
called Water, Darkness, Abyss, and Chaos. The
Universal Mother brooded over the Waters; ena
moured of her beauty, the First and Second Man
produced from her the third Great Light, the Christ ;
and He, ascending above, formed with the First and
Second Man the Holy Church. This was the right-
hand birth of the Great Mother. But a Drop of Light
fell downwards to the left hand into chaotic matter ;
this was called Sophia, or Wisdom, the TTor£c£- Mother.
The Waters of the zEther were thus set in motion,
and formed a body for Sophia (the Light-^Eon), viz.,
the Heaven-sphere. And she, freeing herself, left
her body behind, and ascended to the Middle Region
below her Mother (the Universal Mother), who formed
the boundary of the Ideal Universe.
By her mere contact with the Space- Waters she
had aleady generated a son, the chief Creative Power
of the Sensible World, who retained some of the
ANONYMOUS SYSTEM FROM IRENJEUS.
Light-fluid ; this son was laldabaoth (said by some to
mean the Child of Chaos), who in his turn produced a
son, and he another, until there were seven in all, the
great Formative Powers of the Sensible Universe.
And they were " fighters," and quarrelled much with
their fathers. And by means of this interplay of
forces on matter came forth the "mind," which was
" serpent-formed," and " spirit," and " soul," and all
things in the world.
And laldabaoth was boastful and arrogant, and
exclaimed : " I am Father and God, and beyond me is
none other." But Sophia hearing this cried out to
her son : " Lie not, laldabaoth, for above thee is the
Father of All, the First Man, and Man the Son of
Man." And all the Powers were astonished at the
word ; but laldabaoth, to call off their attention, cried
out : " Let us make ' man ' after our image." So they
made " man," and he lay like a worm on the ground,
until they brought him to laldabaoth, who breathed
into him the " breath of life," that is to say the
Light-fluid he had received from Sophia, and so
emptied himself of his Light. And " man " receiving
it, immediately gave thanks to the First Man and
disregarded his fabricators (the Elohim).
Whereupon laldabaoth (Yahweh) was jealous and
planned to deprive Adam of the Light-spark by
forming " woman." And the six creative powers
were enamoured of Eve, and by her generated sons,
namely, the angels. And so Adam again fell under
the power of laldabaoth and the Elohim ; then
Sophia or Wisdom sent the " serpent " (" mind ") into
the Paradise of laldabaoth, and Adam and Eve
Yahweh
laldabaoth.
0. T.
Exegesis.
190 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
listened to its wise councils, and so once more " man "
was freed from the dominion of the Creative Power,
and transgressed the ordinance of ignorance of any
power higher than himself imposed by laldabaoth.
Whereupon laldabaoth drove them out of his
Paradise, and together with them the " serpent " or
" mind " ; but Sophia would not permit the Light-
spark to descend, and so withdrew it to avoid
profanation. And " mind " (the lower mind) the
serpent-formed, the first product of laldabaoth,
brought forth six sons, and these are the " dsemonial "
powers, which plague men because their father was
cast down for their sake.
Now Adam and Eve before the fall had spiritual
bodies, like the " angels " born of this Eve ; but after
their fall, down from the Paradise of laldabaoth,
their bodies grew more and more dense, and more
and more languid, and became " coats of skin," till
finally Sophia in compassion restored to them the
sweet odour of the Light, and they knew that they
carried death about with them. And so a recollection
of their former state came back to them, and they
were patient, knowing that the body was put on
only for a time.
The system then goes on to grapple with the
legends of Genesis touching Cain and Noah, etc., and
the Old Testament record generally, with moderate
success ; the main idea being that the prophets were
inspired by one or other of the seven Elohim, but
occasionally Sophia had succeeded in impressing them
with fragmentary revelations about the First Man
and the Christ above.
ANONYMOUS SYSTEM FROM IREN^US.
191
The rest of the system is devoted to the question
of the scheme of regeneration and the interpretation Christology.
of the Mystery-myths. Sophia, or Wisdom, finding
no rest in heaven or earth, implored the help of the
Great Mother, and she in compassion begged of the
First Man that the Christ should be sent to help her.
And then Wisdom, knowing that her brother and
spouse was coming to her aid, announced his coming
by John, and by means of the " baptism of
repentance " Jesus was made ready to receive him,
as in a clean vessel. And so the Christ descended
through the seven spheres, likening himself unto the
Rulers, and draining them of their power, the Light
they had retained all flowing back to him. And
first of all the Christ clothed his sister Sophia with
the Light- vesture, and they rejoiced together, and
this is the mystical " marriage " of the " bridegroom
and the bride." Now Jesus, having been born of a
"virgin" by the working of God (in other words, after
the spiritual " second birth " had been attained by the
ascetic Jesus), Christ and Sophia, the one enfolding
the other, descended upon him and he became Jesus
Christ.
Then it was that he began to do mighty works,
to heal, and to proclaim the Unknown Father, and Jesus,
profess himself openly the Son of the First Man.
Whereupon the Powers and especially laldabaoth
took measures to slay him, and so Jesus, the man,
was " crucified " by them, but Christ and Sophia
mounted aloft to the Incorruptible ^Eon. But Christ
did not forget the one in whom He had tabernacled,
and so sent a power which raised up his body, not
192 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
indeed his gross physical envelope, but a psychic and
spiritual body. And those of his disciples who saw
this body, thought he was risen in his physical frame,
but to certain of them who were capable of receiving
it, he explained the mystery, and taught them many
other mysteries of the spiritual life. And Jesus now
sits at the right hand of his father, laldabaoth, and
receives the souls who have received these mysteries.
And in proportion as he enriches himself with souls,
in such measure is laldabaoth deprived of power ;
so that he is no longer able to send back holy souls
into the world of reincarnation, but only those of
his own substance ; and the consummation of all
things will be when all the Light shall once more
be gathered up and stored in the treasures of the
Incorruptible ^Eon.
Such is the account of this by no means absurd
scheme of the Gnosis preserved to us in the barbarous
Latin translation of Irenaeus' summary. That the
original system was far more elaborate we may
assume from the now known method of Irenseus
to make a very brief summary of the tenets he
criticized. The main features of the christological
and soteriological part of the system is identical
with the main outlines of the system of the Pistis
Sophia, and of one of the treatises of the Codex
Brucianus. This is a very important point, and
indicates that the dates of these treatises need not
necessarily be later than the time of the bishop of
Lyons, but the consideration of this important
subject must be reserved for the sequel. Interesting
again is it to remark the influence of the Orphic,
AN EARLY "OPHITE" SYSTEM. 193
Pythagorsean, Platonic, and Hermetic tradition in
the cosmological part, and to observe how both the
Hellenic and Jewish myths find a common element
in the Chaldsean tradition.
AN EARLY "OPHITE" SYSTEM.
HIPPOLYTUS devotes the fifth book of his Refutation
to the " Ophites," who, ho we ver, all call themselves
followers of the Gnosis, and not " Ophites,"
as explained above; he seems to regard them
as the most ancient stream of the Gnosis.
After treating of three great schools, to which we
shall subsequently refer, he specially singles out
for notice a certain Justinus, who is mentioned by
no other hseresiologist. This account of Hippolytus
is all the more important, seeing that the system
with which the name of Justinus is associated,
represents apparently one of the oldest forms of
the Gnosis of which we have record. This has been
disputed by Salmon, but to my mind his arguments
are unconvincing ; the fact that the Justinian school,
in its mystical exegesis, makes no reference to the
texts of the New Testament collection, although freely
quoting from the Old, should decide the point. One
short saying is referred to Jesus, but it is nowhere
found in the canonical texts.
This circle had a large literature, from which
Hippolytus selects a single volume, The Book of
Baruch, as giving the most complete form of the
system. The members were bound by an oath of
194 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
secrecy not to reveal the tenets of the school, and
the form of the oath is given. The cosmogony
is based on a Syrian creation-myth, a variant
of which is preserved by Herodotus (iv. 8-10),
in which Hercules (the Sun-god) plays the prin
cipal part, and a stratum of which is also found
in Genesis. The myth has intimate points of contact
with Chaldsean and ancient Semitic traditions.
The following is the outline of the system.
There are three principles of the Universe : (i.)
The Book of The Good, or all-wise Deity; (ii.) the Father, or
Spirit, the creative power, called Elohim; and (iii.)
the World-Soul, symbolized as a woman above
the middle and a serpent below, called Eden.
From Elohim (a plural used as a collective) and
Eden twenty-four cosmic powers or angels come
forth, twelve follow the will of the Father-Spirit, and
twelve the nature of the Mother-Soul. The lower
twelve are the World-Trees of the Garden of Eden.
The Trees are divided into four groups, of three each,
representing the four Rivers of Eden. The Trees are
evidently of the same nature as the cosmic forces
which are represented by the Hindus as having
their roots or sources above and their branches
or streams below. The name Eden means Pleasure
or Desire.
Thus the whole creation comes into existence, and
finally from the animal part of the Mother-Soul are
generated animals, and from the human part men.
The upper part of the Garden is called the "most
beautiful Earth"; that is to say, Cosmic Earth, and the
body of man is formed of the finest. Man having thus
AN EARLY "OPHITE" SYSTEM. 195
been formed, Eden and Elohlm depute their powers
unto him ; the World-Soul bestows on him the soul,
and the World-Spirit infuses into him the spirit.
Thus were men and women constituted.
And all creation was subjected to the four groups
of the twelve powers of the World-Soul, according to
their cycles, as they move round as in a circular
dance
But when the man-stage was reached, the turning-
point of the world — process, Elohim, the Spirit,
ascended into the celestial spaces, taking with him
his own twelve powers. And in the highest part of
the heaven he beheld the Great Light shining
through the Gate (? the physical sun), which led to the
Light-world of The Good. And he who had hitherto
thought himself Lord of Creation, perceived that
there was one above him, and cried aloud: "Open me
the gates that I may acknowledge the [true] Lord;
for I considered myself to be the Lord." And a voice
came forth, saying : " This is the Gate of the Lord ;
through this the righteous enter in." And leaving
his angels in the highest part of the heavens, the
World-Father entered in and sat down at the right
hand of the Good One.
And Elohim desired to recover by force his spirit
which was bound to men, from further degradation;
but the Good Deity restrained him, for now that he
had ascended to the Light-realm he could work no
destruction.
And the Soul (Eden) perceiving herself abandoned
by Elohim, tricked herself out so as to entice him
back ; but the Spirit would not return to the arms of
196 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Mother Nature (now that the ''middle point of
evolution was passed). Thereupon, the spirit that
was left behind in man, was plagued by the soul; for
the spirit or mind desired to follow its Father into
the height, but the soul, incited by the powers of the
Mother — Soul, and especially by the first group who
rule over sexual passion and excess, gave way to
adulteries and even greater vice; and the spirit in
man was thereby tormented.
Now the angel, or power, of the World-Soul, which
Baruch. especially incited the human soul to such misdeeds,
was the third of the first group, called Naas
(Heb. Nachasli), the serpent, the symbol of animal
passion. And Elohim, seeing this, sent forth the
third of his own angels, called Baruch, to succour
the spirit in man. And Baruch came and stood in
the midst of the Trees (the powers of the World-
Soul), and declared unto man that of all the Trees
of the Garden of Eden he might eat the fruit, but
of the Tree Naas, he might not, for Naas had
transgressed the law, and had given rise to adultery
and unnatural intercourse.
And Baruch had also appeared to Moses and the
prophets through the spirit in man, that the people
might be converted to the Good One ; but Naas had
invariably obscured his precepts through the soul in
man. And not only had Baruch taught the prophets
of the Hebrews, but also the prophets of the uncir-
cumcised. Thus, for instance, Hercules among the
Syrians had been instructed, and his twelve labours
were his conflicts with the twelve powers of the
World-Soul. Yet Hercules also had finally failed,
AN EARLY "OPHITE" SYSTEM. 197
for after seeming to accomplish his labours, he is
vanquished by Omphale, or Venus, who divests him
of his power by clothing him with her own robe, the
power of Eden below.
Last of all Baruch appeared unto Jesus, a
shepherd boy, son of Joseph and Mary, a child of Christology.
twelve years. And Jesus remained faithful to the
teachings of Baruch, in spite of the enticements of
Naas. And Naas in wrath caused him to be
" crucified," but he, leaving on the " tree " the body of
Eden — that is to say, the psychic body or soul, and
the gross physical body — and committing his spirit
or mind to the hands of his Father (Elohim), ascended
to the Good One. And there he beholds " whatever
things eye hath not seen and ear hath not heard, and
which have not entered into the heart of man " ; and
bathes in the ocean of life-giving water, no longer
in the water below the firmament, the ocean of
generation in which the physical and psychic bodies
are bathed. This ocean of generation is, of course,
the same as the Brahmanical and Buddhistic samsdra,
the ocean of rebirth.
Hippolytus tries to make out that Justinus was
a very vile person, because he fearlessly pointed
out one of the main obstacles to the spiritual life,
and the horrors of animal sensuality ; but Justinus
evidently preached a doctrine of rigid asceticism,
and ascribed the success of Jesus to his triumphant
purity.
198 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
THE NAASSENI.
PRIOR to the section on Justinus, Hippolytus treats
of three schools under the names Naasseni, Peratae,
and Sethians or Sithians. All three schools appa
rently belong to the same cycle, and the first two
present features so identical as to make it highly
probable that the Naassene work and the two Peratic
treatises from which Hippolytus quotes, pertain to
the same Gnostic circle.
Although the name Naassene is derived from the
Hebrew Nachash, a serpent, Hippolytus does not call
the Naassenes Ophites, but Gnostics ; in fact, he
reserves the name Ophite for a small body to which
he also gives (viii. 20) the names Cainites and
Nochaitse (?Nachaitae from Nachasli), and considers
them of not sufficient importance for further
mention.
The Naassenes possessed many books, and also
Their regarded as authoritative the following scriptures:
The Gospel of Perfection, The Gospel of Eve, The
Questions of Mary, Concerning the Offspring of
Mary, The Gospel of Philip, The Gospel according to
Thomas, and The Gospel according to the Egyptians.
One of their MSS. had fallen into the hands of Hip
polytus. It was a treatise of a mystical, psychological,
devotional, and ex egetical character, rather than a cos-
mological exposition, and therefore the system is some
what difficult to make out from Hippolytus' quotations.
Indeed, the Naassene Document, when analysed into
its sources, is found to be the Christian overworking
THE NAASSENI. 199
of the Jewish overworking of a Pagan commentary
on a Hymn of the Mysteries. The date of the
Christian overwriter may be placed about the middle
of the second century, and the document is especially
valuable as pointing out the identity of the inner
teachings of Gnostic Christianity with the tenets
of the Mysteries — Phrygian, Eleusinian, Dionysian,
Samothracian, Egyptian, Assyrian, etc.
The Christian writer claimed that his tradition
was handed down from James to a certain Mariamne.
This Miriam, or Mary, is somewhat of a puzzle to
scholarship; it seems, however, probable that the
treatise belonged to the same cycle of tradition as
The Or eater and Lesser Questions of Mary, The Gospel
of Mary, etc., in the frame of which the Pistis
Sophia treatise is also set.
The main features of the system are that the
cosmos is symbolized as the (Heavenly) Man, male-
female, of three natures, spiritual (or intelligible),
psychic and material ; that these three natures found
themselves in perfection in Jesus, who was therefore
truly the Son of Man. Mankind is divided into three
classes, assemblies, or churches : the elect, the called,
and the bound (or in other words, the spiritual or
angelic, the psychic, and the choic or material),
according as one or other of these natures pre
dominates.
After this brief outline, Hippolytus proceeds to
plunge into the mystical exegesis of the writer and Their
Mystical
overwriters (whom he of course regards as one Exegesis,
person) and their interpretation of the Mysteries,
which is mixed up here and there with specimens of
200 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the pseudo-philological word-play so dear to the
heart of Plato's Cratylus, as remarked above. The
system is supposed to underlie all mythologies, Pagan,
Jewish and Christian. It is the old teaching of
macrocosm and microcosm, and the Self hidden in
the heart of all.
The technical character of this exegesis and the
nature of our essay compel us to give only a brief
summary of the main ideas; but the subject is
important enough to demand a special study in itself.
The spirit or mind of man is imprisoned in the
soul, his animal nature, and the soul in the body.
The nature and evolution of this soul were set forth
in The Gospel according to the Egyptians, a work
which is unfortunately lost.
Now the Assyrians (following the Chaldseans,
ASS rian wno> together with the Egyptians, were regarded by
Mysteries, antiquity as the sacred nation par excellence) first
taught that man was threefold and yet a unity. The
soul is the desire-principle, and all things have
souls, even stones, for they increase and decrease.
The real " man " is male-female, devoid of sex ;
therefore he strives to abandon the animal nature and
return to the eternal essence above, where there is
neither male nor female but a new creature.
Baptism was not the mere symbolical washing
with physical water, but the bathing of the spirit or
mind in the " living water above," the eternal world,
beyond the ocean of generation and destruction ; and
the anointing with oil was the introduction of the
candidate into unfading bliss, thus becoming a
Christ.
THE NAASSENI. 201
The kingdom of heaven is to be sought for within
a man ; it is the " blessed nature of all things which
were, and are, and are still to be," spoken of in the
Phrygian Mysteries. It is of the nature of the spirit
or mind, for, as it is written in The Gospel according
to Thomas : " He who seeks me shall find me in
children from the age of seven years " ; and this is the
representative of the Logos in man.
Among the Egyptians, Osiris is the Water of Life,
the Spirit or Mind, while Isis is " seven-robed nature, The .
Egyptian.
surrounded by and robed in seven sethereal mantles,"
the spheres of ever-changing generation, which meta
morphose the ineffable, unimaginable, incomprehensible
mother-substance ; while the Mind, the Self, makes all
things but remains unchanged, according to the saying:
" I become what I will, and I am what I am ; where
fore, say I, immovable is the mover of all. For He
remains what He is, making all things, and is naught
of the things which are." This also is called The
Good, hence the saying : " Why callest thou Me Good ?
One only is Good, My Father in the heavens."
Among the Greeks, Hermes is the Logos. He is
the conductor and reconductor (the psychagogue and The Greek,
psychopomp), and originator of souls. They are
brought down from the Heavenly Man above into the
plasm of clay, the body, and thus made slaves to the
demiurge of the world, the fiery or passionate god of
creation. Therefore Hermes "holds a rod in his
hands, beautiful, golden, wherewith he spell-binds
the eyes of men whomsoever he would, and wakes
them again from sleep." Therefore the saying:
" Wake thou that sleepest, and rise, and Christ shall
202
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The Samo-
thracian.
The
Phrygian.
give thee light." This is the Christ, the Son of the
Man, in all who are born ; and this was set forth in
the Eleusinian rites. This is also Ocean, "the genera
tion of gods and the generation of men," the Great
Jordan, as explained in the Myth of the Going-forth,
given above.
The Samothracians also taught the same truth ;
and in the temple of their Mysteries were two statues,
representing the Heavenly Man, and the regenerate or
spiritual man, in all things co-essential with that Man.
Such a one was the Christ, but His disciples had
not yet reached to perfection. Hence the saying:
"If ye drink not My blood and eat not My flesh,
ye shall by no means enter into the Kingdom of
the Heavens ; but even if ye drink of the cup which
I drink of, whither I go ye cannot come." And the
Gnostic writer adds : " For He knew of what nature
each of His disciples was, and that it needs must be
that each of them should go to his own nature. For
from the twelve ' tribes ' He chose twelve disciples,
and through them He spake to every ' tribe.' Where
fore (also) neither have all men hearkened to the
preaching of the twelve disciples, nor if they hearken
can they receive it."
The mysteries of the Thracians and Phrygians are
then referred to, and the same ideas further explained
from the Old Testament documents. The vision of
Jacob is explained as referring to the descent of spirit
into matter, down the ladder of evolution, the Stream
of the Logos flowing downward, and then again
upward, through the Gate of the Lord. Wherefore
the saying: "I am the true gate." The Phrygians
THE NAASSENI. 20*3
also called the spirit in man the "dead," because it
was buried in the tomb and sepulchre of the body.
Wherefore the saying ; " Ye are whitened sepulchres,
filled within with the bones of the dead," — "for the
living man is not in you." And again: "The dead
shall leap forth from the tombs " ; that is to say,
"from their material bodies, regenerated spiritual
men, not carnal." For "this is the resurrection
which takes place through the gate of the heavens,
and they who pass not through it, all remain dead."
Many other interpretations of a similar nature
are given, and it is shown that the Lesser Mysteries
pertained to " fleshly generation," whereas the Greater
dealt with the new birth. " For this is the Gate of
Heaven, and this is the House of God, where the
Good God dwells alone, into which no impure man
shall come, no psychic, no fleshly man ; but it is
kept under watch for the spiritual alone, where
they must come, and, casting away their garments,
all become bridegrooms made virgin by the Virginal
Spirit. For such a man is the virgin with child,
who conceives and brings forth a son, which is
neither psychic, animal, nor fleshly, but a blessed
aeon of aeons."
This is the Kingdom of the Heavens, the " grain
of mustard seed, the indivisible point, which is the
primeval spark in the body, and which no man
knoweth save only the spiritual."
The school of the Naasseni, it is said, were all
initiated into the Mysteries of the Great Mother, The
because they found that the whole mystery of the Great
of rebirth was taught in these rites; they
204 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
were also rigid ascetics. The name Naasseni
was given them because they represented
the " Moist Essence " of the universe — without
which nothing that exists, " whether immortal
or mortal, whether animate or inanimate, could
hold together" — by the symbol of a serpent. This
is the cosmic Akasha of the Upanishads, and the
Kundalini, or serpentine force in man, which when
following animal impulse is the force of generation,
but when applied to spiritual things makes of a man
a god. It is the Waters of Great Jordan flowing
downwards (the generation of men) and upwards (the
generation of gods); the Akasha-ganga or Heavenly
Ganges of the Puranas, the Heavenly Nile of mystic
Egypt.
" He distributes beauty and bloom to all who are,
just as the [river] ' proceeding forth out of Eden and
dividing itself into four streams.' " In man, they
said, Eden is the brain " compressed in surrounding
vestures like heavens," and Paradise the man as far
as the head only. These four streams are sight,
hearing, smell, and taste. The river is the " water
above the firmament [of the body]."
Thus, to use another set of symbolic terms, "the
spiritual choose for themselves from the living waters
of the Euphrates [the subtle world], which flows
through the midst of Babylon [the gross world or
body], what is fit, passing through the gate of truth,
which is Jesus, the blessed," i.e., the "gate of the
heavens," or the sun, cosmically ; and microcosmically
the passing out of the body consciously through the
highest centre in the head, which Hindu mystics cal
THE NAASSENI. 205
the Brahmarandhra. Thus these Gnostics claimed to
be the true Christians because they were anointed
with the " ineffable chrism," poured out by the
serpentine " horn of plenty," another symbol for the
spiritual power of enlightenment.
We will conclude this brief sketch of these most
interesting mystics by quoting one of their hymns. The
F riitr in 6ii t
The text is unfortunately so corrupt that parts of of a Hymn.
it are hopeless, nevertheless sufficient remains to
" sense " the thought. .It tells of the World-Mind, the
Father, of Chaos, the Cosmic Mother, and of the
third member of the primordial trinity, the World-
Soul. Thence the individual soul, the pilgrim, and
its sorrows and rebirth. Finally the descent of the
Saviour, the firstborn of the Great Mind, and the
regeneration of all. Behind all is the Ineffable, then
comes first the First-born, the Logos :
" Mind was the first, the generative law of all ;
Second was Chaos diffused, [spouse] of the first-born ;
Thirdly, the toiling Soul received the law;
Wherefore surrounded with a watery form
It weary grows, subdued by death. . . .
Now holding sway, it sees the light ;
Anon, cast into piteous plight, it weeps.
Whiles it weeps, it rejoices ;
Now wails and is judged ;
And now is judged and dies.
And now it cannot pass ....
Into the labyrinth [of rebirth] it has wandered.
[Jesus] said : Father !
A searching after evil on the earth
206 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Makes [man] to wander from thy Spirit,
He seeks to shun the bitter Chaos,
But knows not how to flee.
Wherefore, send me, O Father !
Seals in my hands, I will descend ;
Through every aeon I will tread my way ;
All mysteries will I reveal,
And show the shapes of gods ;
The hidden secrets of the Holy Path
Shall take the name of Gnosis,
And I will hand them on."
THE PERAT^E.
HIPPOLYTUS says that the mysteries symbolized by
the serPent are at the root of all Gnosticism; and
Tradition though the Church Father himself has not any idea
what these mysteries really are, as is amply proved
by all his remarks, we agree with him, as we have
endeavoured to show above. He then proceeds to
treat of the system of the Peratee, to whom we have
already referred, and whose Mysteries (Hippolytus
calls them their " blasphemy against Christ ") had
been kept secret " for many years." We know from other
sources that the school was prior to Clement of Alex
andria. The system of the Peratse was based on an
analogy with sidereal considerations, and depended on
the tradition of the ancient Chaldsean star-cult. In
Book iv., Hippolytus has already endeavoured to
refute the Chaldaean system of the star-spheres; but
though he makes some good points against the vulgar
THE PERAT.E. 207
astrology of the time, he does not affect the mysterious
doctrine of the septenary spheres, of which the
empirical horoscopists had long lost the secret, and
for which they had substituted the physical planets.
Hippolytus had the Peratic school especially in mind
in his attempted refutation of the art of the astrologers
and mathematicians, of which, however, he admits he
had no practical knowledge, but space compels us
simply to refer the student to the fourth book of his
Philosophumena for the outline of astrology which
the Church Father presents.
According to the Peratic school, the universe was
symbolized by a circle enclosing a triangle. The
triangle denoted the primal trichotomy into the three
worlds, ingenerable, self-generable, and generable.
Thus there were for them three aspects of the Logos,
or, from another point of view, three Gods, or three
Logoi, or three Minds, or three Men. When the
world-process had reached the completion of its
devolution, the Saviour descended from the
ingenerable world or 0eon; the type of the Saviour
is that of a man perfected, " with a threefold nature,
and threefold body, and threefold power, having in
himself all [species of] concretions and potentialities
from the three divisions of the universe." According
to the Pauline phrase : " It pleased Him that in him
should dwell all fulness (pleroma) bodily."
It is from the two higher worlds, the ingenerable
and self-generable, that the seeds of all kinds of
potentialities are sent down into this generable or
formal world.
Hippolytus here breaks off, and, after informing
208 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
us that the founders of the school were a certain
Euphrates (whom Origen calls the founder of those
Ophites to whom Celsus referred about 175 A.D.) and
Celbes, whom he elsewhere calls Acembes and Ademes,
proceeds to tell us something more of the Chaldsean
art. He then says that he will quote from a number
of Peratic treatises to show that their ideas were
similar to those of the Chaldseans.
The Saviour has not only a human but a cosmic
task to perform; the cosmic task is to separate the
good from the bad among the sidereal powers and
influences ; the same peculiarity of soteriology is
brought into prominence in the Pistis Sophia treatise,
to which we shall refer later on. The " wars in
heaven " precede the conflict of good and evil on
earth.
The treatise from which Hippolytus proceeds to
A Direct quote is evidently a Gnostic commentary on an old
Babylonian or Syrian cosmogonic scripture, which
the commentator endeavours to explain in Greek
mythological terms. The beginning of this mysterious
treatise runs as follows :
"I am the voice of awakening from slumber in the
seon (world) of night. Henceforth I begin to strip
naked the power that proceed eth from Chaos. It is
the power of the abysmal slime, which raiseth up
the clay of the imperishable vast moist [principle],
the whole might of convulsion of the colour of water,
ever moving, supporting the steady, checking the
tottering, . . . the faithful steward of the track
of the aethers, rejoicing in that which streameth forth
from the twelve founts of the Law, the power which
THE PERAT.E. 209
taketh its type from the impress of the power of the
invisible waters above."
This power is called Thalassa, evidently the
Thalatth (Tiamat), or World-Mother, of the Baby
lonians. The twelve sources are also called twelve
mouths, or pipes, through which the world-powers
pour hissing. It is the power which is surrounded
by a dodecagonal pyramid or dodecahedron — a hint
which should persuade astrologers to reconsider their
" signs of the zodiac."
Hippolytus' quotations and summary here become
very obscure and require a critical treatment which
has not yet been accorded them ; we are finally told
that the matter is taken from a treatise dealing with
the formal or generable world, for it is denominated
The Proasteioi up to the ^Ether ; that is to say, the
hierarchies of powers as far as the aether, which were
probably represented diagramatically by a series of
concentric circles, a " proasteion " being the space
round a city's walls.
Hippolytus here again points out the correspon
dence between astrological symbolism and the
teaching of this school of Gnosticism ; it is, he says,
simply astrology allegorized, or rather we should say
cosmogony theologized. These Peratics, or Transcen-
dentalists, derive their name from the following
considerations.
They believed that nothing which exists by
generation can survive destruction, and thus the The
sphere of generation is also the fate-sphere. He then of the Name.
who knows nothing beyond this, is bound to the
wheel of fate ; but " he who is conversant with the
210 FEAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
compulsion of generation [samsdra], and the paths
through which man has entered into the [generable]
world," can proceed through and pass beyond
(transcend) destruction. This destruction is the
" Water " which is the " generation of men," and
which is the element in which the hierarchies of
generation hold their sway, and have their being. It
is called water because it is of that colour, namely,
the lower ether.
The treatise from which Hippolytus quotes, again
dives into the depths of mythology, and among other
things adduces the Myth of the Going-forth, and its
mystical interpretation ; finally, the Gnostic com
mentator explains the opening verses of the proem
to the fourth canonical Gospel. Hippolytus, however,
is beginning to be baffled by the amazing intricacy
of the system, as he tells us, and thus breaks off, and
apparently takes up another treatise from which to
quote. The new treatise is of an exceedingly
mystical character, and seemingly deals with the
psychological physiology of the school.
The universe is figured forth as triple : Father,
logical0" ^on' anc^ Matter (Hyle), each of endless potentialities.
Physiology. ^^Q gonj ^ fashioning Logos, stands midway
between the immovable Father and moving Matter.
At one time He is turned to the Father and receives
the powers in His disk (face, or " person "), and then
turning casts them into Matter, which is devoid of
form; and thus the Matter is moulded and the
formal world is produced.
We here see an attempt to graft a higher teaching,
of the same nature as the Platonic doctrine of types
THE PER AT.E. 211
and ideas, on to the primitive symbolism of imper
fectly observed natural phenomena. The sun is the
Father, the moon is the Son, and the earth is Matter.
The moon is figured as a serpent, owing to its serpen
tine path, and its phases are imagined as the turning
of its face towards the sun, and again towards the
earth. If this is correct, however, the immobility of
the sun and the motion of the earth give us reason
to believe that the Chaldaeans were better acquainted
with astronomy than the followers of the far later
Hipparcho-Ptolemaeic geocentricism. The Gnostic
writer has also a correct theory of magnetic and
other influences, which he quaintly sets forth. We
can, moreover, distinguish three strata of inter
pretation : (i.) metaphysical and spiritual — the ideal
world, the intermediate, and the visible universe;
(ii.) the world of generation — with its sun, moon
and earth-forces; and (iii.) the analogical psycho-
physiological process in man.
The last is thus explained. The brain is the
Father, the cerebellum the Son, and the medulla
Matter or Hyle. " The cerebellum, by an ineffable
and inscrutable process, attracts through the pineal
gland the spiritual and life-giving essence from the
vaulted chamber [? third ventricle]. And on receiving
this, the cerebellum [also] in an ineffable manner
imparts the ' ideas,' just as the Son does, to Matter;
or, in other words, the seeds and the genera of things
produced according to the flesh flow along into the
spinal marrow." And, adds Hippolytus, the main
secrets of the school depend on a knowledge of these
correspondences, but it would be impious for him
212 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
to say anything more on the matter — a scruple which
is surprising to find in a Church Father, and especially
in Hippolytus, who devoted the second and third
books of his Refutation to an exposition of the
Mysteries.
Now it is a curious fact that these two books
have been bodily removed from the MS. Did
Hippolytus. Hippolytus, then, reveal too much of the "plagiarism
by anticipation" of the rites and doctrines of the
Church, and did those who came after him consider it
unwise to keep such evidence on record ? For one
would have thought that above all things the
orthodox Fathers would have delighted in parading
the possession of such information before the heathen
and heretics, and would have specially preserved these
two books from destruction. But indeed it is
altogether strange that this, the most important
Refutation of all the hseresiological documents which
we possess, was made no use of by the successors of
Hippolytus. The only MS. known to the western
world was brought from Mount Athos in 1842, and
its contents (because of the number of direct
quotations) have revolutionized our ideas on
Gnosticism on many points. Had the two books
on the Mysteries been preserved, we might perchance
have had our ideas even further revolutionized.
THE SETHI ANS. 213
THE SETHIANS.
CLOSELY connected with the Gnostics above described
are the Sethians, to whom Hippolytus next devotes Seth.
his attention. He speaks of their "innumerable
commentaries," and refers his readers especially to
a certain treatise, called The Paraphrase of Seth,
for a digest of their doctrines. But whether or not
Hippolytus quotes from this document himself, or
from some other treatise or treatises, is not apparent.
The title, Paraphrase of Seth, is exceedingly puzzling ;
it is difficult to say what is the exact meaning of
the term " paraphrasis" and the doctrines set forth
by Hippolytus have no connection with the Seth-
legend.
The term Sethians, as used by Hippolytus, is not
only puzzling on this account, but also because his
summary differs entirely from the scraps of inform
ation on the system of the Sethites supposed to
have been mentioned in his lost Syntagma, and allied
to the doctrine of the Nicolaitans by the epitomizers.
In the latter fragments the hero Seth was chosen
as the type of the good man, the perfect, the pro
totype of Christ.
Can it possibly be that there is a connection
between the name " Seth " and the mysterious
" Setheus " of the Codex Brucianus ? And further,
are we to look for the origin of the Sethians along
the Egyptian line of tradition of the Hyksos-cult,
the Semitic background of which made Seth the
Mystery-God ?
214 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The Sethians of whom we are treating begin
An Outline with a trinity ; Light, Spirit and Darkness. The
System. Spirit is not, however, to be thought of as a breath
or wind, but as it were a subtle odour spreading
everywhere. All three principles then are inter
mingled one with another. And the Darkness
strives to retain the Light and the Spirit, and imprison
the light-sparks in matter ; while the Light and the
Spirit, on their side, strive to raise their powers aloft
and rescue them from the Darkness.
All genera and species and individuals, nay the
heaven and earth itself, are images of " seals " ; they
are produced according to certain pre-existent types.
It was from the first concourse of the three original
principles or powers that the first great form was
produced, the impression of the great seal, namely,
heaven and earth. This is symbolized by the world-
egg in the womb of the universe, and the rest of
creation is worked out on the same analogy. The
egg is in the waters, which are thrown into waves
by the creative power, and it depends on the nature
of the waves as to what the various creatures will
be. Here we have the whole theory of vibrations
and the germ-cell idea in full activity.
Into the bodies thus brought into existence by the
waves of the waters (the vehicles of subtle matter)
the light-spark and the fragrance of the Spirit
descend, and thus " mind or man " is " moulded into
various species."
" And this [light-spark] is a perfect god, who
from the ingenerable Light from above, and from the
Spirit, is borne down into the natural man, as into a
THE SETHIANS. 215
shrine, by the tide of nature and the motion of the
wind [the creative power which causes the waves],
'i . . Thus a minute spark, a divided splinter
from above, like the ray of a star, has been mingled
in the much compounded waters [bodies of various
kinds of subtle matter] of many (existences).
. . . Every thought, then, and solicitude actuating
the Light from above is as to how and in what
manner mind may be set free from death — the evil
and dark body — from the ' father ' below, the [genera
tive impulse] wind, which with agitation and tumult
raised up the waves, and [finally] produced a perfect
mind, his own son, and yet not his own in essence.
For he [the rnind] was a ray from above, from that
perfect Light, overpowered in the dark and fearsome,
and bitter, and blood-stained water; he also is a
light-spirit floating on the water."
The generative power is called not only " wind,"
but also " beast," and " serpent," the latter because of
the hissing sound it produces, just like the whirling
wind. Now the impure womb, or sphere of genera
tion, can only produce mortal men, but the virgin or
pure womb, the Sphere of Light, can produce men
immortal or gods. It is the descent of the Perfect
Man or Logos into the pure man that alone can still
the birth-pangs of the carnal man.
This natural and spiritual process is shown forth
in the Mysteries; after passing through the Lesser The .
Mysteries, which pertain to the cycle of
generation, the candidate is washed or baptised,
and stripping off the dress of a servant,
puts on a heavenly garment, and drinks of the cup
216 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of life-giving water. That is to say, he leaves his
servile form, the body which is subjected to the
necessity of generation and is thus a slave, and
ascends in his spiritual body to the state where is
the ocean of immortality.
The Sethian school supported their theosophic
tenets by analogies drawn from natural philosophy,
and by the allegorical interpretation of the Old
Testament; but, says Hippolytus, their system is
nothing else than the tenets of the Orphic Mysteries,
which were celebrated in Achaea at Phlium, long
before the Eleusinian. No doubt the Sethians based
their theories on one or more of the traditions of the
Mystery-cult, but we need not follow Hippolytus in
his selection of only one tradition, and that too in its
grossest and most ignorant phase of vulgar phallicism.
The school seems also to have had affinities with
the Hermetic tradition, and used the analogy of
natural and " alchemical " processes for the explana
tion of spiritual matters. For instance, after citing
the example of the magnet, one of their books
continues : " Thus the light-ray [human soul], mingled
with the water [animal soul], having obtained through
discipline and instruction its own proper region,
hastens towards the Logos [divine soul] that comes
down from above in servile form [body]; and along
with the Logos becomes Logos there where the
Logos has His being, more speedily than iron
[hastens] to the magnet."
THE DOCET.E. 217
THE DOCET.E.
As previously remarked, the remains of the ancient
bed of the stream of the Gnosis which we are
endeavouring to survey, are so fragmentary, that
nothing can be attempted, but a most imperfect outline,
or rather a series of rough sketches of certain sec
tions that some day further discovery may enable us
to throw into the form of a map. Chronological
indications are almost entirely wanting, and we can
as yet form no idea of the correct sequence of these
general Gnostic schools. We must therefore proceed
at haphazard somewhat, and will next turn our
attention to a school which Hippolytus (Bk. viii.)
calls the Docetae, seeing that their tenets are very
similar to those of the three schools of which we have
just treated. There is nothing, however, to show why
this name is especially selected, except the obscure
reason that it is derived from the attempt of these
Gnostics to theorise on " inaccessible and incom
prehensible matter." It may, therefore, be possible
that they believed in the doctrine of the non-
reality of matter ; and that the name Docetae
(" Illusionists ") is of similar derivation to the
Maya-vadins of the Hindus. The system of this
Gnostic circle bears a strong family likeness to
the doctrines of the Basilidian and Valentinian
schools ; but the doctrine of the non-physical nature
of the body of the Christ, which is the general
characteristic of ordinary Docetism, is not more
prominent with them than with many other
218 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
schools. The outline of their tenets given by
Hippolytus is as follows.
The Primal Being is symbolized as the seed of a
fig-tree, the mathematical point, which is every
where, smaller than small, yet greater than great,
containing in itself infinite potentialities. He is the
" refuge of the terror-striken, the covering of the
naked," and much else as allegorically set forth
in the Scriptures. The manner of the infinite
generation of things is also figured by the fig-tree, for
from the seed comes the stem, then branches, and
then leaves, and then fruit, the fruit in its turn
containing seeds, and thence other stems, and so on in
infinite manner ; so all things come forth.
In this way, even before the sensible world was
formed, there was an emanation of a divine or ideal
world of three root-aeons, each consisting of so
many sub-aeons, male-female; that is to say, worlds,
or beings, or planes, of self-generating powers.
And this aeon-world of Light came forth from the
one ideal seed or root of the universe, the
ingenerable. Then the host of self-generable aeons
uniting together produce from the One Virgin (ideal
cosmic substance), the Alone-begotten (-generated)
one, the Saviour of the universe, the perfect aeon;
containing in Himself all the powers of the ideal
world of the aeons, equal in power in all things to
the orignal seed of the universe, the ingenerable.
Thus was the Saviour of the ideal universe produced,
the perfect aeon. And thus all in that spiritual world
was perfected, all being of the nature of That which
transcends intellect, free from all deficiency. Thus
THE DOCET.E. 219
was accomplished the eternal and ideal world-process
in the spaces of the aeons.
Next with regard to the emanation of the ideal
world into the sensible universe. The third root-aeon,
in its turn, made itself threefold, containing in itself
all the supernal potentialities. Thus, then, its Light
shone down upon the primordial chaotic substance,
and the souls of all genera and species of living beings
were infused into it. And when the third aeon, or
Logos, perceived that His ideas and impressions and
types or seals (xapar^/oe?) — the souls — were seized
upon by the darkness, He separated the light from
the darkness, and placed a firmament between; but
this was only done after all the infinite species of
the third aeon had been intercepted in the darkness.
And last of all the resemblance of the third aeon
himself was impressed upon the lower universe, and
this resemblance is a "life-giving fire, generated
from the light." Now this fire is the creative god
which fashions the world, as in the Mosaic account.
This fabricating deity, having no substance of his
own, uses the darkness (gross matter) as his substance,
out of which he makes bodies, and thus perpetually
treats despitefully the eternal attributes of light
which are imprisoned in the darkness. Thus until
the coming of the Saviour, there was a vast delusion
of souls, for these "ideas" are called souls (\fsvxai)
because they have been breathed out (aTro^vyelarai)
from the (aeons) above. These souls spend their lives
in darkness, passing from one to another of the bodies
which are under the ward of the creative power
or world-fabricator.
220 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
In support of this the Gnostic author refers to
the saying : " And if ye will receive it, this is Elias
that was for to come ; he that hath ears to hear,
let him hear"; and also to Job ii. 9: "And I am
a wanderer, changing place after place and house
after house." The latter passage is found in the
version of the Seventy, but is omitted in the English
translation.
It is by means of the Saviour that souls are set
The Saviour. free from the c[rG[e of rebirth (metensomatosis), and
faith is aroused in men that their sins should be
remitted. Thus, then, the Alone-begotten Son gazing
upon the soul-tragedy — the " images " of the supernal
aeons changing perpetually from one body to another of
the darkness — willed to descend for their deliverance.
Now the individual aeons above were not able
to endure the whole fullness of the divine world,
i.e., the Son; and had they beheld it they would
have been thrown into confusion at its greatness
and the glory of its power, and would have feared
for their existence. So the Saviour indrew His glory
into Himself, as it were the vastest of lightning-
flashes into the minutest of bodies, or as the sudden
cessation of light when the eyelids close, and so
descended to the heavenly dome; and reaching the
star-belt there, again indrew His glory, for even
the apparently most minute light-giver of the star-
sphere is a sun illuminating all space; and so the
Saviour withdrew His glory again and entered into
the domain of the third sphere of the third aeon.
And so He entered even into the darkness; that is
to say, was incarnated in a body.
THE DOCET^E. 221
And His baptism was in this wise : He washed
himself in the Jordan (the stream of the Logos),
and after this purification in the water He became
possessed of a spiritual body, a copy or impression
of his virgin-made physical body ; so that when
the world-ruler (the god of generation) condemned
his own plasm (the physical body) to death, i.e.,
the cross, the spiritual body, nourished in the virgin
physical body, might strip off the physical body, and
nail it to the "tree," and thus the Christ would
triumph over the powers and authorities of the
world-ruler, and not be found naked ; for He would
put on His new spiritual body of perfection instead
of another body of flesh. Thus the saying : " Except
a man be born of water and of the spirit he cannot
enter into the kingdom of the heavens ; that which
is born of the flesh is flesh."
As to Jesus Christ, the Gnostic writer wisely
remarks that this ideal can be seen from many
sides ; that each school has its own view, some a
low, some a high view ; and that this is in the
nature of things. Finally none but the real Gnostics,
that is those who have passed through initiations
similar to those of Jesus, can understand the mystery
face to face.
It would seem hardly necessary to point out to
the student of Gnosticism the striking similarity
between the general outlines of this system and the
leading ideas of the contents of the Bruce and Askew
Codices ; and yet no one has previously remarked
them.
222 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
MONOIMUS.
HIPPOLYTUS devotes his next section to a certain
Monoi'mus, who is only mentioned by one other
hseresiologist, namely Theodoret, in a brief para
graph. Monoi'mus was an Arabian and lived some
where in the latter half of the second century.
His system is based on the idea of the Heavenly
Man, the universe, and the Son of this Man, the
perfect man, all other men being but imperfect
reflections of the one ideal type.
His general ideas attach themselves to the cycle of
Number- Gnostic literature of which we are treating, and are
theories.
elaborated by many mathematical and geometrical
considerations from the Pythagorean and Platonic
traditions. The theory of numbers and the geometrical
composition of the universe from elements which are
symbolized by the five Platonic solids — namely, the
tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, dodecahedron and
icosahedron — are developed. All these geometrical
symbols are produced by the monad, which he calls
the iota, the yod, and the " one horn." It is our old
friend the serpentine force, the horn of plenty, the
rod of Moses and of Hermes ; in other words, it is
the atom which is said by seers to be a " conical "
swirl of forces. This monad is in numbers the decad,
the perfect number and completion of the first series
of numbers, after which the whole process begins
again.
Now it was Moses' rod which brought to pass the
plagues of Egypt according to the myth. These
MONOIMUS. 223
" plagues " are nothing else but transmutations of the
matter of the physical body, e.g., water into blood, etc.,
all of which is quaintly worked out by the writer.
The whole of this system, indeed, opens up a
number of important considerations which would lead
us far beyond the scope of the present essay.
Monoimus was undoubtedly a contemporary of the
Valentinian school, if not a pupil of Valentinus, and
the garbled version of his system as preserved by
Hippolytus can be made to yield many important
points which will throw light on the " theological
arithmetic " of the Gnostic doctors. This^ mayg be
proved some day still to preserve a seed which may
grow into a tree of real mathematical knowledge.
We will conclude our sketch of the tenets of
Monoimus by quoting his opinion on the way to seek ^°w to Seek
for God. In a letter to a certain Theophrastus, he
writes : " Cease to seek after God (as without thee),
and the universe, and things similar to these ; seek
Him from out of thyself, and learn who it is, who
once and for all appropriateth all in thee unto Him
self, and sayeth : * My god, my mind, my reason, my
soul, my body.' And learn whence is sorrow and
joy, and love and hate, and waking though one would
not, and sleeping though one would not, and getting
angry though one would not, and falling in love
though one would not. And if thou shouldst closely
investigate these things, thou wilt find Him in
thyself, one and many, just as the atom ; thus finding
from thyself a way out of thyself."
All of this re-echoes very distinctly the teaching
of the earlier Trismegistic literature.
224 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
THE SO-CALLED CAINITES.
BEFORE returning again towards the time of the
Obscurity of origins along another line of tradition, of which one
the Subject. or £wo obscure indications still remain — the
Carpocrates-Cerinthus trace — we will briefly refer to
the obscure chaos of tendencies classed together under
the term " Cainite " and its variants. Our sources of
information are scanty, and (if we exclude the mere
mention of the name) are confined to Irenseus and
Epiphanius ; the latter, moreover, copies from Irenseus,
and with the exception of his own reflections and
lucubrations, has only a scrap or two of fresh infor
mation to add.
This line of tradition is again generally classed as
" Ophite," and as usual we find that its adherents
called themselves simply Gnostics. They were
distinguished by the honour they paid to Cain and
Judas ; which fact, taken by itself, was sufficient to
overwhelm them with the execrations of the orthodox,
who ascribed the perpetration of every iniquity to
them. Thus we find that Epiphanius, who wrote two
hundred years after Irenaeus, embroiders considerably
on the account of the Bishop of Lyons, even where
he is in other respects simply copying from his
predecessor. We will now proceed to see the reason
why these Gnostics entertained an apparently so
strange belief.
If the reader will bear in mind the systems of
Justinus and of the Sethians, he will be in a better
position to comprehend what follows. The main
THE SO-CALLED CAINITES. ' 225
features of the system of these Gnostics, then, is as
follows.
The creator of the world was not the God over
all ; the absolute power from above was stronger than
the weaker (va-repa — hystera) power of generation,
which was symbolized as the power of the impure
world-womb, containing heaven and earth within it
— the sensible world. But this sensible world was,
as it were, an after-birth (iWe/oa — hystera), compared
with the true birth from the virgin spiritual womb,
the ideal world of the aeons above. Epiphanius has
made a great muddle of this part of the system; it
is evidently consanguineous with the Valentinian
" deficiency " (va-reprj/ma — hysterema), or " abortion,"
the sensible world, without or external to the ideal
fullness or perfection (TrX^/aco^ta — pleroma), or world
of the aeons.
The inferior power, therefore, was the God of
generation, the superior the God of enlightenment TheEnemies
and wisdom. The Old Testament idea of God went the Friends
no further than obedience to the commands of the
inferior power. Those who had obeyed its behests
were regarded as the worthies of old by the
followers of the External Law, who, seeing no
further, had in their traditions vilified all who
refused to follow this law, the commands of the
inferior power of generation. Thus Abel and Jacob
and Lot and Moses were praised by the followers
of the law of generation; whereas in reality it was
the opponents of these who ought to be praised, as
followers of the Higher Law who despised the
laws of the powers of generation, and were thus
Q
226 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
protected by Wisdom and taken to herself, to the
aeon above. They therefore claimed that Cain and
Esau, and the inhabitants of the Cities of the
Plain, and Coran, Dathan and Abiram, were types
of those individuals or nations who had followed a
higher law, and who, apparently, were calumniated
by the followers of Yahweh.
We can here see very plainly the traces of the
same antitheses as those worked out by Justinus ;
the influence of the psychic powers or angels being
traceable along the Abel line of descent, and that
of the spiritual powers along the Cain line. Abel
was the offerer of blood-sacrifices, while Cain offered
the fruits of the field. This antithetical device, in
one form or other, was common enough — as for
instance, the later Ebionite antitheses of superior
and inferior men (Isaac-Ishmael, Jacob-Esau, Moses-
Aaron), or the Marcionite antitheses of the God of
freedom and the God of the law, the God of the
Christ and the Yahweh of the Old Testament — but
the school whose tenets we are describing, seem, in
their contempt for Yahweh, to have pushed their
theories to the most extravagant conclusion of any.
This is especially brought out in their ideas of
New Testament history, which, in spite of their
strangeness, may nevertheless contain a small trace
of the true tradition of the cause of Jesus' death.
This Gnostic circle had a number of writings,
Judas. chief amongst which were two small summaries
of instruction, one called The Gospel of Judas,
and the other The Ascent of Paul. To take
the latter first; The Ascent of Paul purported to
THE SO-CALLED CAINITES. 227
contain the record of the ineffable things which Paul
is reported to have seen when he ascended into the
third heaven. Whether this was the same as The
Apocalypse of Paul referred to by Augustine is
uncertain; in any case it is lost. A more orthodox
version of one of the documents of the same cycle has
come down to us in The Vision of Paul, a translation
of which may be read in the last volume of the Ante-
Nicene Christian Library (1897). If we can rely on
this title, for which Epiphanius alone is responsible,
the school of the Cainites is consequently post-
Pauline.
But the strangest and, from one point of view, the
most interesting development of their theory, was the
view they took of Judas. The " Poor Men's "
(Ebionite) tradition had consistently handed over
Judas to universal execration; there was, however,
apparently another tradition, presumably Essene in
the first place, which took a different view of the
matter. Obscure traces of this seem to be preserved
in the unintelligent Irenaeus- Epiphanius account of
the Cainite doctrines.
This circle of students looked upon Judas as a
man far advanced in the discipline of the Gnosis, and
one who had a very clear idea of the true God as
distinguished from the God of generation; he conse
quently taught a complete divorcement from the
things of the world and thus from the inferior power,
which had made the heaven, the world and the flesh.
Man was to ascend to the highest region through the
crucifixion of the Christ. The Christ was the spirit
which came down from above, in order that the
228 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
stronger power of the spiritual world might be
perfected in man ; and so Jesus triumphed over the
weaker power of generation at the expense of his
body, which he handed over to death, one of the
manifestations of the God of generation. This was
the christological doctrine of the school, and it
was apparently, judging from the " he says " of
Epiphanius, taken from The Gospel of Judas.
But besides this general mystical teaching, there
A Scrap of was a}so a historical tradition: that Jesus, after
History.
becoming the Christ and teaching the higher
doctrine, fell away, in their opinion, and
endeavoured to overset the law and corrupt
the holy doctrine, and therefore Judas had him
handed over to the authorities. That is to say,
those to whom Jesus originally taught the higher
doctrine considered that his too open preaching
to the people was a divulging of the Mysteries,
and so finally brought about his condemnation for
blasphemy by the orthodox Jewish authorities.
Yet another more mystical tradition, preserved
in one of their books, declared that, on the contrary,
the Christ had not made a mistake, but that all
had been done according to the heavenly wisdom.
For the world-rulers knew that if the Christ were
betrayed to the cross, that is to say, were incarnated,
the inferior power would be drained out of them
and they would ascend to the spiritual aeon. Now
Judas knew this, and, in his great faith, used every
means to bring about His betrayal, and in this way
the salvation of the world. These Gnostics conse
quently praised Judas as being one of the main
THE CARPOCRATIANS. 229
factors in the scheme of salvation; without him the
mystic " salvation of the cross " would not have been
consummated, nor the consequent revelation of the
realms above.
The Cainite circle, therefore, from their doctrines
appear to have been rigid ascetics. But, says
Epiphanius, embroidering on Irenseus, they were
very dreadful people, and, like Carpocrates, taught
that a man could not be saved without going through
every kind of experience. We will therefore now
take a brief glance at the views of the Carpocratians.
THE CARPOCRATIANS.
OUR main source of information is Irenseus ;
Tertullian, Hippolytus and Epiphanius simply copy
their predecessor. Carpocrates, or Carpocras, was
(according to Eusebius) a Platonic philosopher who
taught at Alexandria in the reign of Hadrian (A.D.
117-138); he was also the head of a Gnostic circle,
whom the Church fathers call Carpocratians, but
who called themselves simply Gnostics. With regard
to the charge which Epiphanius brings against them
two hundred and fifty years afterwards, it is evidently
founded on a complete misunderstanding of the
jumbled account of Irenseus, if not of malice pre
pense; for the Bishop of Lyons distinctly says, that
he by no means believes that they did the things
which he thinks they ought to have done, if they
had consistently carried out their teachings ! As a
matter of fact, the whole confusion arises through
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the incapacity of the latter Church Father to under-
ud the elements of the doctrine of rebirth. The
main tenets of the school were as follow
The sensible world was made by the fabricating
Their Uoa powers, or builders, far inferior to the ineffable power
of the unknown ingenerable Father. JCMIS was the
son of Joseph and Mary, and was born like all other
men; he differed from the rest in that his soul, being
strong and pure, remembend what it saw in its orbit
round ;or conversation with" the ineffable Father.
This is also the idea Jying behind the Pythagorean,
Platonic and Hermetic traditions'! of the orderly
course of the soul in harmonious circuit round the
Spiritual Sun. in the Plain of Truth, when it is in
it$ own nature. In consequence of this reminiscence
^which is the source of all wisdom and virtue") the
Father clothed him with powers, whereby he might
escape from the dominion of the rulers of the world.
and passing through all their spheres, and being
freed from each, finally ascend to the Father. In
like manner all souls of a like nature who put forth
similar efforts, shall ascend to the Father. Though
the soul of Jesus was brought up in the ordinary
Jewish views, he soared above them, and thus by the
powers he received from above, he triumphed over
human passions.
Relieving, then, that all souls which rise above
the constraints of the world-building rulers, will
receive similar powers and perform like wonders,
these Gnostics still further claimed that some of
their number had actually attained to the same
degree of perfection as Jesus, if not to a higher
THE CARPOCRATIANS. 231
degree, and were stronger than Peter and Paul, and
the other Apostles who had attained similar powers.
In fact they boldly taught that men could reach
higher degrees of illumination than Jesus; it is not,
however, clear whether they made the usual dis
tinction between Jesus and the Christ. These
powers were of a " magical " nature, and the next
paragraph of Irenseus puts us strongly in mind of
the tenets of the " Simonian " school. Such ideas
seem to have been very prevalent, so much so that
Irenseus complains that outsiders were induced to
think that such views were the common belief of
Christianity.
The next paragraph deals with the doctrine
that there is no essential evil in the universe, Re
incarnation,
but that things are bad and good in man's opinion
only. Let us, therefore, see how Irenseus, from his
summary of their doctrine of rebirth, arrives at
this generalisation.
The soul has to pass through every kind of
existence and activity in its cycle of rebirth.
Irenseus is apparently drawing his information from
a MS. which asserted that this could be done in
one life; that is to say, apparently, that some souls
then existing in the world could pay their karmic
debt in one life. For the MS. quotes the saying,
" Agree with thine adversary quickly whiles thou
art in the way with him, lest at any time thine
adversary deliver thee to the judge, and the judge
deliver thee to his officer, and thou be cast into
prison. Amen, I say unto thee, thou shalt not
come forth thence till thou has paid the utter-
232 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
most farthing." Now, the adversary is the accuser
(diabolus), that is to say the karmie record in the
man's own nature; the judge is the chief of the
world-building powers; the officer is the builder of
the new body; the prison is the body. Thus the
MS. explains the text — precisely the same exegesis
as is given to it in the Pistis Sophia treatise, which
explains all in the fullest manner on the lines of re
incarnation and what Indian philosophers call karma.
But not so will Irenseus have it. He asserts
that the doctrine means that the soul must pass
through all experience good and bad, and until
every experience has been learned, no one can be
set free. That some souls can do all this in one
life ! That the Carpocratians, therefore, must have
indulged in the most unmentionable crimes because
they wished to fill full the tale of all experience
good and bad, and so come to an end of the
necessity of experience.
Irenseus, however, immediately afterwards adds
that he does not believe the Carpocratians actually
do such things, although he is forced to deduce
such a logical consequence from their books. It
is, however, evident that the whole absurd con
clusion is entirely due to the stupidity of the
Bishop of Lyons, who, owing to his inability to
understand the most elementary facts of the
doctrine of reincarnation, has started with entirely
erroneous premises, although the matter was as
clear as daylight to a beginner in Gnosticism.
The circle of the Carpocratians is said to have
established a branch at Home, about 150, under a
" EPIPHANES." 233
certain Marcellina. They had pictures and statues of
many great teachers who were held in honour by
their school, such as Pythagoras, Plato, and Aristotle,
and also a portrait of Jesus.
It is curious to remark that Celsus, as quoted by
Origen (c. 62), in referring to these Marcellians, also
mentions the Harpocratians who derived their tenets
from Salome. Is it possible that this is the correct
form of the name, and not Carpocratians ? Harpo-
crates was the Graecised form of Horus, the Mystery-
God of the Egyptians ; and Salome, we know, was a
prominent figure in the lost Gospel according to the
Egyptians.
" EPIPHANES."
WE next pass on to the contradictory and manifestly
absurd legends, which Patristic writers have woven
round the second best-known name of the Carpo-
cratian circle. We have already referred to the
extraordinary blunder of Epiphanius, who has
ascribed a whole system of the Gnosis, which he
found in Ireneeus assigned simply to a " distinguished
teacher " (probably the Valentinian Marcus), to this
Epiphanes ; the Greek for " distinguished " being also
" epiphanes"
This is excusable in a certain measure, seeing that
Epiphanius wrote at the end of the fourth century (at
least 250 years after the time of the actual Epiphanes)
when any means of discrediting a heretic were con
sidered justifiable ; but what shall we say of Clement
234 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of Alexandria, who is generally fair, and who lived in
the same century as Epiphanes ? His blunder is even
more extraordinary. This is his legend. Epiphanes
was the son of Carpocrates and Alexandria, a lady of
Cephallenia. He died at the early age of seventeen,
and was worshipped as a god with the most elaborate
and lascivious rites by the Cephallenians, in the great
temple of Same, on the day of the new moon.
Such an extraordinary legend could not long-
escape the penetrating criticism of modern scholar
ship, and as early as Mosheim the key was found to
the mystery. Volkmar has worked this out in detail,
showing that the festival at Same was in honour
of the moon-god, and accompanied with licentious
rites. It was called the Epiphany (ra 'Eiri^ajua) in
honour of Epiphanes (6 'ETn^awj?), the " newly-
appearing one," the new moon. This moon lasted
some seventeen days. Thus Clement of Alexandria,
deceived by the similarity of the names and also by
the story of licentious rites, bequeathed to posterity a
scandalous libel. It is almost to be doubted whether
any Epiphanes existed. Clement further asserts that
among the Carpocratians one of their most circulated
books was a treatise On Justice, of which he had seen
a copy. He ascribes this to Epiphanes, but it is
scarcely possible to believe that a boy of seventeen or
less could have composed an abstract dissertation on
justice.
We thus come to the conclusion that the
Communism. Carpocratians, or Harpocratians, were a Gnostic
circle in Alexandria at the beginning of the
second century, and that some of their ideas were
" EPIPHANES." 235
set forth in a book concerning justice, a copy of
which had come into the hands of Clement. This
Gnostic community was much exercised with the
idea of communism as practised by the early Christian
circles; being also students of Plato, they wished to
reduce the idea to the form of a philosophical prin
ciple and carry it out to its logical conclusion. The
false ideas of meum and tuum were no longer to
exist; private property was the origin of all human
miseries and the departure from the happy days of
early freedom. There was, therefore, to be community
of everything, wives and husbands included — thus
carrying out in some fashion that most curious idea,
of Plato's as set forth in The Republic. We have,
however, no reliable evidence that our Gnostics
carried these ideas into practice ; it is also highly
improbable that men of education and refinement, as
the Gnostics usually were, who came to such views
through the Pythagorean and Platonic discipline, and
through the teachings of Jesus — the sine qua non
condition of such ideal communities being that they
should consist of "gnostics" and be ruled by
" philosophers " — should have turned their meetings
into orgies of lasciviousness. Such, however, is the
accusation brought against them by Clement. This
has already been in part refuted by what has been
said above ; but it is not improbable that there were
communities at Alexandria and elsewhere, calling
themselves Christian, who did confuse the Agapae or
Love-feasts of the early times with the orgies and
feasts of the ignorant populace. The Pagans brought
such accusations against the Christians indiscrimi-
236 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
nately, and the Christian sects against one another;
and it is quite credible that such abuses did creep in
among the ignorant and vicious.
The Carpocratian school has been sometimes
The Monadic claimed, though I think improperly, as the origi
nator of the so-called Monadic Gnosis. This idea
has been worked out in much detail by Neander.
The following summary by Salmon will, however, be
sufficient for the general reader to form an idea of
the theory.
" From one eternal Monad all existence has
flowed, and to this it strives to return. But the
finite spirits who rule over several portions of the
world counteract this universal striving after unity.
From them the different popular religions, and in
particular the Jewish, have proceeded. Perfection
is attained by those souls who, led on by reminis
cences of their former conditions, soar above all
limitation and diversity to the contemplation of the
higher unity. They despise the restriction imposed
by the mundane spirits; they regard externals as
of no importance, and faith and love as the only
essentials; meaning by faith, mystical brooding of
the mind absorbed in the original unity. In this
way they escape the dominion of the finite mundane
spirits; their souls are freed from imprisonment in
matter, and they obtain a state of perfect repose
(corresponding to the Buddhist Nirvana) when
they have completely ascended above the world of
appearance."
CERINTHUS. 237
CERINTHUS.
CONTINUING to pick our way back along this trace
towards the times of the origins, we next come upon
the circle of the Cerinthians (or the Merinthians,
according to the variant of Epiphanius). They are
said to derive their name from a certain Cerinthus,
who is placed in " apostolic times," that is to say the
latter half of the first century.
Epiphanius has busied himself exceedingly over
Cerinthus, and cleverly made him a scapegoat for the The
J Scapegoat for
" pillar-apostles' " antagonism to Paul. Most writers the "Pillar-
have followed his lead, and explained away a number
of compromising statements in the Acts and Pauline
Letters by this device. Impartial criticism, however,
has to reject the lucubrations of the late Epiphanius,
and go back to the short account of Irenseus, from
whom all later writers have copied. Irenssus, who
was himself a full century after Cerinthus, has only
a brief paragraph on the subject.
Cerinthus is the strongest trace between Ebionism,
or the original external non- Pauline tradition, and the
beginning of the second century. He is supposed to
have come into personal contact with John, the
reputed writer of the fourth Gospel ; but the same
story is told of the mythic Ebion, and it must there
fore be dismissed as destitute of all historical
value.
Cerinthus is said to have been trained in the
" Egyptian discipline," and to have taught in Asia
Minor. The Egyptian discipline is supposed to mean
238 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the Philonic school, but this is a mere assumption.
The Over- Jn any case the importance of Cerinthus, whom some
writer ot the
Apocalypse. Gnostics claimed to have been the writer of the
Apocalypse orthodoxly ascribed to John, is that his
name has preserved one of the earliest forms of
Christian tradition. Its cosmogony declared the
stupendous excellence of the God over all, beyond
the subordinate power, the World-fashioner. Its
christology declared that Jesus was son of Joseph
and Mary ; that at his " baptism " the Christ, the
" Father in the form of a dove," descended upon
him, and only then did he begin to prophesy and do
mighty works, and preach the hitherto unknown
Father (unknown to the Jews), the God over all.
That the Christ then left him ; and then Jesus
suffered, and rose again (that is, appeared to his
followers after death).
Such is the account of Irenseus, which seems to be
straightforward and reliable enough as far as it
goes. The scripture of the Cerinthians was not the
recension of the Sayings ascribed to " Matthew,"
but a still earlier collection in Hebrew. All other
collections and recensions were rejected as utterly
apocryphal. The Greek writer of the fourth canonical
Gospel is said to have composed his account in opposi
tion to the school of Cerinthus, but this hypothesis is
not borne out by any evidence.
NICOLAUS. 239
NICOLAUS.
WE have now got back to such early times that even
the faintest glimmer of historical light fails us ; we " Which
f things I hate.
are deep down in the sombre region of legend and
speculation. We will, therefore, plunge no farther
into the dark depths of the cave of the origins, but
once more retrace our steps to the mouth of the
cavern, where at least some fitful gleams of daylight
struggle through. But before doing so, we must call
the reader's attention to a just discernible shadow of
early Gnosticism, the circle of the Nicolaitans. These
Gnostics are of special interest to the orthodox,
because the over- writer of the Apocalypse has twice
gone out of his way to tell us that he hates
their doings. Encouraged by this phrase, Irenseus
includes the Nicolaitans in the writer's condemnation
of some of the members of the church of Pergamus,
who apparently "ate things sacrificed to idols and
committed fornication." Subsequent hseresiologists,
in their turn encouraged by Irenseus, added further
embellishments, until finally Epiphanius makes
Nicolaus the father of every enormity he had
collected or invented against the Gnostics. And then,
with all this " evidence " of his iniquity before him,
Epiphanius proceeds rhetorically to address the shade
of the unfortunate Gnostic : " What, then, am I to
say to thee, O Nicolaus ? " For ourselves we are
surprised that so inventive a genius as the Bishop of
Salamis should have drawn breath even to put so
rhetorical a question.
240 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Tradition claims Nicolaua as an ascetic, and
relates an exaggerated instance of his freedom from
passion. Even granted that he taught that the
eating of sacrificial viands was not a deadly sin,
there seems no reason why we to-day should follow
these Church Fathers in their condemnation of
everything but their own particular view of the
Christ's doctrine.
CERDO.
LET us now return to the historical twilight of the
The Master second century, and turn our attention to the great
Basilidian and Valentinian developments. But before
doing so, it will be convenient to give a brief sketch
of the great and contemporaneous Marcionite move
ment, which at one time threatened to absorb the
whole of Christendom. The method of this school
was the direct prototype of the method of modern
criticism. Its conclusions, however, were far more
sweeping ; for it not only rejected the Old Testament
entirely, but also the whole of the documents of the
" in order that it might be fulfilled " school of Gospel-
compilation.
The predecessor of Marcion is said to have been
a certain Cerdo, of Syrian extraction, who flourished
at Rome about 135 A.D. But the fame of Marcion
so eclipsed the name of his preceptor, that Patristic
writers frequently confuse not only their teachings
but even the men themselves. It is interesting to
note that, though Cerdo's relationship with the
Church of Rome was unsettled, no distinct sentence of
MARCION. 241
excommunication is recorded against him; it would,
therefore, appear that the idea of a rigid canon of
orthodoxy was not yet developed even in the
exclusive mind of the Roman presbytery. It was
no doubt the success of Marcion that precipitated
the formulation of the idea of the canon in the mind
of the Roman church, the pioneer of subsequent
orthodoxy.
MARCION.
MARCION was a rich shipowner of Sinope, the chief
port of Pontus. on the southern shore of the Black
Sea ; he was also a bishop and the son of a bishop.
His chief activity at Rome may be placed somewhere
between the years 150 and 160. At first he was in
communion with the church at Rome, and contributed
handsomely to its funds; as, however, the presbyters
could not explain his difficulties and refused to face
the important questions he set before them, he is said
to have threatened to make a schism in the church ;
and apparently was finally excommunicated. But as
a matter of fact the origin of Marcionism is entirely
wrapped in obscurity, and we know nothing of a
reliable nature of the lives of either Cerdo or
Marcion.
The Church writers at the end of the second
century, -who are our best authorities, cannot tell The
the story of the beginning of the movement Marcionism.
with any certainty. For all we know, Marcion
may have developed his theories long before he
242 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
came to Rome, and may have based them on
information he gleaned and opinions he heard
on his long voyages. This much we know, that
the views of Marcion spread rapidly over the
" whole world," to use the usual Patristic phrase for
the GraBco-Roman dominions ; and as late as the fifth
century we hear of Theodoret converting more than
a thousand Marcionites. In Italy, Egypt, Palestine,
Arabia, Syria, Asia Minor and Persia, Marcionite
churches sprang up, splendidly organised, with their
own bishops and the rest of the ecclesiastical discipline,
with a cult and service of the same nature as those
of what subsequently became the Catholic Church.
Orthodoxy had not declared for any party as yet,
and the Marcionite view had then as good a chance
as any other of becoming the universal one. What
then was the secret of Marcion's success ? As already
pointed out, it was the same as that of the success
of modern criticism as applied to the problem of the
Old Testament.
Marcion's view was in some respects even more
The "Higher moderate than the judgment of some of our modern
thinkers; he was willing to admit that the Yahweh
of the Old Testament was just. With great acumen
he arranged the sayings and doings ascribed
to Yahweh by the writers, and compilers, and
editors of the heterogeneous books of the Old
Testament collection, in parallel columns, so to
say, with the sayings and teachings of the
Christ — in a series of antitheses which brought out
in startling fashion the fact, that though the best
of the former might be ascribed to the idea of a
MARCION. 243
Just God, they were foreign to the ideal of the
Good God preached by the Christ. We know how
in these latter days the best minds in the Church
have rejected the horrible sayings and doings
ascribed to God in some of the Old Testament
documents, and we thus see how Marcion formulated
a protest which must have already declared itself
in the hearts of thousands of the more enlightened
of the Christian name.
As for the New Testament, in Marcion's time,
the idea of a canon was not yet or was only just
being thought of. Marcion, too, had an idea of a
canon, but it was the antipodes of the views which
afterwards became the basis of the orthodox canon.
The Christ had preached a universal doctrine, a
new revelation of the Good God, the Father over all.
They who tried to graft this on to Judaism, the
imperfect creed of one small nation, were in grievous
error, and had totally misunderstood the teaching
of the Christ. The Christ was not the Messiah
promised to the Jews. That Messiah was to be an
earthly king, was intended for the Jews alone, and
had not yet come. Therefore the pseudo-historical
" in order that it might be fulfilled " school had
adulterated and garbled the original Sayings of the
Lord, the universal glad tidings, by the unintelligent
and erroneous glosses they had woven into their
collections of the teachings. It was the most terrific
indictment of the cycle of New Testament "history"
that has ever been formulated. Men were tired
of all the contradictions and obscurities of the
innumerable and mutually destructive variants of
244 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the traditions concerning the person of Jesus. No
man could say what was the truth, now that
" history " had been so altered to suit the new
Messiah-theory of the Jewish converts.
As to actual history, then, Marcion started with
The Gospel pau] • he was the first who had really understood
of Paul.
the mission of the Christ, and had rescued the
teaching from the obscurantism of Jewish sectarianism.
Of the manifold versions of the Gospel, he would
have the Pauline alone. He rejected every other
recension, including those now ascribed to Matthew,
Mark, and John. The Gospel according to Luke,
the " follower of Paul," he also rejected, regarding
it as a recension to suit the views of the Judaising
party. His Gospel was presumably the collection
of Sayings in use among the Pauline churches of
his day. Of course the Patristic writers say that
Marcion mutilated Luke's version; but it is almost
impossible to believe that, if he did this, so keen a
critic as Marcion should have retained certain verses
which made against his strong anti-Judaistic views.
The Marcionites, on the contrary, contended that
their Gospel was written by Paul from the direct
tradition, and that Luke had nothing to do with it.
But this is also a difficulty, for it is highly
improbable that Paul wrote any Gospel.
So many orthodox apologists wrote against
Marcion after his death, that it is possible to recon
struct almost the whole of his Gospel. It begins with
the public preaching of the Christ at Capernaum;
it is shorter than the present Luke document, and
some writers of great ability have held that it was
MABCION. 245
the original of Luke's version, but this is not very
credible. As for the rest of the documents included
in the present collection of the New Testament,
Marcion would have nothing to do with any of
them, except ten of the Letters of Paul, parts of
which he also rejected as interpolations by the
reconciliators of the Petro- Pauline controversy.
These ten Letters were called The Apostle.
The longest criticism of Marcion's views is to
be found in Tertullian's invective Against Marcion,
written in 207 and the following years. This has
always been regarded by the orthodox as a most
brilliant piece of work; but by the light of the
conclusions arrived at by the industry of modern
criticism, and also to ordinary common sense, it
appears but a sorry piece of angry rhetoric.
Tertullian tries to show that Marcion taught two
Gods, the Just and the Good. Marcion, however,
taught that the idea of the Jews about God, as
set forth in the Old Testament, was inferior and
antagonistic to the ideal of the Good God revealed
by the Christ. This he set forth in the usual
Gnostic fashion. But we can hardly expect a
dispassionate treatment of a grave problem, which has
only in the last few years reached a satisfactory
solution in Christendom, from the violent Tertullian,
whose temper may be gleaned from his angry
address to the Marcionites : " Now then, ye dogs,
whom the apostle puts outside, and who yelp at
the God of truth, let us come to your various
questions ! These are the bones of contention,
which ye are perpetually gnawing ! "
246 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Enough has now been said to give the reader
a general idea of the Marcionite position — a very
strong one it must be admitted, both because of its
simplicity and also because it formulated the
protest of long slumbering discontent among the
outer communities. It is, however, difficult to
deduce anything like a clear system of
cosmogony or christology from the onslaughts of
the best known haeresiologists on Marcionite
doctrines. It has even been doubted whether
Marcion should be classed as a Gnostic, but this
point is set at rest by the work of Eznik (Eznig
or Esnig), an Armenian bishop, who flourished
about 450 A.D. In his treatise The Destruction
of False Doctrines, he devotes the fourth and
last book to the Marcioriites, who seem to have
been even at that late date a most flourishing body.
Although it is doubted whether the ideas there
described are precisely the same as the original
system of Marcion, it is evident that the Marcionite
tradition was of a distinctly Gnostic tendency, and
that Marcion owed more to his predecessors in
Gnosticism than was usully supposed prior to the
first translation of Eznik's treatise (into French)
in 1833.
It will be sufficient here to shorten Salmon's
summary of this curious Marcionite myth, calling
the reader's attention to the similarity of parts
of its structure to the system of Justinus.
There were three Heavens; in the highest was
the Good God; in the intermediate the God of the
Law; in the lowest, his Angels. Beneath lay Hyle
MAECION. 247
or root-matter. The world was the joint product
of the God of the Law and Hyle. The Creative A Marcionit*
Power perceiving that the world was very good,
desired to make man to inhabit it. So Hyle gave
him his body and the Creative Power the breath
of life, his spirit. And Adam and Eve lived in
innocence in Paradise, and did not beget children.
And the God of the Law desired to take Adam
from Hyle and make him serve him alone. So
taking him aside, he said : " Adam, I am God and
beside me there is no other; if thou worshippest
any other God thou shalt die the death." And
Adam on hearing of death was afraid, and withdrew
himself from Hyle. Now Hyle had been wont to
serve Adam ; but when she found that he withdrew
from her, in revenge she filled the world with
idolatry, so that men ceased to adore the Lord of
Creation. Then was the Creator wrath, and as men
died he cast them into Hell (Hades — the Unseen
World), from Adam onwards.
But at length the Good God looked down from
Heaven, and saw the miseries which man suffered
through Hyle and the Creator. And He took com
passion on them, and sent them down His Son to
deliver them, saying : " Go down, take on Thee the
form of a servant [? a body], and make Thyself like
the sons of the Law. Heal their wounds, give sight
to their blind, bring their dead to life, perform with
out reward the greatest miracles of healing; then
will the God of the Law be jealous and instigate his
servants to crucify thee. Then go down to Hell,
which will open her mouth to receive Thee, supposing
248 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Thee to be one of the dead. Then liberate the
captives Thou shalt find there, and bring them up
to Me."
And thus the souls were freed from Hell and
carried up to the Father. Whereupon the God of the
Law was enraged, and rent his clothes and tore the
curtain of his palace, and darkened the sun and veiled
the world in darkness. Then the Christ descended a
second time, but now in the glory of His divinity,
to plead with the God of the Law. And the God of
the Law was compelled to acknowledge that he had
done wrong in thinking that there was no higher
power than himself. And the Christ said unto him :
" I have a controversy with thee, but I will take no
other judge between us but thy own law. Is it not
written in thy law that whoso killeth another shall
himself be killed ; that whoso sheddeth innocent blood
shall have his own blood shed ? Let me, then, kill
thee and shed thy blood, for I am innocent and thou
hast shed My blood."
And then He went on to recount the benefits He
had bestowed on the children of the Creator, and how
He had in return been crucified ; and the God of the
Law could find no defence, and confessed and said :
" I was ignorant ; I thought Thee but a man, and
did not know Thee to be a god; take the revenge
that is Thy due."
And the Christ thereupon left him, and betook
himself to Paul, and revealed the path of truth.
The Marcionites were the most rigid of ascetics,
abstaining from marriage, flesh and wine, the latter
being excluded from their Eucharist. They also
MABCION. 249
rejoiced beyond all other sects in the number of their
martyrs. The Marcionites have also given us the The Title
most ancient dated Christian inscription. It was
discovered over the doorway of a house in a Syrian
village, and formerly marked the site of a Marcionite
meeting-house or church, which curiously enough
was called a synagogue. The date is October 1,
A.D. 318, and the most remarkable point about it is
that the church was dedicated to " The Lord and
Saviour Jesus, the Good " — Chrestos not Christos.
In early times there seems to have been much con
fusion between the two titles. Christos is the Greek
for the Hebrew Messiah, Anointed, and was the
title used by those who believed that Jesus was the
Jewish Messiah. This was denied, not only by the
Marcionites, but also by many of their Gnostic pre
decessors and successors. The title Chrestos was
used of one perfected, the holy one, the saint ; no
doubt in later days the orthodox, who subsequently
had the sole editing of the texts, in pure ignorance
changed Chrestos into Christos wherever it occurred ;
so that instead of finding the promise of perfection in
the religious history of all the nations, they limited it
to the Jewish tradition alone, and struck a fatal
blow at the universality of history and doctrine.
There was naturally a number of sub-schools of
the Marcion school, and in its ranks were a number
of distinguished teachers, of whom, however, we
have only space to refer to Apelles.
250
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
His Wide
Tolerance.
APELLES.
WE owe our most reliable information on this Gnostic
to a certain Rhodon, who opposed his views some
time in the reign of Commodus (180-193 A.D); an
excerpt from this lost " refutation " has fortunately
been preserved for us by Eusebius. At this time
Apelles was a very old man and refused the con
troversy, saying that all sincere believers would
ultimately be saved, whatever their theology might
be — a most enlightened doctrine and worthy of the
best in Gnosticism. As Hort says : " The picture
which Rhodon unwittingly furnishes of his [Apelles']
old age is pleasant to look upon. We see a man
unwearied in the pursuit of truth, diffident and
tolerant, resting in beliefs which he could not reconcile,
but studious to maintain the moral character of
theology."
Apelles seems to have taken up a less exclusive
position than Marcion, though his book of Reasonings,
directed against the Mosaic theology, seems to have
been drastic enough; and he is further said by
Eusebius to have written a " multitude of books "
of the same nature.
He was, however, specially taken to task for
his belief in the clairvoyant faculty of a certain
Philumene, whom he came across in his old age.
Her visions were recorded in a book called
The Manifestations, by which Apelles set great
store. Strangely enough, the man who pours on
his head the greatest abuse for this, accompanied
APELLES. 251
with the usual charges of immorality, is Tertullian,
who, in his own treatise On the Soul, following out
his own Montanist convictions, confesses his full
belief in the prophetical power of a certain voyante
of his own congregation, in a most entertaining and
naive fashion ! Rhodon, on the contrary, who knew
Apelles personally at Alexandria, says that the old
gentleman thought himself protected from such
slanderous insinuations, by his age and well-known
character.
Philumene seems to have enjoyed certain psychic
faculties, and also to have been a " medium " for
physical phenomena, as a modern spiritist would say.
She belonged to the class of holy women or " virgins,"
who were numerous enough in the early Church,
though it is exceedingly doubtful whether any of
them were trained seeresses, except in the most
advanced Gnostic circles.
There is an entertaining account of Philumene in
a curious fragment of an anonymous author, which
was printed in the early editions of Augustine's work
On Heresies, in the section devoted to the Severians.
The following is Hort's rendering of the passage :
" He [Apelles] moreover used to say that a certain
girl named Philumene was divinely inspired to Her
predict future events. He used to refer to her his
dreams, and the perturbations of his mind, and to
forewarn himself secretly by her divinations or
presages." [Here some words appear to be missing.]
" The same phantom, he said, showed itself to the
same Philumene in the form of a boy. This seeming
boy sometimes declared himself to be Christ, some-
252 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
times Paul. By questioning this phantom she used
to supply the answers which she pronounced to her
hearers. He added that she was accustomed to
perform some wonders, of which the following was
the chief : she used to make a large loaf enter a glass
vase with a very small mouth, and to take it out
uninjured with the tips of her fingers; and was
content with that food alone, as if it had been given
her from above."
All of which is very monkish and very spiritistic,
and quite in keeping with the records of phenomen
alism.
We should, however, remember that this account
is not from the side of the Gnostics, but from an
unfriendly source. We shall perhaps never know
whether Apelles had a knowledge of the sources of
the phenomena he witnessed ; or, like the vast
majority of that time, as indeed of all times,
ignorantly assumed that the fact of psychic powers
proved the truth of theological doctrines.
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 253
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS.
LET us now return to the early years of the second
century, and devote our attention to Basilides and his Basilides and
* his Writings.
followers (" them of Basilides "), who elaborated one
of the most abstruse and consistent systems of the
Gnosis, the outlines of which are plainly recoverable
from the garbled fragments that Patristic polemics
have left us.
Of the life of this great doctor of the Gnosis we
know nothing beyond the fact that he taught at
Alexandria. His date is entirely conjectural ; he is,
however, generally supposed to have been immediately
prior to Valentinus. If, therefore, we say that he
flourished somewhere about A.D. 120-180, it should be
understood that a margin of ten years or so either
way has to be allowed for. Of his nationality again
we know nothing. But whether he was Greek, or
Egyptian, or Syrian, he was steeped in Hellenic
culture, and learned in the wisdom of the Egyptians.
He was also well versed in the Hebrew scriptures
as set forth in the Greek version of the Seventy.
The Gospel teaching was his delight, and he wrote
no fewer than twenty-four books of commentaries
thereon, although he does not appear to have
used the subsequently canonical versions. He also
quotes from several of the Pauline Letters.
Of the writings of Basilides the most important
were the commentaries already referred to; they
were the first commentaries on the Gospel-teachings
written by a Christian philosopher; and in this, as
254 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
in all other departments of theology, the Gnostics
led the way. Basilides is further said to have written
a Gospel himself, and to have claimed to be the
disciple of a certain Glaucias, who was an " inter
preter of Peter." There is also mention of certain
Traditions of Matthias, as held in great honour by
the school. These purported to be teachings given
to Matthias in secret by Jesus after the " resurrec
tion." It may, therefore, be supposed that the
Gospel of Basilides was not a new historical setting
of the Sayings of the Lord, but an exposition of
that "knowledge of supermundane things," which
was the definition he gave to the Gospel. Basilides
presumably wrote a commentary on the Sayings
and Doings of the Lord, which were in general
circulation in many traditions, with or without the
various historical settings; and also his own elabora
tion of certain inner instructions that had been
handed down by a secret tradition. Whether or
not this inner Gospel formed part of the twenty-four
books of his Exegetica is doubtful ; most critics,
however, are in favour of this view. In any case,
it is to be supposed that his commentaries aimed at
explaining the public Sayings and Parables by the
light of this secret Gospel. But there is another
hypothesis, which, if true, would be of intense
interest. It is suggested that it was Matthias, one
of the heads of the inner schools, who wrote the
original sketch of Sayings and Doings underlying
our Synoptic accounts, and that these accounts were
expansions by various presbyters of the outer
churches in Egypt. The original draft was pre-
THE BASILIDIAN GNOS1S. 255
sumably a Life intended for public circulation, and
designed to be capable of an interpretation according
to the inner tenets of the Gnosis.
Basilides is also said to have written certain
Odes, but of these no fragment has reached us.
Our main sources of information for recovering
an outline of the Basilidian Gnosis are three in Our
Sources of
number, and consist of the very fragmentary quota- Information.
tions : (i.) of Hippolytus in his later work, The
Philosophumena ; (ii.) of Clement of Alexandria in
his Miscellanies; and (iii.) presumably in the first
place (either of the lost Syntagma of Justin or) of
the lost work of Agrippa Castor, who is said by
Eusebius to have written a refutation of the views
of Basilides in the reign of Hadrian (c. 133 A.D.),
and whose very unsatisfactory and inaccurate data
were copied by Ireneeus, and the epitomators of the
earlier, smaller, and now lost work of Hippolytus.
Turning to the great work of Hippolytus, we
come upon the most valuable information extant for
the reconstruction of this most highly metaphysical
system. The Church Father had evidently before
him a treatise of Basilides, but whether it was the
Exegetica or not, is by no means clear ; what is
certain, however, is that it set forth the Gospel, or
" knowledge of supermundane things," as Basilides
understood it ; and we can only regret that we have
not the original text of the Gnostic doctor himself
before us, instead of a most faulty copy of the text
of the Church Father's Refutation, whose method is
of the most provoking. Hippolytus muddles up his
own glosses and criticisms with mutilated quotations,
256 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
imperfectly summarizes important passages, which
treat of conceptions requiring the greatest subtlety
and nicety of language; and in other respects does
scant justice to a thinker whose faith in Christianity
was so great, that, far from confining it to the
narrow limits of a dogmatic theology, he would
have it that the Gospel was also a universal
philosophy explanatory of the whole world-drama.
Let us then raise our thoughts to those sublime
heights to which the genius of Basilides soared so
many centuries ago, when faith in the universal
possibilities of the Glad Tidings was really living.
And first we must rise to that stupendous intuition
of Deity, which transcends even Being, and which
to the narrow minds of earth seems pure nothing
ness, instead of being that which beggars all fullness.
Beyond time, beyond space, beyond consciousness,
beyond Being itself —
" There was when naught was ; nay, even that
The Divinity ' naught ' was not aught of things that are [even
Be?n°gd in the world of reality]. But nakedly, conjecture
and mental quibbling apart, there was absolutely
not even the One [the Logos of the world of
reality]. And when I use the term 'was,' I do not
mean to say that it was [that is to say, in any
state of being]; but merely to give some suggestion
of what I wish to indicate, I use the expression
' there was absolutely naught.' For that ' naught '
is not simply the so-called Ineffable ; it is beyond
that. For that which is really ineffable is not
named Ineffable, but is superior to every name that
is used.
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 257
"The names [we use] are not sufficient even
for the [manifested] universe [which is outside the
world of real being], so diversified is it; they fall
short,"
Much less, then, he continues to argue, can we
find appropriate names for the beings of the world
of reality and their operations; and far more
impossible, therefore, is it to give names to That
which transcends even reality. Thus we see that
Basilides soared beyond even the ideal world of
Plato, and ascended to the untranscendable intuition
of the Orient — the That which cannot be named,
to be worshipped in silence alone.
We next come to the inception of the Seed
of Universality, in this state beyond being, a Universality
discrete stage, so to speak, beyond the unmani- Being,
fested or noumenal world even.
Hippolytus summarizes this condition of non-
being, which transcends all being from the original
treatise as follows.
" Naught was, neither matter, nor substance, nor
voidness of substance, nor simplicity, nor impossi-
bility-of -composition, nor inconceptibility, nor imper-
ceptibility, neither man, nor angel, nor god; in fine,
neither anything at all for which man has ever
found a name, nor any operation which falls within
the range either of his preception or conception.
Such, or rather far more removed from the power
of man's comprehension, was the state of non-being,
when [if we can speak of c when ' in a state beyond
time and space] the Deity beyond being, without
thinking, or feeling, or determining, or choosing, or
258 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
being compelled, or desiring, willed to create
universality.
" When I use the term ' will,' " writes Basilides,
" I do so merely to suggest the idea of an operation
transcending all volition, thought, or sensible action.
And this universality also was not [our] dimensional
and differentiate universe, which subsequently came
into existence and was separated [from other
universes], but the Seed of all universes."
This is evidently the same concept as the
Mulaprakriti of Indian philosophy, and the most
admirable statement of the dogma of the " creation
out of nothing" that has been put forward by any
Christian philosopher.
" This universal Seed contained everything in
itself, potentially, in some such fashion as the grain
of mustard seed contains the whole simultaneously
in the minutest point — roots, stem, branches, leaves,
and the innumerable germs that come from the
seeds of the plant, and which in their turn
produce still other and other plants in manifold
series.
"Thus the Divinity beyond being created
universality beyond being from elements beyond
being, positing and causing to subsist a single
something" — which poverty of language compels us
to call a Seed, but which was really the potentiality
of potentialities, seeing that it was "containing in
itself the entire all-seed-potency of the universe."
From such a "Seed," which is everywhere and
nowhere, and which treasures in its bosom everything
that was or is or is to be, all things must come into
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 259
manifestation in their " proper natures and cycles "
and times, at the will of the Deity beyond all. How
this is brought about is by no means clear. Basilides
seems to have had some idea of a " supplementary
development " (/caTa TT pocrQriKriv au^avojmeva), which,
however, is beyond definition ; one thing is clear,
that he entirely repudiated every idea of emanation,
projection, or pullulation (TrpofioKrf).
" For of what sort of emanation is there need,
or of what sort of matter must we make supposition, Ex Nihilo.
in order that God should make the universe, like
as a spider weaves its web [from itself], or mortal
man takes brass or timber or other matter out of
which to make something ? But ' He spake and it
was,' and this is what is the meaning of the saying
of Moses, 'Let there be light, and there was light.'
Whence, then, was the light ? From naught. For
it is not written whence, but only from the voice
of the Speaker of the word. And He who spake
the word, was not ; and that which was, was not.
For the Seed of the universe, the word that was
spoken, c Let there be light,' was from the state
beyond being. And this was what was spoken in
the Gospel, ' It was the true light which lighteth
every man that cometh into the world.' Man both
deriveth his principles from that Seed and is also
enlightened by it." This primordial Light and
Life is the source of all things.
The next stage deals with the outcome, first-
fruits, highest product, or sublimest consummation,
of universal potentiality, which Basilides calls the
Sonship.
260 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
" In the absolute Seed there was a triple
The Sonship. Sonship in every way consubstantial with the God
beyond being, coming into being from the state
beyond being. Of this triply divided Sonship, one
aspect was the subtlest of the subtle, one less
subtle, and one still stood in need of purification-
The subtlest nature of the Sonship instantly and
immediately, together with the depositing of the
Seed of universality by the God beyond being,
burst forth, rose aloft, and hastened from below
upward, ' like wing or thought,' as Homer sings,
and was with Him beyond being [TT/OO? rov OVK
oVTOL — 'with,' the very same word as the mysterious
preposition in the Proem now prefixed to the fourth
canonical Gospel]. For every nature striveth after
Him because of His transcendency of all beauty
and loveliness, but some in one way and others in
another.
" The less subtle nature of the Sonship, on the
other hand, still remained within the universal Seed ;
for though it would imitate the higher and ascend,
it could not, seeing that it fell short of the degree
of subtlety of the first Sonship, which had ascended
through it [the second], and so it remained behind.
The less subtle Sonship, accordingly, had to find for
itself as it were wings on which to soar, . . . and
these wings are the Holy Spirit."
Just as a bird cannot fly without wings, and the
wings cannot soar without the bird, so the second
Sonship and the Holy Spirit are complementary the
one to the other, and confer mutual benefits on one
another.
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 261
We here see that Basilides is dealing with the
second aspect of the Logos, the positive-negative
state ; we also perceive the anticipation of the ground
of the great controversies which subsequently arose
generations later, such as the Arian and the
" Filioque." But if we enquire whence was the
Holy Spirit, Basilides will tell us, from the universal
Seed, from which all things came forth under the
will of Deity.
" The second Sonship, then, borne aloft by the
Spirit, as by a wing, bears aloft the wing, that is the The Holy
Spirit ; but on drawing nigh to the first Sonship
and the God beyond being, who createth from the
state beyond being, it could no longer keep the
Spirit with it, for it [the Spirit] was not of the
same substance with it, nor had it a nature like
unto that of the Sonship. But just as a pure and
dry atmosphere is unnatural and harmful to fish,
so to the Holy Spirit was that state of the Sonship
together with the God beyond being — that state more
ineffable than every ineffable and transcending every
name.
" The Sonship, therefore, left it [the Spirit] behind
near that Blessed Space, which can neither be con
ceived of, nor characterized by any word, yet not
entirely deserted nor yet divorced from the Sonship.
But even as the sweetest smelling unguent poured
into a vessel, though the vessel be emptied of it with
the greatest possible care, nevertheless some scent of
the unguent still remains and is left behind — the
vessel retains the scent of the unguent, though it no
longer holds the unguent itself — in such a way has
262 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the Holy Spirit remained emptied and divorced from
the Sonship, yet at the same time retaining in itself
as it were the power of the unguent, the savour of the
Sonship. And this is the saying, ' Like the unguent
on the head which ran down unto Aaron's beard '-
the savour of the Holy Spirit permeating from above
and below even as far as the formlessness [crude
matter] and our state of existence, whence the
[remaining] Sonship received its first impulse to
ascend, borne aloft as it were on the wings of an
eagle. For all things hasten from below upward,
from worse to better, nor is anything in the better
condition so bereft of intelligence as to plunge down
ward. But as yet this third Sonship still remains in
the great conglomeration of the seed-mixture, confer
ring and receiving benefits," in a manner that will
receive subsequent explanation.
The Holy Spirit, which in reality permeates
everything, but phenomenally separates the sensible
universe from the noumenal, constitutes what
Basilides terms the Limitary Spirit, midway between
things cosmic and supercosmic. This Firmament is
far beyond the visible firmament whose locus is
the moon's track.
" After this, from the universal Seed and con-
The Great glomeration of seed-mixture there burst forth and
came into existence the Great Ruler, the head of
the sensible universe, a beauty and magnitude
and potency that nought can destroy." This is
the demiurge ; but let no mortal think that he
can comprehend so great a being, " for he is more
ineffable than ineffables, more potent than potencies,
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 263
wiser than the wise, superior to every excellence
that one can name.
" Coming into existence he raised himself aloft,
and soared upward, and was borne above in all his
entirety as far as the Great Firmament. There he
remained, because he thought there was none above
him, and so he became the most potent power of the
universe," save only the third Sonship which yet
remained in the seed-mixture. His limit, therefore,
was his own ignorance of the supercosmic spaces,
although his wisdom was the greatest of all in the
cosmic realms.
"Thus thinking himself lord, and ruler, and a
wise master-builder, he betook himself to the creation
of the creatures of the universe."
This is the supercelestial or setherial creation,
which has its physical correspondence in the spaces
beyond the moon ; below the moon was our
world and its " atmosphere." This atmosphere
(the sublunary regions) terminated at the visible
heaven, or lower firmament, its periphery, marked
by the moon's path. In the sun-space lay the
setherial realms, which apparently no mortal eye
has seen, but only the reflection of their inhabitants,
the stars, in the surface of the sublunary waters
of space.
The setherial creation of the Great Ruler proceeds
on the theory of similarity and analogy.
"First of all the Great Ruler, thinking it not
right that he should be alone, made for himself, and The
brought into existence from the universal Seed, a Creation.
Son far better and wiser than himself. For all this
264 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
had been predetermined by the God beyond being,
when He deposited the universal Seed.
"And the Great Ruler, on beholding his Son,
was struck with wonder and love and amazement
at his marvellously great beauty, and he caused him
to sit at his right hand." And this space where is
the throne of the Great Ruler they called the Ogdoad.
" And the Great Demiurgos, the wise one, fabricated
the whole aether ial creation with his own hand ; but
it was his Son, who was wiser still, who infused
energy into him and suggested to him ideas."
That is to say, that the Great Ruler made the
creatures of the setherial spaces, and these evolved
souls, or rather were ensouled. And thus it is that
the son is, as it were, greater than the father, and
sits on his right hand, or above him ; the right hand
in Gnostic symbolism signifying a higher condition.
They mutually confer benefits also, one giving the
body and the other the mind or soul to setherial
beings. All setherial spaces then, down to the moon,
are provided for and managed by the Son of the
Great Ruler, the consummation or perfection of his
^ evolution or creation.
"Next, there arose a second Ruler from the
The universal Seed, far inferior to the first, but
Spaces. greater than all below him, except the Sonship
which still remained in the Seed." This was
the Ruler of the sublunary spaces, from the
moon to the earth. This Ruler is called effable,
because men can speak of him with understanding,
and the space over which he rules is named the
Hebdomad. And the second Ruler also "brought
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 265
forth a Son far greater than himself from the
universal Seed, in like manner to the first," and the
lower creation was ordered in the same manner as
the higher. This lower creation is apparently still
one of subtle matter.
As to the earth, the conglomeration of the seed-
mixture is still in our own stage or space, and the
things that come to pass in this state of existence,
" come to pass according to nature, as having been
primarily uttered by Him who hath planned the
fitting time and form and manner of utterance of the
things that were to be uttered. Of things here on
the earth, then, there is no special chief or manager
or creator, for sufficient for them is that plan which
the God beyond being laid down when He deposited
the universal Seed."
That is to say, that the earth-stage is the moment
between the past and future, the turning-point of all
choice, the field of new karman ; here all things verily
are in the hand of God alone, in the highest sense.
Thus does Basilides avoid the difficulties both of fate
and free-will absolute.
We next come to the soteriology of Basilides,
the redemption and restoration of all things.
" When, then, the supercosmic planes and the
whole universe [setherial, sublunary, and terrestrial] Soteriology.
were completed, and there was no deficiency," that
is to say, when the evolutionary stream of creative
energy began to return on itself, " there still re
mained behind in the universal Seed the third
Sonship, which bestows and receives benefits.
" But it needs must be that this Sonship also
266 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
should be manifested, and restored to its place
above, there beyond the highest Firmament, the
Limitary Spirit of cosmos, with the most subtle
Sonship, and the second which followed the example
of its fellow, and the God beyond being, even as
it was written, ' And the creation itself groaneth
together and travaileth together, waiting for the
manifestation of the Sons of God ' " — the third
Sonship.
The Sons of God are the divine sparks, the
real spiritual men within, who have been left
behind here in the seed-mixture, " to order and
inform and correct and perfect our souls, which
have a natural tendency downwards to remain in
this state of existence."
Before the Gospel was preached, and the Gnosis
came, the Great Ruler of the Ogdoad was considered
even by the most spiritual among men to be the
only God, nevertheless no name was given to him,
because he was ineffable.
The inspiration of Moses, however, came from
the Hebdomad only, as may be seen from the
words, " I arn the God of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob, but the name of God I did not make known
unto them." This God to whom Moses and the
Prophets gave names, was of the Hebdomad, which
is effable, and their inspiration came from this
source. But the Gospel was that Mystery which
was ever unknown, not only to the nations, but
also to them of the Hebdomad and the Ogdoad,
and even to their Rulers.
" When, therefore, the time had come," says the
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 2t)7
Gnostic doctor, " for the revelation of the children
of God (who are ourselves), for whom the whole The Mystic
Gospel,
creation groaneth and travaileth in expectation,
the Gospel [the Glad Tidings, the Gnosis] came
into the universe, and passed through every princi
pality, arid authority, and lordship, and every title
that man can use. It ' came ' of very truth, not that
anything 'came down' from above, or that the
blessed Sonship * departed from ' that Blessed God
beyond being, who transcends all thought. Nay, but
just as the vapour of naphtha can catch fire from
a flame a great way off from the naphtha, so do
the powers of men's spirit pass from below from
the formlessness of the conglomeration up to the
Sonship.
"The Son of the Great Ruler of the Ogdoad,
catching fire as it were, lays hold of and seizes on
the ideas from the blessed Sonship beyond the
Limitary Spirit. For the power of the Sonship which
is in the midst of the Holy Spirit, in the Limit Space,
shares the flowing and rushing thoughts of the
[supreme] Sonship with the Son of the Great Ruler.
" Thus the Gospel first came from the Sonship
through the Son who sits by the Great Ruler, to that
Ruler ; and the Ruler learned that he was not the
God over all, but a generable deity, and that above
him was set the Treasure of the ineffable and
unnameable That beyond being and of the Sonship.
And he repented and feared on understanding in
what ignorance he had been. This is the meaning of
the words, ' The fear of the Lord is the beginning of
wisdom.' For he began to grow wise through the
268 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
instruction of the Christ sitting by him, learning
what is That beyond being, what the Sonship, what
the Holy Spirit, what the apparatus of the universe
what the manner of its restoration. This is the
' wisdom, declared in a mystery,' concerning which
Scripture uses the words, ' Not in words taught of
human wisdom, but in those taught of the Spirit.'
" The great Ruler, then, being instructed and
taught and made afraid, confessed the sin which he
had done in boasting himself. This is the saying,
' I have recognized my sin, and I know my trans
gression, and I will confess it for the eternity.'
" After the instruction of the Great Ruler, the
whole space of the Ogdoad was instructed and
taught, and the Mystery became known to the
powers above the heavens.
" Then was it that the Gospel should come to
the Hebdomad, that its Ruler might be instructed
and evangelized in like manner. Thereupon the
Son of the Great Ruler lit up in the Son of the
Ruler of the lower space, the Light which he
himself had had kindled in him from above from
the Sonship ; and thus the Son of the Ruler of
the Hebdomad was illumined, and preached the
Gospel to the Ruler, who in his turn, like as the
Great Ruler before him, feared and confessed [his sin].
And then all things in the sublunary spaces were
enlightened and had the Gospel preached unto them.
" Therefore the time was ripe for the illumination
The Sons of the formlessness of our own world, and for
the Mystery to be revealed to the Sonship which
had been left behind in the formlessness, as it
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 269
were to one born out of due time (an abortion)
— ' the mystery which was not known unto former
generations/ as it is written, ' By revelation was
the mystery made known unto me,' and ' I heard
unspeakable words, which it is not lawful for
man to utter.'
" Thus, from the Hebdomad, the Light — which
had already come down from above from the
Ogdoad unto the Son of the Hebdomad — descended
upon Jesus, son of Mary, and he was illumined,
being caught on fire in harmony with the Light
that streamed into him. This is the meaning of
the saying, ' The Holy Spirit shall come upon
thee' — that is to say, that which came from the
Sonship through the Limitary Spirit to the
Ogdoad and Hebdomad, down as far as Mary
[the body] — and ' The Power of the Highest shall
overshadow thee '- — that is to say, the divine
creative power which cometh from the [setherial]
heights above through the Demiurgos, which power
belongeth to the Son."
The text of Hippolytus is here exceedingly
involved, and he evidently did not seize the thought
of Basilides. The " Son " apparently means the soul.
The power belongs to the soul and not to Mary —
the body ; the divine creative power making of man
a god, whereas the body can only exercise the power
of physical procreation. Moreover, Jesus seems to
stand for a type of every member of the Sonship,
every Son of God.
" For the world shall hold together and not be
dissolved until the whole Sonship — which has been
270 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
left behind to benefit the souls in the state of
formlessness, and to receive benefits, by evolving
forms for them [the spirit requiring a psychic
vehicle for conscious contact with this plane] —
shall follow after and imitate Jesus, and hasten
upward and come forth purified. [For by purifi
cation] it becometh most subtle, so that it is able
to speed aloft through its own power, even as
the first Sonship; for it hath all its power
naturally consubsistent with the Light which shone
down from above.
" When, then, the whole Sonship shall have
The Final ascended, and passed beyond the Great Limit, the
matfon™" Spirit, then shall the whole creation become the
object of the Great Mercy ; for it groan eth until
now and suffereth pain and awaiteth the mani
festation of the Sons of God, namely that all the
men of the Sonship may ascend beyond it [the
creation]. And when this shall be effected, God
will bring upon the whole universe the Great
Ignorance [Maha-pralaya], in order that all things
may remain in their natural condition, and nothing
long for anything which is contrary to its nature.
"Thus all the souls of this state of existence,
whose nature is to remain immortal in this state
of existence alone, remain without knowledge of
anything different from or better than this state;
nor shall there be any rumour or knowledge of
things superior in higher states, in order that the
lower souls may riot suffer pain by striving after
impossible objects, just as though it were fish
longing to feed on the mountains with sheep,
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 271
for such a desire would end in their destruction.
All things are indestructible if they remain in
their proper condition, but subject to destruction
if they desire to overleap and transgress their
natural limits.
"Thus the Ruler of the Hebdomad shall have
no knowledge of the things above him, for the
Great Ignorance shall take hold of him also, so
that sorrow and pain and lamentation may go
from him. He shall desire naught of things
impossible for him to attain, and thus shall suffer
no grief.
" And in like manner the Great Ignorance shall
seize upon the Great Ruler of the Ogdoad, and also
upon all the [setherial] creations which are subject to
him in similar fashion, so that nothing may long
after anything contrary to nature and thus suffer
pain.
" And thus shall be the restoration of all things,
which have had their foundations laid down accord
ing to nature in the Seed of the universe in the
beginning, and which will all be restored [to their
original nature] in their appointed cycles.
" And that everything has its proper cycle and
time, the Saviour is sufficient witness in the saying,
' My hour hath not yet come,' and also the Magi in
their observation of His star. For He also was
foreordained in the Seed to be subject to the
nativity of the stars and the return of the time-
periods to their starting places."
Now the Saviour, according to the Basilidian
Gnosis, was the perfected spiritual "man," within
272 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the psychic and animal man or soul. And when a
man reaches this stage of perfection, the Sonship in
him leaves the soul behind here, " the soul being no
longer mortal but remaining in its natural state
[that is to say, having become immortal], just as
the first Sonship [left behind] the Holy Spirit, the
Great Limit, in its proper space or region " ; for it
is only then on reaching perfection, that the real
" man " is " clothed with a proper [and really
immortal] soul."
Every part of the creation goes up a stage, and
Jesus. the whole scheme of salvation is effected by the
separating from their state of conglomeration the
various principles into their proper states ; and
Jesus was the first-fruits, or great exemplar, of this
process.
" Thus his physical part down here — which
belongs to formless matter — alone suffered, and was
restored to the formless state. His psychic vesture
or vehicle — which belongs to the Hebdomad — arose
and was restored to the Hebdomad. That vehicle
in him which was of the nature of the height of
the Great Ruler he raised aloft, and it remained
with the Great Ruler. Moreover he raised still
higher that which was of the nature of the Great
Limit, and it remained in the Limitary Spirit.
And it was thus through him that the third
Sonship was purified, the Sonship left behind in
the state of mixture [or impurity] for the purpose
of helping and being helped, and it passed upwards
through all of these purified principles unto the
blessed Sonship above."
THE BASIL1DIAN GNOSIS. 273
The main idea at the back of this system is the
separating forth, classification or restoration of the
various elements or principles confused in the
original world-seed, or universal plasm, into their
proper natures, by a process of purification which
brought unto men the Gnosis or perfection of con
sciousness. Man was the crown of the world-process,
and the perfected man, the Christ, the Saviour, was
the crown of manhood, and therefore the manifesta
tion of Deity, the Sonship.
So far Hippolytus, who in all probability gives
us the outline of the true Basilidian system. It
was only in 1851 that The Philosophumena were
published to the world, after the discovery of the
MS. in one of the libraries on Mount Athos in
1842 ; prior to this nothing but the short and
garbled sketches of Ireneeus and the Epitomators
was known of this great Gnostic's sublime
speculations. The Philosophumena account has
revolutionized all prior views, and changed the
whole enquiry, so that the misrepresentations of
Irenaeus, or those of his prior authority, are now
referred to as "the spurious Basilidian system." To
this we shall refer later on. Meantime let us turn
to Clement of Alexandria, who deals purely with
the ethical side of the Basilidian Gnosis, and there
fore does not touch the " metaphysical " part — using
the term " metaphysical " in the Aristotelian sense,
namely, of things beyond the Hebdomad, the things
of the Hebdomad or sublunary space being called
" physics " or in the domain of physis or nature.
As to marriage, Basilides and his son Isidorus
T
274 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FOEGOTTEN.
taught that it was natural but not necessary, and
seem to have taken a moderate ground between
the compulsory asceticism of some schools and
the glorification of procreation by the Jews, who
taught that " he who is without a wife is no
man."
As to the apparently undeserved sufferings of
martyrs, Basilides, basing himself on the doctrines
of reincarnation and karman, writes as follows in
Book xxiii. of his Exegetica :
"I say that all those who fall into these so-called
Karman tribulations, are people who, only after transgressing
Reincarna- in other matters without being discovered, are
brought to this good end [martyrdom] by the
kindness of Providence, so that, the offences they
are charged with being quite different from those
they have committed without discovery, they do
not suffer as criminals for proved offences, reviled
as adulterers or murderers, but suffer merely for
being Christians ; which fact is so consoling to
them that they do not even appear to suffer.
And even though it should happen that one comes
to suffer without previously committing any out
ward transgression — a very rare case — he will not
suffer at all through any plot of any [evil] power,
but in exactly the same way as the babe who
apparently has done no ill.
" For just as the babe, although it has done no
wrong previously, or practically committed any sin,
and yet has the capacity of sin in it [from its
former lives], when it suffers, is advantaged and
reaps many benefits which otherwise are difficult to
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 275
gain ; in just the selfsame way is it with the
perfectly virtuous man also who has never sinned in
deed, for he has still the tendency to sin in him; he
has not committed actual sin [in this life], because
he has not as yet been placed in the necessary cir
cumstances. In the case even of such a man we should
not be right in supposing entire freedom from sin.
For just as it is the will to commit adultery which
constitutes the adulterer, even though he does riot
find the opportunity of actually committing adultery,
and the will to commit murder constitutes the
murderer, although he may not be actually able
to effect his purpose; for just this reason if I see
such a ' sinless ' man suffering [the pains of martyr
dom], even if he has actually done no sin, I shall
say that he is evil in so far as he has still the
will to transgress. For I will say anything rather
than that Providence is evil."
Moreover, even if the example of Jesus were to
be flung in his face by those who preferred miracle
to law, the sturdy defender of the Gnosis says that
he should answer : " If you permit, I will say, He
has not sinned; but was like a babe suffering."
And if he were pressed even more closely, he would
say : " The man you name is man, but God [alone]
is righteous ; for ' no one is pure from pollution,' "
as Job said.
Men suffer, says Basilides, from their deeds in
former lives ; the " elect " soul suffers " honourably "
through martyrdom, but souls of another nature by
other appropriate punishments. The " elect " soul is
evidently one that will suffer for an ideal; in other
276 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
words it is possessed of faith, which is the "assent
of the soul to any of the things which do not
excite sensation " ; such a soul, then, " discovers
doctrines without demonstration by an intellective
apprehension."
The vulgar superstition of transmigration, the
passing of a human soul into the body of an animal
— so often confused by the uninstructed with the
doctrine of reincarnation, which denies such a
possibility — received a rational explanation at the
hand of the Basilidian school. It arose from a con
sideration of the animal nature in man, the animal
soul, or body of desire, the ground in which the
passions inhere ; the doctrine being thus summarized
by Clement :
" The Basilidians are accustomed to give the name
The of appendages [or accretions] to the passions. These
«Appen°- essences, they say, have a certain substantial
existence, and are attached to the rational soul,
owing to a certain turmoil and primitive confusion."
The word translated essences is literally "spirits";
curiously enough the whole animal soul is called the
" counterfeit spirit " in the Pistis Sophia treatise, and
in The Timceus of Plato the same idea is called
" turmoil," as may be seen from the commentary of
Proclus. The primitive confusion is of course the
chaotic conglomeration of the universal seed-mixture,
and the differentiation of the " elemental essence "
of some modern writers on theosophy.
" On to this nucleus other bastard and alien natures
of the essence grow, such as those of the wolf, ape,
lion, goat, etc. And when the peculiar qualities of
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 277
such natures appear round the soul, they cause the
desires of the soul to become like to the special
natures of these animals, for they imitate the actions
of those whose characteristics they bear. And not
only do human souls thus intimately associate them
selves with the impulses and impressions of irrational
animals, but they even imitate the movements and
beauties of plants, because they likewise bear the
characteristics of plants appended to them. Nay,
there are also certain characteristics [of minerals]
shown by habits, such as the hardness of adamant."
But we are not to suppose that man is composed
of several souls, and that it is proper for man to
yield to his animal nature, and seek excuse for
his misdeeds by saying that the foreign elements
attached to him have compelled him to sin ; far
from it, the choice is his, the responsibility is his,
the rational soul's. Thus in his book, On an
Appended Soul, Isidorus, son of Basilides, writes :
" Were I to persuade anyone that the real soul
is not a unit, but that the passions of the wicked Moral
are occasioned by the compulsion of the appended bility.
natures, no common excuse then would the worthless
of mankind have for saying, ' I was compelled, I
was carried away, I did it without wishing to do
so, I acted unwillingly ' ; whereas it was the man
himself who led his desire towards evil, and refused
to battle with the constraints of the appendages.
Our duty is to show ourselves rulers over the
inferior creation within us, gaining the mastery by
means of our rational principle."
In other words, the man is the same man, no
278 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
matter in what body or vesture he may be ; the
vestures are not the man.
One of the greatest festivals of the school was
the celebration of the Baptism of Jesus on the
fifteenth day of the Egyptian month Tobe or Tybi.
" They of Basilides," says Clement, " celebrate His
Baptism by a preliminary night-service of readings;
and they say that 'the fifteenth year of Tiberius
Csesar ' means the fifteenth day of the month Tybi."
It was then that the Father "in the likeness of
a dove" — which they explained as meaning the
Minister or Holy Spirit — came upon Him.
In "the fifteenth [year] of Tib[erius]" we have,
then, perhaps an interesting glimpse into the
workshop of the " historicizers."
It is evident, therefore, that the Basilidians did
not accept the accounts of the canonical gospels
literally, as Hippolytus claims; on the contrary,
they explained such incidents as historicized legends
of initiation, the process of which is magnificently
worked out in the Pistis Sophia treatise, to which
I must refer the reader for further information.
We learn from Agrippa Castor, as preserved by
A Trace Eusebius, that Basilides imposed a silence of five
of Zoro- ,,
astrianism. years on his disciples, as was the custom in the
Pythagorean school, and that he and his school
set great store by the writings of a certain
Barcabbas and Barcoph, and by other books of
Orientals. Scholars are of opinion that Barcabbas
and Barcoph, and their variants, point to the cycle
of Zoroastrian literature which is now lost, but
which was in great favour among many Gnostic
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 279
communities. It must have been that among the
learned Jews and Essenes, after the return from
Babylonia, and also among the theosophically
minded of the time, .the traditions of the Magi
and of the great Iranian faith were an important
part of eclectic and syncretistic religion. The
Avesta-literature that has come down to us is
said to be a recovery from memory of a very
small portion of the great library of Persepolis,
destroyed by the " accursed Alexander," as Pars!
tradition has it. And it seems exceedingly probable,
as Cumont has shown in his just -published monu
mental work on the subject, that the Mithriac
mystery-tradition contains as authentic a tradition
as the Pars! line of descent, and throws a brilliant
light on the Zoroastrianism with which Gnosticism
was in contact.
Such, then, is all that can be deduced of the real
Basilidian system from the writings of Hippolytus
and Clemens Alexandrinus, who respectively selected
only such points as they thought themselves capable
of refuting; that is to say, such features of the
system as they considered most erroneous. To the
student of comparative religion it is evident that
both Church Fathers misunderstood the tenets they
quoted, seeing that even such hostilely selected
passages easily fall into the general scheme of
universal theosophy, once they are taken out of the
setting of Patristic refutation, and allowed to stand
on their own merits. It is therefore a matter of deep
regret that the writings of the school have been lost
or destroyed ; they would doubtless have thrown
280 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
much light not only on Christian theosophy but
also on the obscure history of the origins.
It now remains for us to refer briefly to the
"sPuri°us" Basilidian system. The following points
are taken from Irenseus and the epitomators, and
are another proof of the unreliability of Irenseus,
the sheet-anchor of orthodox hseresiology. The
series of writers and copyists to which we refer,
had evidently no first-hand information of the
teaching of Basilides, and merely retailed whatever
fantastic notions popular rumour and hearsay
attributed to the school.
The main features of the confection thus brewed
are as follows. The God of the Basilidians, they
said, was a certain Abraxas or Abrasax, who was
the ruler of their first heaven, of which heavens
there were no less than 365. This power was so
denominated because the sum of the numerical
values of the Greek letters in the name Abrasax
came to 365, the number of days in the year.
We learn, however, from Hippolytus (II.) that
this part of the system had to do with a far lower
stage of creation than the God beyond all. It is
not, however, clear whether the Abrasax idea is to
be identified with the Great Ruler of the Ogdoad, or
the Ruler of the Hebdomad and the region of the
"proasteioi up to the aether." In any case the 365
" heavens " pertained to the astrological and
genetical considerations of Egyptian and Chaldsean
occult science, and represented from one point of
view the 365 " aspects " of the heavenly bodies
(during the year), as reflected on the surface of
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 281
the earth's " atmosphere " or envelope, which
entended as far as the moon.
Now it is curious to notice that in the Pistis
Sophia treatise the mysteries of embryology are
consummated by a hierarchy of elemental powers, or
builders, 365 in number, who follow the dictates of
the karmic law, and fashion the new body in accord
ance with past deeds. The whole is set forth in great
detail, and also the astrological scheme of the one
ruler of the four, which in their turn each rule over
ninety, making in all 365 powers.
Not till Schwartze translated this treatise from
the Coptic, in 1853, was any certain light thrown on
the Abrasax idea, and this just two years after Miller
in 1851 published his edition of The Philosophumena,
and thus supplied the material for proving that the
hitherto universal opinion that the "Abrasax" was
the Basilidian name for the God over all, was a gross
error based on ignorance or misrepresentation. It is
also to be noticed that the ancient anonymous treatise
which fills the superior MS. of the Codex Brucianus,
makes great use of the number 365 among its
endless hierarchies, but nowhere mentions the name
Abrasax.
The elemental forces which fashion the body are
the lowest servants of the karmic law. It was
presumably these lowest powers that made up the
Abrasax of the populace. The God over all is the
supreme ruler of an endless galaxy of rulers, gods,
archangels, authorities, and powers, all of them
superior to the 365.
In fact the mysteries of the unseen world were
282 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
so intricate in detail, that even those who devoted
their lives to them with unwearied constancy could
scarcely understand some of the lower processes,
although the general idea was simple enough ; and
thus Basilides imposed a silence of five years on
his disciples, and declared that " only one out of
1,000, and two out of 10,000," could really receive
the Gnosis, which was the consummation of many
lives of effort. Curiously enough this very phrase
is also found in the Pistis Sophia treatise.
The term Abrasax is well known to students of
Gnosticism, because of the number of gems on which
it is found, and which are attributed to the followers
of Basilides ; in addition to the great Continental
scholars who have treated the matter, in this country
King has devoted much of his treatise to the subject.
The best and latest authorities, however, are of
opinion " that there is no tangible evidence for
attributing any known gems to Basilidianism or any
other form of Gnosticism."
In fact, in the Abrasax matter, as in all other
Abrasax. things, Gnosticism followed its natural tendency of
going " one better," to use a colloquialism, on every
form of belief, or even superstition. Doubtless the
ignorant populace had long before believed in
Abrasax as the great power which governed birth
and everyday affairs, according to astrological
notions ; talismans, invocations, and the rest of the
apparatus which the vulgar mind ever clamours
for in some form or other, were all inscribed
with this potent " name of power." Behind the
superstition, however, there lay certain occult facts,
THE BASILIDIAN GNOSIS. 283
of the real nature of which, of course, the vulgar
astrologers and talisman-makers were naturally
ignorant. There facts, however, seem to have been
known to the doctors of the Gnosis, and they
accordingly found the proper place for them in their
universal systems. Thus Abrasax, the Great God
of the ignorant, was placed among the lower hier
archies of the Gnosis, and the popular idea of him
was assigned to the lowest building powers of the
physical body.
As to the rest of the " spurious system" there is
nothing of interest to record; we cannot, however,
omit the silliest tale told against the Basilidians,
which was as follows. They are said to have believed
that at the crucifixion Jesus changed bodies with
Simon of Cyrene, and then, when his substitute hung
in agony, stood and mocked at those he had tricked !
— with which cock-and-bull story we may come out
of the Irenseic " store-house of Gnosticism " for a
breathing space.
Of the history of the school we know nothing
beyond the fact that Epiphanius, at the end of the
fourth century, still met with students of the
Basilidian Gnosis in the nomes west of the Delta,
from Memphis to the sea. It seems more probable,
however, that the school continued in the main
stream of Gnosticism of the latter half of the second
century, and was at the back of the great Valentinian
movement of which we have next to treat. Indeed
it is very probable that the followers of this, the main
stream of the Gnosis, would have warmly resented
being classed as "them of Basilides" or "them of
284 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Valentinus " ; they doubtless regarded these teachers
as handers-on of a living tradition, each in his own
way, and not as severally inspired revealers of new
doctrines.
THE VALENTINIAN MOVEMENT.
BEHIND the whole Valentinian movement stands
The " Great the commanding and mysterious fio-ure of Valen-
Unknown" of
Gnosticism. tinus himself, universally acknowledged to have
been the greatest of the Gnostics. His learning
and eloquence are admitted, even by his bitterest
opponents, to have been of a most extraordinary
nature, and no word has ever been breathed
against his moral character. And yet, when we
come to analyze the chaos of " information " which
Patristic writers have left us on the subject of
so-called Valentinianism, we find the mysterious
character of the great master of the Gnosis ever
receding before our respectful curiosity; he who has
been made to give his name to the remodelling of
the whole structure, still remains the "great
unknown " of Gnosticism. We know nothing certain
of him as a man, nothing definite of him as a writer,
except the few mutilated scraps which hseresiological
polemics have vouchsafed to us.
(I am of course leaving aside entirely the vexed
question of, I will not say the authorship, but the
compilation, of the treatises in the Askew and Bruce
Codices. My own opinion is that we owe a great
part of these elaborations to Valentinus; not that
I think this can be proved in any satisfactory fashion
THE VALENTINIAN MOVEMENT. 285
with the present scanty sources of information open
to us. On the contrary, however, I do not see how
it is to be disproved. It is very strange that, in
spite of the universally admitted transcendency of
Valentinus, no one of his works has been preserved
to us. They are said to have been exceedingly
intricate and difficult; they are further said to have
been syntheses and symphonies as it were of prior
formulations of the Gnosis. Now distinctly this is
not the case with the outline of the best known
system ascribed to " them of Valentinus " by the
Church Fathers. \Ynereas it is patently the case
with the treatises in Coptic translations ; they could
have been elaborated by no one but the stoutest-
headed among the Gnostics— and the best head-piece
of them all is said to have been on the shoulders
of Valentinus.)
In spite of this appalling ignorance of the man
and his teachings, the so-called Valentinian Gnosis
is the piece de resistance of nearly every hgeresio-
logical treatise. We shall, therefore, have to trespass
on the patience of the reader for a short space,
while we set up a few finger-posts in the maze
of Valentinianism, as seen through the eyes of
its Patristic opponents. We should moreover
always remember that " Valentinianism," so far
from being a single separate formulation of the
Gnosis, was the main stream of Gnosticism simply
rechristened by the name of its greatest leader.
With the exception of the few fragments to
which we have referred, all that has been written "Them of
Va/lentinus . '
by the Fathers refers to the teachings of " them
286 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of Valentinus," and even then it is but very
rarely that we have an unmutilated quotation
from any written work of theirs; for the most
part it all consists of fragments torn from their
contexts, or mere hearsay. Now the followers of
Valentinus were no slavish disciples who could do
nothing else but repeat parrot-like the " words of the
master"; the ipse dixit spirit was far from their
independent genius. Each of them thought out the
details of the scheme of universal philosophy in his
own fashion. True that by this time the presentation
of the Gnosis, from being of a most diverse nature,
had become more settled in its main features, and
perhaps Valentinus may have initiated this synthe-
ticizing tendency, though it is far more probable that
he developed and perfected it ; neverthless it was still
enormously free and independent in innumerable
details of a very far-reaching character, and its
adherents were imbued with that spirit of research,
discovery, and adaptation which ever marks a period
of spiritual and intellectual life.
Thus we understand the complaint of Irenseus,
who laments that he never could find two Valen-
tinians who agreed together. And if this be so, what
good is there in any longer talking of the " Valen-
tinian system "? We know next to nothing from the
Church Fathers of the "system" of Valentinus
himself ; as to his followers, each introduced new
modifications, which we can no longer follow in the
confused representations of the Church Fathers, who
make them flatly contradict not only one another, but
also themselves.
THE VALENTINIAN MOVEMENT. 287
From The Philosophumena, published in 1851, we
first heard of an Eastern and Western (Anatolic The so-called
Eastern and
and Italic) division of the school of Valentinus, Western
Schools.
thus explaining the title superscribed to the Extracts
from Theodotus appended, in the only M.S. of them
we possess, to The Miscellanies of Clement of
Alexandria. A great deal has been made of this ;
the meagre differences of doctrine of the Anatolic
and Italic schools of Valentinianism indicated by
Hippolytus (II.) have been seized upon by criticism,
and had their backs broken by the weight of
argument which has been piled upon them. But
when Lipsius demonstrates that the Extracts from
Theodoius, which claim in their superscription to
belong to the Eastern school, are, following the
indications of Hippolytus, half Eastern and half
Western, the ordinary student has to hold his head
tightly on to his shoulders, and abandon all hope
of light from the division of Valentinianism into
Anatolic and Italic schools, in the present state of
our ignorance ; — unless indeed we simply assume
that they were originally purely geographical
designations, to which in later times a doctrinal
signification was unsuccessfully attempted to be
given.
Although we have no sure indication of the date
of Valentinus himself, it may be conjectured to
extend from about A.D. 100 to A.D. 180, as will be
seen later on.
Of the other leaders of the movement, the earliest
with whose names we are acquainted, are Secundus The Leaders
and Marcus. Now Marcus himself had a large Movement.
288 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
following as early as 150 ; his followers were not
called Valentinians but Marcosians, or Marcians, and
what we know of his system differs enormously
from those of the rest of "them of Valentinus."
Marcus is sometimes supposed to have been a
contemporary of Irenaaus, but this is only on the
supposition that Irengeus, in using the second person
in his hortatory and admonitory passages, is
addressing a living person, arid not employing the
" thou " as a mere rhetorical effect, as Tertullian
with Marcion.
Next, years later, we come to Ptolernseus, who
again is supposed to have been a contemporary of
Irenaeus somewhere about A.D. 180.
Ireneeus had certainly no personal knowledge of
Ptolemaeus, and dealt for the most part with his
followers, who are said to have differed greatly
from their teacher.
Later still is Heracleon, whom Clement (c. 193)
calls the most distinguished of the disciples of
Valentinus. Both Heracleon and Ptolemseus, how
ever, are known not so much for the exposition of
a system as for the exegetical treatment of scripture
from the standpoint of the Gnosis of their time.
Still later, and as late as, say, about 220,
Axionicus and Baidesanes flourished, the former of
whom taught at Antioch, and the latter still farther
o
east. They are therefore called, by some, heads of
the Anatolic or Oriental school.
Theodotus, from whom the Excerpts appended
to Clement's Miscellanies were taken, was of course
far earlier in date, but of him we know nothing
THE VALENTINIAN MOVEMENT. 289
We also hear of a certain Theotimus and Alexander,
who are earlier than 220.
In brief, the influence of Valentinus spread far
and wide, from Egypt eastwards to Syria, Asia
Minor and Mesopotamia, and westwards to Rome,
Gaul, and even Spain.
A short review of the teachings ascribed to these
doctors of the Gnosis will bring our task to a close, TAe Syntheti-
cizmg of the
as far as the indirect sources of Gnosticism for the Gnosis.
first two centuries are concerned. But the fact
we would again insist upon is, that we are face to
face with a great movement and not a single system.
On the one hand, such older forms of the Gnosis
as had been exceedingly antagonistic to Judaism
found a logical outcome in the great Marcionite
movement, which cut Christianity entirely apart
from Judaism ; on the other, a basis of reconciliation
was sought by the more moderate and mystical
views of the movement now headed by Valentinus,
which found room for every view in its all-
embracing universality, and explained away con
tradictions by means of that inner secret teaching
which was claimed to have come from the Saviour
Himself.
The main outline of the movement of conciliation,
which presumably had always been the attitude of
the innermost circles, is perhaps to be most clearly
seen to-day in the system of Basilides, but those
infinite spaces, which either Basilides himself left
unfilled, or Hippolytus (II.) has omitted to mention
in his quotations, were also peopled with an
infinitude of creations and creatures by the genius
290 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of the Gnostics, who could brook no deficiency in
the exposition of their universal science. Into this
general outline, or one closely resembling it, they
fitted the various aspects of the ancient Gnosis and
the postulates of the old religions and philosophies,
adopting these world-old ideas, and adapting them
by the light of the new revelation, retaining some
times the old names, more frequently inventing new
ones.
This syntheticizing of the Gnosis was mainly
due to the initiative of the genius of Valentinus.
His technical works, as we have observed above, are
said to have been most abstruse and difficult of
comprehension, as well they might be from the
nature of the task he attempted. What has become
of these writings ? No Church Father seems to have
been acquainted with a single one of his technical
treatises; at best we have only a few ethical frag
ments from letters and homilies. But what of his
own followers, whom Church Fathers and critics
make responsible for a certain Valentinian system
of a most chaotic nature ? Were they in possession
of MSS. of Valentinus ; or did they depend on general
notions derived from his lectures ? Did Valentinus
work out a consistent scheme of the Gnosis ; or did
he set forth several alternatives, owing to the
difficulty of the matter, and the innumerable points
of view from which it could be envisaged ? If the
Pistis Sophia document and the other two Codices
can be made to throw any light on the matter, it
will be a precious acquisition to our knowledge of
this most important epoch; if not, we must be
THE VALENTINIAN MOVEMENT. 291
content to remain in the dark until some fresh
document is discovered.
Meantime we must confine our attention to
the certain traces of Valentinus and the general Sources of
Information.
movement; but before doing so, we must briefly
review our authorities among the Fathers. In
this review I shall mostly follow Lipsius, who is
not only one of the best authorities on the subject
(Art. in S. and W.'s Diet of Christ. Biog., 1887),
but who long ago inaugurated the admirable
critical investigations into our Gnostic sources of
information, by his analysis of The Panarion of
Epiphanius.
Tertullian informs us that prior to himself no
fewer than four orthodox champions had under
taken the refutation of the Valentinians : namely,
Justin Martyr, Miltiades, Irenseus and the Mon-
tanist Proculus. With the exception of the five
books of Irenseus, the rest of these controversial
writings are lost.
Irenseus wrote his treatise somewhere about
A.D. 185-195. He devotes most of his first book
to the Valentinians exclusively, and isolated notices
are found in the remaining four books.
Irenaeus claims to have come across certain
Memoranda of the Valentinians and had conversa
tions with some of their number. But these Notes
belonged only to the followers of Ptolemgeus, and
only one short fragment is ascribed to a writing
of Ptolemseus himself. The personal conversations
were also held with followers of the same
teacher, presumably in the Rhone district — not
292 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
exactly a fertile soil in which to implant the
abstruse tenets of the Gnosis, we should think,
in spite of the " martyrs of Lyons."
In dealing with Marcus, Irenseus derived his
information for the most part from the same un
reliable oral communications, but he seems also to
have been in possession of a Memoir of a Marcosian ;
Marcus himself living and working far away in
Asia Minor years before.
In chapter xi. Irenaeus professes to give the
teaching of Valentinus himself; but here he is
simply copying from the work of a prior refutator.
Lipsius also points out that Irenseus drew some of
his opening statements from the same source as
Clement in The Excerpts from Theodotus.
From all of which it follows that we are face
to face with a most provoking patch-work, and
that the system of Valentinus himself is not to be
found in The Refutation by the Bishop of Lyons.
Our next source of information is to be found
in the Excerpts from the otherwise unknown
Theodotus, which are supposed by Lipsius to have
probably formed part of the first book of Clement's
lost work, The Outlines. These excerpts "have
been dislocated and their original coherence broken
up" in so violent a manner, and so interspersed
with " counter-observations and independent dis
cussions" by Clement hinself, that it is exceedingly
difficult to form a judgment upon them. When,
moreover, Lipsius assigns part of these extracts to
the Oriental and part to the Occidental school, he
practically bids us erase the superscription which
THE VALENTINIAN MOVEMENT. 293
has always been associated with them— namely,
Extracts from the (Books) of Theodotus and the
so-called Anatolic School. In any case, we are
again face to face with another patch-work.
Hippolytus (I.), in his lost Syntagma, recoverable
from the epitomators Pseudo-Tertullian and Philaster,
and Epiphanius, seems to have combined the first
seven chapters of Irenaeus with some other account,
and the chaos is still further confused.
Hippolytus (II.), in that most precious of all
haeresiological documents, The Philosophumena,
gives an entirely independent account, in fact the
most uniform and synoptical representation of any
phase of the Gnosis of the Valentinian cycle that
has reached us through the Fathers.
Tertullian simply copies from Irenseus, and so
also for the most part does Epiphanius. The
latter, however, has preserved the famous Letter of
Ptolemceus to Flora, and also a list of " barbarous
names " of the seons not found elsewhere. Theodoret
of course simply copies Irenseus and Epiphanius.
So many, and of such a nature, then, are our
indirect sources of information for an understanding
of the Valentinian movement; — a sorry troop of
blind guides, it must be confessed, where everything
requires the greatest care and discrimination. Let
us now return to Valentinus himself, and endeavour
to patch together from the fragments that remain,
some dim silhouette of a character that was
universally acknowledged to have been the greatest
among the Gnostics.
294 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
VALENTINUS.
As to his biography, we know next to nothing.
Valentinus was an Egyptian, educated at Alexandria
in all that Egypt and Greece had to teach
him. The mysterious lore of ancient Khem, the
" mathesis " of Pythagoras, the wisdom of Plato, all
helped to fashion his character. But the greatest
inspiration of all he found in the last outpouring
from the same source from which the wisdom
of every true philosopher comes — the stream of
Christianity that was swirling along at full tide.
But what kind of Christianity did Valentinus
encounter at Alexandria ? There was no Cate
chetical School when he was a boy. Pantaenus and
Clement were not as yet. There were the Logoi,
the Sayings of the Lord, and many contradictory
traditions ; a Pauline community also, doubtless
founded by some missionary from Asia Minor ; and
numerous legends of the mysterious Gnosis which
Jesus had secretly taught to those who could com
prehend. But, above all things, at the back were
the inner schools and communities of the wisdom-
traditions and the Gnosis. Valentinus must have
been in closest intimacy with Basilides, though he
is said to have stated that a certain Theodas, an
" apostolic man," was his witness to the direct
tradition of the Gnosis. Nothing is known of this
Theodas or Theudas, and Ussher has even assumed
that it was a contraction for Theodotus, a conjecture
in which he has been followed by Zahn. This theory
VALENTINUS. 295
would thus make the Theodotus of the Excerpts in
Clement an older authority than Valentinus himself,
which would still further complicate the Eastern and
Western school question, and, in fact, change the
whole problem of Valentinian origins. All we can
say here is that the view is not entirely improbable,
and would clear the ground on certain important
points.
In addition there were at Alexandria, in the great
library and in the private libraries of the mystics,
all those various sources of information, and in the
intellectual and religious atmosphere of the place all
those synthetical and theosophical tendencies which
make for the formulation of a universal system of
religion. And this we know was the task that
Valentinus set before him as his goal. He deter
mined to syntheticize the Gnosis, every phase of
which was already in some sort a synthesis. But
in so doing, Valentinus did not propose to attack
or abandon the general faith, or to estrange the
popular evolution of Christianity which has since
been called the Catholic Church. He most probably
remained a Catholic Christian to the end of his life.
It is true that we read of his excommunication in
Tertullian, coupled with the favourite accusation
brought against prominent heretics, that he aposta
tized from the Church because his candidature for
the episcopal office was rejected. Tertullian imagined
that this took place at Rome ; but, even if so, did
Rome speak in the name of the Catholic Church in
those early days ? Would Alexandria, the philosophic,
recognize the ruling of disciplinarian Rome ? Or
296 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
did Rome excommunicate Valentinus after his death,
a favourite way with her in after times of finishing
a controversy ? Or is not Tertullian romancing here
as is not infrequently the case ? Epiphanius dis
tinctly states that Valentinus was regarded as
orthodox so long as he was at Rome, and Tertullian
himself also, in another place, adds fifteen years of
orthodoxy on to the date of his leaving Rome.
Valentinus seems to have passed the greater part
Date. of his life in Egypt; he was, however, if we can
trust our authorities, for some considerable time
at Rome, somewhere between 138 and 160. One
authority also says that he was at Cyprus.
The date of his death is absolutely unknown ;
critics mostly reckon it about 161, but in order to
arrive at this conclusion, they reject the distinct
statement of Tertullian that Valentinus was still an
orthodox member of the Church up to the time of
Eleutherus (c. 175); and the equally distinct statement
of Origen, that he was personally acquainted with
Valentinus. This would set back Origen's own date
of birth and advance the date of Valentinus' death;
but as both are problematical, we have nothing to
fear from the putting back of the one and the putting
forward of the other ten years or so.
On the whole I am inclined to assign the date of
Valentinus to the first eighty years of the second
century. In further support of this length of days,
I would invite the reader to reflect on the extra
ordinary fact that, though the name of Valentinus is
in the mouth of everyone of the time, and though
his fame entirely eclipses that of every other name
VALENTINUS. 297
of this most important Gnostic cycle, the words and
deeds of the great coryphaeus of Gnosticism are
almost entirely without record, and, stranger than
all, he is regarded, at any rate for the major part
of his life, as orthodox. This strange fact requires
explanation, and I would venture to suggest that
the explanation is to be found to a great extent in
the extraordinary reserve and secrecy of the man.
He was an enigma not only to the generality, but
even to those who regarded him as a teacher.
The Gnosis in his hands is trying to forestall
" orthodoxy," to embrace everything, even the most
dogmatic formulation of the traditions of the Master.
The great popular movement and its incomprehensi
bilities were recognized by Valentinus as an integral
part of the mighty out-pouring; he laboured to
weave all together, external and internal, into one
piece, devoted his life to the task, and doubtless
only at his death perceived that for that age he
was attempting the impossible. None but the very
few could ever appreciate the ideal of the man,
much less understand it.
None of his technical treatises were ever pub
lished; his letters and homilies alone were circulated.
After leaving Rome he is practically lost to
the sight of the Western hseresiologists. Where Writings,
he went, what he did, and how long he lived
after that, is almost entirely conjectural. But if
it be ever shown to be true that such documents as
the Pistis Sophia are specimens of the workshop to
which he belonged, we can at least conjecturally
answer that he went back to Alexandria, where he
298 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
finished his life in the retirement that such
abstruse literary labours required.
Of his writings, besides the fact that they were
numerous and his technical treatises exceedingly
difficult and abstruse, we know very little. He
composed numerous Letters and Homilies and Psalms.
We are also told that he composed a Gospel, but
this is supposed to be a false assumption — false,
that is to say, if by Gospel is meant a Gospel
containing the Sayings of the Lord. But may not
Gospel here be used in the Basilidian sense of an
exposition of the Gnosis, or knowledge of the
things beyond the phenomenal world ?
Tertullian also tells us that Valentinus composed
a treatise entitled Sophia, or Wisdom, Some critics
have asserted that the words of Tertullian do not
refer to a book but to the Wisdom which Valentinus
claimed to teach ; but if this were so, the antithesis
which Tertullian makes between the Wisdom of
Valentinus and the Wisdom of Solomon would lose
all its point. The Wisdom of Solomon is a book, the
Wisdom of Valentinus should also be a book; if it
were intended to mean simply the Gnosis which
Valentinus taught, then its proper antithesis would
have been the Wisdom of God and not of Solomon.
We have now to treat of the few fragments of
The Frag- the works of this prolific writer which have come
ments that
remain. down to us in the writings 01 the Church
Fathers. The latest collection of them is by
Hilgenfeld (1884), whose "emendations," however,
we shall not always follow. The fragments consist of
a few scraps of letters and homilies preserved by
VALENTINUS. 299
Clement of Alexandria, and two pieces in The
Philosophumena — the narrative of a vision and the
scrap of a psalm.
i. From a Letter.
" And just as terror of that creature [lit, plasm]
seized hold of the angels [the fabricative powers],
when it gave voice to things greater than had of the First
been used in its fashioning, owing to the presence Mankind.
in it of Him [the Logos] who, unseen to them
[the powers], had bestowed on it the seed of
the supernal essence [the ego], and who spake of
realities face to face ; in like manner also among
the races of humanity, the works of men become a
terror to them who make them — such as statues
and images, and all things which [men's] hands
fashion to bear the name of God. For Adam being-
fashioned to bear the name of the [Heavenly]
Man [the Logos], spread abroad the terror of that
pre-existing Man, for in very truth he had His
being in him. And they [the powers] were struck
with terror, and [in their terror] speedily marred
the work [of their hands]."
Here we have the Gnostic myth of the genesis
of man, which is already familiar to us in the
general tradition of the Gnosis.
The plasm, or primitive form of man, which
could neither stand nor walk — the embryonic sphere
of Plato's Timceus — is evolved by the powers of
nature, as the outcome of evolution ; into it Deity
breathes the mind, and man is immediately raised
above the rest of the creation and its powers.
300 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Nevertheless his body is still feeble, and the nature-
powers, in fear of the mind within — the " name "
of the Heavenly Man — war on him, and only
by slow degrees does the mind of man learn to
overcome them.
The Heavenly Man is the perfect type of all
Humanities, and the " name " is no name, but that
mysterious something which decides the nature and
class and being of every creature. Man alone down
here has the divine " name " or nature alive within
him.
The " prehistoric " world, with which Egypt was
in direct traditional contact, made much of this
" name " ; statues and talismans and amulets, if made
in a certain manner, were supposed to be a nearer
approach to the perfect type either of manhood or of
nature-organism, and on these fabrications of men's
hands the " name " of this or that supernal power
was thought to be bestowed by " Him who speaks
face to face." Here we have a hint of the
explanation given of "idol-worship" by the initiated
priests of antiquity, which idea was thus woven
into the scheme of universal Gnosis by Valentinus.
ii. From a Letter.
" One [alone] is Good, whose free utterance is His
On the Pure manifestation through his Son ; it is by Him alone
that the heart can become pure, [and that too only]
when every evil essence has been expelled out of
it. Now its purity is prevented by the many
essences which take up their abode in it, for each
of them accomplishes its own deeds, outraging it in
VALENTINUS. 301
divers fashions with unseemly lusts. As far as I
can see, the heart seems to receive somewhat the
same treatment as an inn [or caravanserai], which
has holes and gaps made in its walls, and is
frequently filled with dung, men living filthily in
it and taking no care of the place as being
someone else's property. Thus it is with the heart
so long as it has no care taken of it, ever unclean
and the abode of many daemons [elemental essences].
But when the Alone Good Father hath regard
unto it, it is sanctified and shineth with light ;
and he who possesseth such a heart, is so blessed
that ' he shall see God.' "
Here we have the very same doctrine as that
enunciated by Basilides and Isidorus with regard to
the " appendages " of the soul, as indeed is pointed
out by Clement. The doctrine was an exceedingly
ancient one in Egypt. In the so-called Book of the
Dead we read, that the " heart " is a distinct
personality within the man (the "purusha [or man]
in the aether of the heart" of the Upanishads); and
not only this, but the formula referred to and its
explanatory texts teach us that " it is not the
heart that sins but only its fleshly envelope."
(Cf. Wiedemann's Relig. of the Ancient Egyptians,
p. 287 ; 1897.) Isidorus, as we have already seen,
guarded against making the " appendages " the
scapegoat, and fixed the responsibility on the
"heart" proper, the "ancestral heart" — "guardian of
my fleshes" — the reincarnating entity. It is, how
ever, quite true that the passions are connected
with the blood, arid so with the " fleshly envelope,"
302 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
or physical heart, in which the real "heart" is said
to be enshrined.
iii. From the Letter to Agathopus.
The " free utterance," or perfect expression, of
Concerning the Alone Good can only be manifested by the
One of the J J
Powers of the maii made perfect. Such a man was Jesus. Thus
Perfect Man. *
we find Valentinus writing to Agathopus as follows :
" It was by his unremitting self-denial in all
things that Jesus attained to [lit, gained by
working] godship ; he ate and drank in a peculiar
manner, without any waste. The power of con
tinence was so great in him, that his food did
not decay in him, for he himself was without
decay."
It is said that the physical body can be
gradually accustomed to less and less nutriment,
and innumerable cases are on record in the East of
holy ascetics who have been able to support life
on incredibly small quantities of food. The "power"
described above by Valentinus is one of the siddhis
mentioned in every treatise on yoga in India, and
in the Upanishads we read that " very little
waste " is one of the first signs of " success in
yoga" We are also told that in the highest
stages, after the particles of the body have been
entirely refined and made to obey the higher-
will of the ascetic, a body of a still higher grade
of matter can be gradually substituted ; and
apparently some such ideas as these (together
with other notions) lay behind the doctrine of
docetism which was an integral part of the Gnosis-
VALENTINUS. 303
Clement himself also shared like views, and so did
some other Fathers.
iv. From a Homily.
" From the very beginning have ye been immortal
and children of life — such life as the aeons eniov ; Ye are th»
,j , Sons of God.
yet would ye have death shared up among you, to
spend and lavish it, so that death might die in you
and by your hands; for inasmuch as ye dissolve the
world and are not dissolved yourselves, ye are lords
of all creation and destruction."
Here we have the burden of the teaching in one
of the treatises of the Codex Brucianus — to crucify
the world and not let the world crucify us — and of
the Pistis Sophia treatise, "Know ye not that ye
are all gods and lords ? " The Self within the heart,
the seed of the divine, the pneumatic light-spark,
the dweller in light, the inner man, was the eternal
pilgrim incarnated in matter; those who had this
alive and conscious within them were the spiritual
or pneumatic. To such Valentinus is speaking.
v. A few Sentences preserved in the Controversial
Matter of Clement following the above Quota
tion, and probably taken from a Writing of
Valentinus.
The "elect race," the third Sonship of Basilides,
has incarnated here for the abolition of " death," The Fac«
the domain of the Ruler of the phenomenal world, °
the samsara of the Buddhist and Indian philo
sophers, the realm of the "ever-becoming" of Plato.
This Ruler is the God of the Old Testament. "No
304 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
man shall see the face of God and live." This is
the face of death, but there is also a face of life,
concerning which Valentinus writes :
" As far removed as is the [dead image] from
the living face, so far is the [phenomenal] world
removed from the living aeon [the nournenal]. What
then is the cause of the image ? The majesty of the
[living] face, [or person,] which exhibits the type [of
the universe] to the painter, and in order that it
[the universe] may be honoured by its name [ — the
name or real being of the majesty of the godhead].
For it is not the authentic [or absolute] nature
which is found in the form ; it is the name which
completes the deficiency in the confection. The
invisible nature of deity co-operates so as to induce
faith in that which has been fashioned."
Here we have the same idea as in Fragment i.,
and presumably it was taken from the same Letter.
The "painter" is of course the user of the creative
forces of the phenomenal world, who copies from
the types or ideas in the noumenal world of reality.
He whom the Jews called God and Father, was said
by Valentinus to be the " image and prophet of the
true God," the word prophet meaning one who
speaks for and interprets. The " image " is the
work of Sophia or Wisdom, who is the " painter "
who transfers the types from the noumenal spaces
on to the canvas of the phenomenal world, and the
" true God " or the " God of truth " is the creator
of the noumenal world, which contains the types of
all things. He is the god of life; the "image" is
the god of death.
VALENTINUS. 305
" All things that come forth from a pair [or
syzygy] are fullnesses (pleromata), but all which
proceed from a single [a3on] are images."
This will be explained later on; it refers to the
"fall" of Sophia from the aeon- world, whereby the
phenomenal universe came into existence.
The remarks of Clement which immediately
follow are almost unintelligible ; they deal with
the coming of the " excellent " spirit, the infusion
of the light-spark into man.
vi. From the Letter on the Community
of Friends.
" Many of these things which are written in
the public volumes, are found written in the Church Concerning
* j»i -j' <n 1 1 i • i • i tne Pe°Ple °
01 God. For those teachings which are common, the Beloved.
are the words which proceed from the heart, the
law written in the heart. This is the People of
the Beloved who are loved by and love Him."
Clement assumes that Valentinus means by
"public volumes" the Jewish writings and the
books of the philosophers.
The " public volumes," however, for Valentinus
included not only the works of the philosophers
and the scriptures of the Jews, but also the scriptures
of all other religions, and also the Christian documents
in general circulation. He merely asserts that the
only " common " or general truths are those pertaining
to the Community of Friends, or Saints, who form
the Church of God, the People of the Beloved. These
truths come from the heart ; he protests against the
narrow view that can find truth in only one set of
306 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
scriptures; and declares it is in all scriptures and
philosophies, if one looks to the spirit and not the
letter.
vii. A very doubtful Fragment from Eulogius of
Alexandria writing at the end of the Sixth
Century.
If this fragment can be accepted as genuine, we
The learn that the early Christians, whom Valentinus
Galileans.
calls "the Galileans of the time of Christ," believed
in the doctrine of two natures, whereas the Valen-
tinians asserted that there was but one. This is
quite credible, following on the lines of argument of
Isidorus concerning the unit consciousness of the soul
and its responsibility, and the teaching of Valentinus
that Jesus " worked out " his own divinity.
viii. The Myth which Valentinus made.
Hippolytus (II.) inserts the following scrap of
information in the midst of the lengthy description
of the system of Marcus, which he copied from
Irenseus :
Valentinus says that he once saw a child that
The Wisdom had only just been born, and that he proceeded to
"Little One." question it bo find out who it was. And the babe
replied and said it was the Logos." To this, says
Hippolytus, Valentinus subjoined a " tragic myth,"
which formed the basis of his teaching. Have we here
an incident from the prologue to one of Valentinus'
treatises ; and is the " tragic myth " Valentinus'
modification of the great Sophia-mythus which was
the deus ex machind of part of his cosmogony ?
VALENTINUS. 307
ix. From a Psalm.
Finally from the same source, The Philoso-
phumena, we recover the following lines ; it is The Chain
of Being.
probable that Hippolytus took them from the same
treatise from which he derived the above informa
tion, and that the Psalm endeavoured to explain
why the new-born babe was the Logos, why
" this " is " That," as the Upanishads have it, and
all is one.
" All things depending in spirit I see ;
All things supported in spirit I view ;
Flesh from soul depending ;
Soul by air supported;
Air from aether hanging —
Fruits borne of the deep —
Babe borne of the womb."
Whether or not this exceedingly mystical Psalm
was taken in the sense we have suggested above is
merely problematical. Such mystic utterances could
of course be interpreted from both the microcosmic
and macrocosmic standpoints ; and Hippolytus gives
us what he asserts to be a Valentinian interpretation
from the latter point of view.
The "flesh" is the Hyle (the Hebdomad of
Basilides); the "soul" is that of the Demiurge (the
" material " force of the aetheric spaces, the Ogdoad
of Basilides) ; the Demiurge hangs from the Spirit,
which from one point of view is the Great Limit or
Boundary, separating the Pleroma, or world of
reality, from the Kenoma or phenomenal universe,
308 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
and from another is Sophia or Wisdom, in the
Kingdom of the Midst. Thus the Demiurge hangs
from Sophia ; Sophia from the Great Boundary or
Horos (a further differentiation of the Basilidian
simple idea of the Great Firmament) ; Horos from the
Pleroma, the Blessed Treasure of the aeons ; and this
world of ideas, or Living ^Eon, from the Abyss or
Great Depth, the Father, the God beyond being.
This is the Valentinian chain of being, the
subordinate details of which are so abstruse and so
complicated, that no one has hitherto been able to
make any consistent scheme out of their chaotic and
contradictory representations in the writings of the
Fathers.
In the MS. of The Philosophumena the above
fragment is prefixed by the disconnected word
" Harvest." Hilgenfeld accordingly speaks of Valen-
tinus " hymning the Great Harvest," which is a very
grandiose conception, but an idea difficult to connect
with the lines quoted.
Such is the poor sum total of our information
as to what Valentinus actually taught himself — nine,
or rather eight, shreds of fragments in all. Yet
what strong, joyous words, bursting with life, in
the midst of the dullness of the refutators' rhetoric.
To these fragments it might seem proper to
append the account which Irenseus (cap, 11) copied
from a former haeresiological writer. It is generally
assumed that this more ancient authority was Justin
Martyr ; but whoever he may have been, he was a
mere summarizer, and even at that early date in
haeresiology (dr. 150), was struggling with the contra-
VALENTINUS. 309
dictory accounts he had heard of the " Valentinian "
Gnosis. I, therefore, consider this source as no more
worthy of special notice than the other summaries
of general so-called Valentinian doctrine found in
the writings of the Fathers. We have nothing
certain to learn in it of the teaching of Valentinus
himself, and that is the only search on which we are
at present engaged.
Thus we take our farewell of the "great un
known " of Gnosticism, whose name was nevertheless The Ariadne's
Thread out
the best known of all, whose influence was the of the Maze,
most far-reaching, and whose doctrines, instead of
being a cut-and-dried system of dead vocables, were
so animate with life that the kaleidoscopic repre
sentations of them by his followers in the first place,
and the puzzled and puzzling summaries by the
Fathers of these protean representations in the
second, have proved the despair of scholarship. The
reason of this for the most part is that, in endea
voring to bring order into this chaos, words and
terms have been followed as clues instead of ideas.
Not only in the case of the Valentinian cycle of
ideas, but also in every other phase of the Gnosis,
these delusive guides have been generally followed
as leaders out of the labyrinth. But the Adriadne's
thread which takes us out of the maze is spun out
of ideas, not of names. The Gnostics were ever
changing their nomenclature ; the god of one system
might even be the devil of another ! He who
makes a concordance of names merely, in Gnosticism,
may think himself lucky to escape a lunatic asylum;
he, on the contrary, who seeks the idea behind the
310 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
name, will often find himself in a realm of great
beauty and harmony of thought. Men like the
Gnostics have ever had intuitions of a real state of
being, of definite and precise realms of consciousness ;
yet each has caught but a glimpse of the reality,
as all men must so long as they are imprisoned in
a body. If the Gnostics exhausted the philosophy
and religion of their time in striving to find a
decent vestment for the naked truth, as they
thought they saw it, who shall blame them ? Though
they contradict one another, in the view of the
word-hunter, they do not contradict themselves for
the follower of ideas. The idea is the key which
opens the mysteries of the Gnosis, and those who
refuse to use this living key must be content to
have the treasury closed against them.
We shall now, before dealing with the followers
of Valentinus, attempt, from the chaos of summaries,
to sift out some of the leading ideas of the Valen-
tinian cycle of the Gnosis. If we were to bring all
these contradictory accounts together and treat them
to a critical analysis, it is to be feared that
the general reader, for whom these sketches
are written, would either close our pages in
despair ; or, if he attempted to follow the details
and the weighing of probabilities, be reduced
to such a state of mental perturbation that he
would forget all that has gone before, and be
rendered totally unfit to comprehend what is to
follow. Such technical work must be reserved for
treatment elsewhere, meantime we will attempt, not
to give an exposition of the system of " them of
SOME OUTLINES OF ^EONOLOGY. 311
Valentinus " — if indeed they ever had a single
definite system —but merely to sketch some outlines
of their ideas on seonology.
SOME OUTLINES OF ^EONOLOGY.
IN order to elevate our thought to a contemplation
of the transcendent problems towards which the Towards the
x . . Great Silence.
mind of these Gnostics was carried, we should
refresh our memory with the sketch of the
Basilidian system which has been given above.
From the world of men, our earth, we must pass
in thought through the sublunary spaces, visible
and invisible; thence we must pass beyond the
moon-firmament, the heaven, into the sethereal spaces
— the star-worlds, and their infinite inhabitants,
spaces and regions, orders and hierarchies — bounded
at the utmost limits of space and time, by the
Great Firmament, the Ring " Pass Not," which
marks off the phenomenal universe from the universe
of reality out of space and time. It is a Boundary
everywhere and — no " where."
Here we bid farewell to time and space, and
reach the region of paradox, for mortal man has
still to speak of it in terms of phenomenal things
— calling it a region, although it is not a region;
speaking of it as the Living ^Eon, though it
transcends all life; hymning it as the Light-world,
though its light is darkness to mortal eyes, because
of the superabundance of its brilliancy.
This is the Pleroma, the world of perfection, of
312 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
perfect types and perfect harmony. The mind falls
back from it, unable to comprehend, and yet the
spirit within cries unto man with a voice that can
brook no denial : " Onward still ; beyond still, and
beyond ! " Then is there Silence ; no words, no
symbols, no thoughts can further avail. The mind
is mute, the spirit is at peace, at rest in the
Supreme Silence of contemplation, of union with the
Divine, the Great Deep — Profundity, the within of
things, that which permeates all, goes through all.
Our Gnostics are said to have " begun " with
The Depth this conception of Bythus, or the Abyss of
Beyond Being. t •*
Profundity; but this is a mistake. Basilides had
already shown how impossible it was to name
the God beyond all; are we to think that the
Valentinians fell short of so obvious a truth ? By
no means; some of them taught of the Beyond the
Deep, a hierarchy of Deeps ; and curiously enough in
the Codex Brucianus we meet with such hierarchies,
and also find them assumed in the Pistis Sophia
treatise. What absurdity, then, to seek a "beginning"
in infinitude ! Such a conception as a beginning
was low down in the scale of being ; we can speak of
the " beginning " of some special phenomenal universe,
but there is an infinitude of such universes, and
infinitude has no beginning.
Beyond the Pleroma, or ideal type of all universes,
there was — what ? Silences more unspeakable than
Silence, and Depths deeper than the Deep ! How the
Valentinians would have laughed at the notion of
ascribing a monistic or dualistic theory to their
intuition of what lay beyond Being, and of making
SOME OUTLINES OF ^EONOLOGY. 313
this the basis of dividing them into an Eastern and
Western school ! Yet that is what Hippolytus (II.)
and many modern critics have done.
Let us then leave the mystery in the Silence of
that Depth beyond Being — a Silence which, as it
were, shut off the Pleroma from the Depth beyond
Being by a still higher Boundary than the Great
Firmament. This highest Boundary was within the
innermost depths of the Pleroma itself, the inward
world, just as the Great Boundary was beyond the
depths of the phenomenal external world. The idea
connoted by the term "depth" takes thought away
from all ideas of three dimensional matter, as we
know it, and introduces it to the notion of " through "
in every direction at the same time, inside and out
as well.
We next have to treat of the "being" of the
Pleroma of the aeons. Every "being" in this T
9 world
" Fullness of Being " (Pleroma) was also, in its
turn, a "fullness" or perfection, and the nature
of the life of these " beings " was shown forth in
their names. They were called aeons, or " eternities,"
for they were out of time and space. Everything
outside the Pleroma, that is to say, everything in
the phenomenal universe, on the contrary, was an
" image " or deficiency. The phenomenal world was
therefore called by such names as the Kenoma or
" Emptiness," the Image, etc.
It is, however, evident that until we reach the
phenomenal world, no possible human language can
serve us to express modes of being which transcend
cosmogonic operations. And yet the hardihood of the
314 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Gnostic genius had to find some method whereby it
could adumbrate the manner of being of the aeons,
which were ex hypothesi out of time and space. Let
us then turn our attention to one of the methods
whereby this was attempted. Not that the Gnostics
worked from below upwards, they received from
above and brought it down into matter; in brief,
their expositions were attempts to describe a living
symbol, which is said to have been shown them in
vision.
Now Pythagoras and Plato, and the instructors
in the Mysteries, declared that physical matter
was ultimately of a geometrical nature; that in
all things "God geometrizes." Thus the five regular
solids formed the summit of the geometrical know
ledge of the Platonic school. It was because of
the attention bestowed on these solids by this
school, that posterity has called the five the Platonic
Solids. The whole of the Elements of Euclid, says
Proclus, were but an introduction to this science
of the perfect solids. These polyhedra were believed
to lie at the back not only of earth-formation, but
of every genus, species, and individual in the material
universe. It is strange that no subject in mathe
matics has been so neglected as that of the regular
solids; but so it is, and the moderns laugh at
such " puerilities " of the ancients.
For the re-discovery and elaboration of a part
of this science within the last six years I must
refer the " doulx lecteur " to the works of a young
Spanish scientist, Senor Soria y Mata.
No one of course who is entirely ignorant of the
SOME OUTLINES OF ^ONOLOGY. 315
subject, will be able to comprehend fully the follow
ing general indications ; but the nature of finger-posts
is to point in certain directions, not to accompany
the traveller along the road ; and the " gentle reader "
who requires such personal conducting must seek it
in Senor Soria's admirable essays. For the present
our work is simply to set up sign-posts ; and so we
return to our task.
But even supposing, some one may say, that the
five solids (which are all variations of one in various
combinations with itself) have some connection with
the typical elements which build up the invisible
molecular structure of physical matter, what has that
to do with the Valentinian Gnostics ? A great deal,
we may answer. Marcus, one of the earliest followers
of Valentinus, has some system of a kabalistic
numbering assigned to him, and in connection with
this Hippolytus (II.) declares that the whole of
Valentinianism was based on the numbers and
geometry of Pythagoras and Plato.
No further proof, however, is brought forward of
this sweeping generality, and no scholar has so far
supplied the missing link. It is, nevertheless, entirely
credible that the seonology of the Valentinian School
was based partly on such considerations. Let us then
attempt to make a few suggestions on the subject, not
from the numbering ascribed to Marcus, but from the
living side of Pythagorean and Platonic mathematics,
the " mathesis " which was the same as the " gnosis"
and which is said to have been called even by
Pythagoras himself, " the gnosis of things that are."
It was then perhaps along this line of thought
316 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
that some of the Gnostic thinkers sought for a
living symbolism, which should adumbrate in some
fashion the manner of being of the aeons. From
the region of definite polyhedrical matter, the order
ing of which, though invisible to the eye, could yet
be imagined in the mind, the symbolism could be
pushed back a further stage — from the molecular to
the atomic as we should say now-a-days. The
regular solids were thus the eventuation in physical
matter of certain systems of perfect equilibrium of
"points" in space. These points were not pure
mathematical abstractions, but actual centres of
force, bearing certain relations to one another, equili
brated by a law of polarity or syzygy. This was
the region of the atom. The atom was thought of
as a living thing of force, a sphere, said by some
to be a spherical (" conical ") swirl, the most perfect
figure, ever contracting and expanding, generative of
all motions, while it is itself self -motive, and yet from
another point of view " immovable," as pertaining to
the "foundations of earth." It is smaller than the
small as matter, yet greater than the great as energy.
It was the atom and its combinations, then, as
we should riow-a-days say, which the Valentinian
Gnosis envisaged in its seonology. I do not, how
ever, for a moment suggest that any Gnostic philo
sopher thought of the atom in the same way as a
modern physicist does ; I believe, on the contrary,
that the most advanced of the Gnostics were shown
this living symbol of world-formation in vision, and
the various systems were efforts to explain such
visions. Of course, any symbol is immensities
SOME OUTLINES OF ^ONOLOGY. 317
removed from the reality, but the endeavour to
imagine, or the privilege of being shown, the living
type lying beyond the simplest types - of physical
matter-formation, is at any rate nearer the reality
than any dead physical shape. Thus the atom and
its simplest modes of differentiated being, may be
taken as symbols of the aeon-world, the Pleroma,
the world of life and light, beyond time and space,
the undecaying heart of the eternities.
The following view may then be of interest to
students of symbolism, who as a rule confine their
attention solely to plane figures, and thus deal as
it were with the " shadows of the dead." For a
plane figure is, so to speak, only a shadow of a
dead solid ; it is the living system of force behind
or within the latter which is the first spark of life
in the series. In order to see this more clearly, let
us take a familiar symbol, the interlaced triangles
or " Solomon's Seal." In solids this symbol is
represented by two mutually interpenetrated
tetrahedra ; from this union come the cube and
octahedron. The dodecahedron and icosahedron
come from the mutual congress of five tetrahedra,
a quintuplication. Thus we have our five regular
solids. The fundamental type is the tetrahedron,
and the force-system behind it consists of two pairs
of atoms, or a double syzygy or couple in perfect
equilibrium. The nature of the relationship of
these atoms or spheres to each other, and of the
interplay of their motions, is the mode of life or
being of the symbol ; and when this is learned'
then the symbol becomes alive and thus the forces
318 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
which the "shadow" of the "dead" solid symbolizes,
are in the hand of the solver of the " mystery."
One form of ancient magic, especially practised in
Egypt, consisted of a most complicated extension
of this idea, which wandered far beyond the limits
of the geometrical symbols. Needless to say that
the vast majority who practised the art, had not
the slightest idea of the " reasons " for their
performances. Magic for the general was never a
rational thing. It consisted of an infinite number
of " rules of thumb," and this side of it is
consequently, and quite rightly, regarded by the
present age of intelligent enquiry as a superstition.
The intelligent student of symbolism will thus
The " Fourth endeavour to free his mind from the limitations of
Dimension.
three-dimensional space, and think within into the
state of the so-called "fourth dimension." For it is
only along this line of thought that there is any
hope of the faintest conception of seonic being.
As the matter is of the first importance for a student
of Gnosticism, and at the same time one of great
difficulty, the following line of thought may be
suggested as a preliminary exercise. Think of an
atom, or monad, as a sphere which generates itself,
or swells out, from a point and refunds itself again
into that point. This gives the simple idea of
position. Take two of such spheres at the same
moment of expansion, that is to say two equal
spheres, and place them in mutual contact. This can
be done in an infinite number of ways, so that they
may be in any direction the one with the other.
Reduce these spheres in thought to mathematical
SOME OUTLINES OF ^ONOLOGY. 319
points, and we have the simplest idea of extension —
one dimension. The two points are the extremities
or boundaries of a line.
Next, take three similar spheres and bring them
into mutual contact. They can be placed in any
direction the one to the other. Reduce them in
thought to points, and we have three points not in
a straight line, lying in a plane surface, or superfices
of two dimensions. Then take four such spheres and
bring them into mutual contact. Reduce them in
their turn to points, and their positions require space
of three dimensions. Finally, take five such spheres
and try to imagine how they can be brought into
mutual contact, that is to say, how each one can
touch all the rest. This cannot be imagined in three
dimensions, and requires the conception of another
" dimension " — something to do with the content of
the spheres — the idea of " through." This does not
seem to be so much a " fourth dimension " as an
involution of perception, retracing the path we have
so far followed.
For instance, three-dimensional space is for normal
sight bounded by surfaces ; those who have inner
vision ( " four-dimensional " sight) say that the con
tents of an object — e.g., a watch — appear, in some
incomprehensible way, spread out before them as on
a surface. If this is so, then three-dimensional space,
the fourth link in our chain, is the turning point, and
hence consciousness turns itself inwards once more
towards the point, which when reached will become
the illimitable circumference, or pleroma of conscious
ness — the nirvanic " atom," so to say.
320 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Let us now try to imagine how the Gnosis
symbolized the ideal universe, the type of all universes
— the primal atom or monad, its motions, and modes
of self -differencing and self -emanation within itself.
The object of their contemplation was identical with
the world of ideas, or noetic world, of Plato ; the light-
world of ancient Iran ; the " eternal egg," or type,
from which all universes come forth, of ancient
Khem ; the " resplendent germ," or hiranya-garbha,
of the Upanishads — all of which has been intuitively
set forth in philosophical terms by Leibnitz in his
Monadology.
First, then, we have the conception of an infinite
The Eternal sphere of Light, Light which transcends the glory
of the most brilliant sun, as that sun's glory tran
scends the flame of a rush-light ; Light beyond
thought. As yet there is naught but infinite Light ;
yet through it there is ever a something going, as
it were from and to its centre, which is everywhere
and nowhere, a breath ever outbreathing and in
breathing, an endless energy which nothing human
can perceive or know. It is the Life-breath of the
universe at the zero-point of being, to use terms
familiar to some theosophical students.
We next proceed to what we must call a change
of state ; but we should remember that all the states
we are attempting thus to symbolize, in reality exist
simultaneously ; and though in thought we are to
follow out a kind of emanation or evolution, it is in
reality an ever-existing infinite state of consciousness
out of time and space.
In this ever-pulsating field of universal energy
SOME OUTLINES OF ^ONOLOGY 321
(which is everywhere and nowhere), a something
arises slightly less brilliant than the transcendent The Law of
Syzygy.
Light, another mode of motion as it were, which we
may symbolize as an oval or egg-like swirling, ever
swelling-out and in-drawing. Within this two " foci "
are gradually developed, as it pulsates and swells.
The inner periphery of the egg-envelope contracts in
the midst through the action of the two foci, the
symbols of equilibrium, of positive and negative, the
law of syzygy or pairing. The two part asunder.
Bythus and Ennoea, Prof oundity and Thought, are the
first syzygy of asons, now symbolized as two spheres.
Being separate, in some mysterious fashion they are
differently affected by the great out-breath and in-
breath, yet each manifests the qualities of the other.
One is positive, the other is negative, as it were, and
these qualities are at once communicated to the
whole of the great Light-sphere, for they are every
where and nowhere at once. Polarity is thus stated
to be a mode of being of the Pleroma; the law of
syzygy is affirmed.
But duality arising, multiplicity must follow ;
and not only multiplicity but universality. For the
Pleroma must be simultaneously the type of the One,
Many and All, and monotheism, polytheism and pan
theism must each find its source therein.
In following out our symbolic imagery, however,
we cannot think the whole at once. We try to
conceive that whatever process we gain an intuition
of by means of our symbols, takes place everywhere,
always, and simultaneously with every other process
and manner of being; but of this we can get no
322 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
mental image. We can only pass from one process to
another by following out the behaviour of a single
pair of our living symbols. To proceed then.
Thus we have spheres evolving, each positive-
negative in itself, but positive or negative in its
relationship to the other. In thought we will treat
one as positive, the other as negative, and thus try to
imagine the changes of mode. As the twin spheres
in their turn expand and contract, when they touch,
from the negative a " veil " or " mist " is shed forth
and as it were " lines " the great Light-sphere.
The law of densification and perpetual differentia-
^on *s declared. At each contract the negative sphere
tion. becomes less light and more passive as it were, though
in reality the " lowest " aeon far transcends the most
brilliant radiance in the universe. The negative
light-sphere developes into progeny, differentiates
its substance, impregnated by the positive light-
sphere. That is to say, the Light-world is
differentiated into "planes" of being; there are
" veils " and " firmaments." But how many and
of what kind ?
I must refer the reader again to Sefior Soria's
essays on the polyhedric origin of species for the
only possible series of physical systems of perfect
equilibrium of spheres of equal diameter, from two
upwards, if he would follow out this most interesting
problem in greater detail and work out the matter
for himself. For the moment it is sufficient to state
that the first seonic hierarchy of the Valentinian
Pleroma is said to have been an ogdoad, or group of
eight, which was sometimes considered as a dual
SOME OUTLINES OF ^ONOLOGY.
323
tetrad — in living symbols, the system of equilibrium
behind two equally interpenetrated tetrahedra.
A point of interest which should not be over
looked, however, is to be noticed as following from
the consideration of the ogdoadic mode of the
Pleroma. The Bythus and Emicea are no longer
regarded as a single pair ; Enncea, the negative
sphere, has produced offspring. She is now the type
of " seven-robed " Nature, Isis ; while Bythus is the
Great Deep or " Water- whirl," Osiris, the aether.
The negative sphere is now seven spheres (herself,
and six like unto herself and the positive sphere) —
that is, three pairs of aeons. Here we have the type
of the one sphere of sameness, and the seven spheres
of difference, of the Pythagorean and Platonic World-
soul. The Ogdoad and Hebdomad of Basilides have
also here their types.
Thus having declared the law of duality, or
syzygy, we next find the law of triplicity asserted in
the triad of syzygies into which the negative sphere
is differentiated. These are the three great stages or
spaces of the Pleroma, and the syzygies, or modes of
polarity, of these phases were called Mind-Truth,
Word-Life, and Man-Church, for reasons which are
somewhat obscure, and to which we shall return
later on.
We are next told of a dodecad and decad of aeons
which owe their existence to one or other of the
syzygies °f the ogdoad. The accounts of their genesis
are entirely contradictory ; sometimes also the decad
is placed before the dodecad, and, seeing of course
that ten naturally comes before twelve, the critics
The Three
and the
Seven.
The Twelve
and Ten,
324 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
have without exception preferred this order. The
matter is at best purely conjectural in such a chaos,
but experience leads us to choose the less likely as
being the more correct account. What on earth
should have induced some of the Valentinians to put
the twelve before the ten if their symbolism had not
necessitated such an order ?
We shall therefore take the main phases of the
Pleroma to be those symbolized by the ogdoad, the
dodecad and the decad in turn ; not that one came
from the other in reality (they all existed together
eternally), but because the living symbols are
described in a dramatic myth, one of the variants of
which we shall shortly present to the reader.
The ogdoad is a term connoting the operations of
the living processes behind the symbol of two inter
penetrated tetrahedra, and therefore includes all the
permutations of their complementary progeny (the cube
and octahedron). Thus the ogdoad was divided into
a higher and lower tetrad, and in various other ways,
including the one and the seven as described above ;
the one and the seven can be represented by the
curious geometrical fact that if seven equal circles be
taken, and six be grouped round the central one, each
circumference respectively will be found to exactly
touch two adjacent circles and the one in the middle,
while the greater circle can be described round all
seven. This is of course but the shadow of a symbol,
and is only intended to serve as a mnemonic ; but the
fact is curious, and such natural facts were not so
lightly regarded by the Platonists as they are by the
moderns, especially when they had to do with the
SOME OUTLINES OF POMOLOGY, 325
most perfect figures — circles and spheres, the natural
symbols of perfections or pleromata.
We have now come to a stage where the differen
tiation of the primal simplicity is to be represented
by groups of twelve; the mode of being of the
Pleroma is now the dodecad. It is a curious fact that
if we were to imagine space filled with spheres all of
equal diameter and in mutual contact, we should find
that each sphere was surrounded with exactly twelve
other spheres ; moreover, if we should imagine the
spheres to be elastic, and that pressure be brought
to bear on one of such systems of twelve, on every
side at once, the central or thirteenth sphere would
assume a dodecagonal form — in fact, a rhombic
dodecahedron.
If we further remember that there is frequent
mention of a " thirteenth aeon," which has hitherto
puzzled all the commentators ; that the Pythagoreans
and Platonists and Indian philosophers asserted that
the dodecahedron was the symbol of the material
universe ; that we are assured by some who have
psychic or clairvoyant vision to-day that the field
of activity of the atom is contained by a rhombic
dodecahedron ; and that the " twelve " signs of the
zodiac have hitherto remained a mere irrational
hypothesis — then we may be inclined to think that
there was good reason for insisting on the dodecad as
an important phase of seonian being.
Moreover, each phase of the Pleroma is supposed
to be positive to the succeeding phase. Thus the
Pleroma as a whole is positive to the dyadic stage ; in
the dyadic stage, Bythus is positive to Ennoea, who
326 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
becomes various and sevenfold. The sevenfold is
positive to the dodecad stage, which consists of
thirteen spheres.
If we think of the dodecad as the dodecahedron
we shall be dealing with the phenomenal universe,
and thus be without the Pleroma ; here we are
dealing with the living type behind, in the aeon-world,
that is to say the system of thirteen spheres which
eventuate the dodecahedron in the physical world.
Each of these thirteen contains in itself the seven
modes of being of the preceding phase, and thus, in
every system of thirteen, there is in reality a
multitudinous progeny. These are the children of
that phase of being which we may call the multi
plicity of sameness, i.e., the atomic ocean of like
contiguous spheres ; and they in their turn undergo
a change which will eventuate in a harmonious
arrangement or perfection, to be finally denoted by
the perfect number ten, the decad.
How, then, do we get from the dodecad to the
The Decad. decad, from atomic matter to the perfect form ?
Perhaps somewhat in this way. Every sphere is
living, moving in all ways at once, so to speak, and
yet in another sense motionless. The types of exter
nal motion are up, down, right, left, back, front, and
round — seven in all ; to these we have to add in and
out, and a motion that is no motion we can imagine.
And thus we reach a new phase of being through
the decad or ten, which begins, as it were, another
series of motions on a higher plane (1, 2, 3, etc., and
then 11, 12, 13, etc.).
The seven motions, or modes of life, in every
SOME OUTLINES OF ^EONOLOGY. 327
system of thirteen spheres, are simple in the great
sphere which surrounds the thirteen — the fourteenth
or boundary of the system ; but in the subordinate
thirteen spheres the modes of motion act and react
on each other (for each subordinate sphere contacts so
many others) and produce a number of other modes
of a subordinate nature, namely (7 x 13 or) 91. If
to these we add as rulers the seven simple rates of
motion, in all we have 98 (91 -f 7) different modes.
To these we add the two higher modes, the in- and
out-breathing, and in all we have 100. The one
hundred is the perfection (10 x 10) of the perfect
number (10). We shall see later on how the Gnostics,
in one of their systems, in their perfecting of the
Pleroma, found themselves compelled to add two
aeons, and so introduced Christ and the Holy Spirit
into the myth of the Pleroma-drarna.
Thus the hundred obtained along the line of
development of the ogdoad and dodecad, by the
addition of two new factors, or the operation of a
new syzygy, led by another path of simplification to
the ten, the number of consummation.
Now the number of root-seons in the Pleroma was
said to be thirty (8 + 12 -f 10), to which we may
add Christ and the Holy Spirit — the representatives
of the By thus and Sige (Silence) beyond the Pleroma
— and finally the That beyond all, so getting thirty-
three, the number of the Vaidic pantheon of thirty-
three deities, the 8 Vasus, 12 Adityas and 10
Rudras, with a supreme Rudra at their head, and
Heaven and Earth.
The number 100 also gives a hint whereby to
328 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
explain the ordering of the subordinate phases of
the Pleroma, as found in the system attributed by
Hippolytus (II.) to the Docetse, where mention
is made of the "thirty-fold, sixty-fold and one
hundred-fold."
I do not for one moment suggest that these
speculations were the basis of Gnostic aeonology ; I
believe the Gnostics were " shown " their aeon-lore in
vision, and that they found analogies to what they
were shown, in nature and in the science of the time.
Pythagoras was also, I believe, shown the same truths
and worked them out in mathematical symbols. The
Gnostics were acquainted with the system of his
followers — a system of which unfortunately only the
merest fragments have reached us- -and they doubt
less pressed into their service his theological arithmetic
and geometry to aid in their expositions ; but this
was only one means out of a number which they
employed for the same purpose. But to continue
with our seonology.
But how, out of the perfection of the Pleroma
Chaos. (for every one of the aeons was a perfection or
pleroma in its turn), was the imperfection, or
deficiency, of cosmic matter to come, which should
serve as the substance out of which the " images "
or " creatures " of the universe were to be formed ?
So far the living symbol of the Pleroma has
produced perfect spheres, all in pairs, a light and
less light or " darker " globe ; for the twelve and ten,
just like the eight, consist of pairs. The various
phases have been brought about by the light globes
acting on the " darker " ones. But now a new change
SOME OUTLINES OF POMOLOGY. 329
takes place. There is an interaction of "dark" globes;
and the result is no longer a perfect sphere innate
with motion, but an amorphous mass, in one sense
out of the Pleroma, as being lower than it, or not of
its nature. When this takes place, the whole system
endeavours, as it were, to right itself, just as the
organs and corpuscles of the human body do when
anything goes wrong in it, for the Pleroma is the
spiritual body of the Heavenly Man. But the various
aeons of themselves cannot effect their purpose, they
can only act on the " formlessness " when they
combine together. From every one of the thirty
aeons, as it were, there shoots forth a ray, and all
the rays somehow or other, form a new aeon or globe
of light, which rounds off the amorphous mass, or
" abortion," burns it into shape, enters into it, and
finally carries it back to the rest.
This is the living symbol of the world-drama,
and was worked out by the Gnostics in much mytho
logical detail. To everything below the Pleroma, the
Pleroma is one, a single thing, containing the powers
of all the aeons ; it is the " living aeon " and acts upon
cosmic matter, which is shapeless, and so endows it
with form and creates the universe. But this is only
the " enforming according to essence " ; there is also
an " enforming according to knowledge," or conscious
ness, which pertains to the soteriological part of the
drama.
The idea seems to have been that the " abortion,"
or chaos, was destitute of the life-swirl or vortex. T1«»os.
The vortex is the linger of fire, as it were, or
light-spark, shot forth by the light-seons, in their
330 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
positive phases; the negative spheres cannot shape
or fashion the abortion, but can only densify or
materialize it; the mother-breath cools, the father-
breath warms the plasm of the universe. This plasm
is now, so to say, thrown out of the ideal world into
the cosmic plane, or rather, let us say, from the cosmic
plane into the plane of a star-system ; for the human
mind cannot grasp such immensities as those of the
ideal world, and all we can do is to single out a finite
example from the infinitudes of space. Anything
thrown out of the great cosmic sweep and the life of
the aeons is, as it were, "crucified in space "; or rather
that which is incarnated into it, leaves the plane of
infinitude where it is one with the Father, and is
" crucified." The Logos takes a body, and His body is
the cosmos. The Heavenly Man is crucified in space.
But this crucifixion is no shame, no disgrace ; the
cross is the body of the Heavenly Man, the universe ;
and the symbol which the wise have chosen for that
mystery, is the figure of the Heavenly Man with arms
outstretched pouring His life and love and light into
His creatures. He is the source of all good to the
universe, the perpetual self-sacrifice.
Far lower down in the scale of being there is
another crucifixion, when the spirit is incarnated into
the plane where there is male and female, and is thus
cut off from the great life and motion of the Pleroma.
The spirit in man is no longer consciously in the
grand sweep of the Great Breath, the Nirvanic Ocean
of Life.
But we must return to cosmic substance and its
fashioning. This substance is so fine and rare and
SOME OUTLINES OF ^EONOLOGY. 331
subtle, that it transcends all substance we know of ;
indeed the mother-substance of cosmos is of so mar
vellous a nature that the Gnostics called it Wisdom
herself, the highest vesture with which the spirit
could be clothed. That which gives Wisdom her first
enformation, is the potency of all the aeons, called the
Common Fruit of the Pleroma.
We have now arrived at the beginning of the
evolution of the cosmos, according to this scheme of Cosmos.
universal philosophy. We must, however, if our
imagination is to stand the strain, be more modest,
and confine our attention to the beginning of a
solar system instead of the origin of the cosmos.
The aetheric spaces destined to be the home of the
future system are void and formless. From the
fullness of potential energy, the Pleroma, there comes
forth the stream of power, the spiral vortex — the
Magna Vorago, or Vast Whirlpool, of Orpheus. It is
the fiery creative power ; there is as it were the puri
fication of the spaces by fire. He enters into the
formlessness, and becomes the thing which it lacked,
the spiral life-force or primordial atom ; He also
fashions it without. The mother-substance becomes
a sphere, irradiate with life, a whirling mass of star-
dust. The " atom " becomes the " flying serpent," the
comet, which as it were first hovers over the mother-
substance, the new-born system. It is the " serpent "
and the " egg " again, the spermatozoon and ovum of
the solar embryon.
We have now reached a stage where we have to
deal with the differentiation of this nebula according
to the types in the Divine Mind, in other words, the
332 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Pleroma. It is at this point that the intuitions of
antiquity and the most recent discoveries of modern
science should meet face to face. This most desirable
union of the past and the present is, I believe, not
so distant an event as one might be led to suppose,
but the present essay does not give us scope even to
suggest a few indications of the subject. The matter
is exceedingly technical, and we are not at present
engaged on such a task, but are merely enabling the
general reader to while away an hour or two among
the Gnostics.
We will, therefore, break off here on the border-
Mythology, land between the geonology and cosmogony of the
Valentinian circle of Gnosticism, and before going
any farther give a specimen of their mythological
treatment of the aeon-process. As we have already
remarked more than once, the accounts in the
Church Fathers are inconsistent and in many details
contradictory. We hope, however, that the sketch
we have given above of the trend of ideas will
throw some light on all accounts, but as we have not
the space to give all, we must select one as a specimen;
and the fact that Hippolytus (II.) seems to have had
a Gnostic MS. in front of him (seeing that he invari
ably adheres more closely to his written authorities
than any of his predecessors) shall guide us in our
selection. Hippolytus, in his Philosophumena, may
be quoting from a late writing compared for instance
with the Excerpts from Theodotus ; but his account is
more or less a reflection of the way in which a
Gnostic looked at the matter, while the Excerpts are
most pitifully mutilated and misplaced. As for
SOME OUTLINES OF ^ONOLOGY. 333
Irenaeus' summary, it is at best a sorry patchwork.
Not, however, that the account of Hippolytus is not
also a patchwork. It is manifestly patched together,
nevertheless the main pattern is taken from some
treatise in the private circulating library of the
Valentinian school.
It may, however, before dealing with the account
of Hippolytus, be of interest to give the reader some The Sophia-
Mythus.
general idea of the important role played by the
personified Wisdom in Gnostic mythology. As
Wisdom was the end of the Gnosis, so the pivot
of the whole Gnostic mythological drama was the
so-called Sophia-Mythus. For whether we interpret
their allegories from the macrocosm ic or micro-
cosmic standpoint, it is ever the evolution of the
mind that the initiates of old have sought to
teach us. The emanation and evolution of the
world-mind in cosmogenesis, and of the human
mind in anthropogenesis, is ever the main interest
of the secret science.
The dwelling of Sophia, as the World-Soul,
according to our Gnostics, was in the Midst, in the
Ogdoad, between the upper or purely spiritual worlds,
and the lower psychic and material worlds. Below
the Ogdoad was the Hebdomad or Seven Spheres of
psychic substance. Truly hath " Wisdom built for
herself a House, and rested it on Seven Pillars"
(Prov. ix. 1); and again: "She is in the lofty
Heights ; she stands in the Midst of the Paths, for she
taketh her seat by the Gates of the Powerful Ones,
she tarrieth at the Entrances [of the Light- World] "
(ibid., viii. 2), says the Wisdom in its Jewish tradition.
334 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Moreover, Sophia was the Mediatrix between the
upper and lower spaces, and at the same time pro
jected the Types or Ideas of the pleroma into the
cosmos. But why should Wisdom, who was
originally of a pneumatic or spiritual essence, be in
the Middle Space, an exile from her true Dwelling ?
Such was the great mystery which the Gnosis
endeavoured to solve. Seeing again that this " Fall of
the Soul " (whether cosmic or individual) from her
original purity involved her in suffering and misery,
the object which the Gnostic philosophers had ever
before them, was identical with the problem of
" sorrow " that Gautama Sakyamuni set himself to
solve. Moreover, the solution of the two systems was
identical in that they traced the " cause of sorrow " to
Ignorance, and for its removal pointed out the Path
of Self-knowledge. The Mind was to instruct the
mind ; " self -analysing reflection " was to be the
Way. The material mind was to be purified, and so
become one with the spiritual mind. In the nomen
clature of the Gnosis this was dramatized in the
redemption of the Sophia by the Christ, who
delivered her from her ignorance and sufferings.
It is not surprising, then, that we should find
The Mother the Sophia in her various aspects possessed of
Names. many names. Among these may be mentioned :
the Mother, or All-Mother; Mother of the Living,
or Shining Mother; the Power Above; the Holy
Spirit; again, She of the Left-hand as opposed
to the Christos, Him of the Right-hand ; the Man-
woman ; Prouneikos or Lustful one ; the Matrix ;
Paradise ; Eden ; Achamoth ; the Virgin ; Barbelo ;
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS. 335
Daughter of Light ; Merciful Mother ; Consort of
the Masculine One ; Revelant of the Perfect
Mysteries ; Perfect Mercy ; Revelant of the Mysteries
of the whole Magnitude; Hidden Mother; She who
knows the Mysteries of the Elect; the Holy Dove
who has given birth to Twins ; Ennoea ; Ruler ;
and the Lost or Wandering Sheep, Helena, and
many other names.
These terms refer to Sophia or the " Soul" — using
the term in its most general sense — in her cosmic or
individual aspects, according as she is above in her
perfect purity; or in the midst, as intermediary; or
below, as fallen into matter. But to return to :
HIPPOLYTUS' ACCOUNT OF ONE OF THE
VARIANTS OF THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS.
" VALENTINUS and Heracleon and Ptolerngeus and
the entire school of these [Gnostics], disciples of
Pythagoras and Plato and following their guidance,
laid down the ' arithmetical science ' as the funda
mental principle of their doctrine.
" For them the beginning of all things is the
Monad, ingenerable, imperishable, incomprehensible, The Father
inconceptible, the creator and cause of all things
that are generated. This Monad is called by them
the Father. Now as to its nature, there is a
difference of opinion among them. For some
declare .... that the Father is devoid of
femininity, and without a syzygy, and solitary;
336 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
whereas others think it is impossible that the
creation of all things should be from a single male
principle, and so they are compelled to add to the
Father of all, in order that He may be a Father,
the syzygy Silence. But as to whether Silence is
a syzygy or not, let them settle this dispute among
themselves. . . ."
Hippoly tus has missed the point as usual ; there
were Fathers for every plane, the monads or monadic
state of being, and also Father-Mothers, the dyads
or dyadic state of being, and as forth.
" In the beginning, says [the Gnostic whose
MS. Hippotytus had before him], naught was that
was created. The Father was alone, increate, without
space, or time, or any with whom to take counsel,
or any substantial nature capable of being conceived
by any means. He was alone, solitary, as they say,
and at rest, Himself in Himself, alone. But since
He was creative, it seemed good to Him at length
to create and produce that which was most beautiful
and most perfect in Himself. For He was [now]
no longer lover of solitariness. For He was all love,
says [the writer of the MS.], but love is not love if
there be nothing to be loved.
c5
" Therefore, the Father, alone as He was,
The emanated and generated Mind -and -Truth, that is
Parents ot
the .<Eons. to say, the dyad, which is Lady and Beginning,
and Mother of all the aeons they reckon in the
Pleroma. And Mind -and -Truth, having been
emanated from the Father, possessing the power
of creation like His creative parent, in imitation
of the Father, emanated Himself also Word -and-
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS. 337
Life. And Word-and-Life emanates Man-and-
Church. And Mind-and-Truth, when He saw
that His own creation had become creator in His
turn, gave thanks to the Father of all, and made
an offering unto Him of ten aeons, the perfect number.
For, says [the writer], Mind-and-Truth could not offer
the Father a more perfect number than this. For
it needs must have been that the Father who was
perfect, should be glorified with a perfect number;
now the ' ten ' is a perfect number, for the first
number of the series of multiplicity is perfect. [The
10 begins the series of multiplicity in the system
of numeration with radix 10.] The Father, however,
was more perfect still ; for increate Himself, alone,
by means of the first single syzygy, Mind-and-Truth,
He succeeded in emanating all the roots of things
created.
" And when Word-and-Life also saw that Mind-
and-Truth had glorified the Father of all in a perfect
number, Word-and-Life also wished to glorify His
own father-mother, Mind-and-Truth. But since
Mind-and-Truth was create and not possessed of
perfect fatherhood, [or] the quality of parentlessness
[ingenerability], Word-and-Life does not glorify his
own father Mind with a perfect, but with an imperfect
number. Thus Word-and-Life offers Mind-and-Truth
twelve aeons."
The reader need hardly be reminded that this
summary of the variant of the myth has confused
what we have supposed to have been the original
order of the Ten and Twelve, as may be seen from
the next paragraph but one of Hippolytus.
338 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
" So then the first created roots of the seons . . .
The Names are as f ollows : Mind - and - Truth, Word - and - Life,
Man - and - Church, ten from Mind - and - Truth, and
twelve from Word-and-Life ; eight and twenty in all.
[The ten, consisting of five syzygies,] are called by
the following names : Depthlike- and -Commingling,
Unageing - and - Union, Self - productive - and - Bliss,
Immoveable - and - Blending, Alone - begotten - and-
Happiness."
In this nomenclature we have an attempt to
shadow forth the positive and negative aspects of
the father-motherhood (polarisation) of the creative
mind, androgynous and self-generative. Hippolytus
then continues :
" These are the ten aeons which some derive from
Mind -and -Truth, and others from Word-and-Life.
Some again derive the twelve from Man-and-Church,
and others from Word-and-Life ; and the names they
give these [six syzygies] are : Comforter-and-Faith,
Father-like -and -Hope, Mother-like -and -Love, Ever
lasting and Understanding, Church-like-and-Happi-
ness, Longed-for-and- Wisdom."
It is evident that this list has suffered damage in
the hands of copyists ; we can, however, make out
some resemblance to the list of the " fruits of the
spirit," in Paul's Letter to the Galatians (v. 22, 23),
" love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness,
faith, mildness, temperance." The word translated
"Happiness" is a different form from the "Happiness"
of the decad, but both come from the same root. It
is impossible to represent the difference in the present
English we have at our disposal. We would also call
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS. 339
the attention of the student to the term for the
female aspect of the first and sixth syzygy — Faith-
Wisdom (Pistis-Sophia). Epiphanius gives a totally
different set of names for the aeons — a set of " nomina
barbara" which have so far proved the despair of
every philologist, and with which, therefore, we need
not trouble the general reader. The Greek terms,
however, for the positive aspects of the six syzygies
are probably in part reflections of the characteristics
of the higher triad of aeons, in part prototypes of the
characteristics of the Holy Spirit. Mind-and-Truth,
Word-and-Life, Man-and-Church, seem to appear in
the terms Father-like and Mother-like, Comforter and
Longed-for, Everlasting and Church-like ; the female
aspects of the higher triad being male aspects in the
hexad. I believe that the names of the aeons are
probably doctrinal variants or attempts at translation
of original Zoroastrian terms — of Hormuz and the
Amshaspands and the rest of the Light-beings — and
that the " barbara nomina " are a relic of these
terms ; the ideas and schematology of the aeons,
however, are demonstrably Egyptian. But to con
tinue with our Hippolytus.
" Now, the twelfth of these twelve, and the last
of the eight and twenty aeons, female in nature, The World-
Mother.
and called Wisdom (Sophia), beheld the number
and power of the creative aeons; she ascended [or
returned] to the depth of the Father, and perceived
that whereas all the rest of the aeons, as being
themselves create, created through a syzygy, the
Father alone created without a syzygy. She, there
fore, longed to imitate the Father and create by
340 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
herself without her consort (syzygy), and so achieve a
work in nothing inferior to the Father ; in ignorance
that it is the increate alone, the absolute cause, and
root, and breadth, and depth of the universal
[creations], who has the power of creating by Himself
alone, whereas Wisdom, being created and coming into
being after a number of others, is thus incapable of
possessing the power of the increate. For in the
increate, says the writer, are all things together,
whereas in the create the feminine has the power
of emanating the essence [or substance], while the
masculine possesses the power of enforming the
essence emanated by the feminine. Wisdom, there
fore, emanated the only thing which she could,
namely, a formless essence, easy to cool down [into
shape]. And this is the meaning, says he, of the
words of Moses : ' The earth was invisible and
unwrought ' [according to the translation of the
Seventy]. This, says he, is the Good [Land], the
Celestial Jerusalem, into which God promised to lead
the children of Israel, saying, ' I will lead you into
a good land flowing with milk and honey.'
" And thus ignorance arising in the Pleroma owing
The to Wisdom, and formlessness through the creature
of Wisdom, tumult arose in ths Pleroina [from
fear] lest the creations of the aeons should in
like manner become formless and imperfect, and
destruction in no long time seize on the aeons
[themselves]. Accordingly they all betook them
selves to praying the Father to put an end
to Wisdom's grieving, for she was bewailing and
groaning because of the ' abortion ' which she had
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS. 341
produced by herself — for thus they call it. And so
the Father, taking pity on the tears of Wisdom and
giving ear to the prayers of the aeons, gives order for
an additional emanation. For He did not Himself
emanate, says the writer, but Mind-and-Truth
emanated Christ-and-Holy-Spirit for the enforming
and elimination of the abortion, and the relief and
appeasing of the complaints of Wisdom. Thus with
Christ-and-Holy-Spirit there are thirty aeons."
Here we have the type of the dual world-creator
and redeemer — Christ, the Logos, by whom all things
were made, and the Holy Ghost, the Comforter.
" At any rate some of them think that the
triacontad of aeons is made up in this way, while
others would unite Silence to the Father and add the
[aeons of the Pleroma] to them.
"Christ-and-Holy-Spirit, then, being additionally
emanated by Mind-and-Truth, eliminates this form
less abortion of Wisdom's, which she begat of herself
and brought into existence without a consort, from
among the universal aeons, so that the perfect aeons
should not be thrown into confusion at the sight of
its formlessness."
These passages throw great light on the term
"only-begotten" (^oi/oyewj?). Orthodoxly the phrase The Term
" only-begotten son " is taken to mean that Christ begotten."
was the only son of the Father. Apologetic
philology, moreover, has asserted that it means " the
only one of his kind." In the list of the decad
of aeons given above, the male aspect of the last
syzygy is called by this name, where I have
translated it " alone-begotten." In the above passage,
342 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the "abortion" of Wisdom is called by the same
term, and I have translated it " which she begat
of herself," there being no doubt that the term
usually translated " only-begotten " means nothing of
the kind, but " created alone," that is to say, created
from one principle and not from a syzygy or pair.
There are many instances of this meaning of the
word, not only among the Gnostics, but also in the
lines of Orphic and Egyptian tradition. Hippolytus
then proceeds :
" Moreover, in order that the formlessness of the
The Cross, abortion should finally never again make itself
visible to the perfect aeons, the Father Himself also
sent forth the additional emanation of a single aeon,
the Cross [or stock], which being created great, as
[the creature] of the great and perfect Father, and
emanated to be the guard and wall of protection
[lit., paling or stockdale] of the aeons, constitutes
the Boundary of the Pleroma, holding the thirty
aeons together within itself. For these [thirty] are
they which form the [divine] creation."
The word translated by "cross" in the N.T.,
means generally a stock or stake. As we learn from
Gratz, it was the custom of the Jews, as a warning
to others, to expose on a stake the bodies of those
who were stoned, the cruel pain of the Mosaic
penalty being in later times mitigated by a soporific
draught of hyssop and other ingredients. The phrase
" hanging on the tree " is thus comprehensible also.
But, as previously remarked, for the Plerdma, we have
to deal with living and not with dead symbols, and
the cross-idea is thus transformed into the conception
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS. 343
of a great wall (sc. sphere), by which the living
Mou is " bounded " — if an infinite can be bounded
by a finite — the prototype of the mystic Christ
bound to or in the tree of the body.
The idea was simple, the expression of it in
words exceedingly confused.
Thus Hippolytus writes :
" Now it is called the Boundary because it bounds
off the deficiency (hysterema) from the perfection
(pleroma); again it is called the Partaker, because
it partakes of the deficiency; and also the Cross
[stake or stock], because it is fixed immovable and
unchangeable [lit. without repentance or change of
mind]; so that nothing of the deficiency should
approach the seons within the Pleroma."
It is difficult to reconcile the various characteristics
of this great boundary as given by Hippolytus. It
is of course the Great Firmament or Limitary Spirit
of Basilides, and the Last Limit of the Pistis Sophia
treatise. It was there that the glorious "robe of
power" had been left behind, when the Saviour
descended for the regeneration of the cosmos without
the Pleroma, and with which he was again clothed
at his final initiation, after perfecting his task, as
magnificently set forth in the opening pages of the
MS. This is the Limit "against which none shall
prevail," until the Day Be-with-us, the Day of
Come-unto-us of the so-called Book of the Dead and
the Askew Codex — the day of final initiation or
perfectioning for the rare individuals who have
made themselves worthy to become gods or christs
(and thus a day which perpetually is), but for the
344 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTON.
average mass of humanity the end of the world-cycle
when all things pass into pralaya, as Indian philo
sophy calls it (and thus the final consummation of
the present universe).
This " robe of power " is presumably the highest
spiritual body, or principium individuitatis, which
participates of the divine and human natures, that is
to say, opens up the realms of the divine world to the
man, and makes him a partaker of eternal being.
Thus its living symbol is a O, the reflection of the
body, or self -limitation, of the sexless Heavenly Man,
the Logos, whereby He limits Himself and crucifies
Himself for the good of humanity. Lower down in
the scale of being this becomes the dead symbol of
the orthodox cross ( + ), the man of sex.
It is to be noticed that this Limit is due to the
Father alone, and by its means He consummates and
perfects the whole of the divine world of aeons, which
accordingly become one entity, the Living ^Eon, to
every creation outside the Pleroma. But to continue
with Hippolytus' summary :
" Without, then, this Boundary, Cross, or Partaker,
is what they call the Ogdoad ; this is the Wisdom-
without-the-Pleroma, which Christ-and-Holy-Spirit,
when they had been after-emanated by Mind-and-
Truth, shaped and wrought into a perfect seon, so that
she should finally become by no means inferior to any
of those within the Pleroma. When, then, Wisdom -
without had had shape given her, seeing that it was
impossible that Christ-and-Holy-Spirit, in that they
were emanated from Mind-and-Truth, should remain
along with her outside the Pleroma, Christ-and-Holy-
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS. 345
Spirit ascended to Mind -and -Truth within the
Boundary, to join the rest of the aeons in their
glorification of the Father.
"And since at length there was, as it were, the
singleness of peace and harmony of all the aeons The Mystic
or Cosmic
within the Pleroma, it seemed good to them no Jesus,
longer to glorify the Father by means of their
.several syzygies, but also to hymn His glory by a
[single] offering of fit fruits to the Father. The whole
thirty aeons accordingly agreed to emanate a single
aeon, the common fruit of the Pleroma, as the sign of
their unity, unanimity and peace. And inasmuch
as it is an emanation of all the aeons unto the Father,
they call it the Common Fruit of the Pleroma. Thus
were the things within the Pleroma constituted.
" And now the Common Fruit of the Pleroma had
been emanated — Jesus (for this is His name), the
great High Priest ; when Wisdom-without-the-
Pleroma, seeking after the Christ who had enformed
her, and the Holy Spirit, was thrown into great
terror, lest she should perish, now that He
who had enformed and stablished her had with
drawn."
This operation of enforming Wisdom, or cosmic
substance, is apparently the making of a boundary
for the Ogdoad (the aetherial space) in its turn,
following the law of similitude, and then fashioning
the separated substance according to the types of the
aeons. This is dramatically set forth as follows :
" She mourned and was in great doubt, pondering
on who was her enformer [the Christ] ; who the Holy
Spirit ; whither had they departed ; who prevented
346 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
them from being with her ; who envied her that fair
The Grief and blessed vision. Plunged in such sufferings, she
betook herself to praying and beseeching Him who
had left her. Thereupon the Christ within the
Pleroma and the rest of the aeons took pity on her
prayers, and sent forth out of the Pleroma the
Common Fruit, to be Consort of Wisdom-without,
and corrector of the passions which she suffered in
seeking after the Christ.
"And so the Common Fruit coming forth from the
Pleroma, and finding her afflicted by the four primal
passions — namely, fear, grief, doubt and supplication
— set right her sufferings ; and in doing so He per
ceived that neither was it proper [on the one hand]
that such passions, as being of the nature of an aeon
and peculiar to Wisdom, should be destroyed, nor [on
the other] should Wisdom continue in such afflictions
as fear and grief, supplication and doubt. Accord
ingly, inasmuch as he was so great an aeon, and
child of the whole Pleroma, He made the passions
depart from her, and turned them into substantial
essences ; and fear he made into psychic essence, and
grief into subtle matter [hylic essence], and doubt
into elemental [daemonian] essence, and conversion —
prayer and supplication — He made into a path
upwards, that is to say repentance and the power
of the psychic essence which is called ' right.' "
Just as the passions in man are regarded as
being of a material nature, so are the passions of the
cosmic soul imagined as substantial essences by the
dramatisers of the world-process in this scheme of
universal philosophy.
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS. 347
We have now come to the stage of the Wisdom-
drama which represents the constitution of the The Sensible
" sensible " world, as distinguished from the " intel
ligible," to use Platonic terms. But before we
proceed with Hippolytus' summary, a few words of
explanation may be added to guide the student
through the maze of Gnostic technicalities.
The lower or fallen Wisdom is the prime
substance, or World-mother, chaotically moved by
four great impulses, her primal " afflictions " or
" passions."
From her chaotic state she is rescued by the
Divine Power from above, the synthesis of the powers
of the intelligible or noetic universe. Chaos becomes
cosmos ; un-order, order. The " passions " (fear, grief,
doubt and supplication) are separated from her, and
she is purified and remains above, while the passions
contract into denser phases of substance, constituting
the sensible universe. Above them broods the Power,
the representative of the three highest planes (the
intelligible universe or Pleroma) and of the One
beyond, the Supreme Deity. This Divine Power is
called the Common Fruit.
The four " passions " are separated from Sophia,
and she remains as the substance of the highest of
the lower planes. Fear and grief become the sub
stances of the psychic and hylic (or physical) planes
respectively. Doubt is regarded as a downward
tendency, a path downward to even more dense and
gross states of existence than the physical; while
supplication (prayer, repentance, or aspiration) is
regarded as a path upwards to the Heaven- world.
348 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
This is the power of the soul which is called " right,"
the tendency downwards into matter being called
" left." We may now return to the consideration of
our text.
" The fabricative power [proceeds] from ' fear.'
This is the meaning of the scripture, says the writer,
JJ8 . ' The fear of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdom,'
Demmrge.
for it was the beginning of the sufferings of
Wisdom. She [first] feared, then grieved, then
doubted, and then flew for refuge to prayer and
supplication. Moreover, he says, the psychic sub
stance is of a fiery nature, and they call it [Middle]
Space and Hebdomad and Ancient of Days. And
whatever other statements of this kind they make
concerning this [space], they [in reality] refer to
the [cosmic] psychic substance, which they declare
to be the fabricative power of the [physical] world.
And it is of a fiery nature. Moses also, says
the writer, declares, ' The Lord, thy God, is fire
burning and consuming,' for thus he would have
it written."
The action of the emotion of fear is said to
contract and densify the aura or subtle envelope of
man. The psychic plane is a contraction or densifica-
tion of the mental, and the material again of the
psychic.
" Now the power of fire, he says, is twofold ; for
there is a fire which is all-devouring and cannot be
quenched and . . ."
A lacuna unfortunately occurs here ; perhaps to
be filled up by the words, " and another that is
quenchable."
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS. 349
" According to this, then, the soul [that is, the
psychic substance] is partly mortal [and partly
immortal] , being as it were a kind of mean. (It is
[both] the Hebdomad [the sublunary space] and [also]
the means of bringing the Hebdomad to an end.)
For it is below the Ogdoad [the mind or spirit-
substance] — where is Wisdom, the day of perfect
forms [that is, the sun-space], and the Common Fruit
of the Pleroma — but above the hylic matter [the
earth-space], of which it is the fashioner [or demiurgic
power]. If then the soul is made like unto the things
above, it becomes immortal, and entereth into the
Ogdoad, which is, he says, the Jerusalem above the
heavens ; whereas if it be made like to matter, that
is to say the material passions, then it is destructible
and perishes."
The next sentence has a wide lacuna, which I have
endeavoured to bridge over as follows :
"As, therefore, proceeding from the psychic sub
stance, [and not from an aeon or pleroma], the first and
greatest power [of the Sensible World] was an image,
[and not a pleroma, namely the Workman (Demiurge) ;
while the power proceeding from the material sub
stance or ' grief ' was] the Accuser (Diabolus), the
ruler of this world.
" [The power, moreover, which proceeds] from the
elemental [or dsemonian] substance, that is to say
' doubt,' is Beelzeboul.
" [And] Wisdom herself energises from above, from
the Ogdoad, as far as the Hebdomad. [For] they say
that the Workman knows nothing at all, but is,
according to them, mindless and foolish, and knows
350 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
not really what he does or works. Owing to his
ignorance Wisdom energised and strengthened for
him everything he made ; and, though it was she who
had done so, he imagined it was himself who had of
himself achieved the fabrication of the universe, and
so he began to say : ' I am God, and beside me there is
no other.'
" Here then we have our Tetraktys according to
Valentinus, ' a source of ever-flowing nature having
roots,' and our Wisdom from which the whole creation
is now constituted both psychic and material."
This is meant by Hippolytus to be ironical and a
sneer both at Pythagoras and Valentinus. The four
" passions " are of course very far from the Tetraktys
proper ; they are only a reflection of it on the lower
planes.
" Wisdom is called ' Spirit,' and the Workman
' Soul ' ; while the Accuser (Diabolus) is the ' Ruler of
this World ' [Body], and Beelzeboul the ' Ruler of
Daemons ' [Chaos]. Such is what they tell us.
"Moreover, basing all their teaching on mathe
matical considerations, as I have said before, they
declare that the aeons within the Pleroma emanate a
new series of thirty other aeons following the law !of
similitude, in order that the Pleroma should be finally
grouped into a perfect number. For just as the
Pythagoreans divided into twelve [? ten] and thirty
and sixty — and have further subtleties on subtleties,
as has been shown — in the same way these (Gnostics)
also subdivide the creations within the Pleroma.
" The contents of the Ogdoad are also subdivided ;
and Wisdom (who is the mother of all living [the
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS 351
cosmic Eve] according to them) and the Common
Fruit of the Pleroma (the Word) have emanated "Words "or
others who are the heavenly Angels, Citizens of
Jerusalem Above, in the heavens. For this Jeru
salem is Wisdom-without, and her bridegroom is the
Common Fruit of the Pleroma."
Some critics have preferred a reading which
would make Wisdom and the Common Fruit emanate
" seventy words " ; but though this was the number
of the nations among the Jews in contradistinction
to the twelve tribes of Israel, for which reason also
the " seventy " (standing for seventy-two) apostles
were chosen after the " twelve," according to the
historicizing narratives, I prefer to follow the reading
of the Codex, as indeed I have done in every case.
"The Workman also emanated souls; for he is
the substance of souls. According to them the Souls.
former is Abraham, and the latter the children of
Abraham."
(A nomenclature which would explain the
otherwise very absurd expression " Abraham's
bosom.")
" It was moreover from the material and elemental
substance that the Workman made bodies for the
souls. And this is the meaning of the saying, 'And
God fashioned man, taking clay from the earth, and
breathed into his person [lit., face] the breath of
life; and man became a living soul.'
" This [soul] is, according to them, the * inner man,'
called psychic when it dwells in the body of hylic
matter, but material, destructible, imperfect, when
[its vehicle is] formed of elemental substance."
352 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Hippolytus here seems to be summarising the
otherwise very elaborate cosmogenesis and exegesis
of the Valentinians into a few brief paragraphs, and
the reader should never forget that the summary is
made by an unfriendly hand. I have, however,
thought it good to let the student see for himself
that, even so, the Church Father could not eliminate
all the meaning of the Gnostic writer.
" And this material man is, according to them,
Bodies. as it were, an inn or dwelling-place at one time of
the soul alone, at another of the soul and dsemonian
existences [elementals], at another of the soul and
' words ' [or angels] which are ' words ' sown from
above — from the Common Fruit of the Pleroma
and Wisdom — into this world, dwelling in the body
of clay together with the soul, when daemons cease
to cohabit with her. And this is, says [the Gnostic
writer], what was written in the scriptures [Paul's
Letter to the Ephesians] : ' For this cause I bow my
knees to the God and Father and Lord of our
Lord Jesus Christ, that God may vouchsafe to you
that Christ should dwell in your inner man' — that
is to say, the psychic and not the bodily man — ' that
ye may be strong to know what is the Depth ' —
that is, the Father of the universals — 'and what is
the Breadth' — that is. the Cross, the Boundary of
<*f the Pleroma — ' and what is the Greatness ' — that
is, the Pleroma of the seons. Wherefore ' the psychic
man,' says [Paul elsewrhere in his lirst Letter to the
Corinthians], 'does not receive the things of the Spirit
of God, for they are foolishness to him ' ; and foolish,
says [the Gnostic writer], is the power of the Work-
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS. 353
man, [that is, the power (or soul) sent forth by the
Workman], for he himself was foolish and mindless,
and thought that he was fashioning the world unaided,
being ignorant that it was Wisdom, the Mother, the
Ogdoad, who infused energy into him for the forma
tion of the universe without his knowing it.
" All the Prophets and the Law, therefore, spake
from the Workman, foolish know-nothings of a foolish
God, according to the writer. For which cause, he
writes, the Saviour says : ' All who came before me are
thieves and robbers ' ; and the Apostle : ' The mystery
which was unknown to former generations.' For
none of the Prophets, says he, spake about any of the
things of which we speak; they were at that time
unknown.
" When, therefore, the world-formation was ended
future evolution was to consist of the unveiling The New
[revelation] of the Sons of God — that is to say of the
Workman — [the revelation] which had [hitherto]
been hidden — in which, says he, the psychic man
had been hidden, having a veil over his heart. When,
therefore, the veil was to be raised and these
mysteries revealed, Jesus [as the first example of the
new evolution] was born through Mary, the virgin,
according to the saying : ' Holy Spirit shall come upon
thee ' — Spirit is Wisdom — ' and Power of Highest shall
overshadow thee' — Highest is the Workman — 'for
that which is born of thee shall be called holy.' For
he was not born of the Highest alone, like as men
fashioned after the type of Adam owe their origin
to the Highest alone, that is the Workman. Jesus,
the new man, was of the Holy Spirit — that is to say
z
354 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Wisdom — but of the Workman also, in order that
the Workman might furnish the moulding and make
up of his body, but the Holy Spirit supply his essence
or [substance], and so he might be a heavenly word,
born from the Ogdoad through Mary."
That is to say, that Jesus was the type of the
perfected man, who had transcended the necessity of
rebirth, the cycle of generation. He was the mani
festation of one of the Sons of God, who together
make up the Divine Sonship. These sons are all
' words ' or logoi, according to this nomenclature. The
whole nature of such a man was said to be advanced
one stage. Thus his body was made by the power
which furnished other men's souls ; his soul was of
the same nature as the spirits of other men ; and his
spirit was a " word," the direct progeny of aeons,
partaker of the Pleroma.
" Now there is much investigation devoted by
The Mystic them to this subject, and it is the starting-point of
the Christ, schism and disagreement. Hence their doctrine is
divided in twain, and one teaching is called the
Anatolic, according to them, and the other the Italic-
They [who get their teaching] from Italy, of whom
are Heracleon and Ptolemseus, say that the body
of Jesus was [originally] of psychic constitution, and,
because of this, at his baptism the Spirit, like a dove,
descended upon him — that is to say, the ' word ' of the
Mother from above, Wisdom — and united with his
psychic [body], and raised him from the dead. This
is, says the writer, the saying : ' He who raised Christ
from the dead will vivify also your mortal bodies '•-
that is to say, psychic [bodies]. For the clay it was
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS. 355
which came under the curse. ' For earth,' says
[Moses], ' thou art, and unto earth shalt thou return.'
Whereas those [who derive their teaching] from
the East, of whom are Axionicus and Ardesianes
[? Bardesanes], say that the body of the Saviour was
spiritual. For the Holy Spirit — that is to say
Wisdom — came upon Mary, and also the power of
the Highest, the Workman's art, in order that that
[substance] which had been given to Mary, might
be fashioned.
" We may leave them, then, to investigate such
matters by themselves, and [so too] anyone else who
may like to carry on such investigations." The writer,
moreover, goes on to say that, just as the imperfec
tions on the plane of the aeons within were corrected,
so also were those on the plane of the Ogdoad, the
Wisdorn-without, set right, and further those on the
plane of the Hebdomad were also corrected.
" (For the Workman was taught by Wisdom, that
he was not God alone, as he thought, and beside Soteriology.
him there was no other, but through Wisdom he
learned to know the Better [Deity]. He received,
[however, only] elementary instruction from her
[became a catechumen], and the first initiation, and
was [thus] taught the mighty mystery of the Father
and the aeons ; and [thus] he could reveal it to no one
else.)"
The terms used denote that the Demiurge received
instruction, but was not given the higher power or
initiation, whereby he could become a teacher or
initiator in his turn; he received the " muesis" but
not the " epopteia"
356 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
"(This is the meaning, according to the writer,
of his words unto Moses : ' I am the God of Abraham,
and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, and the
name of God I have not made known unto them '-
that is to say, I have not declared the Mystery, nor
explained who is God, but I kept to myself in secret
the Mystery which I heard from Wisdom.)
"Since then the things above [in the Pleroma,
Ogdoad and Hebdomad] had been set right, by the
same law of succession the things here [on earth]
were to meet with their proper regulation. For this
cause Jesus, the Saviour, was born through Mary, that
things here might be righted. Just as Christ was
additionally emanated by Mind-and -Truth for the
righting of the sufferings of Wisdom-without, that is
to say the ' abortion ' ; so again did the Saviour, born
through Mary, come for the righting of the sufferings
of the soul."
The above will give the reader some general
notion of the cycle of ideas in which these Gnostics
moved. The exposition of the Gnostic writer has
doubtless suffered much in the summarizing process
to which it has been subjected ; nevertheless, even if it
had been given in full, it would have to be ascribed
to a pupil and not to a master of the Gnosis such as
Basilides or Valentinus. In order to obtain a more
consistent and detailed exposition of the Valentinian
cycle of ideas, it would be necessary first of all to
analyse (1) the above account, (2) the contents of the
Excerpts from Theodotus, and (3) the summary of the
tenets of the followers of Ptolemy given by Irenams
in his opening chapters, and then re-formulate the
THE SOPHIA-MYTHUS. 357
whole. Hippolytus' account, however, is quite
sufficient to acquaint the reader with the general
outlines, and a more detailed exposition would be out
of place in these short sketches.
We shall now give a brief outline of the teachings
of the more prominent leaders of Gnostic thought in
this period, and so we return to a consideration of
" them of Valentinus."
Of Theodotus and Alexander we know nothing,
and of Secundus only the fact that he divided the
highest Ogdoad, within the Pleroma, into two
Tetrads, a Right and Left, — though we are of course
not to suppose that he originated such a fundamental
notion.
We shall, therefore, confine our attention to
Marcus, Ptolemaeus, Heracleon and Bardesanes, brief
notices of whom will bring our information derived
from indirect sources — namely, the Patristic writings
— to a conclusion.
Let us then turn to " them of Valentinus " and
first treat of Marcus and his number-symbolism.
358 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS.
A LONG section in Irenseus is our almost exclusive
Sources. source for a knowledge of Marcus and his followers.
Hippolytus and Epiphanius simply copy Irenseus and
add nothing but new terms of condemnation, while
our information from other sources is a question of
lines and not of paragraphs. The unreliability of
Irenseus as a chronicler of Gnostic views is already
known to our readers, and in the case of Marcus
and the Marcosians is more painfully patent than
usual. It seems that some of the adherents of
the school were to be found even among the rude
populace of the Rhone valley, and the worthy Pres
byter of Lyons was especially anxious to discount
their influence. He begins the attack by retailing all
the scandalous stories he can collect about Marcus, a
man he had never seen, and who had not been nearer
to the sheepfold of Lyons than Asia Minor, or at best
Egypt !
Irenaeus professes first of all to describe what took
place at the initiation-ceremonies and secret rites of
the Marcosians, and paints a graphic picture of
charlatanry and debauchery, much to his own satis
faction. To all of these reports and descriptions,
however, the Marcosians gave a most emphatic denial,
and therefore we shall not at present trouble the
reader with the Presbyter's statements on the subject,
except to remark that he himself acknowledges that
he depends entirely on hearsay, and to point out to
the student that the account seems to be a very
THE NUMBEK-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 359
distorted caricature of the ceremonies, the ritual of
which is partly preserved to us directly in the Askew
Codex and one of the MSS. of the Codex Brucianus.
Irenseus next proceeds to give a resumd of a
Marcosian MS. which had fallen into his hands. He
apparently quotes some passages verbatim, but for the
most part contents himself with a summary, so that
we can by no means be sure what the writer of the
document really said. The original of the document
Irenseus ascribes to Marcus himself, whom throughout
the whole section he apostrophises as a contemporary;
it is, however, probable that this is merely rhetorical —
as is the case with Hippolytus, who, thirty or forty
years afterwards, in his opening paragraph, predicts
that the result of his exposure of Marcus will be that
" he will n.cnv desist [from his imposture] ," although
the body of the Gnostic doctor had long been laid in
the grave.
Of Marcus himself we know nothing beyond the
fact that he was one of the earlier pupils of
Valentinus, or at any rate belonged to the earlier
circle of Valentinian ideas. His date is vaguely
placed somewhere about the middle of the second
century ; he is said to have taught in Asia Minor,
and Jerome, two hundred years afterwards, states
that he was an Egyptian.
To the student of Gnosticism who regards the
Gnostic doctors as cultured men who made a Number-
brave effort to formulate Christianity as a universal
philosophy, or rather as a divine science springing
from the ground of a philosophy of religion, the
attempt of Marcus to adapt the Hebrew number-letter
360 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
system, devised by " kabalistic " Rabbis, to the Greek
alphabet, and so work out a number-symbolism for
the too abstruse aeon-genesis and world-process of the
Gnosis, is a point of great interest. It may, however,
be that the Hebrews copied from the Greeks ; or that
both derived this method from Egypt.
As must be patent to everyone, the methods of
symbolism of the Gnostics were very numerous ; many
attempts were made to convey to the physical
consciousness some idea of the modes, not only of
superphysical existence, but also of what was definitely
stated to be suprarational being. That these attempts
were all doomed to failure, as far as general compre
hension was concerned, is no reason for us to deride
the efforts made ; that we have not even to-day, with
all our elaborate mathematical formulas, evolved a
sufficient symbolism, is no reason for denying the
possibility of such an achievement within certain
limits in future ages.
Marcus attempted this gigantic task with
insufficient means, it is true, with means too that
appear to our prosaic minds to-day as fantastic and
even worthless ; nevertheless he was not without a
tradition that to some extent justified his making
the attempt.
The ancient religion of the Chaldseans was
O
astronomical and mathematical; cosrnogenesis and
evolution were worked out in the symbolism of
numbers. Every letter of the sacred language had
a certain numerical equivalent, and thus words and
sentences could be constructed which could be
interpreted numerically, and be finally made
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 361
explanatory of natural and celestial phenomena
and processes. Since the sacred books of the
" Mathematicians " are said to have been written
with this definite object in view, the mathematical
key given to the initiate into the ancient star-lore
of Chaldsea, might thus open the door to the sacred
science of nature and man as known to the seers of
that ancient civilisation.
The Rabbis of the Jews, on their return from
captivity, presumably brought with them some
notions of this method of number-letters, and later
on proceeded to turn it to account as a means,
both of explaining away much that was distasteful
to the cultured mind in their ancient traditions, and
of reading into the old cosmogonic and patriarchal
fables new and spiritual meanings, derived to a large
extent from their contact with Oriental ideas during
the years of captivity and subsequently. This
method of mystical exegesis by number-letters was
developed to a marvellous extent by the Hellenising
tendencies of the cultured Rabbis among the
Diaspora ; and Egypt, and especially Alexandria, was
one of the main centres of this peculiar learning. A
relic of this number-system has come down to the
present times with the tradition of the Kabalah. It-
is to be observed, however, that the Rabbis adapted
the system to a heterogeneous library of works of
various dates and many recensions, which were not
originally composed with this end in view. True,
they believed that every word and letter of the Law
had been directly inspired by God, and thus contained
a wonderful magical potency, but the relentless logic
362 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of modern Biblical research has to a large extent
overturned this fond hypothesis, and their pious
number-processes must now for the most part be
regarded as the development of apologetic Rabbinism,
and as legitimate only for such small parts of the
documents as may have been composed in Babylon by
scribes who were already versed in the Chaldaic
method.
There is little doubt that Valentinus and his
pupils were acquainted with all there was to learn at
Alexandria of Rabbinical exegesis, in which the hopes
of the Jews were more than ever centred after the
destruction of the second temple in A.D. 70. They
were also perfectly familiar with the Pythagorean
number-philosophy, the symbolism of which no doubt
had many resemblances to the number- books of the
ancient Chaldeans. It is therefore but little surprising
to h'nd that one of them busied himself with adapting
this ancient method of symbolism (if indeed it was
not already native to Grecian tradition) to the Greek
alphabet, in which the documents of the new faith,
and, as they firmly believed, the new world-science,
were now almost exclusively written. Needless to
say, the Greek alphabet would not stand the strain ;
nevertheless it was a good exercise for a pupil of the
Gnosis, and offered wide scope for the use of much
ingenuity.
This exercise in correspondences was naturally no
contribution to knowledge, but only a means of
conveying knowledge otherwise acquired. It will,
however, be of interest to give the reader a brief
sketch of some of Marcus' ideas, as far as it is possible
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 363
to recover them from the contemptuous summary of
the Marcosian MS. by Irenseus in his polemic. They
are also additionally interesting as showing intimate
points of contact with the Coptic treatises we have so
often referred to.
The source of the document's inspiration is ascribed
to the Supernal Four, the highest hierarchy of the
Pleroma, which however only reveals itself to mortals
in its " feminine " form, for the world cannot bear the
power and effulgence of its " masculine " greatness.
The same idea is current in India. The God (Deva)
uses his power, the Goddess (Shakti, Devi), as his
means of communication with mortals ; his own form
no mortal can behold and live. The whole of what
follows is based upon the Greek texts of Hippolytus
(Duncker and Schneidewin) and Epiphanius (Dindorf )
—who copied from the lost Greek text of Irenseus —
and upon the oft-times unintelligent and barbarous
Latin version of the Greek original of Irenseus
(Stieren).
The MS. apparently opened with the following
passage descriptive of the speaking forth of the Word
of the Supernal Father.
" When first the Father, the not even the One,
beyond all possibility of thought and being, who is
neither male nor female, willed that His ineffability
should come into being, and His invisibility take
form, He opened His mouth and uttered a Word,
like unto Himself; who, appearing before Him,
became the means of His seeing what He himself was
— namely Himself appearing in the form of His own
invisibility."
364 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Now the utterance of the Great Name was on this
wise. The Father spake the Word ; the first note of
His Name was a sound of four elements ; the second
sound was also of four elements ; the third of ten ;
the fourth and last of twelve. Thus the utterance of
the whole Name was of thirty elements and four
sounds or groupings.
After the words " the first note of His Name was
a sound of four elements," Irenseus has dragged into
his summary a suggestion of his own, probably
derived from some numerical exegesis of the Prologue
to the fourth Gospel, which he had come across
elsewhere in his heresy-hunt. Thus he evidently
breaks into the thread of the summary with the
interjected note, " namely apxn" the " Beginning " of
the Prologue.
Further, each single element of the thirty has its
own peculiar utterance, character, letters, configura
tions and images. But no element is acquainted with
the form of the sound of which it is an element ; in
fact, so far from knowing its parent-sound, it pays no
attention even to the utterance of its associate
elements in its own sound-hierarchy, but only to its
own utterance.
Thus uttering all that it knows, it thinks it is
sounding forth the whole Name. For each of the
elements, being a part of the whole Name, enunciates
its own peculiar sound as the whole Word, and does
not cease sounding until it arrives at the very last
letter of the last sub-element in its own peculiar
tongue.
Now the consummation or restitution of all things
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 365
takes place when all these original elements, coming
to one and the same letter or note, send forth one and
the same utterance, a symbol of which was the
chanting of the sacred word " Amen " in unison. It
was these notes of the scale of the Primordial
Harmony which were the means of giving form to
the Living ^Eon, which transcended all idea of
substance and generation. To such forms the Lord
referred when speaking of " the angels who con
tinually behold the face of the Father."
The ordinary spoken names for these elements
are : aeons, words, roots, seeds, plenitudes (pleromata),
fruits. The "spoken" names are distinguished from
the "authentic" names, or mysticce voces, many
instances of the cypher-equivalents of which will be
found in the Coptic Codices.
Now every divine element, with all its sub-sounds,
notes, or letters, was contained in the phase of the
Divine Being to which the symbolic name of Church
had been given. The term " Church " (Ecclesia)
means the " Calling Forth," the Heritage of the Elect,
a substitute for an "authentic" name, which was
only revealed to the initiated members of the school.
The Church was the female aspect of the fourth and
last syzygy, or pair, of the Tetrad, or Holy Four, the
Lords of the Pleroma.
When the last note of the last sub-element
of these supernal elements had uttered its own The Echo of
. p i • i the Name.
peculiar sound, the echo of it went forth, in the
image of all these elements and sub-elements,
and gave birth to another series; and it is this
series which is the cause not only of the elements
366 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of the world which we know, but also of those
elements which have a prior existence to those of
our world.
The last divine note itself, of which echo rang
on echo downwards, was wafted upwards by its own
parent-sound to complete and consummate the whole
Name; while the echo descended to the parts below,
and remained as though cast out of the Pleroma.
This parent-sound or element, from which the
last note, containing potentially the utterance of the
parent -sound, descended below, consisted of thirty
letters or elements, and each of these contains other
letters or elements, by means of which the name of
each root-element is spelt, and so on infinitely. That
is to say, the sub-elements as it were spell out the
name, or manifest the power, of the main element ;
and the power or name of each sub-element in turn
is manifested or spelt by other minor sub-elements,
and so on infinitely.
Marcus brought home this grand idea to the
minds of his pupils by pointing out an analogy in
the Greek alphabet. Thus take any single letter,
say A, delta ; as soon as you name it, you have five
letters, namely A delta, E epsilon, A lambda, T tau,
A alpha. Again E, epsilon, is resolved into E epsilon,
¥ psi, I iota, A lambda, O omicron, N nu ; and so
on infinitely. The illustration is certainly graphic
enough.
The Gnostic MS. then proceeded to describe a
The method of symbolizing the Great Body of the
Body oAhe Heavenly Man, whereby the twenty-four letters of
Truth.* the Greek alphabet were assigned in pairs to the
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 367
twelve "limbs." The Body of the Heavenly Man
was the graphic symbol of the ideal economy,
dispensation, or ordering of the universe, its regions,
planes, hierarchies and powers.
This symbolic representation was called the schema
or configuration of the one element (TO o-x^a TOV
a-TOxeiov), and also the glyph (or character) of the
figure (or diagram) of the Man of Truth, presumably
the God of Truth of the Codex Brucianus, one of the
treatises of which contains a whole series of diagrams
of the various moments of emanation of the creative
deity under this designation.
In the phrase " glyph of the figure " (6 \apaKTvjp
TOV y/DayUyuaro?), the word ypdjuL/ma means either (i.) a
letter of the alphabet, or (ii.) a note of music, or
(iii.) a mathematical figure or diagram. The character,
glyph, or configuration, would thus be the symbol or
reflection of the super-spiritual Pleroma, regarded
(i.) as the last letter of the four-lettered Great Name,
or (ii.) as the last note of the Divine Harmony which
is sung forth by the Supernal Logos or Word. To avoid
complication and symbols of symbols, we have taken
the word ypa^/ma in its third sense, in which it
declares its consanguinity with the great art of
systematising the elements and powers of nature,
known in India as tantra (" systematising,"
"ordering.") Tautrika is now a janus-faced art,
white and black, and its main feature is the drawing
of magical diagrams (yantras), to represent the con
figuration of the elements and powers which the
operator desires to use.
I omit here all mention of Mark's diagram of the
368 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
body of the Heavenly Man, as the consideration
of it would take up too much space in these short
sketches.
Now the Word, the male energy of the middle pair
or syzygy of the trinity (Mind-Truth, Word-Life,
Man-Church) and the sum of the six, issued forth
from the mouth of Truth. This Word is the Logos
or Supreme Reason of all things, the self -generator of
the universe, who bestows fatherhood (TrarpoSoTopa
Ao'yoi') on all things. On earth this Word becomes
the name known commonly to all Christians, namely,
Christ Jesus. But Jesus is only the sound of the
name down here and not the power of the name.
Jesus is really a substitute for a very ancient name,
and its power is known to the " elect " alone of the
Christians.
It is the six-lettered name. But even this is only
a symbol ; among the seons of the Pleroma it is
manifold, and of another form and type, and this is
known only to them who are akin to the Logos in
their hearts, those whose angels or greatnesses are
with Him for all time.
Now the twenty-four letters of the alphabet,
attached to the various limbs of the Body of the
Heavenly Man in the diagram, are the symbols,
or images, of the emanations of the three powers
which contain the sum total or Pleroma of the aeonic
elements above. And there is a further analogy to
their nature in the alphabet. For there are nine
consonants (or soundless letters), eight liquids (or
semi-sounds), and seven vowels (or sounds).
The consonants symbolise the ineffable or sound-
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 369
less elements of Mind-and-Truth ; the liquids, midway
between the soundless letters and the sounds, typify
the elements of Word-and-Life, which receive the
emanation from the unmanifested above, and receive
back the ascent from the manifested below; and the
vowels represent the elements of Man-and-Church, for
sound going forth through the Man enf ormed all things.
For the echo of His voice in vestured them with form.
This reminds us of the elaborated division of the
Platonic world of ideas into three spaces: (1) noetic;
(2) both noetic and noe'ric ; and (3) noeric. (See my
essay on Orpheus).
Thus we have the series 9, 8, 7 ; and if we take
1 from 9 and add it to 7, we get 8, 8, 8 — or Jesus, the JThe ,_
Numbers.
six-lettered name (itiarovs), the numerical values of
the letters of which amount to 888. That is to
say, He who had his seat with the Father (Mind),
left his seat and descended, sent forth to the one
from whom He was separated (the Church), to
restore the divine creation to a state of equilibrium,
in order that, the unities of the Pleromas (or three
phases of the Pleroma or ideal cosmos) being reduced
to an equality, there might be a common product of a
single power from all of them in all of them. Thus
the 7 obtained the power of the 8, and the three
spaces became equal in their numbers, namely, 3
eights, and these added together are 24.
Now these three spaces or elements are each two
fold (positive and negative), 6 in all, and these again
fourfold, 24 in all, the reflection of the elements of
the Unnameable, in dyads, triads and tetrads.
Moreover, if you would find the 6 among the 24
370 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
letters of the alphabet, which are only images of
the real elements, you will find it hidden in the
double letters B (*?), ¥ (-Try), Z ((5?). Add this 6
to the 24 and we have again a symbol of the 30 aeons
of the Pleroma.
With much ingenuity our Gnostics found these
Gospel numbers and processes in the prologue to Genesis, and
elsewhere in the Old Covenant library ; we need not,
however, follow them into this field of letter-
numbering. But when we find that they treated
the Gospel-legends also not as history, but as allegory,
and not only as allegory, but as symbolic of the
drama of initiation, the matter becomes of deep
interest for the theosophical student.
Thus they said that the transfiguration-story was
symbolic (ev OfJLOttofJMTt etVoYo?) of the divine economy
as manifested in the man seeking perfection ; in other
words, of a certain stage of initiation.
To make this further apparent, we will use terms
already familiar to some of our readers.
After "six days," that is to say, in the seventh
stage since the disciple first set his feet on the path,
he ascended into the " mountain " — a graphic symbol
for the higher states of consciousness.
C5
He ascended the fourth and became the sixth.
That is to say, he ascended with three and was joined
by two, the Peter, James and John, and Moses and
Elias of the familiar Gospel-narrative.
The " three " are the powers he had already won
over the gross, subtle and mental planes — presumably
the degrees of srotdpanna, sakaddgamin and
andgdmin in the Buddhist tradition. The " two "
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 371
are the representatives of the spiritual and divine
powers which welcome and support him, and thus he
becomes sixth, or possessed of the spiritual conscious
ness, while still in the body, — the arahat stage.
It was this " six," said the Marcosians, which had
descended and been detained in the Hebdomad, or
region of the seven spheres of difference; the "six"
being in reality of the same essence as the World-
mother, the eighth encircling sphere of sameness,
which is above or beyond these seven. The six
(the arahat) being thus of the same essence as the
World-mother (Wisdom) contains essentially in him
self the whole number of all the elements or powers —
a fact already typified in* the stage symbolised in the
baptism -myth by the descent of the dove. The dove
is the Alpha and Omega (1 and 800) of the diagram,
the first and last of the numbers, representing the
head. Moreover the word for "dove" in Greek is
Trepia-repd, and 80 (TT) + 5 (e) + 100 (/o) + 10 (i) +
200 (<r) -f 300 (r) + 5 (e) + 100 (p) + 1 (a) = 801.
Again, it was on the " sixth day," the " prepara
tion," that the divine economy, or order of things,
manifested the " last man," the " man from heaven,"
for the new birth or regeneration of the " first man "
or " man of the earth " ; and further the passion
began in the sixth hour and ended in the sixth hour,
when the initiate was nailed to the cross. All of
which was designed to indicate the power of creation
(inception) and regeneration or rebirth (consum
mation), typified in the number 6, to those who were
admitted to the mysteries of initiation, called by
the Marcosian writer the " Sons of the Light," or
372 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
" Sons of the Man," for the Greek will carry both
meanings.
For creation or descent is represented by the
number 2, that is to say by dyads, and regeneration
or ascent by the number 3, that is to say by triads,
and 2x3 = 6.
Now as to the creation of the sensible universe :
The . the Logos, as creator, uses as his minister, or servant,
Creation
of the the seven-numbered " greatness " (that is to say,
Sensible .
World. the septenary hierarchy of the ideal universe, the
Pleroma or Mind of the Logos, symbolized by the
seven vowels), in order that the fruit of His self-
meditated meditation may be manifested.
The creation of our particular universe (or solar
system), however, is regarded as a fabrication, or
building, according to a type in the Divine Mind. The
creative fabricator or builder is, as it were, a reflection
of the universal Logos, enformed by Him, but as it
were separated or cut off, and thus remaining apart
from or outside the Pleroma. It is by the power and
purpose of the Divine Logos, that the demiurgic
power, by means of his own emanation or life (the
reflection of the Life of the Pleroma), ensouled the
cosmos of seven powers, according to the similitude of
the septenary power above, and thus was constituted
the soul of the visible all, our cosmos. The demiurge
makes use of this work as though it had come into
existence through his own will alone; but the seven
spheres of the world-soul (the cosmic life)— copies of
the seonic spheres which no cosmic spheres can really
represent — are in reality hand-maidens to the will of
the Divine Life, the supernal Mother.
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 373
Now the first of these seven spheres, or heavens,
sounds forth the sound or vowel A, the second the E,
the third the H, the fourth and midmost the I, the
fifth the O, the sixth the Y, and the seventh and
fourth from the middle the Q. And all uniting
together in harmony send forth a sound and glorify
him by whom they were emanated (the system-logos
or world-builder) ; and the glory of the sound is
carried up to the Forefather of the Pleroma (the
Divine Logos), while the echo of their hymn of glory
is borne to earth, and becomes the modeller and
generator of them upon the earth, that is to say the
souls of men.
Irengeus now appears to have come to the end of
the MS., and so proceeds to give the friend to whom
he is writing, as many other details of Marcosian
ideas as he has picked up from scraps of quotations
or from hearsay, — " quce ad nos pervenerunt ex Us "
(c. xv.). He returns once more to a consideration
of the eternal economy of the Pleroma, and to an
exposition from which he has already quoted a scrap
in another connection (c. xi. 3), as follows :
" Before all universes there is a source (or
beginning) before the primal source, prior even to The
that state which is inconceivable, ineffable, unname-
able, which I number as Noughtness. With this
No-number consubsists a power to which I give
the name Oneness. This Noughtness and Oneness,
which are in reality one, emanated, although they
did not really emanate, the intelligible (or ideal)
source of all, ingenerable and invisible, to which
speech gives the name of Monad (or Nought).
374 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
With this Monad consubsists a power of equal sub
stance (6^ooJ<T(o?) with it, which I call One. These
powers, Noughtness, Oneness, Nought and One, send
forth the rest of the emanations of the aeons.
" Noughtness" (lit., " monadity") is the root of the
monad, the O or circle containing all the numbers—
the no-number.
This passage shows the distinct influence of
Basilides; but among the best critics opinions are
divided as to whether it should be assigned to
Marcus or Heracleon.
The names of this highest tetrad or tetraktys,
however, are really incapable of representation in
human speech ; they are the " holy of holies," names
known to the Son alone, while even He does not
know what the Four really are, this final knowledge
of the one reality being referred to the Father alone.
These names pertain to the "sacred language,"
specimens of which are given in the fragments from
the Books of the Saviour attached to the Pisti*
Sophia document and in two of the treatises of the
Codex Brucianus.
The substitutes for these names are : Ineffable
(afipyros) and Silence (ere*-/?/), Father (-jrar^p) and
Truth (aXyOeia) ; the Greek words for which consist
respectively of 7 and 5, and 5 and 7 letters, or twice
7 and twice 5, the 24 elements of the Pleroma.
So also with the substitutes for the names of the
second tetrad : Word (Ao'yo?) and Life (fan}), Man
(avOpcoTTos) and Church (e/c/cX^cr/a) ; the Greek names
consisting respectively of 5 and 3, and 8 and 8
letters — in all 24.
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 375
Again the spoken or effable name of the Saviour,
Jesus (irja-ovs), consists of 6 letters, while His ineffable
name consists of 24. As stated above, the name = 888,
and thus, by another permutation, = 24.
Similar number-permutations are also found in the
letters of the word Christ.
But enough of this apparent forcing of an
unwilling alphabet into the arms of a number-
symbolism — perhaps the reader will say. The Mar-
cosians, however, might in the first place plead in
excuse the example of Philo and Alexandrine Judaism,
which believed not only in the literal inspiration of
the Hebrew text of the Old Covenant, but also that
the Greek version of the so-called Seventy was
written by the finger of God ; and in the second, they
might perhaps have said : The Greek names for the
aeons are but substitutes for other names which have
these number-equivalents, and pertain to the secrets
of our initiation.
The really scientific part of the system is the
number-process as a natural symbolism of primeval
evolution; it is not enough to label this Pytha-
goreanism and so dismiss it with a sneer, for all our
modern physical science is based upon exactly the
same considerations of measure and number.
Now the One contains in itself implicitly the three
incomprehensibles, Noughtness, Oneness and Nought. Theological
Thus the One is the representative of the upper
tetrad. And since all numbers come from the One,
this tetrad is called the All-Mother, or Wisdom
Above. From her proceeds as a daughter, the
lower tetrad, the comprehensible numbers, the 1, 2,
376 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
3 and the 4, the Wisdom Below, which must be
regarded as 8 potentially, seeing that the 1 mani
fests the unmanifestable One, the representative
of the unmanifestable tetrad. The Wisdom below
is thus reckoned as 8, or the ogdoad. But this
ogdoad contains the decad, for 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 = 10. And
this decad by congress with the 8 makes 80, and by
congress with the 8 and itself makes 800 ; so that the
8, or world-mother, is separated into three spaces, 8,
80, and 800, in all 888, which is the number of her
enforming power or consort Jesus, the creative Logos
from above, the 1 + 2 + 3, or 6, the consort of the 4
or last number of the lower tetrad.
This enformation of the world-substance by means
of the decad — by means of the creative 888 or " Jesus "
— was the " enformation according to substance " ; but
there was another enformation of a higher kind, by
means of the " Christ," the " enformation according to
knowledge." This was the regeneration by means of
the dodecad. Now 6x 2 = 12; (1 + 2+ 3)x 2 = 12;
10 + 2 = 12; 8 + 4 = 12.
The 8 + 4 is the ogdoad with the first tetrad
added to it; the 10 + 2 is the decad with the twin
powers of the upper and lower tetrads added to it ;
the (1 + 2 + 3) x 2, or 6 x 2 is the doubling of the
enforming power or its ascent into itself.
These eternal types and processes were to be seen
Jesus in nature and history. Thus in the case of the great
theMagter. .
Master, just as the world-soul was in ignorance
before she was fashioned arid regenerated, so were
men in ignorance and error before the coming of
the Great One, Jesus. He took flesh as Jesus, in
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 377
order that He might descend to the perception of
men on earth. And they who recognized Him
ceased from Ignorance, and ascended from Death
unto Life, His " Name," or Power, leading them
unto the Father of Truth. For it was the will of the
All-Father to put an end to Ignorance and destroy
Death. And the ending of Ignorance is the Know
ledge (e-TT/yi/axTf?) of Him (the Christ). For this reason
a man was chosen by His will whose constitution was
after the image of the power above (the lower tetrad),
that is to say, sufficiently developed to act as a fit
vehicle.
Now the lower tetrad is spoken of as Word and
Life, Man and Church. And powers emanating from
these four Holy Ones watch over the birth and mould
the lower vehicles of the Jesus on earth. And this, it
was said, was shown clearly in the allegorical scrip
ture. " Gabriel " takes the place of the Word (Reason
or Logos), the " Holy Spirit " that of the Life, the
" Power of the Highest " that of the Man, and the
" Virgin " that of the Church.
Again, at the baptism there descended upon the
Jesus, thus perfectly constituted (or enformed accord
ing to substance), the dove, which soars again to
heaven, its upward course completing the Jesus (or 6)
and making him into the Christ (or 12), the enforma-
tion according to knowledge, or perfect illumination.
And in the Christ subsists the seed of them who
descend and ascend with Him. And the power of the
Christ which descends is the seed of the Pleroma,
containing in itself both the Father and the Son, and
the unnameable power of Silence, the Mother,
378 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
(which is only known through them), and the rest of
the aeons. Now this power of Silence, this Peace
and Comfort, is the Holy Spirit. It was this Spirit
which spoke through the mouth of Jesus in the
Gospel-narratives, and proclaimed itself as Son of
Man, and revealed the Father, descending on Jesus
and becoming one with Him. It was this Saviour
who put an end to death, by the removal of ignorance,
and Jesus made Him known as his Father, the Christ.
Jesus is really the name of the man who was
perfected in his lower nature (that is to say, the
initiate); but because of its adaptability and forma
tion the name has been given to the Man who was to
descend into him (in other words, the Master). And
he who was the vehicle of this Great One, had thus in
him both the Man and Word and Father and the
Ineffable, and Silence and Truth and Life and Church
(for the Master is one who is at-one with these).
After three sections of abuse, Ireneeus resumes the
subject of Marcosian number-correspondences in cap.
xvi. ; but the reading of the key-passage which deals
with the imperfections of the dodecad and the conse
quent " passion " of the cosmic soul and individual
souls is so faulty that, as yet, I have been able to
make nothing out of it.
With cap. xvii., however, the aeonic types are
The traced in the economy of the cosmos. The two
image™? tetrads are shown in the four elements fire, water,
earth, and air, and their four characteristics, hot,
cold, dry, and moist. The decad is shown in the
seven spheres, and the eighth which encompasses
them, and in addition the sun and moon. This
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 379
clearly shows that the " seven spheres " are not the
" planets." of either astrology or astronomy. Finally
the dodecad is shown in the so-called zodiacal circle.
Now the motion of these seven spheres is exceed
ingly rapid, whereas the eighth sphere, or heaven, is
much slower than the motion of the seven mutually
interpenetrating spheres, and as it were balances or
checks their otherwise too rapid motion by pressure
on their periphery; the result is that the whole mass
takes some 30 years to pass through a sign, or a
twelfth part, of the zodiacal belt. This retarding
sphere was thus regarded as an image of the Great
Boundary which surrounds the " Mother of thirty
names " or Pleroma. Again, the moon encompasses its
" heaven," the lower boundary, in 30 days ; and the
sun completes its cyclic return in 12 months. There
are moreover 12 hours in every day, and each hour is
divided into thirty parts, according to the 12 great
divisions of the zodiac, each of which has again 30
sub-divisions, 360 in all; the earth again has 12
climates. All of which is doubtless to be referred to
the tradition of the common source of the ancient
Chaldsean and Egyptian religions.
For the world-fabricator, or time-spirit, when he
desired to copy the infinite, aeonian, invisible and
timeless nature of Eternity, was not able to make a
model of its abiding and eternal nature, seeing that
he himself was the result of a deficiency in this
eternal nature; so he represented Eternity in times
and seasons, and numbers of many years, thinking by
a manifold number of times to imitate its infinitude.
Thus it was that truth abandoned him and he
380 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
followed after a lie; and therefore when the times
are fulfilled his work will come to an end.
Irenaeus devotes his next three chapters (cap p.
From the xviii.-xx.) to what he has heard of the Marcosian
Marcosian
Ritual interpretation ot scripture. This is of little interest ;
but in chapter xxi. the Bishop of Lyons gives
us some of the formulae used by the school, and
these are of greater interest, although the Marcosians
denied their accuracy. Thus he says that the
words of the baptismal consecration are as follows :
" [I baptise thee] unto the Name of the unknown
Father of the universals, unto Truth, the Mother of
all, unto Him who descended on Jesus, unto the
union, redemption, and communion of [thy] powers."
Next we have what purports to be the translation
of a Hebrew invocation to the Christ ; Irenseus gives
the original Hebrew, but in such a woefully corrupt
guise that it has baffled the ingenuity of the best of
scholars.
" I invoke thee, O Light, who art above every
power of the Father, Thou who art called Light and
Spirit and Life ; for Thou hast reigned in the body."
The formula of the rite of angelic redemption
(the " angelic redemption " was the means whereby
the candidate became one with his " angel " above), one
of the higher degrees of Gnostic initiation, is then given :
" [I invoke] the Name hidden from every godhead
and lordship, the Name of Truth, in which Jesus,
the Nazarene, clothed himself in the zones (or girdles)
of Light, [the Name] of the Christ, Christ the Living
One, through the Holy Spirit, for angelic redemption."
Next follows the formula of the restoration or
THE NUMBER-SYMBOLISM OF MARCUS. 381
restitution, the final consecration. They who solem
nize the rite declare as follows :
" There is no separation between my spirit, my
heart, and the Super-celestial Power. May I enjoy
thy Name, O Saviour of Truth ! "
And then the candidate replies :
" I am confirmed and redeemed ; I redeem my
soul from this seon (world) and all that cometh there
from, in the name of IAO, who redeemed its soul,
unto redemption in Christ, the Living One."
Then the assistants rejoin :
" Peace unto all on whom this Name doth rest ! "
There were also prayers for the dead, and also
formulae for the soul in passing through the seven
gates of the seven purgatorial spheres, of which
the following are given by Irenseus as specimens :
" I am the son of the Father, of the Father who
is beyond all existence [that is to say, generation,
or sa/riisa/ra, the sphere of rebirth] while I, His son,
am in existence. I came [into existence] to see mine
own and things not mine, yet not wholly not mine,
for they are Wisdom's, who is [my] female [counter
part] and made them for herself. But I derive my
birth from Him who is beyond existence, and I
return again unto mine own whence I came forth."
And then they pass through the various planes
of the purgatorial realms, and the powers of the
regions make way before them. The final " apology "
is made to the powers surrounding the world-fabri
cator, or demiurge, and runs as follows :
" I am a vessel more precious than the female
power [lower Wisdom] who made you. Your mother
382 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
knoweth not the root from which she came; but I
know myself and know whence I am, and I invoke
the incorruptible Wisdom [above], who is in the
Father. She it is who is the Mother of your mother,
the Mother who hath no mother, nor any male
consort. But it was a female born from a female
who made you, one who knoweth not her Mother,
but thinketh herself to be alone [self -generated]. But
I invoke her Mother to my aid."
And so he passeth on to his own, casting off his
chains, that is to say, the soul, or lower nature.
It is evident that we have in the above an
indication of the same range of ideas which we find
worked out with such elaboration in the Pistis Sophia
and Codex Brucianus treatises : the light-robe of the
Master, the Living One, the invocations, apologies,
prayers for the dead, baptism and chrism, all clearly
distinguishable ; all of which formed part of the great
cycle of Gnostic initiations in known Valentinian
circles. The degrees of this initiation were more and
more secret as they became more real. Irenseus may
have heard of some of the formulae of the lower
grades, but the higher grades could only be under
stood by the picked disciples of these very intellectual
and highly mystical schools. The documents pertaining
to the "higher degrees seem never to have come into
the hands of the Church Fathers.
PTOLEMY. 383
PTOLEMY.
OF the life of Ptolemy, one of the oldest pupils of
Valentinus, we know absolutely nothing. It was
through some of the pupils of Ptolemy mainly that
Irenaeus (I. i.-viii.) become acquainted with a rough
outline of some of the ideas of the developed Gnos
ticism of this line of tradition; but whether or not
Ptolemy himself was alive when the Presbyter of
Lyons wrote the opening chapters of his Refutation,
somewhere about A.D. 185-195, it is impossible to say.
Of the writings of Ptolemy two fragments alone have
been preserved : an interpretation of the magnificent
Proem of the Beginnings still extant in the Prologue
to the fourth canonical Gospel (Iren., I. viii. 5), and a
letter to a lady called Flora, quoted by Epiphanius
(Hcer., xxxiii.).
Whether or not the teaching of Ptolemy had
any essential differences from that of his master
Valentinus, it is at present impossible to decide ; and
the copied statement of Tertullian (Adv. Valent., 4)
— that with Ptolemy the names and numbers of the
aeons were separated into personal substances external
to Deity, whereas with Valentinus these substances
had been included in the sum of the Godhead, as
sensations, affections, and emotions — is perfectly un
intelligible to the student of Gnosticism.
We will first consider the Letter to Flora, and then
the interpretation of the Logos-doctrine Proem. The The Letter
Letter to Flora gives the view which the Valentinian to Flor*'
384 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
tradition held concerning the world-process, the old
Covenant theology, and the documents of the Jewish
law.
Opinions, says Ptolemy, are divided ; some holding
the one extreme and contending that the Jews' Law
came direct from God and the Father (the Logos);
others maintaining the absolute contrary, and de
claring that it emanated from the opposite power,
the destroyer, the god of this world (the Accuser or
Diabolos). Both of these extreme views are unwise.
On the one hand, the Law is evidently imperfect, as
may be seen from the crude ideas ascribed to God in
some of the documents, ideas foreign to the nature and
judgments of the God of the Christ ; and on the other,
the world-process cannot be the work of an unjust
power, for the Saviour Himself declared that a house
divided against itself cannot stand ; and the "Apostle"
long ago robbed of its sting the " baseless wisdom "
(awTTOG-TGLTov <ro<j>iav) of such liars, in the words, " all
things were made by Him," the Logos, and not by a
god of destruction.
fj
Ptolemy, like the rest of the Valentinians, condemns
as strongly such false gnosis as later the now-called
" orthodox " Fathers, headed by Irenaeus, condemned
all gnosis. But at this time the phrase " knowledge
falsely so called " was not a condemnation of all
gnosis, for there still was an " orthodox " Christian
gnosis, as Clement of Alexandria and others have so
well shown.
Such views, then, are held only by those who are
ignorant of the causative law; the one body of
extremists being ignorant of the God of Justice (the
PTOLEMY. 385
framer of the karmic law), the other of the All-
Father, whom the Saviour was the first to know and
proclaim to the Jews.
The Gnostics held a middle position between these
extremes, the only possible one. Ptolemy thus pro- £^. her
ceeds to answer the doubts of Flora entirely in Criticism.
the spirit of what is now called the " Higher
Criticism " ; he lays down a position immediately
self-evident to the cultured Gnostic genius, and said
to be based on the words of Jesus, but only
recovered by modern scholarship after many long
centuries of obscurantism.
The law, as set forth in the Five Books ascribed
to Moses, is not from one source, that is to say,
not from God alone. In fact, three sources may be
distinguished : (1) laws given by Moses under
inspiration ; (2) laws enacted by Moses himself ;
(3) laws added by the elders.
This division is borne out by the " Words of the
Saviour " ; for with regard to divorce He taught that
it was permitted by Moses only because of the Jews'
hardness of heart, whereas the Law of God from the
beginning laid down that husband and wife should
not be sundered. The law of Moses was simply an
enactment of expediency, it was not the Law.
Moreover, the traditions of the elders were equally
not the Law. For the inspired Law taught that
honour was due to father and mother ; and Jesus had
opposed this old truth of karmic duty to the ignorant
tradition of the elders, which taught that anything
given to father or mother by the child was a gift — a
phrase which Ptolemy quotes differently from the
BB
386 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
readings of either of the synoptic documents that
still preserve it ; namely, " whatsoever benefit thou
receivest from me, is a gift to God."
Thus three distinct sources are to be distinguished,
only one of which can be referred to what can in any
sense be called revelation.
Again, as to the first division, this in its turn is
resolvable into three elements : (1) a good element
(the Decalogue), endorsed and completed by the
teaching of Christ ; (2) a bad element, which He set
aside, the " eye for an eye " law of retaliation ; and
(3) the typical and symbolical rites, such as circum
cision, the sabbath and fasting, which the Christ
translated from their sensible and phenomenal forms
into their spiritual and invisible meaning. This is
borne out in a remarkable fashion by one of the
newly discovered Sayings : " Jesus saith, Except ye
fast to the world, ye shall in no wise find the
Kingdom of God ; and except ye sabbatize the sabbath,
ye shall not see the Father." (See Sayings of Our
Lord, Grenfell and Hunt; London, 1897).
Thus with regard to the third element, the Christ
taught that the " offerings " to God were not to consist
of incense and the slaughter of irrational animals, but
of spiritual thanksgiving, and goodwill and good
works to our neighbours; that circumcision was not
of anything physical, but of the spiritual heart; that
keeping the sabbath was resting from evil works ;
and in like manner fasting was from baser things,
and not from physical food.
From what source, then, came the " inspiration "
of Mosea in establishing such observances ? From a
PTOLEMY. 387
source midway between the world of men and the
God over all ; that is to say, from the intermediate The Source
realms, or world-soul, the fabricative power of Inspiration.
this physical world. The source of Moses' inspiration
was not the Perfect Deity of the Christ, but an
inferior source, not good (for God alone is really
good), nor evil (the power which opposes good
alone being evil), but imperfect; the power of the
adjuster or arbitrator. This source is inferior to the
Perfect Deity ; it is only conditionally righteous
or just, and so inferior to the perfect righteous
ness and justice of God. The maker or soul of
our world is generable, the creator of the divine
creation ingenerable. But the world-maker is
superior to the opposer, the world, whose substance
is destruction and darkness, and whose matter is
material and manifoldly divided. But the substance
of the cosmic spaces of the ingenerable Father (the
cosmic spaces, or " universals," as opposed to the
" world," or our earth ; the cosmic planes as
distinguished from the terrestrial) is incorruptibility
and self -existent Light, simple and one.
The substance of these cosmic spaces is differ
entiated in an incomprehensible manner into two
powers or aspects, soul enforming body; that is to
say, the " planetary soul " enforming the " earth."
This soul is an image of the ideal cosmos, and it is
from one of its powers that Moses received his
inspiration.
So far the sensible letter of Ptolemy to Flora; in
which the Gnostic doctor, by his knowledge of the
unseen world and understanding of the teaching of
388
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The Proem
to the
Fourth
Gospel.
the Christ, intuitively applies a canon of criticism
to the contents of the Pentateuch, which the best
scholarship of our own century has taken a hundred
years to establish intellectually.
We will now proceed to consider the interpreta
tion which Ptolemy gave to the glorious Proem
that now stands at the head of the fourth Gospel.
The Beginning is the first principle brought into
being by God, and in it the Father emanated all
things in germ, or potentially. This Beginning is
called Mind, Son, and Alone-begotten (that is to say,
brought forth by the Father alone).
The next phase of being was the emanation of the
Logos (Reason or Word) in the first principle, the
Beginning or Mind. This Logos in His turn contained
in Himself the whole substance of the ^Eons, which
substance the Logos enformed.
According to the Lexicon of the Alexandrian
Hesychius, the philosophical meaning of the term
Logos is " the cause of action " (fj rov Spd/maro?
The opening words, therefore, treat of the divine
hypostases.
" In the Beginning was the Logos, and the Logos
was (one) with God, and the Logos was God. He
was in the Beginning (one) with God." I translate
the phrase irpos rov Qeov by the words "one with
God," and not by the simple and familiar " with God,"
on the authority of Ptolemy (^ Trpo? aXXr/Xoy? d/ma /ecu
*} TTpo? TQV Trarepa ei/axn?), seeing that the simple
English preposition " with " does not convey the sense
of the Greek.
PTOLEMY. 389
First of all there is a distinction made between
the three, God, Beginning and Logos, and then they
are at-oned, or identified ; in order that first the
emanation of the two from the one may be shown—
of the Son (or Beginning or Mind) and of the Logos
from the Father) — and then the identification or
at-one-ment of the two with each other and with the
Father may be indicated.
For in the Father and from the Father is the
Beginning; and in the Beginning and from the
Beginning is the Logos. Well said is it then, " In
the Beginning was the Logos," for He was in the
Son (or Mind).
"And the Logos was (one) with God." For the
Beginning is one with God, and, consequently, the
Logos is one. For what is of God, is God.
" All came into being through Him, and without
Him nothing had being." That is, the Logos was
the cause of the divine or aeonic creation.
But " that which has its being in Him is Life "-
the syzygy or consort of the Logos.
The ^Eons came into being through Him, but
Life was in him. And she who is in Him, is more
akin to Him than they who came into being through
Him. For she is united to Him and bears fruit
through Him.
" And the Life was the Light of men " — " men "
signifying first of all the supernal Man and his
spouse, the Church, for they were enlightened, or
brought to light through Life. Thus far concerning
the Pleroma or divine world.
The next verse, "The Light shineth in the
390 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Darkness and the Darkness comprehended it not,"
refers to the sensible universe. For though the
chaos of the sensible universe was made into cosmos
by the passion of the Divine ^Eon, the sensible world
knew Him not. And this ^Eon is thus Truth and
Life, and " Word made flesh," in the cosmic process.
It is the enlightened only who have " beheld His
glory," the glory of the Alone-begotten Son, the
Divine ^Eon or Pleroma, given unto Him by the
Father, full of Grace (another name for Silence and
Peace) and Truth.
And thus, said Ptolemy, distinct reference to the
two tetraktydes — Father and Silence, Mind and
Truth, Word and Life, Man and Church — is contained
in the Proem.
Such was the nature of the exegesis of Ptolemy
with regard to the Proem of the Logos-doctrine, and
here we must reluctantly leave him, for we have no
further information.
Irenaeus' summary, in his opening chapters, of
what he had picked up concerning the tenets of
"them of Ptolemy," differs but slightly from the
outlines of the aeon-process and Sophia-mythus
drama already familiar to our readers from the
account of Hippolytus.
HERACLEON. 391
HERACLEON.
OF the life of Heracleon, whom Clement of Alexan
dria (Strom., iv. 9) calls the "most esteemed of the His Cora-
school of Valentinus," we again know nothing except the Fourth
that he wrote certain Memoirs (vTro/uLvt'i/uiaTa), contain
ing a commentary on the fourth Gospel. The date
of this commentary, the first on any book of the
New Testament collection, is generally ascribed to
the decade 170-180 A.D. The Gnostic Heracleon is
thus the first commentator of canonical Christianity,
and considerable fragments of his work have been
preserved by Origen in his own Commentary on the
so-called Johannine Gospel. These fragments were
first collected by Grabe in his Spicilegium, reprinted
by Massuet and Stieren in their editions of Irenseus,
and by Hilgenfeld in his Ketzergeschichte (1884),
and finally in 1891 re-edited from a new collation
of all the eight known (only three having pre
viously been collated) MSS. by Brooke in Texts and
Studies, i. 4.
In these fragments Heracleon assumes the
" Valentinian " system as a basis ; but it is kept in
the background, and his exegesis is often endorsed
by Origen.
The Gnostics were still in the Christian ranks,
they were still members of the General Christian
body, and desired to remain members ; but bigotry
finally drove them out because they dared to say
that the teaching of the Christ contained a wisdom
392 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
which transcended the comprehension of the
majority.
The commentary of Heracleon, however, need
not detain us, for it is, so to say, outside the circle
of distinct Gnostic exegesis ; it stands midway
between it and General Christianity, and in almost
the same position as the views of Clement and
Origen.
BARDESANES.
WE will now treat of Bardesanes, " the last of the
Biography. Gnostics," as Hilgenfeld calls him, and so bring to
an end these rough sketches of the Christian
theosophists, which we have endeavoured to
reconstruct from the disfigured scraps of the
originals preserved in Patristic literature.
Bardesanes was the " last of the Gnostics," in the
sense of being the last who attempted to make any
propaganda of the phase of the Gnosis we are dealing
with, among the ranks of Common Christianity ; for
I the Gnosis was still studied in secret for centuries,
and often reappeared in the pages of history in other
guises, e.g., the so-called Manichsean movement; for
" You may pitch out nature with a fork, still she will
find a way home."
Bardesanes, or Bar-daisan (so called from the river
Daisan (the Leaper), on the banks of which he was
born), was born at Edessa, on July llth, 155 A.D., and
died, most probably in the same city, in 233, at the
age of 78. His parents, Nuhama and Nahashirama,
BARDESANES. 393
were rich and noble ; and young Bardaisan not only
received the best education in manners and learning
which was procurable, but was brought up with a
prince who afterwards succeeded to the throne as one
of the Abgars ; he not only shared the young prince's
martial exercises, but in his youth won great fame
for his skill in archery. He married and had a son,
Harmonius.
At what age he embraced Gnostic Christianity is
uncertain ; but his eager spirit not only speedily con
verted his royal friend and patron, but induced the
Abgar to make it the state religion, and thus (it is
said) Bardesanes must have the credit of indirectly
establishing the first Christian state. When Caracalla
dethroned the Abgar Bar-Manu in 216, Bardesanes
made manful defence of the Christian faith before the
representative of the Roman Emperor, so that even
Epiphanius is compelled to call him " almost a
confessor."
Subsequently he went for a time to Armenia,
where he composed a history based on the temple Writings,
chronicles, which he found in the fortress of Ani,
and translated it into Syriac. This Armenian
history of Bardaisan was the basis of the subsequent
history of Moses of Chorene. Bardaisan was also a
great student of Indian religion, and wrote a book
on the subject, from which the Platonist Porphyry
subsequently quoted. But it was as a poet and writer
on Christian theology and theosophy that Bardaisan
gained so wide a reputation ; he wrote many books in
Syriac and also Greek, of which he was said to be
master, but even the titles of most of them are now lost.
394 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
His most famous work was a collection of 150
Hymns or Psalms on the model of the Psalm-collection
of the second temple, as still preserved in the Old
Covenant documents. He was the first to adapt the
Syriac tongue to metrical forms and set the words to
music; these hymns became immensely popular, not
only in the Edessene kingdom but wherever the
Syriac tongue was spoken.
Of the rest of his works we hear of such titles as
Dialogues against the Marcionites, The Light and the
Darkness, The Spiritual Nature of Truth, The Stable
and Unstable, and Concerning Fate. Nothing of
these has come down to us except a Syriac treatise,
which was brought to the British Museum in 1843,
among the Nitrian MSS. This MS. is entitled Boole
of the Laws of Countries, and purports to be a
summary of Bardaisan's views on fate or karman, as
set forth by one of his pupils. The Syriac text and
an English translation were published by Cureton in
1855 ; and once more (as in the case of the dis
covery of the Philosophumena MS. and Basilides) the
possession of an approximately first-hand source has
revolutionised the old view, based on the hearsay of
the Fathers generally, and of the polemic of Ephraim
in particular. In fact, the latest view (that of Hort)
tries to rob Gnosticism of Bardesanes, and carry him
off into the fold of orthodoxy. As more is known
and understood about the Gnostics, the same policy
will no doubt be adopted in other cases ; but
surely since Orthodoxy has cursed Bardesanes
throughout the ages, it might at least leave him
the name derived from those of whom his
BARDESANES. 395
master Valentinus learned his wisdom, and let him
be Gnostic still.
But before considering Bardaisan's views on
"fate," let us see whether we can abstract anything Indirect
J 6 Source*.
of value from the indirect sources. We are indebted
for what we know mainly to Ephraim of Edessa,
who wrote some 120 years later than our Gnostic.
Of the temper of this saint when combatting a
dead man who had done him no injury, and
who had been so loved and admired by all who
knew him, we may judge by the epithets he
applied to Bardesanes, who (he avers) died " wTith the
Lord in his mouth, and demons in his heart." Thus
he apostrophizes Bardaisan as a garrulous sophist ; of
tortuous and double mind ; outwardly orthodox, a
heretic in secret ; a greedy sheep-dog in league with
the wolves ; a faithless servant ; a cunning dissembler
practising deceit with his songs.
In his zealous fury, however, Ephraim confuses
Bardesanites, Marcionites and Manichseans, although
Bardesanes strongly opposed the views of the former,
and the religion of the latter was as yet unborn
when the Gnostic doctor wrote. Ephraim's fifty-six
Hymns against Heresies, for instance, the metre
and music of which he appropriated from our
Gnostic poet, are an indiscriminate polemic against
not only Marcion, Bardaisan and Mani, but also
against their disciples, the very different views of
both teachers and pupils being hopelessly jumbled
together.
The only clear traces of Bardaisan are four scraps
from his Hymns, quoted in the last two Hymns of
396 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Ephraim. The first three are as follows, in Hort's
From his translation :
Hymns.
(1) "Thou fountain of joy
Whose gate by commandment
Opens wide to the Mother;
Which Beings divine
Have measured and founded,
Which Father and Mother
In their union have sown,
With their steps have made fruitful."
(2) "Let her who comes after thee
To me be a daughter
A sister to thee."
(3) " When at length shall it be ours
To look on thy banquet,
To see the young maiden,
The daughter thou sett'st
On thy knee and caressest ? "
The first fragment is generally referred to the
idea of Paradise, which is usually placed above the
third of the seven heavens, or in the midst of the
seven spheres; it seems, however, rather to refer to
the Ogdoad or space above the seven phases of
psychic substance, the Jerusalem Above of the
Valentiriians.
The second fragment appears to be an address of
the Divine Mother to the elder of her two daughters,
the Wisdom above in the Pleroma and the Wisdom
BARDESANES. 397
below in the Ogdoad, where is the spiritual Heaven-
world.
The third fragment is most probably an address
to the Divine Mother of all, the Holy Spirit,
and refers to the consummation of the world-
process, when the spiritual souls shall be taken
from the Ogdoad into the Pleroma, and made one
with their divine spouses at the Great Wedding
Feast, in the Space of the Light-maiden, the
Wisdom above.
The remaining fragment consists of only two
lines, and is as follows :
(4) " My God and my Head
Hast thou left me alone ? "
This cry was ascribed to the lower Wisdom by
the Valentinian school, both in the world-drama,
when the world-substance invokes the aid of her
consort, the aeonic world-fashioner, and also in the
soul-tragedy of the spirit fallen into matter, the
sorrowing Sophia, as in the Pistis Sophia treatise.
Nothing more of a certain nature can be deduced
from the polemical writings of Ephraim, and the only
scrap of interest we can glean from other writers is a
beautiful phrase preserved by the Syrian writer
Philoxenus of Mabug (about 500 A.D.): "The
Ancient of Eternity is a boy " — that is to say, is ever
young.
Let us now turn to Bardaisan's views on
"astrology" and "fate," or, in other words, his
conception of karman, and quote a few passages from
Cureton's somewhat unintelligible translation of The
398 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Book of the Laws of Countries (in his Spicilegium
ftyriacum, pp. 11, sqq.).
This dialogue was written by a pupil of our
The Book of Gnostic, and Bardaisan is introduced as the main
the Laws of , „
Countries, speaker; in tact, the pupils only break in here and
there with a short question for literary effect. We
may be therefore fairly confident that we have
in this treatise a faithful reproduction of the
views, not only of Bardaisan on fate or karman, but
also of the Gnostics of his school.
The following extracts from the speeches of
Bardaisan will throw much light also on the astro
logical ideas in the Pistis Sophia.
" I likewise . . . know that there are men
who are called Chaldeans, and others who love this
knowledge of the art, as I also once loved it [before
he met with the teaching of Valentinus], for it has
been said by me, in another place, that the soul of
man is capable of knowing that which many do not
know, and the same men [sic] meditate to do; and all
that they do wrong, and all that they do good, and all
the things which happen to them in riches and in
poverty, and in sickness and in health, and in defects
of the body, it is from the influence of those Stars,
which are called the Seven, they befall them, and they
are governed by them. But there are others who
say the opposite of these things, — how that this art
is a lie of the Chaldseans, or that Fortune does not
exist at all, but it is an empty name ; and all things
are placed in the hands of man, great and small ; and
bodily defects and faults happen and befall him by
chance. But others say that whatsoever a man doeth,
BARDESANES. 399
he doeth of his own will, by the Free-will that has
been given to him, and the faults and defects and Karman.
evil things which happen to him, he receiveth as
a punishment from God. But as for myself,
in my humble opinion, it appeareth to me that
these three sects are partly true, and partly
false. They are true, because men speak after
the fashion which they see, and because, also,
men see how things happen to them, and
mistake ; because the wisdom of God is richer
than they, which has established the worlds and
created man, and has ordained the Governors, and has
given to all things the power which is suitable for
each one of them. But I say that God, and the
Angels, and the Powers, and the Governors, and the
Elements, and men and animals have this power ; but
all these orders of which I have spoken have not
power given to them in everything. For he that is
powerful in everything is One ; but they have power
in some things, and in some things they have no
power, as I have said : that the goodness of God may
be seen in that in which they have power, and in that
in which they have no power they may know that
they have a Lord. There is, therefore, Fortune, as
the Chaldaeans say."
And that everything is not in our own Free-will,
that is that Free-will is not absolute, is plainly visible
in everyday experience. Fortune also plays its part,
but is not absolute, and Nature also. Thus " we men
are found to be governed by Nature equally, and by
Fortune differently, and by our Free-will each as he
wishes."
400 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
" That which is called Fortune is an order of
Fortune procession which is given to the Powers and the
Nature. Elements by God ; and according to this procession
and order, intelligences [minds, egos] are changed by
their coming down to be with the soul, and souls
are changed by their coming down to be with the
body ; and this alteration itself is called the Fortune
and the Nativity of this assemblage, which is being
sifted and purified, for the assistance of that which
by the favour of God and by grace has been assisted,
and is being assisted, till the consummation of all.
[Compare in the system of Basilides the 'benefiting
and being benefitted in turn.'] The body, therefore,
is governed by Nature, the soul also suffering with
it and perceiving; and the body is not constrained
nor assisted by Fortune in all the things which it
does individually ; for a man does not become a
father before fifteen years, nor does a woman
become a mother before thirteen years. And in the
same manner, also, there is a law for old age ;
because women become effete from bearing, and
are deprived of the natural power of begetting ;
while other animals which are also governed by
their own Nature before those ages which I have
specified, not only procreate, but also become too old
to procreate, in the same manner as also the bodies of
men when they are grown old do not procreate; nor
is Fortune able to give them children at that time at
which the body has not the Nature to give them.
Neither, again, is Fortune able to preserve the body
of man in life, without eating and without drinking ;
nor even when it has meat and drink, to prevent it
BARDESANES. 401
from dying, for these and many other things pertain
to Nature itself ; but when the times and manners of
Nature are fulfilled, then comes Fortune apparent
among these, and effecteth things that are distinct one
from another ; and at one time assists Nature and
increases, and at another hinders it and hurts; and
from Nature cometh the growth and perfection of the
body ; but apart from Nature and by Fortune come
sickness and defects in the body. For Nature is the
connection of males and females, and the pleasure of
the both heads [sic] ; but from Fortune comes abomi
nation and a different manner of connection and all
the filthiness and indecency which men do for the
cause of connection through their lust. For Nature is
birth and children ; and from Fortune sometimes the
children are deformed ; and sometimes they are cast
away, and sometimes they die untimely. From
Nature there is a sufficiency in moderation for all
bodies ; and from Fortune comes the want of food,
and affliction of the bodies ; and thus, again, from the
same Fortune is gluttony, and extravagance which is
not requisite. Nature ordains that old men should be
judges for the young, and wise for the foolish ; and
that the valiant should be chiefs over the weak, and
the brave over the timid. But Fortune cause th that
boys should be chiefs over the aged, and fools over
the wise ; and that in time of war the weak should
govern the valiant, and the timid the brave. And
know ye distinctly that, whenever Nature is disturbed
from its right course, its disturbance is from the
cause of Fortune, because those Heads and Governors,
upon whom that alternation is which is called
cc
402 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Nativity, are in opposition one to the other. And
those of them which are called Right, they assist
Nature, and add to its excellency whenever the
procession helps them, and they stand in the
high places, which are in the sphere, in their
own portions ; and those which are called Left
are evil, and whenever they, too, occupy the places of
height, they are opposed to Nature, and not only
injure men, but, at different times, also animals, and
trees and fruits, and the produce of the year, and the
fountains of water, and everything that is in the
Nature which is under their control. And on account
of these divisions and sects which exist among the
Powers, some men have supposed that the world is
governed without any superintendence, because they
do not know that these sects and divisions and
justification and condemnation proceed from that
influence which is given in Free-will by God, that
those actions also by the power of themselves may
either be justified or condemned, as we see that
Fortune crushes Nature, so we can also see the Free
will of man repelling and crushing Fortune herself ;
but not in everything, as also Fortune itself doth not
repel Nature in everything ; for it is proper that the
three things, Nature and Fortune and Free-will,
should be maintained in their lives until the proces
sion be accomplished, and the measure and number be
fulfilled, as it seemed good before Him who ordained
how should be the life and perfection of all creatures,
and the state of all Beings and Natures."
Bardaisan thus makes Free-will, Fate, and
Nature the three great factors of the karmic law, all
BARDESANES. 403
three being ultimately in the hand of God. Each
re-acts on each, none is absolute. Nature has to do
with body, Fate or Fortune with soul, and Free-will
with spirit. None of them is absolute, the absolute
being in God alone.
By a strange chance, however, one of the hymns of
the great poet of Gnosticism has been preserved to us The Hymn
* r of the Soul.
entire ; it is now generally admitted that the beauti
ful " Hymn of the Soul," as it has been called,
imbedded in the Syriac form of the apocryphal
Acts of Judas Thomas, preserved in the British
Museum codex, is almost undoubtedly from the
stylus of Bardaisan. Nb'ldeke and Macke were the
first scholars to call attention to the fact. (See
Lipsius' Die apokryphen Apostelgeschichten, i.
299, sqq., 1885). It is a beautiful legend of
initiation, and was first translated by Wright
(Apochryphal Acts of the Apostles, ii. 238 — 245;
1871); it has now quite recently (1898) been re
translated by Be van, using Wright's version as a basis.
Since the time of Wright so much work has been
done on this " master-piece of religious poetry," as
the Cambridge Reader in Arabic justly calls it, that
the translation of the pupil is to be prefered to
that of the teacher, and Professor Sevan's work must
now be considered not only to have superseded
Wright's, but to be the best on the subject.
The high probability of the Bardesantist origin
of the poem is based on the following considerations :
The three main accusations of the orthodox Father
Ephraim against Bardaisan, who, he says, taught
that there were Seven Essences (Ithye), are: "(l)That
404 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
he denied the resurrection and regarded the separa
tion of the soul from the body as a blessing ; (2) that
he held the theory of a divine ' Mother ' who in
conjunction with ' the Father of Life ' gave birth
to a being called 'the Son of the Living'; (3) that
he believed in a number of lesser ' gods/ that is to
say, eternal beings subordinate to the supreme God.
"Now, it is remarkable," says Professor Bevan,
" that these three ' heresies ' all appear distinctly in
the Poem before us. There can be no doubt that
the Egyptian garb, which the prince puts on as a
disguise and casts away as soon as his mission is
accomplished, represents the human body. The
emphatic declaration that the ' filthy and unclean
garb ' is ' left in their country ' conveys an unmis
takable meaning; it would be difficult, in an alle
gorical piece, to deny a material resurrection more
absolutely."
Since Bardaisan, like all the great Gnostics,
believed in reincarnation, such a conception as the
resurrection of the same physical body must have
been regarded by him as a gross superstition of
the ignorant. Such a " proof " of identity of
doctrine as is here brought foward could hardly
occur to one who has realised the meaning of the
doctrine of rebirth.
"The true clothing of the soul, according to the
poet, is the ideal form which it left behind in heaven
and will resume after death. [Only after the 'death
unto sin'; the Light-robe is not for all.] As for
the Father of Life, the Mother, and the Son of the
Living, they here figure as the Father ' the King of
BARDESANES. 405
kings,' the Mother * the Queen of the East/ and
the Brother ' the next in rank.' Finally the ' lesser
gods ' appear as ' the kings,' who obey the command
of the King of kings."
If the student, in reading this masterpiece of
Gnostic poesy, will bear in mind the beautiful
Parable of the Prodigal Son, as preserved in the third
Synoptic, he will be able to trace the basic similarity
of ideas in the outer and inner traditions, and note
how the inner expands and explains the outer.
I do not know on what authority this beautiful
poem has been called the Hyrnn of the Soul ; there is
no authority in the text for the title, and the Gnostic
poet had a far more definite theme in mind. He sang
of the consummation of the Gnostic life, the crown of
victory at the end of the Path; not of any vague
generalities but of a very definite goal towards which
he was running. He sang of the " wedding garment,"
the " robe of initiation," so beautifully described in
the opening pages of the Pistis Sophia. Thus, then,
in most recent translation runs what I will venture
to call:
406 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
THE HYMN OF THE ROBE OF GLORY.
When I was a little child.
And dwelling in my kingdom, in my Father's
house,
And in the wealth and the glories
Of my nurturers had my pleasure,
From the East,1 our home,
My parents, having equipped me, sent me forth.
And of the wealth of our treasury 2
They had tied up for me a load.
Large it was, yet light,
So that I might bear it unaided —
Gold of ... 3
And silver of Gazzak the great,
And rubies of India,
And agate (?) from the land of Kushan (?),
And they girded me with adamant 4
Which can crush iron.
And they took off from me the bright robe,
1 Either the Pleroma or Ogdoad, the spiritual realms. The
following notes are all mine.
2 A Gnostic technical term.
3 Beth-'Ellaye (Wright). It is highly probable that all the
names of countries and towns, some of which Bevan has omitted
as too doubtful, are substitutes for states or regions of the higher
planes; the identification of some of them has entirely baffled
scholars, and the identification of the rest is mostly unsatis
factory. No doubt Bardaisan, or his son Hannonius, or whatever
Bardesanist wrote the poem, was familiar with the great caravan
route from India to Egypt, and used this knowledge as a
substructure, but the whole is allegorical. (Since writing this
note some excellent work of interpretation on these lines has
been done by German scholars. See Bibliography).
4 A symbol, presumably, for the mind-body, or vesture.
THE HYMN OF THE ROBE OF GLORY. 407
Which in their love they had wrought for me,
And my purple toga,
Which was measured (and) woven to my stature.
And they made compact with me,
And wrote it in my heart that it should not be
forgotten :
" If thou goest down into Egypt,1
And bringest the one pearl,2
Which is in the midst of the sea3
Hard by the loud -breathing serpent,4
(Then) shalt thou put on thy bright robe
And thy toga,5 which is laid over it,
And with thy Brother,6 our next in rank,7
Thou shalt be heir in our kingdom."
I quitted the East (and) went down,
There being with me two messengers,8
For the way was dangerous and difficult,
And I was young to tread it.
I passed the borders of Maishan,
The meeting place of the merchants of the East,
And I reached the land of Babel,
And I entered the walls of . . . 9
1 The body, a technical term common to many Gnostic
schools.
2 The Gnosis.
3 Of matter, gross and snbtle.
4 Perhaps the elemental or animal essence in matter.
5 Two of the higher vestures of the Self, of which there
were three.
6 The higher ego presumably.
7 Next in rank to the Mother and Father.
8 The powers that compel to rebirth presumably, the
representatives of the Father and Mother.
9 Sarbug (Wright). These are apparently various planes or
states.
408 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
I went down into Egypt,
And my companions parted from me.
I betook me straight to 'the serpent,
Hard by his dwelling I abode,
(Waiting) till he could slumber and sleep,1
And I could take my pearl from him.
And when I was single and alone,
A stranger to those with whom I dwelt,
One of my race, a free-born man,
From among the Easterns, I beheld there —
A youth fair and well-favoured.
* and he came and attached himself to me.
And I made him my intimate,
A comrade with whom I shared my merchandise.
I warned him against the Egyptians
And against consorting with the unclean ;
And I put on a garb like theirs,
Lest they should insult (?) me because I had come
from afar,
To take away the pearl,
And (lest) they should arouse the serpent against
me.
But in some way or other
They perceived that I was not their countryman ;
So they dealt with me treacherously.
Moreover they gave me their food to eat.
I forgot that I was a son of kings,
And I served their king ;
1 The serpent is presumably the passions, which inhere in the
elemental essence.
THE HYMN OF THE ROBE OF GLORY. 409
And I forgot the pearl,
For which my parents had sent me,
And by reason of the burden of their . . .
I lay in a deep sleep.1
But all those things that befell me,
My parents perceived and were grieved for me ;
And a proclamation was made in our kingdom,
That all should speed to our gate,
King and princes of Parthia
And all the nobles of the East.
So they wove a plan on my behalf,
That I might not be left in Egypt,
And they wrote to me a letter,
And every noble signed his name2 thereto :
" From thy Father, the King of kings,
And thy Mother, the Mistress of the East,
And from thy Brother, our next in rank,
To thee our son, who art in Egypt, greeting !
Up and arise from thy sleep,
And listen to the words of our letter !
1 Is it possible that in the above a real piece of biography has
also been woven into the poem H I am inclined to think so. It
may even be a lost page from the occult life of Bardaisan himself.
Filled with longing to penetrate the mysteries of the Gnosis, he
joins a caravan to Egypt and arrives at Alexandria. There he
meets with a friend on the same quest as himself. Bardaisan
first of a]l has the misfortune to fall into the hands of some
sensual and self-seeking school of magic, and forgets for a time
his real quest. Only after this bitter experience does he obtain
the instruction he sought in the initiation of the Valentinian
school. Of course this speculation is put forward with all
hesitation, but it is neither an impossibility nor an improbability.
2 Names are powers. Compare the beautiful " Come unto
us " passages in the Song of the Powers of the Pistis Sophia,
pagg. 17 sqq.
410 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Call to mind that thou art a son of kings !
See the slavery — whom thou servest !
Remember the pearl
For which thou didst speed to Egypt !
Think of thy bright robe,
And remember thy glorious toga,
Which thou shalt put on as thine adornment,
When thy name hath been read out in the list of
the valiant,
And with thy Brother, our [? next in rank],
Thou shalt be [? king] in our kingdom."
And my letter (was) a letter
Which the King sealed with his right hand,
(To keep it) from the wicked ones, the children
of Babel,
And from the savage demons of . . . 1
It flew in the likeness of an eagle,
The king of all birds ; 2
It flew and alighted beside me,
And became all speech.
At its voice and the sound of its rustling,
I started and arose from my sleep.
I took it up and kissed it,
And loosed its seal (?), (and) read ;
And according to what was traced on my heart
Were the words of my letter written.
I remembered that I was a son of kings,
And my free soul longed for its natural state.
I remembered the pearl,
1 Sarbug (Wright),
3 The descent of the Holy Ghost or spiritual consciousness.
THE HYMN OF THE ROBE OF GLORY. 411
For which I had been sent to Egypt,
And I began to charm him,
The terrible loud-breathing serpent.
I hushed him to sleep and lulled him to
slumber ;
For my Father's name I named over him,
And the name of our next in rank,
And of my Mother, the Queen of the East ; l
And I snatched away the pearl,
And turned to go back to my Father's house.
And their filthy and unclean garb
I stripped off, and left it in their country, 2
And I took my way straight to come
To the light of our home, the East.
And my letter, my awakener,
I found before me on the road,
And as with its voice it had awakened me,
(So) too with its light it was leading me
Shone before me with its form,
And with its voice and its guidance,
It also encouraged me to speed,
******
And with his (?) love was drawing me on.
I went forth, passed by ...
I left Babel on my left hand, 3
And reached Maishan the great,
1 The names of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, that is to say,
the powers of the immortal principles in man.
2 He left his body behind in trance, during the initiation.
3 He goes to " the right " like all the initiates in the Orphic
and other Mysteries.
412 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The haven of the merchants,
That sitteth on the shore of the sea.
******
And my bright robe, which I had stripped off,
And the toga wherein it was wrapped,
From the heights of Hyrcania (?)
My parents sent thither,
By the hand of their treasurers,
Who in their faithfulness could be trusted there
with.
And because I remembered not its fashion
For in my childhood I had left it in my Father's
house —
On a sudden as I faced it,
The garment seemed to me like a mirror of
myself. l
I saw it all in my whole self,
Moreover I faced my whole self in (facing) it.
For we were two in distinction,
And yet again one in one likeness.
And the treasurers also,
Who brought it to me, I saw in like manner,
That they were twain (yet) one likeness. 2
For one kingly sign was graven on them,
Of his hands that restored to me (?)
My treasure and my wealth by means of them.
My bright embroidered robe,
1 Compare the logos: "As any of you sees himself in a
mirror, so let him see Me, in himself." — Eesch, Agrapha (Texte u.
Untersuchungen, Bd. v., Heft 4), 36 I, and As Others saw Rim, p.88.
2 The mystery of the syzygy; compare the story of the
infancy in the Pistis Sophia.
THE HYMN OF THE ROBE OF GLORY. 413
Which with glorious colours ;
With gold and with beryls,
And rubies and agates (?)
And sardonyxes varied in colour,
It also was made ready in its home on high(?)
And with stones of adamant
All its seams were fastened;
And the image of the King of kings was depicted
in full all over it,
And like the sapphire stone also were its mani
fold hues.
Again I saw that all over it
The motions of knowledge l were stirring
And as if to speak
I saw it also making itself ready.
I heard the sound of its tones,
Which it uttered to those who brought it down(?)
Saying, "I . .
Whom they reared for him (?) in the presence of
my fathers,
And I also perceived in myself
That my stature was growing according to his
labours. 3
And in its kingly motions
It was spreading itself out towards me, 4
And in the hands of its givers
1 Q-nosis ; the robe in the Pistis Sophia contains all
tf knowledges " (yvaxTsi?).
2 "I am the active in deeds" (Wright).
3 The " causal " body or vesture which constitutes the higher
ego.
4 "It poured itself entirely over me" (Wright) — the same
simile as is used several times in the Askew Codex.
414 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
It hastened that I might take it.
And me too my love urged on
That I should run to meet it and receive it ;
And I stretched forth and received it,
With the beauty of its colours I adorned myself
And my toga of brilliant colours
I cast around me, in its whole breadth.
I clothed myself therewith, and ascended
To the gate of salutation and homage ;
I bowed my head, and did homage
To the Majesty l of my Father who had sent it
to me,
For I had done his commandments,
And he too had done what he promised,
And at the gate of his princes
I mingled with his nobles ;
For he rejoiced in me and received me,
And I was with him in his kingdom.
And with the voice . . .
All his servants glorify him.
And he promised that also to the gate
Of the King of kings I should speed with him,
And bringing my gift and my pearl
I should appear with him before our King.
Well may Professor Bevan call this glorious hymn
a " master-piece of religious poetry "; it is not only
magnificent as poetry, but priceless as a record of
occult fact. WThat then have we not lost by the
barbarous destruction of the Hymns of Bardaisan ?
1 This seems to be One different from the Father Himself,
and the subject of the third and fourth lines from the end.
SOME TRACES OF THE GNOSIS IN
THE UNCANONICAL ACTS.
FOREWORD.
JUST as there existed, prior to and alongside of the
canonical Gospels, many other settings of the Sayings The
Gnostic
and Doings of the Lord, so there existed, prior to Acts.
and alongside of the selected or canonical Acts, many
other narratives professing to record the doings and
sayings of the Apostles and Disciples of the Lord.
Most of these originated in what are now called
heretical circles, but were subsequently worked over
by orthodox editors to suit doctrinal prejudices, and
eagerly embraced by the Catholic Church. As
Lipsius, the greatest authority on the subject, says :
" Almost every fresh editor of such narratives, using
that freedom which all antiquity was wont to allow
itself in dealing with literary monuments, would recast
the materials which lay before him, excluding what
ever might not suit his theological point of view —
dogmatic statements, for example, speeches, prayers,
etc., for which he would substitute other formulae of
415
416 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
his own composition, and further expanding and
abridging after his own pleasure, or as the immediate
object which he had in view might dictate." (Art.
"Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles," in Smith and
Wace's Dictionary, incorporated into his exhaustive
Die apokryphen Apostelgeschichte, 1883, etc.)
The main point of interest for us is that some of
these edited and re-edited documents still preserve
traces of their Gnostic origin ; and Lipsius has shown
that their Gnosticism is not to be ascribed to the
third century Manichaeism, as has been assumed by
some, but to the general Gnosis of the second century.
There was a very wide circulation of such religious
romances in the second century, for these formed the
main means of Gnostic public propaganda. The
technical inner teachings of Gnosticism the Church
Fathers, as we have seen, assailed with misrepre
sentation and overwhelmed with ridicule; to these
onslaughts the Gnostics made no reply, most probably
because they were bound by their oaths of secrecy on
the one hand, and on the other knew well that the
doctrines of the inner life could not be decided by
vulgar debate. The inner teachings of their Gospel
were for those within ; to the rest they were foolish
ness. But the Acts-romances, often no doubt based on
actual occurrences of the inner life, were not of so
difficult a character. They may seem vastly fantastic
to modern criticism, but to every shade of Christianity
in those early years they were entirely credible.
These formed the intermediate link between the
General Church and the inner teachings of Gnos
ticism, and they could not be disposed of by ridicule.
FOREWORD. 417
Another method had to be used. As Lipsius says :
" Catholic bishops and teachers knew not how better
to stem this flood of Gnostic writings and their
influence among the faithful, than by boldly adopting
the most popular narrations from the heretical books,
and, after carefully eliminating the poison of false
doctrine, replacing them in this purified form in the
hands of the people."
Fortunately the " purification " has not been com
plete, and some traces of the " poison " are still to be
found, as we hope to show our readers in the sequel.
It would be out of place in these short sketches to
attempt a description of these Acts, or enter into a Early
critical treatment of their sources ; our only object
is, to rescue from this mass of literature a few
fragments which still preserve traces of old Gnostic
teachings. The original works in which these
teachings were first formulated, have disappeared ;
the tradition has been badly mutilated by many
editors and scribes. Can it be that the new-found
Coptic Acts of Peter may give us the translation
of an original untampered-with text ?
The earliest collection of these Gnostic Acts is said
to have been made by a certain Leucius (there are no
less than eighteen variants of the name), or Leucius
Charinus, who is said to have been a disciple of John ;
but of course no reliance can be placed on this latter
assertion, unless "John" is taken for the writer of
the Fourth Gospel, and not one of the original
Twelve. At any rate the so-called Leucian Acts
were early ; in the opinion of Zahn this collection was
made at a time when the Gnostics were not yet
DD
418 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
considered heretical, that is to say, prior to 150 A.D.
However this may be, the Leucian Acts were a second
century collection, for Clement of Alexandria was
acquainted with them ; they were also probably
collected at Alexandria.
Another early collector of Gnostic Acts was a
certain Linus, of whom nothing certain is known.
He may probably have lived at Rome. The Abdias-
collection is too late to be noticed in this connection.
For a full discussion of all these points, and an
analysis of all the Gnostic fragments and references
preserved in the Apocryphal Acts, I must refer the
student to Lipsius' great work on the subject. We
will now present the reader with the most important
of these fragments, so that he may judge of their
nature. Some of these Acts are untranslated in
English ; I use the most recent texts of Zahn,
Bonnet and Lipsius.
FROM THE ACTS OF THOMAS. 419
FROM THE ACTS OF THOMAS.
WE have already given the reader the most important
fragment preserved in the Acts of Thomas, or Judas A Hymn to
Thomas ; it is the beautiful Hymn of the Soul, com
posed in every likelihood by Bardesanes. If the Acts
of Thomas had given us nothing else than this
grand Gnostic Hymn of the Robe of Glory, their life
would not have been preserved in vain. Fortunately,
however, there is more to be gleaned from them.
The following is a translation of the beautiful Ode
to Sophia, as it is called.
" The Maiden is Light's daughter ; in her the
King's radiance is treasured. Majestic her look, and
delightsome; in radiant beauty she shineth.
" Like to spring flowers are her garments ; from
them streameth scent of sweet odours. Throned o'er
her head the King sitteth, with food free from death
feeding them at His table.
" Truth crowneth her head ; Joy sports at her feet.
She openeth her mouth as becomes her ; all songs of
praise she lets stream forth.
" Two and thirty are they who sing praises ;
. . . Her tongue is like the entrance veil, moved
by them who enter in only.
" Her neck towereth step-like ; the first world-
builder did build it. Her hands suggest the band of
blessed ^Eons, proclaiming them (?) ; her fingers
point toward the City's Gates.
" Her bridal chamber (-rraerro?) doth stream with
light, and pour forth scent of balsam and sweet herbs,
420 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
delicious scents of myrrh and savoury plants ; with
myrtle wreaths and masses of sweet flowers 'tis
strewn within. Her bridal couch is decked with
reeds (?).
"Her bridesmen are grouped round her; seven
are they in number ; she hath picked them herself.
Seven, too, are her bridesmaids dancing before her.
"Twelve are they who serve and attend her;
their eyes ever look for the Bridegroom, that
He may fill them with light.
" For ever with Him will they be in joy ever
lasting ; and will take their seats at that feast where
the Great Ones assemble, and remain at that banquet
of which the Eternal (aiwvioi) alone are deemed
worthy.
" In kingly dress shall they be clad, and put on
robes of light, and both shall joy in bliss and
exultation, singing praise to the Father.
" For of His glorious radiance they've received ;
and at the sight of Him, their Lord, they have been
filled with light. They have received from Him
immortal food that knows no waste.
" They've drunk of wine that makes men thirst
no more, nor suffer fleshly lust. So with the Living
Spirit they glorify Truth's Father, and sing their
praise to Wisdom's Mother."
Would that we had the original of this beautiful
hymn, for even the faulty and distorted version that
remains is beautiful. Can it be that we have here
another of the Hymns of Bardaisan ? In any case
the hymn looks back to the sacred marriage of
the Sophia with her Bridegroom the Christ, to which
FROM THE ACTS OF THOMAS. 421
reference has already been made in our sketch of
the Basilidian Gnosis.
In this marriage the cosmic Sophia was received
back into the Light-world, and united with her
heavenly spouse. This was to take place at the
Great Consummation; but, mystically, it was ever
taking place for those who united themselves with
their Higher Selves.
As in the consummation of the universe the
World-soul was reunited with the World-mind, so in
the perfectioning of the individual the soul was made
one with the Self within.
The Maiden is the daughter of the Pleroma of
Light ; she reflects the splendour of the Kings, the
Lords of the Light-realm. Above her in the Light-
realm sits throned the King of Glory, the Christos,
who giveth the food of deathlessness to the Spiritual
Souls (Pneumatics) who are worthy to be bidden to
the Feast.
At this high initiation the whole Pleroma (the
two and thirty ^Eons) sing songs of rejoicing that the
victory is won. Tis only such perfected souls who
can move Wisdom's tongue in praise to God; they
alone can make the subtle substance of such lofty
heights vibrate in songs of praise.
The following verse is difficult to understand, and
doubtless does not preserve the original. The " City "
is the Pleroma ; the bride-chamber is the Pastes, the
shrine, the holy place, where the initiation is given
—the Jerusalem Above, identical perhaps with the
City of which we read in the superior MS. of the
Codex Brucianus.
422 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Thither the purified soul is conducted by seven
pairs or syzygies of powers. Rising aloft she takes
with her the twelve, her servants, no longer her rulers
as in the lower world, where she has so long been
chained in the bonds of desire. The twelve are now
her own purified powers, whereby the Light of the
Christos is reflected. In the phrase, " both shall joy
in bliss and exultation," of the third verse from the
end, " both " refers to the reunited soul with its
" Angel " — those Angels who always behold the Face
of the Father.
This and much else does the hymn reveal to those
who love the Gnosis, for many pages would not
exhaust its full meaning.
But we must hasten on to the remaining frag-
Two ments in the Acts of Thomas, and so present our
Invocations, readers with a translation of two interesting sacra
mental prayers or invocations in hymn-form. The
first runs as follows :
" Come Thou Holy Name of Christ, Name above
all names; come Power from above; come Perfect
Mercy ; come highest gift !
" Thou Mother of compassion, come ; come Spouse
of Him, the Man ; come Thou Revealer of the mysteries
concealed; Thou Mother of the seven mansions come,
who in the eighth hath found Thy rest !
" Come Thou who art more ancient far than the
five holy Limbs — Mind, Thought, Reflection, Thinking,
Reasoning ; commune with those of later birth !
" Come Holy Spirit, purge Thou their reins and
heart ! "
The second runs thus :
FROM THE ACTS OF THOMAS. 423
" Come highest Gift ; Thou Perfect Mercy, come ;
Thou knower of the Chosen's mysteries, descend ; Thou
who dost share in all the noble striver's struggles,
come !
" Come Silence, Thou Revealer of the mighty things
of all the Greatness ; come Thou who dost make
manifest the hidden, and make the secret plain !
" Come Holy Dove, mother of two young twins ;
come Hidden Mother, revealed in deeds alone !
" Come Thou who givest joy to all who are at one
with Thee ; come and commune with us in this
thanksgiving (eucharist) which we are making in
Thy name, in this love-feast (agape) to which we have
assembled at Thy call ! "
These sacramental invocations are to be referred
to the same circle of ideas as the formulas of the A Note
thereon.
Marcosian Gnosis which we have already given.
The Name is not the name " Christos," but the
Name or Power of the Christ, His shakti (to use
a term of Indian theosophy) or syzygy.
The " one more ancient than the five limbs," is the
Man, the spouse of the Sophia or Holy Spirit, the
Christos. The five limbs are presumably the Pentad
of the asons referred to in the new-found Gnostic
Gospel of Mary, and the names of them are very
similar to those mentioned in the " Simonian "
system. They are one of the highest orderings of
the limbs, or members, of the Heavenly Man, of
which we read so much in the Bruce and Askew
Codices.
" Those of later birth " are the neophytes awaiting
the initiation of the " seal of perfection." The
424 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
"mighty things of the whole Greatness" are the
mysteries of the Pleroma.
The Holy Dove is again the Sophia or World-
soul ; according to the Gnosis of Bardaisan, she had
two daughters. Ephraim, the bitter opponent of
the Bardesanists, says that they were called Shame
of the Dry and Image of the Water ; whether
these were really their names or not, they were
presumably the productive World-earth and procrea-
tive World- water, the builders of the material world ;
in other words, the sublunary and terrestrial regions.
Before leaving the Acts of Thomas it may be
interesting to give the reader a specimen of the
stories with which such religious romances were
filled. The Apostle Judas Thomas, or the Twin of
Jesus, is fabled to have received India by lot for
his apostolic sphere of work. Thomas at first does
not wish to go, but is sold by Jesus, his master,
to a trader from the East as a slave "skilled in
carpentry." We take the following summary of
the story from Salmon's Introduction to the New
Testament (8th ed., 1897, pp. 337, 338).
" When Thomas arrives in India, he is brought
The Palace before the King, and being questioned as to his
that Thomas
Built. knowledge of masons' or carpenters' work professes
great skill in either department. The King asks
him if he can build him a palace. He replies
that he can, and makes a plan which is
approved of. He is then commissioned to build
the palace, and is supplied abundantly with
money for the work, which, however, he says
he cannot begin till the winter months. The
FROM THE ACTS OF THOMAS. 425
King thinks this strange, but being convinced of
his skill acquiesces. But when the King goes away,
Thomas, instead of building, employs himself in
preaching the Gospel, and spends all the money on
the poor. After a time the King sends to know how
the work is going on. Thomas sends back word that
the palace is finished all but the roof, for which he
must have more money; and this is supplied accord
ingly, and is spent by Thomas on the widows and
orphans as before. At length the King returns to
the city, and when he makes inquiry about the palace,
he learns that Thomas has never done anything but
go about preaching, giving alms to the poor, and
healing diseases. He seemed to be a magician, yet he
never took money for his cures; lived on bread and
water, with salt, and had but one garment. The
King, in great anger, sent for Thomas. ' Have you
built me a palace?' 'Yes.' 'Let me see it/ 'Oh,
you can't see it now, but you will see it when you go
out of this world.' Enraged at being thus mocked,
the King committed Thomas to prison, until he could
devise some terrible form of death for him. But that
same night the King's brother died, and his soul was
taken up by the angels to see all the heavenly
habitations. They asked him in which he would like
to dwell. But when he saw the palace which Thomas
had built, he desired to dwell in none but that.
When he learned that it belonged to his brother, he
begged and obtained that he might return to life in
order that he might buy it from him. So as they
were putting grave-clothes on the body, it returned to
life. He sent for the King, whose love for him he
426 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
knew, and implored him to sell him the palace. But
when the King learned the truth about it, he refused
to sell the mansion he hoped to inhabit himself, but
consoled his brother with the promise that Thomas,
who was still alive, should build him a better one,
The two brothers then received instruction and were
baptized."
FROM THE ACTS OF JOHN.
IN a recent volume of that most valuable series
A Recently Texts and Studies (Apocrypha Anecdota II., by
Fragment. M. R. James, 1897), there is a long fragment of
The Acts of John, much of which has never been
previously published. It has been rescued from a
fourteenth century MS. preserved in Vienna. The
original of these Acts is early, belonging as they
do to the Leucian collection. Seeing that Clement of
Alexandria quotes from them, we must assign the
third quarter of the second century to them as the
terminus ad quem. We have therefore before us an
early document, our interest in which is further
increased by the fact of its distinctly Gnostic nature.
Nearly the whole of the fragment consists of a
The monologue put into the mouth of John, in which is
preserved for us a most remarkable tradition
of the occult life of Jesus. The whole setting
of the christology is docetic and the fragment
is thus a most valuable addition to our know
ledge on this interesting point of Gnostic
tradition. Docetism was the rank growth of the
FROM^THE ACTS OF JOHN. 427
legends of certain occult powers ascribed to the
" perfect man," which were woven into the many
christological and soteriological theories of the
Gnostic philosophers ; and also, as I believe, of a
veritable historical fact, which has been obscured out
of all recognition by the many historicizing narrations
of the origins. After His death the Christ did return
and teach His followers among the inner communities,
and this was the part origin of the protean Gnostic
tradition of an inner instruction. He returned in the
only way He could return, namely, in a " psychic " or
" spiritual " body ; this body could be made visible at
will, could even be made sensible to touch, but was,
compared to the ordinary physical body, an "illusory"
body — hence the term " docetic."
But just as the external tradition of the " Poor Men "
was gradually transmuted, and finally exalted Jesus The
J * Evolution of
from the position of a prophet into the full power Tradition.
and glory of the Godhead itself, so the internal
tradition extended the original docetic notion
to every department of the huge soteriological
structure raised by Gnostic genius. The Acts of
John pertain to the latter cycle of tendencies,
and " John " is the personification of one
of the lines of tradition of the protean docetism,
which had its origin in an occult fact, and of those
marvellous teachings of initiation which became
subsequently historicized, and which John sums up in
the words : " I held firmly this one thing in myself,
that the Lord contrived all things symbolically and
by a dispensation toward men, for their conversion
and salvation."
428 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
That the Christ was possessed of spiritual powers
of a very high order is easy of belief to any student
of occult nature. That he could appear to others in
a maydvi-rupa, as it is called in India, and change
its appearance at will, is quite possible of credit. But
that the tradition of these and other such happenings
should have been handed down without exaggeration
and fantastic embellishment, would be entirely con
trary to human experience in such matters.
Thus, then, we are told that at the calling of
Mystic James and John, first of all James saw Jesus as a
Stones of
Jesus. child, while John saw Him first as a man " fair
and comely and of a cheerful countenance " ;
afterwards he saw Him as one " having a head
rather bald, but a thick and flowing beard," while
James asserted that He appeared " as a youth whose
beard was newly come."
Moreover, another peculiarity which John remarked,
was that His eyes never closed. Strangely enough,
this is one of the signs of a " god " given in the
Hindu scriptures. Many changes of appearance did
John remark, sometimes as of " a man small and
uncomely, and then again as one reaching to heaven "
— a fact quite credible when related of a pupil in
sympathetic contact with the powerful " presence " or
" glory " of a Master. But stranger still, when John
lay upon his breast, " sometimes it was felt of me to
be smooth and tender, and sometimes hard, like
stones." Moreover, when Jesus was in prayer and
contemplation, there was seen in Him " such a light as
it is not possible for a man that useth corruptible
speech to tell what it was like."
FROM THE ACTS OF JOHN. 429
The following naive story will at the end bring a
smile to the face of the reader, but at the same
time it will give the student of hidden nature proof
that the legend is not based entirely on the imagina
tion, but pertains to the domain of occult fact, if at
any rate the many similar legends, current in India,
concerning the touch of yogins when in certain
states of ecstasy are at all to be credited. (The
quotations are for the most part from Dr. James'
translation).
" Again in like manner he leadeth us three up into
the mountain, saying ' Come ye to Me.' And we
again went : and we beheld Him at a distance
praying. Now therefore I, because He loved me,
drew nigh unto Him softly as though He should not
see, and stood looking at His back. And I beheld
Him that He was not in any wise clad with garments,
but was seen of us naked thereof, and not in any wise
as a man ; and His feet whiter than any snow, so that
the ground there was lighted up by His feet ; and
His head reaching unto heaven, so that I was afraid
nd cried out ; and He turned and appeared as a mana
of small stature, and took hold of my beard and pulled
it and said unto me, ' John, be not unbelieving, and
not a busybody.' And I said unto Him, ' But what
have I done, Lord ?' And I tell you, brethren, I
suffered great pain in that place where he took hold
upon my beard for thirty days.
" But Peter and James were wroth because ' I
spake with the Lord, and beckoned unto me that The Christ
I should come unto them, and leave the Lord alone. Jesus.8 *
And I went, and they both said unto me, ' He that
430 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
was speaking with the Lord when he was upon
the top of the mount, who was He ? for we heard
both of them speaking.' And I, when I considered
His great grace and His unity which hath many
faces, and His wisdom which without ceasing looked
upon us, said, 'That shall ye learn if ye inquire of
Him.'
" Again, once when all of us His disciples were
sleeping in one house at Gennesaret, I alone, having
wrapped myself up, watched from under my garment
what He did ; and first I heard Him say, ' John, go
thou to sleep,' and thereupon I feigned to be asleep ;
and I saw another like unto Him come down, whom
also I heard saying unto my Lord, 'Jesus, do they
whom thou hast chosen still not believe in thee ? '
And my Lord said unto Him, ' Thou sayest well, for
they are men.' "
Here, in my opinion, is the direct tradition of an
inner fact which led to the subsequent great doctrinal
distinction between Jesus and the Christ in Gnostic
Christianity. The Christ was the Great Master ;
Jesus was the man through whom He taught during
the time of the ministry.
Interesting again is the simple story that when
An Early Jesus and His disciples were each given a loaf by
of the Great some well-to-do householder, Jesus would bless the
loaf and divide it among them, and each was well
satisfied with his portion, and thus " our loaves
were saved whole " — an incident credible enough to
any student of occultism, and supplying a basis on
which the gorgeous oriental imagination could easily
in time construct the legend of the feeding of the
FROM THE ACTS OF JOHN. 431
five thousand. Such incidents were all that the
writer deemed advisable to tell to the uninitiated ;
there were many more of a nature too sacred or
too far from credibility to be revealed to the outer
circles.
" Now these things, brethren, I speak unto you for
the encouragement of your faith toward Him ; for we
must at present keep silence concerning His mighty
and wonderful works, inasmuch as they are mysteries
and peradventure cannot at all be either uttered or
heard."
Next follows the " Hymn " which was sung
before He was taken by " the lawless Jews." The £ Ritual
from the
disciples are described as holding one another's Mysteries.
hands so as to make a ring round Jesus, who
stands in the midst, and to each line He sings, they
intone in chorus the sacred word "Amen." It is
evidently some echo of the Mysteries, and the cere
mony is that of a sacred dance of initiation. The
Hymn stands at present in a very confused and
mutilated form, and the rubrics have almost entirely
disappeared. I have therefore permitted myself a
few conjectures ; in some passages, however, the con
fusion is so great that it is impossible to venture on a
suggestion. In the following C. stands for the candi
date, I. for the initiator (the Christ), and A. for the
assistants.
C. " I would be saved."
I. " And I would save."
A. " Amen."
C. " I would be loosed."
I, " And I would loose."
432 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
A. " Amen."
C. " I would be pierced."
I. <; And I would pierce."
A. " Amen."
C. " I would be born."
I. " And I would bring to birth."
A. " Amen."
C. " I would eat."
I. " And I would be eaten."
A. " Amen."
C. " I would hear."
I. " And I would be heard."
A. " Amen."
" I would be understood, being all understanding
(mind)."
A. " Amen."
C. " I would be washed."
I. " And I would wash."
A. " Amen."
" (Grace [i.e., the Sophia] dances.)"
" I would pipe ; dance all of you."
A. " Amen."
" The Ogdoad plays to our dancing. Amen."
" The Dodecad danceth above [us]. Amen."
[The reading of this line is hopeless.]
" He who danceth not, knoweth not what is being
done."
C. " I would flee."
I. " I would [have thee] stay."
A. " Amen."
C. " I would be robed [in n't garments]."
I. " And I would robe [thee]."
FROM THE ACTS OF JOHN. 433
A. " Amen."
C. " I would be at-oned.''
I. " And I would at-one."
A. " Amen."
" I have no house, and I have houses. Amen."
" I have no place, and I have places. Amen."
" I have no temple, and I have temples. Amen."
I. " I am a lamp to thee who beholdest Me."
A. " Amen."
I. " I am a mirror to thee who perceivest Me."
A. "Amen."
I. " I am a door to thee who knockest at Me."
A. " Amen."
I. " I am a way to thee, a wayfarer."
A. " Amen."
I. " Now respond thou to my dancing."
"See thyself in Me who speak; and when thou
hast seen what I do, keep silence on My mysteries."
" (Dancing.) Observe what I do, for thine is this
passion (suffering) of the Man which I am to suffer
(perform)."
[Here probably followed a mystery-drama of the
crucifixion and piercing.]
" Thou couldst never [alone] have understood what
I suffer. I am thy Word (Logos — Highest Self). I
was sent by the Father."
" When thou didst look on My passion, thou didst
see Me as suffering ; thou stood'st not firm, but wast
shaken completely.
" Thou hast Me for a couch, rest thou upon Me."
" Who am I ? That shalt thou know when I
depart."
n
434 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
" What I am now seen to be, that I am not ; but
what I am thou shalt see when thou comest."
" If thou hadst known how to suffer, thou wouldst
have had the power not to suffer."
" Know then suffering and thou shalt have the
power not to suffer."
" That which thou knowest not, I myself will
teach thee."
" I am thy God, not that of thy betrayer."
C. " I would be brought into harmony with holy
souls."
I. " In Me know thou the Word of wisdom."
So run the mutilated fragments of this most
The interesting relic of inner Gnostic ritual ; in the version
Doxology.
of The Acts of John from which we are quoting,
this so-called Hymn begins and ends with the
following doxology, to each line of which the
disciples, " going round in a ring," are said to answer
back "Amen."
"Glory to Thee, Father. Amen!
" Glory to Thee, Word ; glory to Thee, Grace.
Amen !
" Glory to Thee, Spirit ; glory to Thee, Holy One ;
glory to Thy glory. Amen !
" We praise Thee, 0 Father ; we give thanks to
Thee, O Light, wherein dwelleth no darkness. Amen!"
If we had only a description of the " drama," the
" things done," as well as of the " things said," at this
most instructive ceremony, much light might be
thrown on the meaning of the " passion " of the
Christ as it was originally understood. When,
moreover, we reflect that most precious fragments of
FROM THE ACTS OF JOHN. 435
this hidden part of earliest Christendom are being
discovered almost yearly, it is not too wild a hope
that some tattered leaf may give us further light.
That, however, the " mystery of the cross," the mystic
crucifixion, was understood by the Gnostics in a
fashion far different from the literal historic narrative,
is abundantly proved by these same Johannine Acts.
When the Lord was hung upon the " bush of the
cross," He appeared unto John, who had fled unto the
" Mount of Olives."
"Our Lord stood in the midst of the cave
and filled it with light and said, ' To the multitude The
Mystery
below, in Jerusalem [? the Jerusalem Below — of the
the physical world], I am being crucified, and
pierced with lances and reeds, and gall and vinegar
is given Me to drink; to thee now I speak, and
hearken to My words. Twas I who put it in thy
heart to ascend this mount, that thou mightest hear
what disciple must learn from Master, and man from
God.5
" And having thus spoken, He showed me a cross
of light set up, and about the cross a great multitude,
and therein one form and one likeness ; and on the cross
another multitude, not having one form, and I saw the
Lord Himself above the cross, not having any shape,
but only a voice ; and a voice not such as was
familiar to us, but a sweet and kind voice and one
truly of God, saying unto me : ' John, it is needful
that one should hear these things from Me; for I
have need of one who will hear. This cross of light
is sometimes called the Word by Me for your sakes,
sometimes Mind, sometimes Jesus, sometimes Christ,
436 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
sometimes Door, sometimes Way, sometimes Bread,
sometimes Seed, sometimes Resurrection, sometimes
Son, sometimes Father, sometimes Spirit, sometimes
Life, sometimes Truth, sometimes Faith, sometimes
Grace.
" ' Now these things it is called as toward men ;
but as to what it is in truth, as conceived of in itself
and as spoken of to thee — it is the marking off
(delimitation) of all things, the firm necessity of
those things that are fixed and were unsettled, the
harmony of Wisdom. And whereas it is Wisdom
in harmony (or fitly ordered), there are on the Right
and Left Powers, Principalities, Sources, and Daemons,
Energies, Threats, Wrath, Accusers, Satan, and
[Below] the Lower Root from which hath proceeded
the nature of the things in genesis.
" * This, then, is the cross which fixed all things
apart by Reason, and marked off the things that
come from genesis, the things below it, and then
compacted all into one whole.
" ' This is not the cross of wood which thou wilt
see when thou hast descended ; nor am I He that is
upon the cross, whom now thou seest not but only
hearest a voice.
" ' By the others, the many, I have been thought to
be what I am not, though I am not what I was. And
they will [still] say of Me what is base and not
worthy of Me.
" ' As, therefore, the Place of Rest is neither seen
nor spoken of, much more shall I, the Lord of that
Place, be neither seen nor spoken of.
" ' Now the multitude of; one aspect that is about
FROM THE ACTS OF JOHN. 437
the cross is the lower nature, and those whom
thou seest on the cross, if they have not one The
form, it is because not yet hath every Limb of tation
Him who came down been gathered together.
But when the upper nature shall be taken up,
and the race which is repairing to Me, in
obedience to My voice ; then that which [as yet] hears
Me not, shall become as thou art, and shall no longer
be what it now is, but above them [of the world],
even as I am now. For so long as thou callest not
thyself Mine, I am not what I am. But if hearing
thou hearkenest unto Me, then shalt thou be as I am,
and I shall be what I was, when I have thee as I
am with Myself. For from this thou art. Pay no
attention, then, to the many, and them outside the
mystery think little of ; for know that I am wholly
with the Father and the Father with Me.
"' Nothing therefore of the things which they will
say of Me have I suffered; nay, that suffering also
which I showed unto thee and unto the rest in the
dance, I will that it be called a mystery. For what
thou seest that did I show thee ; but what I am that
I alone know, and none else. Suffer me then to keep
that which is Mine own, and that which is thine
behold thou through Me, and behold Me in truth that
I am, not what I said, but what thou art able to
know, for thou art kin to Me.
"'Thou hearest that I suffered, yet I suffered not;
that I suffered not, yet did I suffer; that I was
pierced, yet was I not smitten; that I was hanged,
yet was I not hanged; that blood flowed from Me,
yet it flowed not. In a word those things that they
438 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
say of Me, I had not, and the things that they say
not, those I suffered. Now what they are I will
shadow forth (riddle) for thee, for I know that thou
wilt understand.
'" See thou therefore in Me the slaying of a Word
(Logos), the piercing of a Word, the blood of a Word,
the wounding of a Word, the hanging of a Word, the
passion of a Word, the nailing [? fixing or joining] of
a Word, the death of a Word. And by a Word I
mean Man. First, then, understand the Word, then
shalt thou understand the Lord, and thirdly the Man,
and what is His passion.'"
It is evident that we have here the tradition of
The the inner schools as to the great mystery of
Initiation .... .
of the initiation called the Cross. The Cross is apparently
three limbed, having a right, a left, and a lower
arm, like the Egyptian tau. On it the body
of the candidate presumably was bound, and in
trance his soul ascended the mountain of initiation,
the " height " within. Here he meets the Master, but
only hears His voice ; not yet can he see Him as He
is, for all his limbs are not yet gathered together, the
perfect Osiris is not formed in him, but will be at a
higher stage, when he is at-oned with the Christ.
How beautiful are these echoes from the old
teaching, and what light they throw on things other
wise entirely incomprehensible ! It was these inner
experiences of the soul which were the life and
strength of the Gnosis, experiences in which the com
plex systems that " the tongue of flesh " endeavoured
to enunciate with such labour, received illumination
and light — " sweet, joyous light," as the Shepherd of
FROM THE ACTS OF JOHN. 439
Hermes the Thrice-greatest has it. Well now can we
imagine the significance of the greeting among such
scholars of the hidden way as : " The mystery of that
which hangs 'twixt heaven and earth be with you."
Of the idea of the Little and Great Man, the lower
and higher selves, in such circles of initiation we hear The
Higher and
elsewhere from The Gospel of Eve (Epiph., xxvi. 3), Lower
describing one of these visions on the Mount.
" I stood on a lofty mountain and saw a mighty
Man, and another, a dwarf, and heard as it were a
voice of thunder, and drew nigh for to hear; and it
spake unto me and said : ' I am thou and thou art I ;
and wheresoever thou art I am there, and I am sown
(or scattered) in all ; from whencesoever thou wiliest
thou gatherest Me, and gathering Me thou gatherest
Thyself."
The " dwarf " presumably corresponds to the " man
of the size of a thumb in the aether of the heart " of
the Upanishads ; as yet he is smaller than the small,
but as the spiritual nature develops he will become
greater than the great, and grow into the stature of
the Heavenly Man — the Supreme Self.
As to the scattering and collecting of the Limbs,
there is a passage cited by Epiphanius (ibid., 13) from
The Gospel of Philip, which throws some further light
on the subject. It is an apology or defence to be used
by the soul in its ascent to the Heaven-world, as it
passes through the middle spaces, and runs as follows:
" I have recognised myself and gathered myself
together from all sides. I have sown no children to
the Ruler [the lord of this world], but have torn up
his roots; I have gathered together my limbs that
440 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
were scattered abroad, and I know thee who thou
art."
So much for what we can glean from the text of
A Prayer the latest published fragment of these most instructive
of Praise
to Christ. Acts ; from the already known texts there are
several other fragments of interest. The following
is a prayer of praise put into the mouth of John at
the sacred feast prior to his departure from life.
It is addressed to the Christ.
" What praise, what offering, what thanksgiving,
shall we, in breaking bread, speak of but Thee alone ?
We glorify Thy Name [i.e., Power] which hath been
spoken by the Father ; we glorify Thy Name which
hath been spoken through the Son ; we glorify the
Resurrection shown unto us through Thee ; we glorify
Thy Seed, Word, Grace, Faith, Salt, True Pearl
ineffable, Treasure, Plough, Greatness, Net, and
Diadem, Him who hath been called for our sakes the
Son of Man, Truth, Rest, and Gnosis, Power, Statute,
Frankness, Hope, Love, Freedom, and Going-for-
refuge to Thee. For Thou alone art the one
Lord, the Root of Deathlessness, and Source of
Incorruptibility, Seat of the ^Eons. All these hast
Thou been called for us, that we invoking Thee by
them, may know that as we are we never can embrace
Thy Greatness, greatness that can alone be contem
plated by the Pure, for it is imaged in Thy man
alone."
The same phrase, "Thy man," is found in the
beautiful treatise of Hermes Trismegistus known as
The Secret Sermon on the Mountain : " Thou art the
God ; Thy man thus cries to Thee through fire, air,
FROM THE ACTS OF JOHN. 441
earth ; through water, spirit, through these Thy
creatures." But indeed the whole of the so-called
Poimandres collection of the Trismegistic literature
comes from the same source as the Gnosis.
The high ideal of the Gnostic life, and the lofty
level to which these strivers after the sinless state
aspired, are amply shown in the farewell address to
his disciples, put in the mouth of John by the Gnostic
composer or compiler of the Acts.
" Brothers and fellow-servants, co-heirs and
co-partners in the kingdom of the Lord, ye know how John's
J Farewell
many powers the Lord hath granted you through Address
me — how many wonders, healings how many, how Community.
many signs, what gifts [of the Spirit], teachings,
guidings, reliefs, services, glories, graces, gifts,
bestowings of faith, communions — how many ye see
with your own eyes given unto you, how many
that neither these eyes of yours can see, nor these
ears hear ! Stand ye, therefore, fast in Him, in
every deed remembering Him, knowing wherefore
the mystery of the dispensation towards men is
being worked out.
" The Lord Himself exhorteth you through me :
' Brethren, I would be free from grief [on your
behalf], from violence, plottings, punishments.'
" For He knoweth the violence that comes from
you, He knoweth the dishonour, He knoweth the
plotting, He knoweth the punishment that comes
through them who obey not His commandments.
" Let not then our Good God be grieved, Him the
compassionate, merciful and holy, the pure and spot
less one, the one and only one, unchangeable, of
442 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
speckless purity, who knows not guile or wrath,
higher and loftier than any attribute that we can
name or think, Jesus our God.
" May He be glad of us as citizens of a well-ruled
state ; may He rejoice at our living in purity ; may
He have rest by our reverent behaviour ; may He be
free from care by our continence ; may He be
delighted by our dwelling in brotherhood; may He
laugh with joy at our prudence; may He rejoice at
our love for Him.
" These things do I say unto you, hastening to the
end of my appointed task, which has been brought to
an end for me by the Lord. For what else can I say
to you ? Ye have the pledges of our God ; ye have
the sureties of His goodness ; ye have His presence
which can never leave you. If then ye sin no
more, He doth forgive you all that ye have done in
ignorance ; but if, having once known Him and having
received of His mercy, ye turn back into such paths
then shall your former sins be put to your charge,
and ye shall have neither portion nor mercy before
Him."
Immediately on this there follows the last prayer
of John to the Christ on behalf of his brethren.
" Thou who hast woven this wreath by Thy
weaving, Jesus, Thou who hast united these many
blossoms into that sweet flower of Thine
whose scent can never fade, Thou who hast
sown these Words, protector of Thine own,
healer who heal'st for naught, Thou only one who
ever doest good, stranger to arrogance, Thou only
merciful, the friend of man, Thou only saviour,
FROM THE ACTS OF JOHN. 443
righteous one, who ever seest all things and art in all
and always ever-present, God, Jesus, Christos, Lord,
who with Thy gifts and Thy compassion dost screen
[all] them who hope on Thee, Thou who dost right
well know all those that do us wrong and who
blaspheme Thy holy Name, Thou only Lord, watch
o'er Thy servants and protect them ; yea, Lord, do
this!" "
The rest of the prayer has also a strong Gnostic
colouring, but sufficient has already been quoted to
give the reader some idea of the lofty thoughts which
animated such communities of the early days.
But before leaving The Acts of John we cannot
refrain from presenting the reader with the best
known story that has crept into their compilation.
It is strange that, where there is so much beauty,
this particular story should have been singled out
for most frequent quotation, and that many theo
logical students know nothing else of the contents
of these instructive documents but " The Story of
John and the Bugs." But so it is, and we give it
as a specimen of the many legends that were current
among the people, and also because it is not deficient
in humour, an uncommon commodity in the circles
of the pious. We take the account from Salmon's
summary. ( Op. supra cit., p. 350).
Once on a time John and his companions were
a-journey ing for apostolic purposes. " On their journey The story
the party stopped at an uninhabited caravanserai.
They found there but one bare couch, and having laid
clothes on it they made the Apostle lie on it, while the
rest of the party laid themselves down to sleep on the
444 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
floor. But John was troubled by a great multitude of
bugs; until after having tossed sleepless for half the
night, he said to them in the hearing of all: 'I say unto
you, O ye bugs, be ye kindly considerate ; leave your
home for this night, and go to rest in a place which
is far from the servant of God.' At this the disciples
laughed, while the Apostle turned to sleep, and they
conversed gently, so as not to disturb him. In the
morning, the first to awake went to the door, and
they saw a great multitude of bugs standing. The
rest collected to view, and at last St. John awoke
and saw likewise. Then (mindful rather of his
grateful obligation to the bugs than of the comfort
of the next succeeding traveller) he said : ' O ye
bugs, since ye have been kind and have observed my
charge, return to your place.' No sooner had he
said this, and risen from the couch, than the bugs
all in a run rushed from the door to the couch,
climbed up the legs, and disappeared into the joinings.
And John said : ' See how these creatures, having
heard the voice of a man, have obeyed; but we,
hearing the voice of God, neglect and disobey; and
how long ? ' "
FROM THE ACTS OF ANDREW. 445
FROM THE ACTS OF ANDREW.
FROM The Acts of Andrew the following Address
to the Cross is of great interest, when compared with
what has been already quoted from The Acts of
John and with the rest of the Gnostic ideas on
the subject. For the Gnostics the Cross was a
symbol of cosmic processes as well as of the
crucifixion of the soul in matter and of its regenera
tion, and it is to be regretted that our information
is so fragmentary. The following Address put into
the mouth of Andrew has been worked over by
Catholic scribes, but the underlying material is
plainly to be derived from the Gnostic circle of ideas.
"Rejoicing I come to thee, thou Cross, the life-
giver, Cross whom I now know to be mine; I know
thy mystery, for thou hast been planted in the
world to make fast things unstable.
" Thy head stretcheth up into heaven, that thou
mayest symbol forth the heavenly Logos, the
head of all things. Thy middle parts are stretched
forth, as it were hands to right and left, to put
to flight the envious and hostile power of the evil
one, that thou mayest gather together into one
them [sci., the limbs] that are scattered abroad.
Thy foot is set in the earth, sunk in the deep, that
thou mayest draw up those that lie beneath the
earth and are held fast in the regions beneath it,
and mayest join them to those in heaven.
" O Cross, engine, most skilfully devised, of
446 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
salvation given unto men by the Highest; O Cross,
invincible trophy of the conquest of Christ o'er His
foes; 0 Cross, thou life-giving tree, roots planted
on earth, fruit treasured in heaven; O Cross most
venerable, sweet thing and sweet name; O Cross
most worshipful, who bearest as grapes the Master,
the true vine, who dost bear too the Thief as thy
fruit, fruitage of faith through confession ; thou who
bringest the worthy to God through the Gnosis and
summonest sinners home through repentance ! "
FROM THE TRAVELS OF PETER.
To the above may be added the final speech put into
The the mouth of Peter, in the romance of his Travels, or
DfiSCGHt
of Man. Circuits (Tours). It is found in the fragment »f
of the Linus-collection, called The Martyrdom of
Peter. The legend says that Peter insisted on being
crucified head downwards, and the reasons for this
strange proceeding are given as follows in the faulty
Latin translation.
" Fitly wert Thou alone stretched on the cross
with head on high, O Lord, who hast redeemed all of
the world from sin. I have desired to imitate Thee in
Thy passion too ; yet would I not take on myself to
be hanged upright. For we, pure men and sinners,
are born from Adam, but Thou art God of God,
Light of true Light, before all aeons and after
them ; thought worthy to become for men Man
without stain of man, Thou hast stood forth man's
glorious Saviour. Thou ever upright, ever raised
FROM THE TRAVELS OF PETER. 447
on high, eternally above ! We, men according to the
flesh, are sons of the first man (Adam), who sunk his
being in the earth, whose fall in human generation is
shown forth. For we are brought to birth in such a
way, that we do seem to be poured into earth, so that
the right is left, the left doth right become ; in that
our state is changed in those who are the authors of
this life. For this world down below doth think the
right what is the left; this world in which Thou,
Lord, hast found us like the Ninevites, and by Thy
holy preaching hast Thou rescued those about to die."
" The authors of this life " presumably refer to the
powers that bring the man to birth. The Jonah-myth
was a type of the initiate, who, after being three days
and three nights in the " belly of Sheol " or Hades,
preached to those in Nineveh, the Jerusalem Below,
that is to say, this world.
But for the brethren there was a still further
instruction as to the meaning of the Mystic Cross.
" But ye, my brothers, who have the right to hear,
lend me the ears of your heart, and understand what The Mystic
now must be revealed to you— the hidden mys-
tery of every nature and the secret spring of every
thing composed. For the first man, whose race
I represent by my position, with head reversed,
doth symbolize his birth into destruction; for that
his birth was death and lacked the life-stream.
But of His own compassion the Power Above
came down into the world, by means of corporal
substance, to him who by a just decree had
been cast down into the earth, and hanged
upon the Cross, and by the means of this
448 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN
most holy calling [the Cross], He did restore
us and did make for us these present things
(which had till then remained unchanged by men's
unrighteous error) into the Left, and those that men
had taken for the Left into eternal things. In
exaltation of the Right He hath changed all the
signs into their proper nature, considering as good
those thought not good, and those men thought
malefic most benign. Whence in a mystery the Lord
hath said : ' If y e make not the Right like as the Left,
the Left like as the Right, Above as the Below, Before
as the Behind, ye shall not know God's kingdom.'
This saying have I made manifest in me, my brothers ;
this is the way in which your eyes of flesh behold me
hanging. It figures forth the way of the first man.
" But ye, beloved, hearing these words and by
conversion of your nature and changing of your
life perfecting them, even as ye have turned you from
that way of error where ye trod, unto the most sure
state of faith, so keep ye running and strive towards
the peace of that which calls you from above, living
the holy life. For that the way on which ye travel
there is Christ. Therefore with Jesus, Christ, true
God, ascend the Cross ; He hath been made for us the
one and only Word. Whence also doth the Spirit
say: 'Christ is the Word and Voice of God.' The
Word in truth is symbolized by that straight stem on
which I hang. [As for the Voice — ] since that voice
is a thing of flesh, with features not to be ascribed
unto God's nature, the cross-piece of the cross is
thought to figure forth that human nature which
suffered the fault of change in the first man, but by
FROM THE TRAVELS OF PETER. 449
the help of God-and-man, received again its real mind.
Right in the centre, joining twain in one, is set the
nail of discipline, conversion and repentance."
The Latin translation is very faulty and often
obscures the Greek original, but enough of the
meaning has been preserved to show the general
drift of the thought. The first quotation is one
of the sayings from The Gospel according to the
Egyptians; the source of the second is not known.
Compare also the changing of the Right and Left
with the conversion of the spheres in the opening
pages of the Pistis Sophia treatise.
Other speeches and innumerable isolated phrases,
which still preserve traces of the Gnosis, could be Afterword,
cited from the existing remains of the uncanonical
Acts, but sufficient has been written to give
the reader an idea of the extensive popular
literature of this kind which emanated from
Gnostic circles in the early years, and to show him
that very different ideas prevailed among those who
were in touch with the inner tradition, from those
of that exclusively historical view which eventually
gained the upper hand.
Whether or not these ideas throw light on the
Christ's teaching, each must decide for himself. That,
however, they were ideas put forward by men vastly
nearer the time of the origins than ourselves — by men
whose whole lives were devoted to the Christ, striving
by every means to purify themselves, and to
experience in themselves the truths of the unseen
world and realize the teachings of the Master — is
amply manifest.
FF
THE GNOSIS ACCOBDING TO
ITS FRIENDS,
Sempiterna Lux! Nee divitias nee honor es peto; me modo
Divince Lucis radio illumines!
From An Essay of Transmigration in Defence of
Pythagoras (London, 1692).
SOME GREEK ORIGINAL WORKS IN
COPTIC TRANSLATION.
THE ASKEW AND BRUCE CODICES.
So far we have endeavoured to recover some
fragments of flotsam and jetsam from the pitiful
wreck of the Gnosis, wrought by the hands of its
bitterest foes, the orthodox Church Fathers ; we will
now try to give the reader some rough idea of the
contents of some Gnostic treatises, which have been
preserved to us in Coptic translation by the hands of
its friends.
We have to consider the contents of three precious
documents known as the Askew, Bruce, and Akhmim
Codices, the last of which was only discovered in
1896. We shall reserve the Akhmlrn Codex for later
notice, since little is so far known of it, and so give our
immediate attention to the Askew and Bruce Codices.
The Askew Codex was bought by the British
Museum from the heirs of Dr. Askew at the The Askew
end of the last century (presumably a little
prior to 1785). The MS. is written on vellum
in Greek uncials, in the Upper Egyptian
453
454 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
dialect, and is not in roll but in book-form. It
consists of 346 quarto pages, and for the most part is
in an excellent state of preservation ; a few leaves
only are missing. The Codex is a copy and not an
original ; and the original was a translation from the
Greek. The general contents consist of a treatise to
which custom has given the name Pistis Sophia,
owing to a heading in the middle of the general
narrative, added by another hand. The treatise has
no superscription or subscription, and though there is
a long incident in it dealing with the passion and
redemption of the Sophia, other parts of equal length
might just as well be called The Questions of Mary,
as Harnack has suggested, and Matter long prior to
him. The Codex also contains a short inset and a
lengthy appendix entitled Extracts from the Books of
the Saviour. For a further description I must refer
the reader to the Introduction of my translation.
The Bruce Codex was brought to England from
o o
The Bruc« Upper Egypt in 1769 by the famous Scottish traveller
Bruce, and bequeathed to the care of the Bodleian
Library, Oxford. It is written on papyrus, in
Greek cursive characters, in the Upper Egyptian
dialect, and consists of seventy-eight leaves, in
book-form. Its leaves are in a most terrible
state of disorder and dilapidation, and many
are missing. A scientific examination of the Codex
reveals the fact that it consists of two distinct MSS.,
containing the remains of at least two distinct Gnostic
works and some fragments. The superior MS., of
better material and finer handwriting, contains a
treatise of great sublimity, but without a title, the
THE ASKEW AND BRUCE CODICES. 455
first and last pages being lost. The other MS. contains
fragments of at least two separate books, and preserves
the title The Book of the Great Logos according to
the Mystery. This is taken by Schmidt to be the
general title, and to comprise two parts which he
calls respectively the First and Second Book of leou.
The contents of these treatises are of such a
marvellous and complex nature, that I despair of Translation*,
giving the general reader any adequate conception
of them. The student may, however, form some
idea of the task by reading my translation of
the Pistis Sophia treatise and the Extracts
from the Books of the Saviour; but even this
will give him no adequate conception of the com
plexity of the contents of the Codex Brucianus, of
which, unfortunately, there is as yet no English
translation.
In 1891 Amelineau published a text and French
translation of the Bruce Codex with a brief introduc
tion; but his text was based on Woide's copy of the
Codex made a century ago, and the French savant
had no idea that he was dealing with two distinct
MSS., whose leaves were jumbled up in inextricable
confusion.
In 1892 Dr. Carl Schmidt, having with admirable
patience collated the copies of the Codex made by
Schwartze and Woide with the original at Oxford,
and with still greater acumen and industry separated
the two MSS. and placed their respective leaves in
order, published a critical text, with a German
translation and a voluminous commentary.
In the following resume", with regard to the Codex
456 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Brucianus, I shall follow Schmidt's translation and
The not Amelineau's. Schmidt is by far the most
Difficulty
of the ' competent authority in the field, and no praise is
too high a tribute to pay this most distinguished
Coptic scholar for his unwearied patience. I have
before me a rough translation of the whole of
Schmidt's voluminous work, and have spared
no pains to make myself acquainted with his
labours ; but, even with his help, I feel as yet a very
tyro in the Gnosticism revealed in these treatises.
For, though Schmidt throws light on many points,
innumerable problems are still left untouched ; in
fact, with all his admirable scholarship and infinite
research, he is entirely baffled on just those very
points which seem to have been of greatest interest
to the composers or compilers of these Gnostic
documents.
When, in 1896, I published a translation of the
Pistis Sophia I had intended to follow it up with a
commentary; but I speedily found that in spite of the
years of work I had already given to Gnosticism,
there were still many years of labour before me, ere I
could satisfy myself that I was competent to essay
the task in any really satisfactory fashion ; I have
accordingly reserved that task for the future. Mean
time, in the present short sketches nothing more is
attempted than a very tentative summary, so that the
general reader may obtain some notion of the contents
of our Coptic Gnostic treatises; my only excuse for
breaking silence being that there is absolutely
nothing as yet in English on the contents of the
Bruce Codex.
THE ASKEW AND BRUCE CODICES. 457
We will, then, first of all attempt a summary
of the contents of the so-called Pistis Sophia Programme,
treatise; then a summary of the Extracts from the
Books of the Saviour, inserted in and following
after this treatise in the Askew Codex. This will
SUMMARY OF THE FRAGMENTS
tained in the inferior MS. of the Bruce Codex. I
shall venture, however, to transpose Schmidt's main
order, and place what he calls The Second Book
of leou before what he calls The First, for the
general subjects of his first group of fragments seem
to me to follow the subjects of his second, rather than
the contrary. It is quite true that the beginning
of his second division starts on the verso of the
papyrus leaf, the recto of which contains the end
of the other; but this only assures us the correct
position of two adjacent fragments. That the
numerous other fragments are always arranged in
their proper sequence is by no means quite certain,
though I frankly confess I so far see no more
satisfactory ordering of the chaos myself.
That we have among these fragments part of the
original contents of The Books of leou mentioned
in the Pistis Sophia seems highly probable, but that
we can assign our fragments definitely to Books
I. and II. is not so certain. The whole will there
fore in our summary stand under the general title,
The Book of the Great Logos according to the
Mystery, without further distinction, including both
the introductory matter and also the leaves sur
rounded by a border, which Schmidt adds as an
appendix. But it must be understood that this
458 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
is a tentative arrangement. There may be several
treatises to which the fragments of the inferior
MS. of the Bruce Codex ought to be assigned for
anything we know to the contrary.
This will be followed by the fragments of the
untitled treatise contained in the superior MS.
The purpose that has guided me in this general
arrangement is, as far as possible, to place the
contents of these Coptic translations roughly in
such a sequence that the reader may be led from
lower to higher grades of the Gnosis. I am perfectly
aware that higher mysteries (the three Spaces of
the Inheritance) are spoken of and explained in the
Pistis Sophia treatise than in the rest of the matter,
but they are not revealed. In The Book of the Great
Logos and in the Extracts from the Books of the
Saviour some of the mysteries are given, and the
disciples are made to see face to face. I therefore
place the summary of the Pistis first, though it was
probably composed last.
459
SUMMARY OF THE CONTENTS OF THE
SO-CALLED PISTIS SOPHIA TREATISE.
THE treatise begins by informing us that Jesus,
after rising from the dead, had spent eleven years The
with His disciples, instructing them. So far, how-
ever, He had taught them the mysteries of the
inner world up to a certain point only, apparently
up to the outermost realms of the Light- world only,
and yet even so far with omissions of many points
which they were as yet incapable of understanding.
But so wonderful had been the instruction imparted
that the disciples imagined that all had been revealed
to them, and that the First Mystery — the Father
in the likeness of a dove — was the end of all ends
and the gnosis of- all gnoses. They did not know
that this First Mystery was the lowest of a vast
series of still higher mysteries.
It came to pass, therefore, in the twelfth year,
that the disciples were assembled with the Master on £he Mystic
Transfigura-
the Mount of Olives, rejoicing that they had, as they tiou and
thought, received all the fullness. It was the the Twelfth
fifteenth day of the month Tybi, the day of the full
moon. Jesus was sitting apart, when, at sunrise,
they beheld a great light-stream pouring over Him,
so that he became lost to view in the ineffable
radiance which stretched from earth to heaven.
The light was not one radiance, but its rays were
of every kind and type ; and in it the Master soared
aloft into heaven, leaving the disciples in great fear
460
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The Master
returns
to His
Disciples.
Of the
Mystic
Incarnation
of the
Twelve.
and confusion as they silently gazed after Him.
From the third hour of the fifteenth day until the
ninth hour of the morrow (thirty hours) the Master
was absent; and during this time there was a
shaking of all the regions and great confusion and
fear, while songs of praise came forth from the
interior of the interiors.
On the ninth hour of the morrow they saw Jesus
descending in infinite light, more brilliant far than
when He had ascended ; the light was now of three
degrees, glory transcending glory. The disciples
were dismayed and in great fear, but Jesus, the com
passionate and merciful-minded, spake unto them,
saying : " Take courage, it is I ; be not afraid." At
their prayer Jesus withdraws His great light into
Himself, and appears in His familiar form once more,
and the disciples come to worship, and ask Him,
saying : " Master, whither didst thou go ? or on what
ministry wentest thou ? or wherefore are all these
confusions and shakings?"
The Master, now speaking as the glorified Christ,
bids them rejoice, for that now He will tell them all
things " from the beginning of the truth to the end
thereof," face to face, without parable, for that
authority has now been given Him by the First
Mystery to reveal these things unto them.
For this cause is it that He hath again been
clothed in the vesture of light, the robe of glory,
which he had left with the First Mystery, in the
lowest spaces of the supernal Light-realm. He
hath received it in order that He may speak to
human kind and reveal all the mysteries, but
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 461
first of all to the Twelve. For the Twelve are
His order, whom He hath chosen from the beginning;
before He came into the world. He chose twelve
powers, receiving them from the hands of the
twelve Saviours of the Light-treasure, and when He
descended into the world cast them, as light-sparks,
into the wombs of their mothers, that through them
the whole world might be saved. It is by reason of
these powers that they are not of the world, for the
power in them is from Him, a part of Himself.
So too another of His powers was in John the
Baptizer with water for the remission of sins; not That the
Soul of Elias
only so, but the soul of John was the soul of is bom in
the Baptist.
Elias reborn in him. These things had He
explained before, when He said : " If ye will receive
it, John the Baptist is Elias, who, I said, was
for to come " ; but they had not understood.
Into Mary, His mother, also He had implanted a
power higher than them all, " the body which I bore Of His own
in the height," and also another power instead of
the soul, and so Jesus was born. It was He
Himself who had watched over the birth of His
disciples, so that no soul of the world-rulers should
be found in them, but one of a higher nature.
And the Master continued in His conversation and
said unto them : " Lo, I have put on My vesture, and Concerning
all power hath been given Me by the First Mystery. *" °
Yet a little while and I will tell you the mystery of
the pleroma and the pleroma of the pleroma ; I will
conceal nothing from you from this hour, but in
perfectness will I perfect you in the whole pleroma,
and all perfection, and every mystery; which things,
462 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
indeed, are the perfection of all perfections, the
pleroma of all pleromas, and the gnosis of all gnoses,
which are in My vesture. I will tell you all mysteries
from the exterior of the exteriors, to the interior of
the interiors. Hearken, I will tell you all things
which have befallen Me.
" It came to pass, when the sun had risen in the
regions of the east, that a great stream of light
descended in which was My vesture, the same which
I had laid up in the four-and-twentieth mystery, as I
have said unto you. And I found a mystery in My
vesture, written in these five words which pertain to
the height : Zama, Zama, Ozza, Rachama, Ozai. And
this is the interpretation thereof:
" The Mystery wrhich is beyond the world, that
whereby all things exist : It is all evolution and all
involution ; It projected all emanations and all things
therein. Because of It all mysteries exist and all
their regions."
Hereupon the Master recites the hymn of praise
and welcome sung by the powers at His investiture on
The Hymn the Great Day " Come unto us " — the day of this
Come unkT supreme initiation, when all His Limbs are gathered
together. " Come unto us, for we are Thy fellow-mem
bers (or limbs). We are all one with Thee. We are
one and the same, and Thou art one and the same.
This is the First Mystery, who hath existed from the
beginning in the Ineffable, before He came forth ; and
the Name thereof is all of us. Now, therefore, we
all live together for Thee at the last limit, which also
is the last mystery from the interior. That also is
part of us. Now, therefore, we have sent Thee Thy
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 463
vesture, which, indeed, is Thine from the beginning,
which Thou didst leave in the last limit, which also
is the last mystery from the interiors, until its time
should be fulfilled, according to the commandment of
the First Mystery. Lo, its time being fulfilled, I give
it Thee.
" Come unto us, for we all stand near to clothe
Thee with the First Mystery and all His glory, by
commandment of the same, in that the First Mystery
gave us two vestures to clothe Thee, besides the one
we have sent Thee, since Thou art worthy of them,
and art prior to us, and came into being before us.
For this cause, therefore, the First Mystery hath sent
for Thee through us the mystery of His glory, two
vestures."
The hymn proceeds to explain how that the first
vesture hath in it the whole glory of all the names The Three
of all the mysteries of all the orders of the Light*1"68
spaces of the Ineffable ; that the second contains
the whole glory of all the names, or powers,
of all the mysteries, or emanations, of the orders
of the twin spaces of the First Mystery; that
the third vesture contains all the glory of the powers
of the emanations of all the spaces and sub-spaces
bslow these supernal realms as far as the earth.
The hymn then continues :
"Lo, therefore, we have sent Thee this [third]
vesture, without any [of the powers] knowing it from
the First Statute downward ; because the glory of its
light was hidden in it [the First Statute], and the
spheres with all their regions from the First Statute
downwards [knew it not]. Make haste, therefore;
464 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
clothe Thyself with this vesture. Come unto us;
for ever, until the time appointed by the Ineffable
was fulfilled, have we been in need of Thee, to clothe
Thee with the two [remaining] vestures, by order of
the First Mystery. Lo, then, the time is fulfilled.
Come, therefore, to us quickly, in order that we may
clothe Thee, until Thou hast accomplished the full
ministry of the perfections of the First Mystery, the
ministry appointed for Thee by the Ineffable. Come,
therefore, to us quickly, in order that we may clothe
Thee, according to the commandment of the First
Mystery; for yet a little while, a very little while,
and Thou shalt come to us, and shalt leave the
world. Come, therefore, quickly, that Thou mayest
receive the whole glory, the glory of the First
Mystery."
Thereupon, on hearing the hymn of the powers,
The Journey the Master said, He donned the lowest robe of glory,
Height6 and, changed into pure light, soared upwards and
came to the lower firmament. And all the powers
of that firmament were in great confusion because
of the transcendent light; and on seeing the
mystery of their names or powers inscribed in
it, leaving their ranks, they bowed down and
worshipped, saying : " How hath the Lord of the
pleroma changed us without our knowing ! " And
they all sang together to the interior of the interiors
a hymn of praise in harmony.
And so He passed upwards and inwards to the
First Sphere above the firmament, shining with a
radiance forty-and-nine times as great as before, and
the gates were opened and He entered the mansions
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 465
of the Sphere, and the powers were changed and
worshipped, and sang hymns of rejoicing as before.
Thence upward and inward he passed to the Second
Sphere, shining with a light nine-and-forty times
still more intensified, and the powers of that sphere did
as them beneath them, and bowed and worshipped
and sang hymns to the interior of the interiors.
Still continuing His triumphal flight, He soared
still higher within, to the Space of the Twelve ^Eons,
shining with radiance forty- and -nine times still
further increased. And all the orders and rulers of
the ^Eonic Space were amazed. Those of them called
the Tyrants, under their great leader Adamas, in
ignorance fought against the light; but in vain, for
they only expended their strength one against the
other, and fell down and became " as the inhabitants
of the earth who are dead and who have no breath in
them "—that is to say, deprived of the light-spark,
like the unknowing among men.
And He took from them a third of their power,
that they should no more prevail in their evil doings ; The Master
so that if men should invoke them for evil in
the magic practices which the transgressing Angels
brought down from above, they should not be able
to work their will as heretofore.
And so He changed the Fate-Sphere, over which
they are lords. For by order of the First Statute
and First Mystery, they had been set, by Ieou; the
Overseer of the Light, all facing the Left, accomplish
ing their influences. But now they were changed
so that for six months they faced the Left and for
six months the Right.
GK*
466
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The
Questions
of Mary.
Why the
Rulers have
been
robbed.
Hereupon, the Master having invited questions
and interpretations of the mysteries He has revealed,
Mary Magdalene, who is throughout represented as
the most spiritual by far of all the disciples, conies
forward, and being granted permission to speak,
interprets a passage from Isaiah by the light of the
new teaching. The passage begins with the words :
" Where, then, O Egypt, where are thy diviners and
ordainers of the hour ? " — and among other things
Egypt is said to mean the "inefficacious matter
(hyle)r
Mary is commended for her intuition, and in reply
to her further questioning, the Master explains that
all their power has not been taken from these Rulers
of the Fate, by the third robe of glory, but only a
third of it ; so that if the ordainers of the hour
chance on the Fate or the Sphere turning to the Left,
they will say what is to take place; but if they
chance on it turning to the Right they will not be
able to prophesy, for He has changed all the influences.
But those who know the mysteries of the magic of
the Thirteenth ^Eon will accomplish them perfectly,
for He has not taken away the power in that Space,
according to the command of the First Mystery.
In reply to a question by Philip, it is explained
that this conversion of the spheres has been effected
to aid the salvation of souls; otherwise the number
of perfected souls would have been kept back from
its accomplishment, that is to say, of those who shall
be counted in the heritage of the height, by means
of the mysteries, and shall dwell in the Light-
treasure. The power of the Rulers is in the matter
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 467
of the world which they make into souls. By the
victory of the Master a third of this power has
been taken from them, and converted to a higher
substance.
In answer to Mary's further questioning, it is
further explained how this third part of their power
was taken away. It always had been that their
power, as it became purified, was gathered back to
the higher world by Melchisedec, the Great Receiver
or Collector of Light, it being continually liberated
by the spheres being made to turn more rapidly,
that is to say by the quickening of evolution owing
to the influx of Light. The substance of the Rulers
is graphically described as "the breath of their
mouths, the tears of their eyes, and the sweat of
their bodies" — the matter out of which souls are
made.
But as their power was gradually taken from
them, their kingdom began to be dissolved ; the
Rulers therefore began to devour their own matter,
so that it should not be made into souls of men and
so be purified, and in every way strove to delay the
completion of the number of perfect souls — the
crown of evolution. So it came to pass that they
fought against the great soul of the Master as He
passed through them, and so He changed them and
their configurations and influences, " and from that
hour they have not had the power to turn towards
the purgation of their matter to devour it."
" I took away a third part of their power ; I
changed their revolution; I shortened their circles,
and caused their path to be lightened, and they were
468
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The
Shortening
of the
Times.
The
Heaven-
journey
continued.
greatly hurried, and were thrown into confusion in
their path; and from that hour they have no more
had the power of devouring the matter of the
purgation of the brilliancy of their light."
Thus had He shortened their times and hastened
evolution. " For this cause I said unto you before,
' I have shortened the times because of my Elect.' "
The " Elect " (Pneumatics) are the perfect number
of souls who shall receive the mysteries ; indeed
had not the times been shortened, "there would
not have been a single material (hylic) soul saved,
but they would have perished in the fire which is in
the flesh of the Rulers."
After these explanations the Master continues the
narrative of his heaven -journey. All the great
powers of the ^Eonic Spaces, when they saw
what had happened to their Tyrants, adored
and sang hymns to the interior of the interiors.
And so He passed inward to the veils of the
Thirteenth /Eon. Here, outside this Space, He
found Pistis Sophia, sitting alone, mourning and
grieving because she had not been brought into the
Thirteenth ^Eon, her proper region in the height.
She was grieving because of the sufferings brought
upon her by Arrogant, one of the three Triple Powers.
But when she saw the radiant light-vesture of the
Master, containing the whole glory of her mystery,
the mystery of the Thirteenth ^Eon, she began to sing
a song to the light which is in the height, which she
had seen in the veil of the Treasure of Light. And
as she sang, the veils of the Thirteenth /Eon were
drawn apart, and her syzygy, and her two-and-
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 469
twenty fellow-emanations within the ^Eon, making
together four-and-twenty emanations who came forth
from the Great Invisible Forefather and the two
other great Triple Powers of that Space, gazed upon
the light of His vesture.
Hereupon follows the mystic story of the suffer
ings of Pistis Sophia. In the beginning she was The Myth
in the Thirteenth ^Eon with her companion ^Eons. Sophia.
By order of the First Mystery, she gazed into the
height and saw the light of the veil of the Treasure
of Light, and desired to ascend into that glorious
realm, but could not. She ceased to do the mystery
of the Thirteenth ^Eon and ever sang hymns to the
Light she had seen.
Hereupon the Rulers in the Twelve ^Eoiis below
hated her, because she had ceased to do their mystery
— the mystery of intercourse or sexual union — and
desired to go into the height and be above them all.
And Arrogant, the disobedient one, that one of
the three Triple Powers of the Thirteenth ^Eon who The Enmity
refused to give the purity of his light for the
benefit of others, but desired to keep it for
himself and so be ruler of the Thirteenth
Mori, led the onslaught against her. Arrogant
is apparently the conservative power of the
"matter" of this Space. He joined himself to the
number of the Twelve ^Eons and fought against the
Sophia. He sent forth a great power from his light
and other powers from his matter, the reflections of
the powers and emanations above, into Chaos; and
caused the Sophia to look down into the lower
regions, that she might see this power and imagine
470 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
it was the real Light to which she aspired. And so
in ignorance she descended into matter, saying :
" I will go into that region, without my consort, to
take the light, which the ^Eons of Light have produced
for me, so that I may go to the Light of lights, which
is in the Height of heights."
Thus pondering she went forth from the Thir-
The Fall teenth ^Eon and descended into the Twelve ; but
into
Matter. they pursued her, and so she gradually descended
to the regions of Chaos, and drew nigh to the
light-power which Arrogant had sent below, to
devour it. But all the material emanations of
Arrogant surrounded her, and the light-power of
Arrogant set to work to devour all the light-
powers in the Sophia ; " it expelled her light and
swallowed it, and as for her matter they cast it
into Chaos." This light-power of Arrogant is that
laldabaoth " of which," says the Master, " I have
spoken to you many times."
And so Sophia was greatly weakened and beset
and "cried out exceedingly, she cried on high to
that Light of lights which she had seen in the
beginning, in which she had trusted [hence is she
called Pistis (Faith) Sophia], and began to sing
songs of repentance," whereby she might be converted
or taken back to the Light.
The lengthy incident of the Pistis Sophia occupies
repentances and songs of praise are a mystical
interpretation of a number of the Psalms of the Second
Temple collection and of five of the Odes of Solomon.
To attain to the knowledge of the Light, the
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 471
human soul (as the world-soul before it) has to
descend into matter (hyle). Hence the Sophia, desiring The
the Light, descends towards its reflection, from the Of the
Thirteenth Mou, through the Twelve, into the depths
of Chaos or Unorder, where she seems in danger of
entirely losing all her own innate light or spirit,
being continually deprived of it by the powers of
matter. Having descended to the lowest depths of
Chaos, she at length reaches the limit, and the path of
her pilgrimage begins to lead upward to spirit again.
Thus she reaches the middle point of balance, and
still yearning for the Light, rounds the turning point
of her cyclic course, and changing the tendency of her
thought or mind or nature, recites her penitential
hymns or repentances. Her chief enemy is the false
light — presumably the counterfeit spirit of which
we shall hear later on — the desire-nature, which is
assisted by four-and-twenty material powers, the
reflections of the supernal projections, powers or
co-partners of the Sophia, the whole looked at from
without making an ordering into forty-nine.
The Sophia first utters seven repentances. At the
fourth of these, the turning point of some sub-cycle of its
,, . . T . Repentance
her pilgrimage, she prays that the image of the Light and
may not be turned from her, for the time is come when
" those who turn in the lowest regions " should be
regarded — "the mystery which is made the type of
the race."
At the sixth the Light remits her transgression;
viz., that she quitted her own region and fell into
Chaos. This perhaps refers to the dawning of the
consciousness of the higher ego in the lower
472 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
personality. But as yet the command has not come
from the First Mystery to free her entirely from
Chaos. This may refer to the higher illumination
when the consciousness of the true spiritual soul is
obtained.
Therefore at the conclusion of her seventh repent
ance, where she pleads that she has done it all in
ignorance, through her love for the Light, Jesus, her
syzygy (without the First Mystery) raises her up to a
slightly less confined region in Chaos, but Sophia still
knows not by whom it is done.
It is only at the ninth stage that the First
Mystery partly accepts her repentance and sends
Jesus in the form of the Light to her help, so that
she recognises it.
Her next four hymns are sung knowingly to the
Light, and are of the nature of thanksgiving, and of
declaration that justice will shortly overtake her
oppressors, while at the same time she prays to be
delivered wholly from her " transgression " - the
lower desire-nature.
After the thirteenth repentance, Jesus again, of
The himself, without the First Mystery, emanated a
ofepurifica- brilliant power of light from Himself, and sent it to aid
Sophia, to raise her still higher in Chaos, until the com
mand should come to free her entirely. There are,
therefore, as it seems, three degrees of purification
from the chaotic elements of the lower nature.
Next follows a description of the light-powers,
which are to be closely compared with the description
of the three vestures of glory in the opening pages of
the Codex.
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 473
Then, while Sophia pours forth hymns of joy, the
power becomes a " crown to her head," and her hyle The Light-
(or material propensities) begins to be entirely
purified, while the spiritual light-powers which she
has succeeded in retaining during her long combat,
join themselves with the new vesture of light which
has descended upon her.
Then is the law fulfilled, and the First Mystery
in His turn sent forth another great light-power,
which joined with that already emanated by the
Light, and it became a great light-stream. This
stream was nothing else than the First Mystery
Himself looking without, coming forth from the
First Mystery looking within.
When all this is accomplished the Sophia is
completely purified, and her light-powers are re
established and filled with new light, by their
own co-partner of light, that syzygy without
whom Sophia in the beginning had thought to
reach the Light of lights, unaided, and so fell
into error.
But all is not yet over ; the final victory is not yet
won. For the higher she rises the stronger are the
powers or projections sent against her; they proceed
to change their shapes, so that she now has to
struggle against still greater foes, which are emanated
and directed by the subtlest powers of cosmos.
Thereupon Sophia is not only crowned but entirely
surrounded with the light-stream, and further sup- The Final
ported on either hand by Michael and Gabriel,
the " sun " and " moon." The " wings of the great
bird" flutter, and the " winged globe" unfolds its
474 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
pinions, preparatory to its flight. Thus the last
great battle begins.
The First Mystery looking without directs her
attack against the "cruel crafty powers, passions
incarnate," and makes the Sophia tread underfoot the
basilisk with seven heads, destroying its hyle, " so
that no seed can arise from it henceforth," and
casting down the rest of the opposing host.
Thereupon Sophia sings triumphant hymns of
praise on being set free from the bonds of Chaos.
Thus is she set free and remembers.
Still the great Self-willed one and Adamas, the
Tyrant, are not yet entirely subdued, for the com
mand has not yet come from the First Mystery
looking within. Therefore does the First Mystery
looking without seal their regions and those of their
rulers " until three times are accomplished," pre
sumably until the end of the seven cycles or ages,
of which the present is said to be the fourth, when
the perfect number of those of humanity who reach
perfection will pass into the interplanetary Nirvana
— to use a Buddhist term. This Nirvana, however,
is a state out of time and space, as we know them,
and therefore can be reached now and within by
very holy men who can attain the highest degree of
spiritual contemplation. Then shall the Gates of the
Treasure of the Great Light be opened and the heights
be crossed by the pilgrim.
In the course of the many interpretations of
otherwise scripture given by the disciples and women disciples,
Sto°y°ofn Mary, the Mother of Jesus (" my mother according
the infancy. to matter, thou in whom I dwelt"), who is also
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 475
one of the women disciples, receives permission to
speak and tells a quaint story of the Infancy,
otherwise entirely unknown.
And Mary answered and said : " My Master,
concerning the word which Thy power prophesied
through David, to wit, ' Mercy and truth are met
together, righteousness and peace have kissed each
other ; truth hath flourished on the earth, and
righteousness hath looked down from heaven ' — Thy
power prophesied this word of old concerning Thee.
" When Thou wert a child, before the Spirit had
descended upon Thee, when Thou wert in the vine
yard with Joseph, the Spirit came down from the
height, and came unto me in the house, like unto
Thee, and I knew Him not, but thought that He
was Thou. And He said unto me, ' Where is Jesus,
my Brother, that I may go to meet Him ? ' And
when He had said this unto me I was in doubt,
and thought it was a phantom tempting me. I
seized Him and bound Him to the foot of the bed
which was in my house, until I had gone to find
you in the field — Thee and Joseph, and I found
you in the vineyard ; Joseph was putting up the
vine poles.
" It came to pass, therefore, when Thou didst hear
me saying this thing unto Joseph, that Thou didst
understand, and Thou wert joyful and saidest,
' Where is He, that I may see Him ? Nay [rather]
I am expecting Him in this place.' And it came to
pass, when Joseph heard Thee say these words, that
he was disturbed.
" We went together, we entered into the house,
476 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
we found the Spirit bound to the bed, and we gazed
upon Thee and Him, and found that Thou wert like
unto Him. And He that was bound to the bed was
unloosed; He embraced Thee and kissed Thee, and
Thou also didst kiss Him ; ye became one and the
same being."
At the end of the story of the Sophia, Mary asks :
"My Master and Saviour, how are the four-and-
twenty Invisibles [the co-powers of Sophia]; of
what type, of what quality ; or of what quality
is their light ? "
And Jesus answered and said unto Mary : " What
Of the is there in this world which is comparable to them :
Glory of
Them of th« or what region in this world is like unto them ?
Now, therefore, to what shall I liken them; or
what shall I say concerning them ? For there is
nothing in this world with which I can compare
them ; nor is there a single form to which I can
liken them. Indeed, there is nothing in this
world which is of the quality of heaven. But,
Amen, I say unto you, every one of the Invisibles
is nine times greater than the Heaven [the lower
firmament], and the Sphere above it, and the Twelve
zEons all together, as I have already told you on
another occasion.
" [Again] there is no light in this world which is
superior to that of the sun. Amen, Amen, I say unto
you, the four-and-twenty Invisibles are more radiant
than the light of the sun which is in this world, ten
thousand times, as I have told you before on another
occasion ; but the Light of the Sun in its true form,
which is in the space of the Virgin of Light, is more
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 477
radiant than the four-and-twenty, . . . ten
thousand times more radiant."
The Master promises further, when he takes them
through the various spaces of the unseen world, to
bring them all finally into the Twin Spaces of the
First Mystery, as far as the supreme Space of the
Ineffable, " and ye shall see all their configurations as
they really are, without similitude."
" When I bring you into the region of the rulers
of the Fate-Sphere, ye shall see the glory in which The Scale
they are, and compared with their greatly
superior glory, ye will regard this world as the
darkness of darkness; and when ye gaze down
on the whole world of men, it will be as a
speck of dust for you, because of the enormous
distance by which [the Fate-Sphere] will be distant
from it, and because of the enormous superiority of
its quality over it."
And so shall it be in ever increasing glory of light
with each higher space, the lower appearing as a
speck of dust from its sublimity, as they are taken
through the Twelve ^Eons, the Thirteenth ^Eori
(or the Left), the Midst, the Right (sci., of the cosmic
cross), the Light-world, and the Inheritance of Light
within it.
Then Mary asks : " Master, will the men of this
world who have received the mysteries of light be The Perfect
J shall be
higher in Thy Kingdom than the emanations of Higher than
the Emana-
the Treasure of Light ? " tions of
A J • \1 Tl/T 1 • ! • Li«ht in the
And in answer the Master explains the ordering Kingdom.
and nature and functions of these great emanations,
and how that, at the final time of the completion
478 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of the aeon and the ascension of the pleroma, these
all shall have a higher place in His Kingdom; but
this time has not yet come. But high above all of
them the souls of men who have received the
mysteries of light, shall take precedence.
And Mary said : " Master, my indweller of light
The hath ears, and I comprehend every word which Thou
•hall be speakest. Now, therefore, 0 Master, concerning the
word which Thou hast spoken, to wit, ' All the
souls of human kind which shall receive the
mysteries of light, shall in the Inheritance of
Light take precedence of all the Rulers who
shall repent, and all them of the region of
those who are on the Right, and the whole
space of the Treasure of Light ' ; concerning this
word, my Master, Thou hast said unto us aforetime,
' The first shall be last and the last shall be first,'
that is, the ' last ' are the whole race of men who
shall be first in the Light-kingdom ; so also they that
are [now] in the space of the height are the ' first.' "
The Master then continues in His conversation
The Three and tells them of the glorious beings and spaces,
Spaces of of which He will treat in detail in His
further teaching, up to the inner Space of the
First Mystery, but of those within these
supernal spaces He will not treat in the physical
consciousness, for " there is no possibility of
speaking of them in this world " ; nay, " there is
neither quality nor light which resembleth them, not
only in this world, but also no comparison in those
of the Height of Righteousness." He, however, in
lofty language describes the greatness of the five
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 479
Great Supporters of the outer Space of the First
Mystery, above or within which is the inner Space
of the First Mystery, and above all the Space of the
Ineffable.
To these supernal realms of the Inheritance shall
come those who have received the light-mysteries,
and each shall occupy the space according to of Light,
the mystery he has received, a higher space or
a lower according to the degree of the mysteries
he has received ; each shall have the power of
going into all regions of the Inheritance below
him, but not of ascending higher.
" But he who shall have received the complete
mystery of the First Mystery of the Ineffable, that is The Mystery
to say, the twelve mysteries of the First Mystery, Mystery.
one after another, . . . . . . . shall have
the power of exploring all the orders of the
Inheritance of Light, of exploring from without
within, from within without, from above below,
and from below above, from the height to the
depth, and from the depth to the height, from the
length to the breadth, and from the breadth to the
length ; in a word, he shall have the power of
exploring all the regions of the Inheritances of Light,
and he shall have the power of remaining in the
region which he shall choose in the Inheritance of the
Light-kingdom.
" Amen, I say unto you, this man, in the dissolution
of the world, shall be King over all the orders of the The Gnosis
Inheritance of Light; and he who shall have Mystery of6
received the Mystery of the Ineffable, that man the
is Myself.
480 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Hereupon follows a magnificent recital of the
perfect Gnosis of such a one, for :
" That Mystery knoweth why there is darkness,
and why light."
And so on, in great phrases describing the wisdom
of the supreme Mystery, who knows the reason of the
existence of all things: darkness of darkness and light
of light; chaos and the treasure of light; judgment
and inheritance of light ; punishment of sinners and
rest of the righteous ; sin and baptisms ; fire of
punishment and seals of light; blasphemies and
songs to the light ; and so on through many pairs
of opposites, ending with death and life.
But the recital of the greatness of the supreme
Gnosis is not yet ended, for the Master continues:
" Hearken, therefore, now further, O My disciples,
while I tell you the whole Gnosis of the Mystery
of the Ineffable."
It is the Gnosis of pitilessness and compassion;
of destruction and everlasting increase ; of beasts and
creeping things, and metals, seas, and earth, clouds
and rain, and so on working downwards from man
into nature and upwards through all the supernal
realms.
But the disciples are amazed at the glories of the
The Gnosis of this greatest Mystery and lose courage.
£seCCourage Anc^ Mary said : " O Master, if the Gnosis of all
ment^Tthe these things is in that Mystery, who is the man
in this world wno sna11 be able to understand that
Mystery and all its gnoses, and the manner of all the
words which thou hast spoken concerning it ? "
And the Master said: "Grieve not, My disciples,
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 481
concerning the Mystery of that Ineffable, thinking
that ye will not understand it. Amen, I say unto
you, that Mystery is yours, and every one's who shall
give ear unto you, and shall renounce the whole
world, and all the matter therein, who shall renounce
all the evil thoughts that are therein, and shall
renounce all the cares of this aeon.
" Now, therefore, will I tell you : Whosoever shall
renounce the whole world and all therein, and shall £he Hi&hest
Mystery is
submit himself to the Divinity, to him that Mystery the Simplest
Jt J J of them All.
shall be far more easy than all the mysteries of the
Kingdom of Light ; it is far simpler to understand
than all the rest, and it is far clearer than them all.
He who shall come to a knowledge of that Mystery,
hath renounced the whole of this world and all its
cares. For this cause have I said unto you aforetime :
' Come unto Me all ye that are oppressed with cares
and labour under their weight, and I will give you
rest, for My burden is light and My yoke easy."
Let them not be dismayed at the vast complexity
of the emanation of the pleroma and the world-
process, " for the emanation of the pleroma is its
Gnosis." Let but the Christ be born in their hearts
by their forsaking the delights of the world, and they
shall grow into the being of the pleroma and so
possess all its Gnosis.
The Master then continues His description of the
Gnosis of the Mystery of the Ineffable, resuming it at Concerning
the point where He had broken off, and leading Word <rf the
them higher and higher into the supernal heights Ineffable-
through space after space, and hierarchy after
hierarchy, of stupendous being and its emanation,
HH
482 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
up to the Mystery itself, the First Mystery who
knoweth why He came forth from the Last Limb
of the Ineffable. All this, which He now recites
simply, naming the great spaces and their indwellers,
He promises to explain at length in His further
teaching.
" Now, therefore, it is the Mystery of the Ineffable
which knoweth why all of which I have spoken unto
you hath come into existence; of a truth all this
hath existed because of Him. He is the Mystery
which is in them all; He is the emanation of them
all, the re-absorption of them all, and the support
of them all.
" This Mystery of the Ineffable is in all those
of which I have spoken, and of which I shall speak
in treating of the emanation of the pleroma. He
is the Mystery which is in them all, and He is the
One Mystery of the Ineffable. And the Gnosis of
that which I have said unto you, and of what I
have not yet spoken unto you, but of all of which
I shall speak when treating of the [full] emanation
of the pleroma, and the whole Gnosis of each of
them, one after another, that is to say, why they
exist — all this is the One Word (Logos) of the
Ineffable."
" The Mystery of the Ineffable is the One and
Only Word, but there is another [Word] on the
Tongue of the Ineffable ; it is the rule of the
interpretation of all the words which I have spoken
unto you."
It is then explained how that he who receives
this One and Only Word, when he comes forth from
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 483
the body of the matter of the Rulers, becomes a
great light-stream, and soars into the height ; he The Glory of
stands in no need of apology or symbol, for all powers Receives the
bow down before the vesture of light in which he is
clothed, and sing hymns of praise, and so he passes
upwards and onwards, through all the Inheritances
of Light, and higher still until he becometh one
with the Limbs of the Ineffable. " Amen, I say
unto you, he shall be in all the regions during the
time a man can shoot an arrow."
Hereupon follows a recital of the greatness of
such a soul. Beginning with the words, " Though he
be a man in the world, yet is he higher than all
angels, and shall far surpass them all," it recites
in the same form all the grades of the supernal
hierarchies of beings from angels upwards, and ends
as follows:
" Though he be a man in the world, yet is he
higher than the whole region of the Treasure, and
shall be exalted above the whole of it.
" Though he be a man in the world, yet shall he
be King with Me in My Kingdom. He is a man in
the world but a King in the Light.
" Though he be a man in the world, yet is he a
man who is not of the world.
"Amen, I say unto you, that man is Myself, and I
am that man."
And at the great consummation all such men
" shall be fellow-kings with Me, they shall sit on My
right hand and on My left in My Kingdom.
"Amen, I say unto you, these men are Myself, and
I am these men."
484
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Of the
Thrones in
the Light-
Kingdom.
There are
other Logoi.
The
Degrees
of the _
Mysteries.
There then follows apparently an interpolation
consisting of a quotation from some now unknown
Gospel : " Wherefore have I said unto you aforetime,
' In the place where I shall be, there also will be my
twelve ministers, but Mary Magdalene and John the
virgin shall be higher than all the disciples.'
"And all men who shall receive the Mystery in
that Ineffable shall be on My left hand and on My
right, and I am they and they are Myself.
" They shall be your equals in all things, and yet
your thrones shall be more excellent than theirs, and
My throne shall be more excellent than yours and
[than those of] all men who shall have found the
Word of that Ineffable."
And Mary thinks that this must be the end of
all things and the Gnosis of all gnoses, and so
protests : " Master, surely there is no other Word of
the Mystery of that Ineffable, nor any other Word
of the whole Gnosis ? "
The Saviour answered and said : " Yea, verily ;
there is another Mystery of the Ineffable and another
Word of the whole Gnosis." Nay, a multitude of
Words, He might have added.
Then Mary asks whether those who do not receive
the Mystery of the Ineffable before they die, will
enter the Light-kingdom. The Master answers
that every one who receives a mystery of light,
any one of them, shall after death find rest in
the Light-world appropriate to his mystery, but no
one who has not become a Christ will know the
Gnosis of the whole pleroma, for "in all openness
I am the Gnosis of the whole pleroma."
THE PISTTS SOPHIA. 485
So he who receives the first mystery of the First
Mystery shall be King over the spaces of the First
Saviour in the Light-realm, and so on up to the
twelfth.
And Mary asks : " Master, how is it that the First
Mystery hath twelve mysteries, whereas the Ineffable
hath but one Mystery?"
The answer is that they are really one Mystery;
this Mystery is ordered into twelve, and also into
five, and again into three, while still remaining one ;
they are all different aspects or types of the same
Mystery.
The two higher mysteries of the three not only
ensure the possessor of them, when he leaves the The Boons
they Grant.
body, his appropriate lot in the Inheritance, but
they further bestow boons with regard to others.
If a man "perform them in all their configura
tions, that is to say when he shall have created those
mysteries for himself," they give the power of
further enabling him to protect one who is not a
participator in the Words of Truth, after his death,
so that he shall not be punished. Of course such
a man cannot " be brought into the Light until
he have performed the whole polity of the light
of those mysteries, that is to say, the strict renuncia
tion of the world " ; but he will be sent back again
into " a righteous body, which shall find the God of
Truth and the higher mysteries."
But as for the highest mystery of all, " whosoever
shall receive the Mystery which is in the whole The Limbs
Space of the Ineffable, and also all the other sweet ineffable,
mysteries which are in the Limbs of that Ineffable,
486 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of which I have not yet spoken unto you, both con
cerning their emanation, and the manner in which
they are constituted, and the type of each of them
as it is — I have not told you why It is called the
Ineffable, or why It lies stretched out with all Its
Limbs, or how many Limbs there are therein, or
what are all Its regulations; nor will I say this
unto you immediately, but only when I come to
speak of the emanation of the [whole] pleroma ;
[then] will I tell you every detail, one by one,
for It hath emanated together with Its own
Word, just as it is in Itself, together with the sum
total of all its Limbs, which belong to the regulation
of the One and Only One, the changeless God of
Truth — in the region, therefore, of which each shall
receive the mystery in the Space of that Ineffable,
there shall he inherit up to the region which he shall
have received, [as far as] the whole region of the
Space of that Ineffable ; nor shall he give explanation
throughout the regions, nor apology nor symbol,
for [such souls] are without symbol and have no
receivers."
So also for the second Space below this, the Space
of the First Mystery looking within ; such souls
require no apology.
But for the third Space, the Space of the First
Mystery looking without, each region has its receiver,
explanation, apologies, and symbols, of all of which
the Master will speak in due course.
" But when the pleroma is completed, that is to
The say, when the number of perfect souls shall be
YeaS of reached, and the Mystery shall be accomplished
Light.
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 487
according to which the pleroma is the pleroma, I
shall pass a thousand years, according to the years
of Light, reigning over all the emanations of the
Light and the whole number of perfect souls who
shall have received all the mysteries."
Now " a day of the Light is a thousand years in
the world, so that thirty-six myriads of years and a
half a myriad of years of the world make a single
year of the Light."
The glories of the Light-kingdom with its three
Realms and Kings is then described.
" Now the mysteries of these three Inheritances of
Light are exceedingly numerous. Ye shall find them The Books
in the two great Books of leou." The higher ones
He will reveal unto them ; " but as for the rest of
the lower mysteries, ye have no need thereof, but
ye shall find them in the two Books of leou, which
Enoch wrote when I spoke with him from the Tree
of Knowledge, and from the Tree of Life, which
were in the Paradise of Adam."
Hereupon Andrew is in great amazement, and
cannot believe that men of the world like themselves
can have so high a destiny reserved for them, and
can reach such lofty heights. " This matter, then, is
hard for me," he says.
When Andrew had said these words, the spirit
of the Saviour was moved in Him, and He cried Ye are Goda.
out and said : " How long shall I bear with you,
how long shall I suffer you ? Do ye still not
know and are ye ignorant ? Know ye not and
do ye not understand that ye are all Angels, all
Archangels, Gods and Lords, all Rulers, all the great
488 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Invisibles, all those of the Midst, those of every
region of them that are on the Right, all the Great
Ones of the emanations of the Light with all their
glory ; that ye are all, of yourselves and in your
selves in turn, from one mass and one matter, and one
substance ; ye are all from the same mixture. . . .
" The great Light-emanations have not at all [in
reality] undergone sufferings, nor changes of region,
nor have they at all torn themselves asunder, nor
poured themselves into different bodies, nor have they
been in any affliction.
" Whereas, ye others, ye are the purgations of
Inarnati"n ^e Treasure, ye are the purgations of the region
of them that are on the Right, ye are the pur
gations of all the invisibles and all the rulers;
in a word, ye are the purgation of all of
them. And ye have been in great afflictions and
great tribulations, in your pourings into different
bodies in this world. And after all these afflictions
which came from yourselves, ye have struggled and
fought, renouncing the whole world and all the matter
that is in it ; and ye have not held your hands in the
fight, until ye found all the mysteries of the Kingdom
of Light, which have purified you, and transformed
you into refined light, most pure, and ye have become
pure light itself. . . .
" Amen, I say unto you, the race of human kind
is of matter. I have torn myself asunder, I have
brought unto them the mysteries of light, to purify
them, for they are the purgations of all the matter of
their matter. . . .
" Now the Light-emanations have no need of any
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 489
mystery, for they are pure ; but the human race hath
need of purification, for all men are purgations of
matter. . . .
" For this cause, therefore, preach ye to the The Preach-
ing of the
whole human race, saying, ' Cease not to seek day Mysteries .
and night, until ye have found the purifying
mysteries ' ; and say unto them, ' Renounce the
whole world, and all the matter therein', for he
who buyeth and selleth in this world, he who
eateth and drinketh of his own matter, who liveth
in his own cares and all his own associations, amasses
ever fresh matter from his matter, in that the whole
world, and all that is therein, and all its associations,
are exceedingly material purgations, and they shall
make enquiry of every one according to his purity."
This is followed by a long instruction on the
nature of the preaching of the disciples to the world
when the Master shall have gone unto the Light.
" Say unto them, ' Renounce the whole world and The
the matter that is in it, all its cares, all its sins, in a Of the
word, all the associations that are in it, that ye
may be worthy of the mysteries of light, and be
saved from all the torments which are in the
judgments.' "
They are to renounce mourning, superstition,
spells, calumny, false witness, boasting and pride,
gluttony, garrulity, evil caresses, desire of avarice,
the love of the world, robbery, evil words, wicked
ness, pitilessness, wrath, reviling, pillage, slandering,
quarrelling, ignorance, villainy, sloth, adultery, murder,
hardness of heart and impiety, atheism, magic potions,
blasphemy, doctrines of error, — that they may escape
490
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The
Boundary
Marks of the
Paths of the
Mysteries.
The After-
death State
of the
Uninitiated
Righteous.
the torments of fire and ice and other graphic horrors
of an elaborate hell, capped by the torments of the
Great Dragon of the inexorable Outer Darkness,
reserved for the greatest of sins, where such absolutely
unrepentant souls " shall be without existence until
the end " of the aeon ; they shall be " frozen up " in
that state.
Thus far for the negative side, the things to be
abandoned ; but for the positive, the things to be done,
they are to : " Say unto the men of the world, ' Be
ye diligent, that ye may receive the mysteries of light,
and enter into the height of the Kingdom of Light.' "
They are to be gentle, peacemakers, merciful,
compassionate, to minister unto the poor and sick and
afflicted, be loving unto God, and righteous, and live
the life of absolute self-renunciation.
" These are all the boundary marks of the
paths of them that are worthy of the mysteries of
light."
Unto such and such only are the mysteries to be
given; the absolute condition is that they make this
renunciation and repent.
" It is because of sinners that I have brought these
mysteries into the world, for the remission of all the
sins which they have committed from the beginning.
Wherefore have I said unto you aforetime, ' I came
not to call the righteous.' "
The question now arises as to good men who have
not received the mysteries, how will it be with them
after death ?
" A righteous man who is perfect in all righteous
ness," answers the Master, yet who has not received
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 491
the mysteries of light, on going forth from the body,
is taken charge of by the Receivers of Light — as
distinguished from the Receivers of Wrath. "Three
days shall they journey round with that soul in all
the creatures of the world," and pass it through all
the elements of the judgments, instructing it therein,
and then it shall be taken to the Virgin of Light
and sealed with an excellent seal that it may be
carried into a righteous body of the aeons, so that
it may in its next birth find the signs of the
mysteries of light and inherit the Kingdom of Light
for ever.
So with a man who has only sinned twice or
thrice, he shall be sent back into the world according
to the type of the sins he hath committed ; " I will
tell you these types when I shall come to explain the
emanation of the pleroma " in detail.
" But Amen, Amen, I say unto you, even though a
righteous man have not committed any sin at all, it is
impossible to take him into the Kingdom of Light,
because the sign of the Kingdom of the Mysteries is
not with him." He must have gnosis as well as
righteousness.
The question next arises as to the sinner who has
repented, and received the mysteries, and then has Of Those
fallen away, and again repented, provided he be not and again
a hypocrite ; " Wilt Thou or not that we remit his
transgressions unto seven times, and give him the
mysteries again ? "
The Saviour answered and said : " Remit ye his
sin not only unto seven times, but Amen, I say unto
you, remit ye it unto him many times seven times,
492 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
and each time give ye him the mysteries from the
beginning, the mysteries which are in the first Space
from the exterior ; perchance ye will win the soul of
that brother, so that he may inherit the Kingdom of
Light. . . .
"Amen, I say unto you, he who shall give life
The Added unto a single soul, and shall save it, in addition to
the Saviours his own proper light in the Kingdom of Light, he
shall further receive an additional glory for the
soul which he shall have saved, so that he who
shall save a host of souls, in addition to his own
proper glory in the Glory, he shall receive a host
of additional glories for the souls which he shall
have saved."
Nay, they shall not only give the lower mysteries,
but the higher mysteries as well, provided always
the man sincerely repent and is not a hypocrite ; all
mysteries up to the three highest mysteries of the
First Mystery, " for the First Mystery is compassionate
and merciful-minded."
" But if that man again transgresseth, and is in
Concerning any kind of sin, ye shall not remit his sin again from
^at nour> nor any more accept his repentance ; let
him be for you a stumbling-block and transgressor.
" For Amen, I say unto you, these three mysteries
shall witness against his last repentance for him from
that hour. Amen, I say unto you, the soul of that man
shall have no more probation for the world of the height
henceforth from that hour, but it shall dwell in the
habitation of the Dragon of the Outer Darkness."
In all of this the disciples have no choice ; if they
know a man is sincere, and not a hypocrite or merely
THE PISTIS SOPHIA 493
curious to know what kind of things the rites of the
mysteries are, they must give him these mysteries
and not withhold them, even if he be one who has
never received any of the lower mysteries ; for should
they hide them from him, they will be subject to a
great judgment.
Beyond the giving of these three higher mysteries
they have no power, for they have not sufficient
knowledge.
But the case of a man who has fallen away after
receiving the highest mysteries they can give, is not Of the
.. . \ , Infinite
entirely hopeless ; it is, however, in the hands of Compassion
the First Mystery and the Mystery of the Ineffable
alone.
These alone can accept repentance from such
a man, and grant him the remission of his sins,
for these Mysteries are " compassionate and merciful-
minded, and grant remission of sins at any time."
The question is now raised, Supposing they give
the mysteries in error to those who are hypocrites Of those who
, Mimic the
and who have deceived them and have afterwards Mysteries.
made a mock of the mysteries " mimicking us and
making forgeries of our mysteries," what then are
they to do ?
In this case they are to appeal to the First
Mystery, saying : " The mystery which we have given
unto these impious and iniquitous souls, they have
not performed in a manner worthy of Thy mystery,
but they have [merely] copied [what we did] ; give
back [therefore] that mystery unto us, and make
them for ever strangers to Thy Kingdom."
In that hour the mysteries such impious souls
494
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Can the
Pains of
Martyrdom
be Avoided.
The
Mystery
of the
Resurrection
of the Dead.
have received, shall return to them, and such people
can receive pardon from no one save only the
Mystery of the Ineffable.
In the case of the unbelieving friends and relatives
of those who have received the mysteries, the latter
may by their prayers and invocations procure a better
lot in the after-death state for their relatives and
friends, so that they may be sent back into conditions
favourable for their receiving the mysteries in
another life.
It is then asked whether the mysteries will save
the disciples from the pains of martyrdom. " For
they are in exceeding great number who persecute
us because of Thee, arid multitudes pursue us because
of Thy name, so that if we be submitted to the
torture, we shall utter the mystery, that we may
immediately depart from the body without suffering
pain."
The answer is not clear ; every one who has
accomplished the first (i.e., highest) of the three
higher mysteries, in life, when the time comes to leave
the body, shall soar into the Kingdom of Life without
need of apology or sign. But it is not said that the
pains of martyrdom can be avoided.
But they will be able to help others, for " not only
ye, but all men who shall achieve the mystery of the
resurrection of the dead, which healeth from
demonian possessions, and sufferings, and every
disease, [which also healeth] the blind, the lame,
the halt, the dumb, and the deaf, [the mystery]
which I gave unto you aforetime — whosoever
shall receive of these mysteries and achieve them,
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 495
if he ask for any thing whatever hereafter,
poverty or riches, weakness or strength, disease
or health, or the whole healing of the body, and the
resurrection of the dead, the power of healing the
lame, the blind, the deaf, and the dumb, of every
disease and of every suffering — in a word, whosoever
shall achieve this mystery, if he ask any of the things
which I have just said unto you, they shall at once be
granted unto him."
Hereupon the disciples cried out together in
transport : " O Saviour, Thou excitest us with very The
great frenzy because of the transcendent height which ot *he
J Disciples.
Thou hast revealed unto us; and Thou exaltest our
souls, and they have become paths on which we travel
to come unto Thee, for they came forth from Thee.
Now, therefore, because of the transcendent heights
which Thou hast revealed unto us, our souls have
become frenzied, and they travail mightily, yearning
to go forth from us into the height to the region of
Thy Kingdom."
The Master continues His teaching, saying that
the rest of the mysteries which have been committed Thafc fchis
Mystery
unto them they may give to others, but not the is to be' kept
mystery of the resurrection of the dead and the
healing of disease, " for that mystery pertaineth to
the rulers, it and all its namings." This they are
to retain as the sign of their mission, so that when
they do such wonder-deeds, "they will believe en
you, that ye preach the God of perfection, and will
have faith in all your words."
The next point of instruction taken up is the
question: "Who constraineth a man to sin?" This
496 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
opens up the whole subject of the constitution of
The man, and gives rise to a very interesting exposition
Constitution f ^ , •
of Man. of Gnostic psychology.
When the child is first born, the " light-power,"
" soul," " counterfeit spirit," and " body," are all
very feeble in it. " None of them hath sense enough
as yet for any work, whether good or evil, because of
the exceeding great weight of oblivion."
The babe eateth of the delights of the world of
the Rulers ; the power absorbeth from the portion of
the power which is in the delights, the soul from the
portion of the soul in the delights, the counterfeit
spirit from the portion of evil in the delights, and
the body from the unperceptive matter in the
delights.
There is also another factor called the " destiny,"
which remains as it came into the world and takes
nothing from the delights.
So, little by little, all these constituent elements in
man develop, each sensing according to its nature.
" The power senseth after the light of the height ; the
soul senseth after the region of mixed righteousness,
which is the region of the Mixture (sei., of Light and
Matter) ; and the counterfeit spirit seeketh after all
vices, and desires, and sins; but the body hath no
power of sensing unless it be an impulse to gain
strength from matter."
The power is evidently the higher mind, the soul
the lower mind, and the counterfeit spirit the animal
nature.
" The power within impelleth the soul to seek
after the region of light and the whole Godhead ;
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 497
whereas the counterfeit spirit draggeth down the
soul, and persistently constraineth it to commit The Evil
,.,„..., T . , . « , , Desire which
every kind 01 iniquity and mischief and sin, and Constrain-
persisteth as something foreign to the soul, and is to Sin.
its enemy, and maketh it commit all these sins and
evils " — bringing them into operation against the
soul because of what it has done in the past ; more
over, for the future, " it spurreth on the Workmen
of Wrath to bear witness to all the sin which it
will constrain the soul to commit. And even when
the man sleepeth by night or by day, it plagueth him
in dreams with the desires of the world, and causeth
him to long after all the things of this world. In
a word, it bindeth the soul to all the actions which
the Rulers have decreed for it, and is the enemy of
the soul, causing it to do what it would not." This
it is which constraineth a man to sin.
The " destiny " is that which leadeth the man to
his death. Then come the Receivers of Wrath to
lead that soul out of the body.
" And for three days the Receivers of Wrath
travel round with that soul through all the regions, The Cycle
of the
taking it through all the seons of the world; and After-death
., » ., . ., , , ,. , State of tha
the counterfeit spirit and destiny accompany that Sinner.
soul, but the power withdrawn itself unto the
Virgin of Light."
The soul is then brought down into Chaos, and
the counterfeit spirit becometh the receiver of that
soul, and haunteth it, rebuking it in every punish
ment because of the sins which it hath caused it to
commit ; it is in exceeding great enmity to the soul.
The soul then rises higher, still always haunted
n
498 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
by the counterfeit spirit, until it comes to the Ruler
of the Way of the Midst between the lower firma
ment and the earth-surface. Here it is still subjected
to the punishments of its counterfeit spirit, according
to its "destiny."
It is then brought by the counterfeit spirit to the
"light of the sun," — the Way of the Midst being
apparently the sublunary regions — and taken to the
Judge, the Virgin of Light, according to the com
mandment of leou, the First Man ; and " the Virgin
of Light sealeth that soul and handeth it over to one
of her receivers, and will have it carried into a body,
which is the record of the sins which it hath
committed."
"Amen, I say unto you she will not suffer that
soul to escape from transmigrations into bodies, until
it hath given signs of being in its last cycle according
to its record of demerit."
In the case of a righteous soul, however, and one
And of the that hath received the higher mysteries of light,
Righteous. " when the time of that soul is come for its passing
from the body, then the counterfeit spirit followeth
after that soul, and also the destiny. They follow
after it in the way whereby it shall pass into the
height.
"And before it goeth far into the height, it
uttereth the mystery of the breaking of the seals
and all the bonds of the counterfeit spirit, whereby
the Rulers bind it to the soul " ; and so they cease to
impede the soul, and the destiny departeth to its own
region, to the Rulers of the Way of the Midst, and
the counterfeit of the spirit to the Rulers of the Fate-
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 499
Sphere. And so it becometh a glorious light-stream
and passeth up to its inheritance, for " the receivers
of that soul, who pertain to the light, become wings
of light for that soul," and will be a vesture of light
for it. Such a soul requires no seals or apologies.
But one that hath received the lower mysteries
only, requires such apologies and seals, all of which
the Master promises to give them in His detailed
exposition of the emanation of the pleroma. For
the present He simply states what spaces have to be
traversed and what are the rulers.
Mary compares some of the statements with
former sayings, including one which the Master
spake " unto us aforetime by the mouth of Paul Enemy."
our brother." She further interprets the saying,
" Agree with thine enemy whilst thou art in the
way with him, lest at any time thine enemy deliver
thee to the judge, and the judge deliver thee to the
officer, and the officer cast thee into prison; thou
shalt not come out thence till thou hast paid the
uttermost farthing," as referring to the Judge, the
Virgin of Light, and the recasting of the soul into
another body, for that no soul is free from trans
migration until it gives signs of being in its last
cycle.
Mary next enquires as to the nature of the
mysteries of the baptisms which remit sins, and the
Master replies:
" The counterfeit spirit beareth witness to every
sin which the soul hath committed ; not only doth The stamp-
. . J ing of the
it bear witness concerning the sins of the souls, but Sins on the
it sealeth every sin that it may be stamped on the
500 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
soul, so that all the rulers of the punishments of
sinners may know that it is the soul of a sinner,
and may be informed of the number of sins which
it hath committed, by the number of the seals
which the counterfeit spirit hath stamped upon
it, so that they may chastise it according to the
number of sins which it hath committed. This is
the fashion in which they treat the soul of the
sinner.
" Now, therefore, when a man receiveth the
The Burning mysteries of the baptisms, those mysteries become
Sins by the a mighty fire, exceedingly fierce, wise, which
Baptism burneth up sins; they enter into the soul secretly
and devour all the sins which the counterfeit
spirit hath implanted in it.
" And when the fire hath purified all the sins
which the counterfeit spirit hath implanted in the
soul, the mysteries enter into the body occultly, that
the fire may secretly pursue after the pursuers and
cut them off with the body. They chase after the
counterfeit spirit and the destiny, to separate them
from the power and the soul, and place them with
the body, so that the counterfeit spirit, the destiny,
and the body may be separated into one group, and
the soul and power into another. And the mystery
of baptism remaineth between the two, and separateth
the one from the other, in order that it may cleanse
them and make them pure, that the soul and power
may not be fouled in matter."
It is then further explained that all the twelve
and other mysteries of the First Mystery and of the
Ineffable are still higher than the mysteries of the
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 501
baptisms; but all of this will be explained in a
further teaching.
Mary gives interpretations of passages of scripture
by the light of the new teaching, the opportunity
being offered by a recapitulation of some of the
points by the Master, with enquiry as to whether
they have well understood. Especially is the
unending compassion of the highest Mysteries
insisted upon.
" If even a king of to-day, a man of the world,
granteth boons unto them who are like unto him, The Infinite
if he moreover granteth pardon unto murderers, Of
and them that are guilty of intercourse with
males, and other horrible and capital crimes; if,
I say, it is in the power even of one who is a man
of the world to act thus, much more then have that
Ineffable and that First Mystery, who are lords of
the whole pleroma, power over everything to do as
they will, and grant remission of sin unto every one
who shall have received the Mystery.
" Again, if even a king of to-day investeth a
soldier with a royal mantle, and sendeth him to
foreign regions, and the soldier there committeth
murders and other grave offences worthy of death,
and yet they are not brought home to him, because
he weareth the royal mantle, how much more, then,
[is it the case with] them who are mantled in the
mysteries of the vestures of that Ineffable, and those
of the First Mystery who are lords over all them of
the height and all them of the depth ! "
Thereupon the Master makes trial of Peter, to see
whether he is compassionate, in the case of a woman
502
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
But Delay
not to
Repent.
For at a
Certain
Time the
Gates of
the Light
will be shut.
who had fallen away after receiving the mystery of
baptism, and Peter comes out of the trial successfully.
It is then explained that the lot of a man who
has received the mysteries and fallen away and not
repented, is far worse than that of the impious man
who has never known them. As to those who are
indifferent, thinking they have many births before
them and need not hasten, the Master bids the
disciples :
" Preach ye unto the whole world, saying unto
men : ' Strive together that ye may receive the
mysteries of light in this time of stress, and enter
into the Kingdom of Light. Put not off from day to
day, and from cycle to cycle, in the belief that ye will
succeed in obtaining the mysteries when ye return to
the world in another cycle.'
" Such men know not when the number of perfect
souls [shall be tilled up] ; for when the number of
perfect souls shall be completed, I will then shut the
Gates of the Light, and from that time none will be
able to come in thereby, nor will any go forth
thereafter, for the number of perfect souls shall be
[completed], and the mystery of the First Mystery
be perfected — [the mystery] whereby all hath come
into existence, and I am that mystery.
" From that hour no one shall any more enter into
the Light, and none shall come forth, in that the time
of the number of perfect souls shall be fulfilled, before
I set fire to the world, that it may purify the aeons,
and veils, the firmaments and the whole world, and
also all the matters that are still in it, the race of
human kind being still upon it.
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 503
"At that time, then, the faith shall show itself
forth more and more, and also the mysteries in those
days. And many souls shall pass through the cycles
of transmigrations of body and come back into the
world in those days ; and among them shall be some
who are now alive and hear Me teach concerning the
consummation of the number of perfect souls, [and
in those days] they shall find the mysteries of light,
and shall receive them. They shall mount up to
the Gates of Light, and shall find that the number
of perfect souls is complete, which is the Consumma
tion of the First Mystery and the Gnosis of the
Pleroma; they will find that I have shut the Gates
of Light, and that from that hour no one can come
in or go forth thereby.
" Those souls then will cry within through the
Gates of Light, saying: * Master, open unto us.' And "I know
I will answer unto them, saying, 'I know not whence ye are."
ye are.' And they will say unto Me, ' We have
received the mysteries, and we have fulfilled all
Thy doctrine; Thou didst teach us on the high
ways.' And I will answer unto them, saying, ' I
know not who ye are, ye who have practised
iniquity and evil even unto this day. Wherefore
go [hence] into the Outer Darkness.' Forthwith
they will depart to the Outer Darkness, where
there is weeping and gnashing of teeth."
Mary then asks as to the type of the Outer
Darkness and the number of the spaces and regions The Dragon
of punishment; and then follows an elaborate Darkness.
description of the space-dragon of this Outer Dark
ness, whose tail is in its mouth, and its twelve
504 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
dungeons, with their authentic faces and names of
the rulers, of the doors and angels that watch at
them, and what souls pass into the Dragon and
how ; it is explained how the names are all contained
in one another, and what are the torments and
degrees of the fires. Thereupon follows the teaching
how the souls of the uninitiated may be saved, and
how finally the Mystery will save even those who
have no more chance of rebirth.
It is further explained how the initiated become
light-flames and streams of light. Mary pleads for
them who have neglected the mysteries; and the
efficacy of the names of the twelve rulers of the
dungeons is explained, and how that the souls who
know the names escape from the Dragon and are
taken to leou, and their subsequent fate.
Then comes fresh instruction as to the Rulers of
The the Fate and the Draught of Oblivion — " the seed of
Oblivion.0 iniquity, filled with all manner of desire and all
forgetfulness . . . ; and that deadly draught of
oblivion becometh a body external to the soul, like
unto the soul in every way, and its perfect
resemblance, and hence they call it the counter
feit spirit."
The manner of the fashioning of a new soul is
then described, and how the power is inbreathed
into it ; this is set forth generally, and more
detailed information is promised on a future
occasion.
It is further explained that the saying, " He who
The Parents shall not leave father and mother and follow after
we are to
Leave. Me," refers to the " parents " or fashioners of the
THE PISTIS SOPHIA. 505
eoul and counterfeit spirit, and not our earthly
parents, far less the parents of the light-power
within — the Saviour and His mysteries.
Further information is also given as to the
counterfeit spirit and its elemental builders, three-
hundred and sixty-five in number ; the embryonic
stages of incarnation ; the karmic compulsion of the
parents — the father and mother of the physical
body; the occult process of gestation; the mode of
incarnation of the various constituent elements in
man ; occult physiognomy ; the nature of the destiny
and how a man comes by his death ; and various
other questions of a like nature. And then the
Saviour continues :
" Now, therefore, for the sake of sinners have I
torn myself asunder and come into the world, to save
them, and also because it is necessary that the leou again,
righteous, who have never done evil, and have
never committed sin, should find the mysteries
which are in the Books of leou, which I made
Enoch write down in Paradise, when I spake
to him from the Tree of Knowledge, and from the
Tree of Life, and which I made him deposit in the
rock of Ararad ; and I set Kalapatauroth, the Ruler
that is over Skemmut, on whose head is the foot of
leou — the latter surroundeth all the ^Eons and the
Fate-Sphere — I set [then] this Ruler to preserve the
Books of leou from the flood, and [also] lest any of
the Rulers out of enmity should destroy them.
These [books] will I give unto you, when I
have finished telling you the emanation of the
pleroma."
506 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
But few only will comprehend the higher
mysteries. " I tell you that there will be found one
in a thousand and two in ten thousand for
the consummation of the mysteries of the First
Mystery."
Before the coming of the First Mystery no soul of
The Christ fcnjg humanity had fully entered into the Light ; none
the First J to
of this of the prophets or patriarchs had as yet entered
to Enter the into the Light, but they will be sent back into
righteous bodies and so find the mysteries and
inherit the Kingdom.
The treatise brings itself to an end with the
following paragraphs :
" Mary answered and said : ' Blessed are we before
all men because of these great [truths] which Thou
hast revealed unto us.'
" The Saviour answered and said unto Mary and
all His disciples : ' I will also reveal unto you all the
grandeurs of the height, from the interior of the
interiors to the exterior of the exteriors, that ye may
be perfect in every gnosis, and in every pleroma, and
in every height of the heights, and every deep of the
depths.'
" And Mary answered and said to the Saviour :
'Tis He who ' Now we know, O Master, freely, surely, plainly, that
Keys of the Thou hast brought the keys of the mysteries of
the Kingdom of Light, which remit the sins of
souls, that they may be cleansed, and be trans
formed into pure light, and be brought into the
Light.' "
EXTRACTS FROM BOOKS OF THE SAVIOUR. 507
SUMMARY OF THE EXTRACTS FROM THE
BOOKS OF THE SAVIOUR.
THE first extract occurs on pp. 252 — 254 of the Askew
Codex, and runs as follows :
" And they that are worthy of the mysteries
which lie in the Ineffable, that is to say, those that Tlie
Immaneot
have not emanated — thev are prior to the First Limbs of the
Ineffable.
Mystery. To use a similitude and correspondence
of speech that ye may understand, they are the
Limbs of the Ineffable. And each is according to
the dignity of its glory, the head according to the
dignity of the head, the eye according to the dignity
of the eye, the ear according to the dignity of the
ear, and the rest of the Limbs (or Members) [in
like fashion] ; so that it is manifest that ' there are
many members, but only one body.' Of this I speak
to you in a paradigm, a correspondence, and a
similitude, but not in the reality of its configuration ;
I have not revealed the [whole] word in truth.
" But the Mystery of the Ineffable and every
Limb which is in It — that is to say, they that The Christ
dwell in the Mystery of the Ineffable and they that
dwell in [that Ineffable] — and also the three Spaces
which follow after them, according to the mysteries,
in truth and verity, all that [is Myself]. I am the
Treasure of all of them, apart from which there is
no treasure, apart from which there is no individu
ality in the world ; but there are other words
[? logoi], other mysteries, and other regions.
508
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The Gnoais
of the
Christ.
The Initia
tion of the
Disciples on
the Mount.
"Now, therefore, Blessed is he [among men]
who hath found the mysteries of the Space
towards the exterior. He is a God, who hath
found the words [? logoi] of the mysteries of the
second Space in the midst. He is a Saviour
and free of every space who hath found the
words of the mysteries, the words of the third Space
towards the interior. He is the very Pleroma itself
(or more excellent than the universe) — the object of
desire of all who are in that third Space — who hath
found the Mystery in which they [all] are, and in
which they are [all] set. Wherefore is he equal to
[all of them]. For he hath found also the words
[? logoi] of the mysteries, which I have set down for
you in a similitude, namely, the Limbs of the
Ineffable. Amen, I say unto you, he who hath found
the words of these mysteries in the Truth of God
[? the God of Truth], that man is chief in the Truth,
he is its peer, because of these words and mysteries.
The universe verily oweth its being to these words
and mysteries. For which cause he who hath found
the words of these mysteries, is equal to the Chief [of
all]. It is the gnosis of the Gnosis of the Ineffable
concerning which I speak unto you this day."
The second series of extracts is far longer and
comes at the end of the Codex, occupying pp. 357 — 390.
It begins with the words :
" It came to pass, therefore, after they had
crucified Jesus, our Master, that He rose from
the dead on the third day. And the disciples
came together unto Him and besought Him,
saying: 'Master, have mercy upon us, for
EXTRACTS FROM BOOKS OF THE SAVIOUR. 509
we have left father and mother, and the whole
world, and have followed Thee.' "
We are at once introduced to an atmosphere of
ceremonies and invocations. Jesus stands by the
Sea of the Ocean, surrounded by his disciples, male
and female, and makes invocation with solemn prayer,
saying : " Hear me, O Father, Father of all father
hood, Boundless Light!" The prayer consists of
the mystic vowels and formulae interspersed with
" authentic " names.
The disciples are grouped round Him, the
women disciples stand behind, all clad in white
linen robes; Jesus stands at an altar and with
His disciples turns to the four quarters, invoking
three times the name IAO. The interpretation of
which is : " I, The pleroma hath gone forth ; A,
They shall return within; O, There shall be an
end of ends."
This is followed by a mystic formula, which is
interpreted as : " O Father of every fatherhood of
the boundless [light-spaces], hear Me because of My
disciples, whom I have brought into Thy presence,
that they may believe in all the words of Thy truth ;
grant unto them all things for which I have cried
unto Thee, for I know the Name of the Father of
the Treasure of Light."
Then Jesus, whose mystery-name is Abera-
mentho, invokes the Name of the Father of The Fint
the Treasure, saying : " Let all the mysteries Drawn
of the rulers, authorities, archangels, and all S1 e'
the powers and all the works of the In
visible Gods [their three mystery-names being
510
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
given] withdraw themselves and roll themselves on
to the right."
Thereupon all the lower regions speed to the
west, to the left of the disk of the sun and of
the moon.
The disk of the sun is symbolically described as a
vast dragon with its tail in its mouth, mounted on
seven powers, and drawn by four others figured as
horses. The car of the moon is figured as a ship, its
helms, or steering oars, being two dragons, male and
female; it is drawn by two oxen, and steered by a
babe on the poop, and at the prow is the face of a cat.
And Jesus and His disciples soar aloft into the
aerial regions, the Way of the Midst, and come to
the first order of the Way of the Midst.
Here the disciples are instructed on the nature of
this space and its rulers. They are told that above
them there are Twelve Mons, six being ruled by
h Described! Adamas and six by labraoth. The six under
labraoth have repented and practised the mysteries
of light, and have therefore been carried by leou,
" the father of My father," to a pure atmosphere
near the light of the sun. The six under Adamas
have refused the mysteries of light, and persisted
in the mystery of intercourse, or sexual union, and
procreated rulers and archangels, and angels, work
men, and decans. They have accordingly been bound
by leou in the Fate-Sphere. There are now three
hundred and sixty of this brood, and again eighteen
hundred (1800 = 360x5) in each aeon. Over them
leou has set five other Great Rulers, called in the
world of human kind by these names : Kronos, Ares,
They enter
the Way of
the Midst,
The
Ordering
of the
EXTRACTS FROM BOOKS OF THE SAVIOUR. 511
Hermes, Aphrodite, and Zeus. Their incorruptible
mystery-names and their genesis is also given.
Zeus is the head of the four, for leou reflected
" that they had need of a helm to steer the world and
the aeons of the spheres." Zeus is good, and passes
three months in the revolutions of the remaining four
ruling powers, " so that every ruler in which he
cometh is freed from his iniquity." The peculiarity
of Zeus is that he has two aeons for his habitation.
All this refers to the ordering of the Fate-Sphere ;
but Mary, who is also in these Extracts represented
as the chief questioner, desires to be informed as to
why the aerial Ways of the Midst, in which they are,
and which lie below the Fate-Sphere, are " set over
great torments." She beseeches the Saviour to have
mercy upon them, " lest the receivers carry off our
souls to the judgments of the Ways of the Midst."
The Master in answer promises to give them the
mysteries of all gnosis : the mystery of the Twelve All Mysteriet
of the Rulers, their seals, their numbers, Of the Light-
and the manner of invocation to enter into their
regions ; in like manner the mystery of the i
Thirteenth vEon (the Left) ; the mystery of the
Baptism of them of the Midst ; the mystery of
the Baptism of them of the Right ; and the great
mystery of the Treasure of Light.
" I will give unto you all the mysteries and every
gnosis, that ye may be called the Sons of the Pleroma,
perfect in every gnosis and every mystery. Blessed
indeed are ye beyond all men who are on the earth,
for the Sons of Light have come in your time."
In these Ways of the Midst are further bound
512
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The
Punishments ..
of the Ways lished
of the Midst
The
Duration
of the
Punish
ments.
by leou three hundred and sixty of the brood of
Adamas, and five great rulers are further estab-
over them, in a sort of reflection of the
space above. The authentic names, types, and
sub-hierarchies of these five are given. It is
explained how all is ordered by leou, who is
the providence of all the rulers and gods and
powers which are in the matter of the Light of
the Treasure, and by Zorokothora (Melchizedec), the
legate of all the light-powers which are purified
among the Rulers. These two great Lights descend at
appointed seasons, to gather together the pure radiance
of the light from those they have cleansed among the
Rulers; this is done when the number and time of
their task come to pass. But when the great Lights
withdraw again, then the Rulers again rebel because
of the " wrath of their iniquity," and march against
the light-powers of the souls, and " hurry off all the
souls that they can harry and ravish, to destroy them
in the smoke of their darkness and their evil fire."
The times that souls must pass in each of these
regions of punishment of the five dsemonial hier
archies are given, and how these times are
brought to an end. To take the first as an
example : "It cometh to pass after these years,
when the sphere of the Little Sabaoth (that is
to say, Zeus) revolveth so as to come into the first aeon
of the Sphere, which is called in the world the Ram
of Bubastis (that is to say, Aphrodite); when, then,
she [Aphrodite] shall have come into the seventh
house of the Sphere, which is the Balance, [it cometh
to pass that] the veils between them of the Right and
EXTRACTS FROM BOOKS OF THE SAVIOUR. 513
them of the Left are drawn aside, and there glanceth
forth from the height, among them of the Right, the
Great Sabaoth, the Good, [lord] of the whole world
and of all the Sphere. But before he glanceth forth,
he gazeth down on the regions of Paraplex [the ruler
of the first dsemonian hierarchy], that they may be
dissolved and perish, and that all the souls which are
in her torments may be brought forth and again led
into the Sphere, for they are perishing in the
torments of Paraplex."
And so for the other four of the five, with
appropriate modifications. It appears that leou and
Melchisedec are powers behind or symbolized by the
sun and moon.
" These then are the operations of the Ways of
the Midst concerning which ye have questioned Me."
And when the disciples had heard this, they
bowed down and adored Him, saying : " Save us, The Disciplt
O Master, have mercy upon us, that we may Mercy to
be preserved from these malignant torments
which are prepared for sinners. Woe unto
them ! woe unto the children of men ! for they
are like the blind feeling in the darkness, and
seeing not. Have mercy upon us, O Master, in
the great blindness in which we are, and have
mercy upon the whole race of human kind ; for they
lie in wait for their souls, as lions for their prey,
to tear them in pieces and make food for their
torments, because of the forgetfulness and ignorance
in which they are. Have mercy, therefore, upon us,
O Master, our Saviour, have mercy upon us, preserve
us from this great stupor ! "
KK
514
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
They Enter
an Atmos
phere of
Exceeding
Great Light.
The Vision
of the
Baptism
Mysteries.
Jesus said unto His disciples : " Have courage,
fear not, for ye are blessed ; nay, I will make you
lords over all these, and place them in subjection
under your feet. Ye remember that I have already
said unto you before My crucifixion : ' I will give unto
you the keys of the kingdom of the heavens.' Now
again I say unto you, I will give them unto you."
When Jesus had thus spoken, He chanted an
invocation in the Great Name, and the regions of the
Ways of the Midst were hidden from view and Jesus
and His disciples remained in an atmosphere of
exceeding great light.
Jesus said unto His disciples : " Come unto Me."
And they came unto Him. He turned towards
the four angles of the world; He uttered the Great
Name over their heads, and blessed them and breathed
on their eyes. Jesus said unto them : " Look up, and
mark what ye see ! "
And they raised their eyes unto the height and
saw a great light, exceedingly brilliant, which no man
in the world could describe.
He said unto them a second time : " Look into
the light, and mark what ye see ! "
They said : " We see tire and water, and wine
and blood."
Jesus, that is to say Aberamentho, said unto His
disciples : " Amen, I say unto you, I have brought
nothing into the world when I came, save this tire
and water, this wine and blood. I brought down the
water and fire from the region of the Light of light,
from the Treasure of Light; I brought down the
wine and the blood from the region of Barbelo.
EXTRACTS FROM BOOKS OF THE SAVIOUR. 515
And shortly after My Father sent unto Me the Holy
Spirit in the form of a dove.
"The fire, the water, and the wine are for cleansing
all the sins of the world ; the blood I had as a sign
of the body of human kind, and I received it in the
region of Barbelo, the great power of the Divine
Invisible [? the Thirteenth ^Eon] ; while the Spirit
draweth all souls and bringeth them into the region
of Light."
This is the " fire " He came to " cast on the earth "
according to a former saying ; this the " living water "
the Samaritan woman should have asked for ; this
the " cup of wine " in the eucharist ; this the " water "
that came from His side.
" These are the mysteries of the light which remit
sins " — that is to say, their names merely.
After this Jesus again gives the command that
the powers of the Left return to their own region,
and the disciples find themselves once more on the to Earth-
Mount of Galilee.
Hereupon Jesus celebrates the mystic eucharist
and the first Baptism of Water, with ceremonies The
and invocations almost identical to those in the of the
Codex Brucianus. The disciples enquire further Eucharist,
as to the nature of the Baptism of Incense
[> Fire], the Baptism of the Holy Spirit, and
the Spiritual Chrism, arid ask that the " Mystery
of the Light of Thy Father " be revealed to them.
Jesus said unto them : " As to these mysteries
which ye seek after, there is no mystery which is The
higher than them. They will bring your souls thafarT*
into the Light of lights, into the regions of Truth Revealed.
516
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The Punish
ments of
Sinners in
the Lower
Regions and
the Evil
Bodies they
Receive
when
Reborn.
The Cup of
Wisdom .
and Righteousness, into the region of the Holy of
all Holies, into the region where there is neither
female nor male, nor form in that region, but only
Light, unceasing, ineffable.
" No mystery is higher than the mysteries ye seek
after, save only the mystery of the Seven Voices and
their Nine-and-Forty Powers and Numbers; and the
Name which is higher than them all, the Name
which sums up all their names, all their lights, and
all their powers."
Here follows a lacuna, and the text is resumed in
the middle of a totally different subject. It treats of
the punishment of him that curseth, of the
slanderer, of the murderer, of the thief, of the
contemptuous, of the blasphemer, of him who hath
intercourse with males, and of a still fouler act of
sorcery, the mention of which stirs the infinite
compassion of the Master to wrath and denunciation.
The few remaining pages of the Codex are taken
up with a description of the after-death state of the
righteous man who has not received the mysteries ; a
man must suffer for each separate sin, but even the
greatest of sinners, if he repent, shall inherit the
Kingdom. The time favourable for the birth of those
who shall find the mysteries is described.
As for the righteous man who has not been
initiated, in his next birth he shall not be given the
draught of oblivion, but " there cometh a receiver
of the little Sabaoth, the Good, him of the Midst;
he bringeth a cup full of intuition and wisdom, and
also prudence, and giveth it to the soul, and
casteth the soul into a body which will not be
EXTRACTS FROM BOOKS OF THE SAVIOUR. 517
able to fall asleep and forget, because of the
cup of prudence which hath been given unto it,
but will be ever pure in heart and seeking after
the mysteries of light, until it hath found them,
by order of the Virgin of Light, in order [that that
soul] may inherit the Light for ever."
The Extracts end with the disciples again
beseeching Jesus to have mercy upon them ; and Tfh®
the whole Codex is terminated by the note of a
scribe describing the preaching of the apostles :
" They went forth three by three to the four points
of heaven ; they preached the Glad Tidings of the
Kingdom in the whole world, the Christ being active
with them in the words of confirmation and the signs
and wonders which accompanied them. And thus
was known the Kingdom of God in all the land and
in all the world of Israel, [and this] is a testimony for
all the nations which are from the east even unto
the west."
518 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
SUMMARY OF THE FRAGMENTS
OF THE BOOK OF -THE GREAT LOGOS
ACCORDING TO THE MYSTERY.
THE first page is headed with the beautiful words :
of 'the00^ " I nave l°ve(l you and longed to give you Life," and
Gnoses -g fo}}owed by the statement : " This is the Book of
of tne J
^msibie the Gnoses (pi.) of the Invisible God " ; it is the
Book of the Gnosis of Jesus the Living One, by
means of which all the hidden mysteries are
revealed to the elect. Jesus is the Saviour of Souls,
the Logos of Life, sent by the Father from the
Light-world to mankind, who taught His disciples
the one and only doctrine, saying : " This is the
doctrine in which all Gnosis dwelleth."
This is evidently an introduction written by an
editor or compiler ; immediately after there begins
a dialogue between Jesus and the disciples.
Jesus saith : " Blessed is the man who crucifieth
the world and doth not let the world crucify him."
He then explains that such a man is he who hath
The Hidden found His Word, and fulfilled it according to the will
of the Father. The apostles beg the Master to tell
them this Word, for they have left all and followed
Him; they desire to be instructed in the Life of the
Father.
Jesus answers that the Life of His Father consists
in their purifying their souls from all earthly stain,
and making them to become the Race of the Mind, so
that they may be filled with understanding, and by
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 519
His teaching perfect themselves, and be saved from the
Rulers of this world and its endless snares. Let them
then hasten to receive the Gnosis He is to impart —
His Word — for He is free from all stain of the world.
The disciples break into praises of the Master —
as the Light shining in the daylight — who hath
enlightened their hearts until they receive the Light
of Life, by means of the Gnosis which teacheth the
hidden wisdom of the Lord.
Jesus saith : " Blessed is the man who knoweth
this [Word] and hath brought down the Heaven, j|aD-*rkig
and borne the earth and raised it heavenwards; and Explained.
it [the Earth] becometh the midst, for it is a
' nothing.' "
The Heaven is explained as being the invisible
Word of the Father. They who know this — (who
become children of the true Mind) — bring down
Heaven to Earth. The raising of Earth to Heaven
is the ceasing from being an earthly intelligence, by
receiving the Word of these Gnoses (pi.) and becoming
a Dweller in Heaven. Thus will they be saved from
the Ruler of this World, and he will become the
midst (that is to say, perhaps, that they will be above
the Ruler and no longer subject to him as heretofore ;
he will be a " nothing " to them, that is to say, have
no effect on them). Nay, the evil powers will envy
them because they know Him, that He is not of this
world and that no evil cometh from Him. But as
for those who are born in the flesh of unrighteousness
(and are not children of the Righteous Race, those of
the second birth), they have no part in the Kingdom
of the Father.
520 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Thereupon the disciples are in despair, for they
The Flesh of have been born "according to the flesh" and have
Ignorance.
known Him only "according to the flesh." But
the Master explains that not the flesh of their
bodies is meant, but the flesh of unrighteousness
and ignorance."
The disciples ask to be instructed in the nature of
ignorance (ayvota, the opposite of gnosis, yvuxris),
and the Master tells them that, to understand this
great mystery, they must first put on His virginity
and righteousness, and His robe (of glory), and seek
to understand the teaching of the Word, whereby
they will learn to know Him in the Fullness
(Pleroma) of the Father.
The apostles answered and said, " Lord Jesus, Thou
Living One, teach us the Fullness and it sufficeth us."
Here unfortunately the text breaks off and pages
are lost; nowhere in the MS. is a direct continuation
to be found.
Taking Schmidt's Second Book of leou first,
we are introduced to the following narrative.
Jesus bids the twelve disciples and also the
The women disciples to surround Him, and promises
theTraurare ^° reveal to them the great mysteries of the
Treasure of Light, which no one in the Invisible
God knows (that is to say, no one even of
the powers of the Thirteenth Mon — the ^Eon
which surrounds or is beyond or within the
Twelve ^Eons — over wThich the Invisible God is
ruler). If these mysteries are consummated, neither
the Rulers of the Twelve ^Eons nor those of the
Invisible God can endure them nor comprehend them,
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 521
for they are the great mysteries of the interior of the
interiors of the Treasure of Light. When these are
consummated, the Receivers of the Light-treasure
come and take the soul from the body, and bear it
through all inferior spaces into the Light-treasure.
Yea, the sins of that soul, whether conscious or
unconscious, are blotted out, and the soul becomes
pure Light. And not only does the purified soul pass
through all inferior spaces, but also within into the
Light-realm, ever inward, within all its spaces,
orders, and powers, to the space of the Uncontainables
in the innermost space of the Light-treasure.
These mysteries are to be guarded with utmost
secrecy, and revealed to none who are unworthy ; Revealed
neither to father nor mother, to sister nor brother, worthy
nor to any relative ; neither for meat nor drink, Alone-
neither for woman nor gold nor silver, nor
anything in this world. Beyond all to no
sorcerer, those who practise certain most foul
rites, whose God is the son of the Great Ruler,
Sabaoth Adamas — the enemy of the Kingdom of
Heaven, the chief of the six non-repentant Rulers.
The mystery-name of this power is given and its
monstrous form described.
Those alone are worthy of the mysteries of the
Light-treasure (the emanation of the Unapproachable
God) who have abandoned the whole world and all
that pertains thereto, its gods and powers, and have
centred their whole faith in the Light, giving ear to
one another, and submitting themselves the one to the
other, as do the children of the Light.
Now inasmuch as the disciples have left father
522
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The Lesser
Mysteries.
The Good
Command
ments.
and mother and brethren and all their possessions,
and have followed Him and fulfilled His command
ments, Jesus promises that He will reveal to them
the mysteries as follows : The mystery of the Twelve
^Eons and their Receivers, and the mode of their
invocation, so that the disciples may pass through
their spaces ; the mystery of the Invisible God (the
Thirteenth ^Eon) and his Receivers (them of the
Left), etc. ; of them of the Middle, etc. ; of them of
the Right. But before all He will give them the
mysteries of the three Baptisms — the Baptism of
Water, the Baptism of Fire, and the Baptism of the
Holy Spirit. Moreover He will give them the
Mystery of Withdrawing the Malice or Naughtiness
(KCLKIO) of the Rulers, and thereafter the Mystery of
the Spiritual Chrism.
But they must remember that, when they in turn
give these mysteries to others, they must command
them not to swear falsely, nor even to swear at all ;
neither to fornicate nor commit adultery ; neither
to steal nor covet other men's goods ; neither to
love silver nor gold, nor invoke the names of the
seventy-two evil Rulers or of their angels for any
purpose ; not to rob, nor to curse, nor calumniate
falsely, nor to rail, but to let their yea be yea and
their nay nay ; in a word, they must fulfil the
good commandments.
The disciples remind Jesus that His first promise
had been that they should be given the mysteries of
the Treasure of Light, the greater, which are above
these lower mysteries of which He has spoken.
Seeing then that the disciples have not only
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 523
abandoned all things in the world and kept all the
commandments, but have further now followed Him The Greater
for twelve years, Jesus assures them that He will
further give them the mysteries of the Light-
treasure, to wit : The mystery of the Nine
Guardians of the three Gates of the Light-treasure
and the way of their invocation, so that they may
pass through their spaces; the mystery of the Child
of the Child, etc.; of the Three Amens; of the Five
Trees; of the Seven Voices; the will (? mystery)
of the Forty -nine Powers ; the mystery of the Great
Name of all names, that is of the Great Light which
contains, or is beyond, the Treasure of Light. The
master-mysteries of the Light-treasure are those of
the Five Trees and of the Seven Voices and of the
Great Name. There is, however, yet another
supreme Mystery, which bestows upon a man all
the rest — the Mystery of the Forgiveness of Sins;
this Mystery transmutes the soul into pure light, so
that it may be received into the Light of lights.
Such souls have already inherited the Kingdom
of God while still on earth ; they have their share The Power*
in the Light-treasure and are immortal Gods ; and *
at death, when they leave the body, all the /Eons
disperse and flee to the west, to the left, until
their souls arrive at the Gates of the Light-
treasure. And the Gates are opened to them,
and the Wardens give them their seals and their
Great Name. So they pass within successively
through the various Orders, where they receive
the successive seals and master-words — within into
the Five Trees and Seven Voices ; yea, still farther
524
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The Mystic
Rite of the
Baptism of
the Water
of Life.
within, to the Orders of the Parentless, to the
spaces of their inheritance — the Order of the Thrice-
spiritual ; until they reach the space of the leou, the
Lord over the whole Treasure — the middle Treasure ;
thence ever within to the inner Treasures — the
spaces of the interior of the interiors, the within of
the within, to the Silences, to Peace Eternal, in those
Everlasting Spaces.
All of these mysteries Jesus promises to give to
His disciples, that they may be called " Children of
the Fullness (Pleroma) perfected in all mysteries."
The Master then gathers His disciples, men and
women, round Him with the words : " Come all of you
and receive the three Baptisms, ere I tell you the
mystery of the Rulers ! "
He bids them go to Galilee and find a man or
woman in whom the greater part of evil (or the
superfluity of naughtiness) is dead, that is to say,
who has ceased from intercourse or sexuality
(o-vvovaria), and receive from such a one two jars of
wine and bring them to the place where He is, and
also two vine branches.
They do so, and the Master sets forth a place
of offering (Oucria), placing one wine-jar on the right
and one on the left, and strews certain berries and
spices round the vessels ; He then makes the disciples
clothe themselves in white linen robes, puts a certain
plant into their mouths, and the number of the Seven
Voices and also another plant in their hands, and
ranges them in order round the sacrifice.
Jesus then spreads a linen cloth, and on it places
a cup, and bread or loaves according to the number
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 525
of the disciples; He surrounds this with olive-
branches, and also puts wreaths of olive-branches
on the heads of His disciples. He next seals their
foreheads with a certain seal (the diagram of which,
authentic name, and interpretation of it — also in the
secret cypher — are given).
The Master then turns with his disciples to the
four corners of the world, and the disciples are com
manded to set their feet together (an attitude of
prayer). He then offers a prayer which is prefixed
with an invocation in the mystery-language, inter
spersed with triple Amens, and continues as follows :
" Hear Me, My Father, Father of all fatherhood,
Boundless Light, who art in the Treasure of Light !
May the Supporters [or Ministers (Trapao-Tarai)] come,
who serve the Seven Virgins of Light who preside
over the Baptism of Life ! [The mystery-names of
the Supporters are here given.] May they come
and baptize My disciples with the Water of Life of
the Seven Virgins of Light, and wash away their
sins and purify their iniquities, and number them
among the heirs of the Kingdom of Light ! If now
Thou hast heard Me and hast had pity on My
disciples, and if they have been numbered among
the heirs of the Kingdom of Light, and if Thou
hast forgiven their sins and blotted out their iniqui
ties, then may a wonder be done, and Zorokothora
come and bring the Water of the Baptism of Life
into one of these wine-jars ! "
The wonder takes place, and the wine in the
right-hand jar becomes water ; and Jesus baptizes
them, and gives them of the sacrifice, and seals them
526 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
with the seal (? of the Supporters), to their great
j°y-
This is the Baptism of Water ; we are next given
Jhe,. a description of the Baptism of Fire. In this rite the
rSaptistn L
of Fire. vine-branches are used ; they are strewn with various
materials of incense. The eucharist is prepared as
before, and the rest of the details are almost identical ;
the number of the Seven Voices is again used, but the
seal is different.
The prayer is longer than the preceding one, but
all to the same purpose ; the supernal baptizers are no
longer the Ministers of the Seven Virgins, but the
Virgin of Life, herself, the Judge ; she it is who gives
the Water of the Baptism of Fire. A wonder is
asked for in " the fire of this fragrant incense," and it
is brought about by the agency of Zorokothora, a
name now interpreted as Melchizedec. What the
nature of the wonder was, is not stated. Jesus
baptizes the disciples, gives them of the eucharistic
sacrifice, and seals their foreheads with the seal of the
Virgin of Light.
Next follows the Baptism of the Holy Spirit. In
The this rite both the wine-jars and vine-branches are
<?fa?he8m used ; the details are otherwise very similar, the
Holy Spmt. numJ3er of the Seven Voices being again employed.
The supernal givers of the Baptism are not men
tioned, but as the final sealing after the rite is with
the seal of the Seven Virgins of Light, we may
suppose that they are the givers of the Baptism.
A wonder again takes place, but is not further
O IT
specified.
After this we have the Mystery of Withdrawing
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 527
the Evil of the Rulers. There is here no mention of
the eucharist, but in other respects the ceremonial
is very similar, and consists of an elaborate incense- Wi^draw-
J ing the Evil
offering. The number is that of the First Amen and of the
& t Rulers.
the seal is very elaborate. The prayer asks that
Sabaoth Adamas and all his chiefs may come, and
take away their (the Rulers') evil or naughtiness
from the disciples. At the end of it the disciples
are sealed with the seal of the Second Amen, and the
Rulers have no longer any power over them ; they
have now become immortal, and can follow Jesus
into all spaces whither they would go.
Jesus having now given the disciples the mysteries
of the Baptisms, the mode of invoking the powers,
their numbers, seals, and authentic names, promises
to give them the apologies (defences or formulae),
whereby they will now be able to enter into the
interior of the spaces or realms of these powers, and
pass through them.
So far as they have been taught, they will be
enabled, when out of the body, to pass through the The Powers
realms apparently of the six ^Eons which have not Mysteries
repented, those of Sabaoth Adamas; these with all
their rulers and indwellers will disperse before them.
But on reaching the six great ^Eons (those apparently
of labraoth, who repented and believed in the Light),
they will be detained until they receive the Mystery
of the Forgiveness of Sins.
The Mystery of the Forgiveness of Sins is said to
have its being in the interior of the interior of the
Treasures of Light; it is the perfect salvation of
the soul. He who receives it is more excellent
528 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
than all the gods and powers of the twelve
The of the Invisible God (the Ruler of the Thirteenth
the Pctajive- ^Eon). This Mystery is the Great Mystery of the
Unapproachable God ; it is the perfection of all
mysteries, making the soul all-perfect.
It is this Mystery which will enable the disciples
to pass into the ^Eons of the Invisible God — that is,
the spaces that no physical eye can see, beyond the
elements of water, fire, and air (or aether) — the
baptismal mysteries of which have been already
given.
But with the aid of the rite of the Mystery of the
i?Con?eS* Forgiveness of Sins all the ^Eons will withdraw to
the west, to the left, as veils before the eyes, up
to the twelfth, which will then be so purified by
the Light of the Light-treasure, that all the ways
by which the disciples will have ascended will be
purified ; and moreover the exterior of the Light-
treasure (the exterior being the Space of the
Thirteenth ^Eon) will be revealed, and they will see
Heaven from below. It will be at this point that
Jesus will give them the apologies, seals, and
numbers of the Mystery with their interpretations.
And when they have received these and go out of
the body, they will become pure light and soar
upwards into the Light-treasure.
And then the Guardians of the Gates of the
Treasure will open to them, and they will pass
upwards and ever inwards through the following
spaces, the powers therein rejoicing and giving
them their mysteries, seals, and names of power :
the Orders of the Three Amens, of the Child of
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 529
the Child, of the Twin Saviours, of the Great
Sabaoth, of the Great lao the Good, of the Seven The
Amens, of the Five Trees, of the Seven Voices; the
Orders of the Uncontainables, of the Impassables;
the Orders of those who are before and beyond
(in time and space) the Uncontainables and Impass
ables; the Orders of the Unstainables, arid of those
who are before and beyond them; the Orders
of the Immovables, and of those who are before and
beyond them; the Orders of the Parentless, and of
those that are before them ; the Orders of the Five
Impressions, of the Three Spaces, of the Five Sup
porters, of the Thrice-spiritual, of the Triple Power,
of the First Precept (or Statute), of the Inheritance,
of the Silences and of Peace, of the Veils which
are drawn before the Great King of the Light-
treasure, unto the Great Man himself, the King of
the whole Light-realm, whose name is leou.
These spaces and orderings are also mentioned
in the Pistis Sophia, treatise, but I have omitted them
in the summary in order not to confuse the reader.
The subject is exceedingly difficult, and no one has
so far succeeded in reconstructing in detail the
elaborate scheme of the Gnosis presupposed by the
compiler or compilers of our treatises, owing in a
great measure to the fragmentary state of the
Codex Brucianus on the one hand and to the
insufficient data of the Askew Codex on the
other.
Still upwards and inwards are they to soar to
the Space of the Great Light which surrounds or
transcends the outer Treasure of Light itself. leou
LL
530 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
is there too, he is the Great Light ; this is the
Second or inner Light Treasure. The guardians will
open the Gates and they will pass into the Orders
of the Triple Powers of the Second Light Treasure;
thence inwards to the twelfth Order of the twelfth
Great Power of the emanation of the True God.
There are twelve Great Powers with twelve Chiefs
in each of their Orders (of which the authentic
names are given). These Twelve will stand apart
in this Space and invoke the True God with this
" Name " (? prayer), saying :
" Hear us, O Father, Father of all fatherhood !
[Here follows a sentence in the mystery-language
God- containing four of the vowels each seven times
repeated — with the interpretation : That is to say,
Father of all fatherhood, for the All hath come out
of the Alpha, and will return to the Omega when
the consummation of all consummations will take
place.] We will now invoke Thy imperishable
Names that Thou mayest send forth Thy great
Light-power, and that it follow these Twelve Un-
containables [that is to say, the twelve disciples],
for they have verily received the Mystery of the
Forgiveness of Sins, and therefore are they not
to be held back from approaching Thy Light-
Treasure."
Thereon the True God will send forth his Light-
power; it will shine forth from behind the disciples,
and cause all the Treasures of the Second Light-realm
to withdraw, and they will reach the Space of the
True God.
Then will the True God in turn invoke the
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 531
Unapproachable God, that is to say the One and
Only One, and He will send forth a Light-power invocation
out of Himself, into the Space of the True God, and Unapproach-
the disciples shall be perfected in all fullness and be
made into an Order in that Treasure. They shall
sing hymns of praise to the Unapproachable God,
for, while still in the body, they have received the
Mystery of the Forgiveness of Sins, and attained to
the Space of the True God.
The disciples hereupon ask to be given this Great
Mystery; the Master promises that He will give it; The Mystery
but before receiving it, they must be told the mystery Twelve
of the Twelve (supernal) JEons, their seals, names,
and apologies. These are given, seal-diagrams, names,
numbers, and apologies ; the last being in the form
" Make way [mystery names], ye Rulers of the h'rst
(second, etc.) Mou, for I invoke [other mystery
names — these being superior names of the Light-
treasure]."
The sixth (? seventh) JSon is called the Little
Midst, for it belongs to the six ^Eons which have
believed on the Light; the Rulers of these Mous
have a little good in them.
In the twelfth JEon is the Invisible God and
Barbelo and the Ingenerable God. The Invisible
God is in a space alone in the twelfth JEon
with veils drawn before him, and in that Mon
are many other gods called the great rulers of the
JSons, though servants of the Invisible God, Barbelo
and the Ingenerable God.
In the thirteenth JSon is the Great Invisible God,
the Great Virginal Spirit (? Barbelo) and the four
532
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The
Thirteenth
The
Fourteenth
and twenty emanations of the Invisible God. The
mystery-names of these four and twenty are given,
and also the invocation of the higher names of the
Light-treasure in which are contained a series of
triple omegas four times repeated, and a series of
triple etas four times repeated. The names of these
emanations are said to be their names "from the
beginning."
Yet higher in the fourteenth ^Eon is a second
Great Invisible God, and another Great God called
the " Great Just One " (XPI&TOS) ; he is a power of
the three Light-rulers which are within all the ^Eons,
but without the Treasure of Light. Here also are
numbers of emanations. The powers of this ./Eon
will try to detain the disciples in order that they
may perform the mysteries of Jesus in those spaces,
and so these powers themselves receive further
powers from the powers of the Light-treasure.
The disciples, however, are given the proper seals,
numbers, and apologies, so that the powers shall
withdraw.
Now the three Great Rulers that are within all
The Three these Invisibles (i.e., the emanations of the Thirteenth
Great
and Fourteenth ^Eons), but without the Treasure of
Light, are called the Triple-powered Gods, and are
above all others.
They themselves have received the mysteries of
the Treasure of Light, for when the First Power
came forth (from the Light-kingdom) they first of all
remained in it (the Power), and when they emerged
from it the Kingdom of Light was preached to them.
" I gave them," says the Master, " the mysteries
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 533
which I have given unto you, but I have not given
them the Mystery of the Forgiveness of Sins. . .• .
Therefore now I say unto you that I, when I shall
separate all the ^Eons, will give to these three Rulers
of the Light, who are in the last [highest] of all the
^Eons> the Mystery of the Forgiveness of Sins,
because they have believed in the Mystery of the
Light-realm."
No one can pass beyond them till he have received
the Mystery of the Forgiveness of Sins; but, con
tinues the Master, they are not to fear on this
account, for there is no place of punishment in those
spaces, for their indwellers received the Mysteries
(?of Baptism).
The seals, names, and apologies of these powers
are then given, and here unfortunately the text
breaks suddenly off, and we come to the end of
Schmidt's Second Book of leou.
Taking now Schmidt's First Book we next come
to a description of the middle Light-world, and Concerning
leou the
its Ruler, the True God, the Demiurgos, Bmanatorof
S ' the Middle
above whom are the Treasures ot the Pleroma Light-world.
of the Father. Jesus is still the narrator.
The subject is one of immense complexity,
with infinite emanations, treasures (i.e., store
houses of riches and fullness), spaces, orders, and
hierarchies, with diagrams and symbols, and hosts of
(to me) absolutely unintelligible "authentic" names,
which are said to be "in the language of my
Father." The authentic name of the supernal
Demiurgos is translated as the True God or God
of Truth, and is given in Greek transliteration as
534 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
leou, which Schmidt transliterates into German as
Jeu.
I would suggest that leou is a transliteration
The Tetra- of the four-lettered mystery name of the creator
according to Semitic and Chaldaean tradition, the
tetragrammaton of the Kabalah. Theodoret tells
us that the Samaritans pronounced this name
labe (lave) and the Jews lao. Since the six
teenth century, by adding the vowels of Adonai to
the unpronounceable Y H V H, it has been pronounced
Jehovah. It is now generally written Yahweh ; but
there is no certainty in the matter, beyond the fact
that Jehovah is absolutely wrong. leou or lao are
probably attempts in Greek transliteration at the
same Semitic name, which contained letters totally
unrepresentable in Greek ; Yahoo or Yahuwh per
chance, the name hidden in lacchus (Yach), still
further corrupted into Bacchus by the Greeks,
lacchus was the mystery-name of the creative power
in that great mystery tradition; Bacchus was the name
in the popular cult. But to continue with our summary.
Jesus, the Living One, has apparently taken his
disciples with Him through the inner spaces of the
unseen world, and brought them to the plane of this
True God, from which He gives the mystic instruc
tion on the creative dispensation of the universe, in
the Realm of Light.
He first shows them leou in his own nature, as a
simple emanation from the Ineffablo Treasures of the
Father, before he has in his turn <ent forth emana
tions by the command of the Father. A strange
combination of letters and signs is said to be the
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 535
" name " of this God " according to the treasures
which are outside this region " — that is to say, either
the planes below or sub-planes of that plane.
Next follows a diagram — a square surrounding a
circle, within which is another square containing The Type
three lines; this diagram is said to be the type Treasures.
of the treasures over which leou will rule, and
it is also the type of leou himself before he
emanated.
But out of leou are to come a host of emanations,
through the command of the Father, who are in their
turn to become fathers of treasures ; each of these
fathers is also to be called leou. This ordering is
effected by Jesus as the Logos ; but the True God is
the father of all of these fathers or fatherhoods, for
he is a direct emanation from the Father, and
through him and from him all subsequent emanation
will proceed. Further, from each of the subordinate
leou's, through the command of the Father, will
proceed other hosts to fill the treasures, and they
shall be called Orders (or hierarchies) of the Treasures
of Light. Myriads of myriads will arise out of them.
We are therefore in the Light-kingdom.
We are next given a diagram which is said
to be the type of the True God before he The Type of
Jr . the True
emanated, that is to say when the subsequent God leou.
emanations lay potential within him. The diagram is
like an egg, with a smaller egg or nucleus within it
containing three lines or strokes. The upper circum
ferences, or shells, of both the egg and the nucleus
are lacking, as though to represent the creative
Light-beam from the Father streaming into them.
536
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
It is very probable, therefore, that in these
The Mystic diagrams squares may represent treasures or the
substance-side, while circles may represent gods or
the energy-side — but these can interchange, for
the substance of one plane or phase becomes the
energy of the plane below. The three strokes seem
to represent the potential triad or trinity latent in
all manifestation, and this triad acting within the
tetrad of the squares produces the infinite ordering
into twelves or dodecads. We should also recollect
that in all probability we have only a very faulty
reproduction of these diagrams, for we have to
take into account the translating and copying and
re-copying by ignorant scribes.
The three lines are said to be the three Voices,
which leou will send forth when he is ordered "to
praise the Father," that is to say, to emanate, for this
is how the creative song of praise is sung.
Next we have a diagram of the first moment of
Cosmic this emanation ; it is curious to notice that the
1 ryo ogy* symbols used closely resemble a spermatozoon and
ovum. Within a square is a small circle with its
diameter produced, so that it very well represents
the head and tail of a spermatozoon; the ovum
consists of three concentric circles, the innermost of
which has a diameter and is of the same size as
the head of the spermatozoon, which has also a
similar diameter ; there are thus two of the lines or
strokes or Voices still latent, and only one is so
far manifest.
Following this comes a diagram the upper half of
which apparently repeats the preceding diagram, and
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 537
the lower half consists of six concentric circles
with a point in the centre. The latter is called The Seal
on the
the seal (xapaKrtjp) upon the face or forehead of Forehead
leou, and is said to be the type of the treasures.
This emanation from the True God is caused by
the streaming into the True God of a Light-power
from the ineffable treasures above, in response to
an invocation of Jesus as the Logos, calling upon
the Name of His Father. The Light-power is called
the " Little Idea," presumably to signify that though
it has power to energize all creation, it is but
little compared to the real "Greatnesses" or Ideas
in the Divine Mind.
What follows is beyond my power of summarizing.
We have diagrams of a series of twenty-eight leou's, 8^°^!
before the text again breaks suddenly off. What gticsofthe
was the full number in the original is now impos
sible to say ; Schmidt supposes thirty. The diagrams
appear to have been very carelessly copied, but
present certain general characteristics. The upper
part generally consists of six squares, one within
the other; within the smallest square is the word
leou, and the special mystery-name of the leou
or treasure for which the diagram stands. These
names are generally placed over a small oblong
figure (or two lines), which are said to stand for the
" root " of the spaces or regions in which the particular
leou is placed. Above and below, cutting through
the top and bottom sides of the six squares, are two
parallel lines, which are said to denote the paths
whereby one must travel if he would enter into the
space of the father of the treasure. These paths
538 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
where they cross the sides of the square are marked
by Greek letters, alphas, which are said to stand for
the curtains or veils which are drawn before the
father. Above each diagram of squares we find
again the three lines or strokes, which are now said
to be the three Gates or Doors of each treasure. Each
treasure has twelve orders, the authentic names of
the Heads of each of which are appended, together
with the authentic names of the three Guardians or
Watchers of the Gates.
The lower half of each diagram consists of the
seal upon the forehead of the leou; these seals are
mostly circles with varying contents, but it is
exceedingly difficult to trace any connection between
them.
Between the second and third leou diagram is
rhe Twelve, another figure differing entirely from the rest of the
the Order
:>f Jesus. series ; as to its meaning I have no notion.
It is followed by these words of Jesus : " From
these orders I will take Twelve and range them
for Myself, that they may serve Me." This
probably refers to the prototypes of the souls of
the disciples which Jesus chooses for Himself before
their incarnation, as we learn from the Pistis
Sophia.
With the twenty-eighth diagram the text breaks
off suddenly ; and the next subject we meet with,
according to Schmidt's ordering of the leaves, is a
hymn which Jesus sings to the First Mystery.
After printing this fragment in this place,
Schmidt came to the conclusion that these pages
must be separated, and treated as fragments of
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 539
another work, on the ground that they could not be
brought into organic unity with the rest.
We are now in the lower space or plane of the
Thirteen ^Eons, each of which has its father or creator,
its leou, with rulers, and subordinate powers, toSe First
called decans and liturgi, signifying servants, 8Unginythe
ministers, or workmen. There are thirteen praise- ^^en
givings, one for each ^Eon, but the text of the first
four is missing. The general tenour of each petition
is as follows :
"Give ear unto me, while I sing Thy praises, O
Thou First Mystery, who didst shine forth in his
mystery [i.e., the mystery of that particular ^Eon] ; it
was Thy Light which caused leou to order this ^Eon
and establish therein its rulers, ministers, and
workers. [Then follows the " imperishable name " of
the ^Eon.] Save all my Members (Limbs), which
since the foundation of the world have been scattered
abroad in all the rulers, ministers, and workmen of
this ^Eon, and gather them all together and receive
them into the Light ! "
The final petition is concluded by a threefold Amen.
The peculiarity of the praise-giving with regard
to the Thirteenth JEou consists in the fact that The
Thirteenth
it is treated apparently as a separate plane
or space. By command of the First Mystery
the leou of this space brought into existence the
space of the four and twenty invisible emana
tions, with all their rulers, gods, lords, arch
angels and angels, their ministers and workmen ;
further to this space of the Thirteenth ^Eon are
assigned the " three gods." Moreover, by command of
540 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the First Mystery the six Rulers under labraoth,
who have believed in the Light-kingdom, are set just
below this Thirteenth MOIL in a space of pure air, the
six unrepentant Rulers being apparently assigned to
the lower impure atmosphere.
With regard to the scattering of the Limbs, we
may remind the reader of Epiphanius' quotation from
The Gospel of Philip : " I have recognised myself and
gathered myself together from all sides. I have sown
no children to the Ruler [the lord of this world], but
have torn up his roots ; I have gathered together my
limbs that were scattered abroad, and I know thee
who thou art."
We are now introduced to a new subject. Jesus
The Sixty is taking His Order, the twelve disciples, through
the Treasures of the Middle Light-world, and
giving them the seals, numbers, and authentic
names whereby these Treasures can be entered
and passed through. There are sixty of these
Treasures, but our narrative begins only in the
the fifty-sixth, for all the intervening pages are lost.
From what we are here told I am inclined to think
that there were also sixty diagrams of the leou's, and
not thirty only as Schmidt supposes. Fundamentally
there were presumably twelve main treasures, but
each apparently was regarded from five different
standpoints, each view-point being called an
order or ordering. There was thus a twelve-fold
ordering, and a five-fold ordering as well, all
immanent in the God " who dwells in the Middle
of the universe," that is to say, in leou, the God
of the Middle Light-world. Of the five, two are
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 541
called the exterior, two the interior, and one the
middle order.
Each treasure is said to be surrounded by six
regions or spaces, represented by the squares of the
diagrams. By a use of the seals (a series of very
curious diagrams), numbers, and names, the Guardians,
Orders, and Veils are said to disperse and the inner
most space of the father of the treasure is reached,
and so the secret of his authentic name is revealed.
Moreover within each treasure is a Door or Gate, and
without three Gates ; each of the outer Gates has three
Guardians, but the inner gate has but one, presumably
the father of the treasure himself.
On the conclusion of this exposition, the disciples
ask how all these spaces and their fatherhoods The Little
have come into being. Jesus replies that it is
because of the " Little Idea," which the Father
has left behind and not withdrawn into Himself;
all else of the Father He has withdrawn into
Himself. " It was in this Little Idea that
I streamed forth, having My being in the Father;
I burst forth and freed Myself therefrom. I shone
forth and it emanated Me, the first emanation there
from, its perfect likeness and image. When it had
emanated Me I stood before it." This was the First
Voice.
Again it shone forth and emanated, sending forth
the Second Voice — all these spaces, which came forth
one after another.
The Third Voice streamed forth and emanated the
rulers of all these spaces.
It is He, Jesus, the First Voice, the first emana-
542 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
tion, who has gathered together His own Order — the
Twelve, and taken them through all the spaces, that
they may serve Him , He has given them the
powers whereby they may pass through all these
spaces within, to the innermost space of the ruler of
them all, the True God.
The disciples then remind Jesus that He had
The Name promised to give them the one master-name, whereby
of the
Great every space could be traversed without the weari-
Power.
some repetition ot each ot the separate names — the
Name that was the key to unlock every gate in
every treasure. Is this, they ask, the Great Name
of the Father ?
The Christ (the first mention of this title) replied :
" Nay, but the Name of the Great Power that is in
all the spaces."
He then gives them this authentic name —
apparently a sentence in cypher, interspersed with
the triple repetition of the seven vowels. It is to be
said in the Space of the True God, in the " space of
the interiors which belongs to the space of the
exteriors." The name must be invoked, turning to
the four corners of the treasure, and then followed by
the request that all the paths to the fatherhood be
left free to the disciple, "for I have invoked the
Great Name of the God of all the spaces." Then
will all the veils be withdrawn, and all the rulers
disperse; they will withdraw "into their own form."
" Lo, now," continued the Master, " I have told
you the [master-name] ; guard it, and do not repeat
it continually, so that all the spaces may not be
disquieted because of the glory therein."
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 543
Hereupon Jesus commands His disciples to follow
Him, and goes yet farther within, into the seventh Hymnlto the
treasure ; this cannot apparently be the seventh able^focT
treasure of the sixty, but must be some other Seventh
ordering. Here He commands them to surround
Him, and answer Him with a threefold Amen for
every praise-giving, as He sings a hymn of praise
to the Father because of the emanation of the
treasures.
The Father is addressed first by the Ineffable
Name, symbols of which are given; then as "God, My
Father," and then as the " Unapproachable One."
The form of each praise-giving begins with the
words : " I praise Thee, Thou Unapproachable God,
for that Thou didst shine forth in Thyself," and ends
with the question : " For what now is Thy will, but
that all this should be, O Unapproachable God ? "
The subject of the hymn is that God has with
drawn Himself into Himself, into His Truth, save
only one Little Idea, the space of which He has left
as the shining Light-world, shining within the
Father. It is a radiance of the Father within
Himself, according to His will. This Light is Jesus,
the one emanation of the Father through His will.
Jesus is the perfect likeness and whole image of God.
The second emanation brings into being the spaces
which surround the Father. The third emanation is
the bringing into being the powers and rulers of the
Light-spaces, which are called Treasures. Moreover
all these powers are energized by a Great Power
emanated by the Father, so that they are called True
Gods, that is, Gods in Truth (presumably as dis-
544
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The Great
Logoi
according
to the
Mystery.
tinguished from the Gods of the vulgar pantheons).
It is this Power that energizes not only in the various
fathers of the treasures, but also in the subordinate
powers.
Thus also are emanated the Guardians or Watchers
and the sixty fatherhoods, one for each treasure.
These sixty are called the " Orders of the Five Trees."
It is also this Power which has brought into existence
the seals and the great name. This same Power is
further called the [First ?] Mystery and the Light-
image surrounding the Father.
These Light-spaces are called the Spaces of the
" Great Logoi according to the Mystery," in whom is
the glory of the Father. This leads us to suppose
that the " Great Logos " of the title of the treatise
is the same as the First Mystery, the Great Power,
and therefore identical with Jesus. The Great
Logoi are also called leou's. The hymn then
continues :
" I praise Thee, O Unapproachable God, for that
Thou didst shine forth in Thyself ; Thou hast emanated
Thy One and Only Mystery, Thou who art an
unapproachable God even for these Logoi. Thou art
an unapproachable among them, in this Great Logos
according to the Mystery of leou, the father of all
leou's, which is Thyself; — yet what is else Thy one
and only will but that we should draw nigh Thee in
them, O God that none can approach, to whom never
theless we have drawn near in this Great Logos
according to the Mystery of leou ? "
I am inclined to think that " Logos " is here used
in two meanings. It generally means Reason or
BOOK OF THE GREAT LOGOS. 545
Word ; here it seems to mean also Sermon, Discourse,
or Teaching.
The hymn ends with praises in which the Father
is again said to have withdrawn, or inbreathed, Him- Ttie Univer
sal Idea,
self entirely into His Universal Likeness and Idea,
with the single exception of the Little Idea, leaving
it as a means whereby His boundless Riches, universal
Glory, and mighty Mysteries might be manifested.
The Great or Universal Idea and the Little Idea are
thus seen to correspond in the ideal spiritual world to
the ideas of the macrocosm and microcosm. And so
ends this remarkable hymn, with a final triple Amen.
The two remaining fragments are put by Schmidt
in an appendix. The first fragment is part of a
hymn of praise, each praise-giving of which begins
with the words :
" Give ear unto me, while I sing Thy praises, Thou
Mystery before all Uncontainables and Impassables, Jhe
who didst shine forth in Thy Mystery, in order that Myster7
the Mystery that is from the beginning should be
completed."
The contents of the hymn are as follows, the
imperishable names being added after each technical
term :
The Mystery shining forth became Water of the
Ocean. The Earth in the midst of the Ocean became
purified. The whole vast matter of the Ocean became
purified — that is to say, the Sea and all species
existing therein. Through its shining forth it sealed
the Sea and all that are therein, for the power that is
in them was in disorder (? chaos) against the existing
order (? cosmos).
MM
546 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The hymn here breaks off suddenly, and we have
The Way of a description of the passing of the soul through the
regions of the dsemonian powers, and of the
imperishable names of the "mystery of their
fear," whereby the soul can escape from their
clutches. These are the spaces of the orders of
the various great ministers of the Great Powerful
Ruler in the Way of the Midst; and the names of
these ministers, recoverable from this scrap, are the
same as the Rulers of the Way of the Midst as given
in the Extracts from the Books of the Saviour. This
Great Powerful Ruler is further described as " he who
is filled with wrath." He is the successor of the
Ruler of the Outer Darkness, of that space which
changes all forms. He is spread out on the Way of
the Midst, so that he may carry off the souls like a
robber.
The leaves on which these fragments are found
differ from the rest of the MS. in that they are
surrounded by single-lined borders.
THE UNTITLED APOCALYPSE. 547
SELECTIONS FROM THE UNTITLED
APOCALYPSE OF THE CODEX BRUCIANUS.
THE beginning is lost, and the leaves that are left
us plunge into the midst of a description of the
supernal beings and spaces as follows :
" He [the God beyond Being] established Him, that
they might strive towards the City in which is their Th.e First
Image. In this City it is that they move and
live; it is the House of the Father, and the
Vesture of the Son, and the Power of the Mother,
and the Image of the Fullness (Pleroma). He
is the First Father of the All ; He is the first
Being; He is the King of the Intangibles. It is
He in whom the All moves. It is He in whom
He gave it (the All) Form. This is the self -produced
and self -generated Space; this is the Depth of the
All. He is the Great One whose real being is deeper
than the Depth. He it is to whom the All did come.
The All was silent before Him and spake not to Him,
for unspeakable and incomprehensible is He. He is
the first Source ; He it is whose Voice hath gone forth
into all spaces. He is the first Tone, whereby the All
doth sense and comprehend. He it is whose Limbs
(Members) make a myriad of myriads of Powers, each
one of which comes from them.
"The second space came into being, which is
to be called Demiurge, and Father and LOP-OS The Second
fe ' Being.
and Source, and Mind, and Man, and Eternal,
and Limitless. This is the Pillar (or Sup
port) ; He is the Overseer. He, too, is Father
548
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The
Supernal
Cross.
The Twelve
Depths.
of the All ; He it is upon whose Head the
vEons form a wreath, shooting forth their rays.
The Outline of His Face is beyond all possibility
of knowing in the outer Worlds — those Worlds
which ever seek His Face, desiring to know
it, for His Word has gone forth into them,
and they long to see Him. The Light of his Eyes
penetrates the Spaces of the Outer Pleroma, and
the Word which comes forth from his Mouth pene
trates the Above and Below [of the Outer Worlds].
The Hair of His Head is the number of the Hidden
Worlds, and the Outline of his Face is the type of the
^Eons. The Hairs of his Face are the number of the
Outer Worlds, and the out-spreading of his Hands
is the manifestation of the Cross ; the out-spreading
of the Cross is the ninefold, on the Right and the
Left.
" The source of the Cross is the Man whom no man
can comprehend. He is the Father ; He is the Source
from which the Silence wells; He it is who is
desired in every Space. He is the Father from
whom came forth the Monad like a light-spark, in
comparison with which (Monad) all Worlds are as
[? darkness] ; for it is the Monad which has moved
all things in their out-shining. And they have
received Gnosis, and Life, and Hope, and Peace, and
Love, and Resurrection, and Faith, and Rebirth, and
the Seal. These are the ninefold which have come
from the Father of those who are without begin
ning, from Him who is Father and Mother to
Himself alone, whose Pleroma surrounds [that is
transcends] the Twelve Depths.
THE UNTITLED APOCALYPSE. 549
" 1. The first Depth is the All-source from which
all Sources have come.
" 2. The second Depth is the All-wise One from
which all Wise ones have come.
"3. The third Depth is the All-mystery from
which all Mysteries have come.
" 4. The fourth Depth is the All-gnosis from
which all Gnosis hath come.
" 5. The fifth Depth is the All-holy from which
all Holiness hath come.
" 6. The sixth Depth is the Silence from which
all Silence hath come.
" 7. The seventh Depth is the Gate which hath
no substance, from which all Substances have come.
" 8. The eighth Depth is the Forefather from
whom all Forefathers have come.
"9. The ninth Depth is the All-father-Self-
father, in which all Fathers exist, — He being the only
father they have.
"10. The tenth Depth is the All-power from
which all Powers have come.
"11. The eleventh Depth is that in which is the
First Invisible, from which all Invisibles have come.
" 12. The twelfth Depth is the Truth from which
all Truth hath come.
" This [the second space, as a Monad, which
surrounds the Depths], is the Truth which embraces The primai
them all; this is the Image of the Father; this Source'
is the Truth of the All ; this is the Mother of
all [their] ^Eons ; this it is which surrounds all
Depths. This is the Monad which is incom
prehensible or unknowable ; this it is which has
550
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The
Unman i-
fested.
The Mani
fested, the
Pleroma.
no Seal (or Mark), in which are all Seals ; which
is blessed for ever and ever. This is the eternal
Father ; this the ineffable, unthinkable, incom
prehensible, untranscendible Father ; this it is in
which the All became joyous ; it rejoiced and was
joyful, and brought forth in its joy myriads of
myriads of ^Eona^ they were called the ' Births of
Joy/ because it (the All) had joyed with the Father.
These are the Worlds from which the Cross up-
sprang ; out of these incorporeal Members did the
Man arise.
" This is the Father and the Source of All, whose
Members are gathered together and completed. All
Names have come from the Father— whether such
Names as Ineffable, or Unknowable, or Incompre
hensible, or Invisible, or Single, or Solitary, or
Power, or All -power, or whether all those Names
which are named in silence alone — all of them come
from the Father, whom all the outer Worlds behold
as the stars of the firmament in the night. As
men desire to see the sun, so do the outer Worlds
desire to see the Father, because of his invisibility
which is round about Him. For ever to the ^Eons
doth He give Life, and through His Word hath
the Indivisible [? Atom] learnt to know the Monad ;
and by His Word hath the holy Pleroma come into
being.
" This is the Father, the second Demiurge; through
the Breath of His Mouth Forethought made the
that -which -is -not. The that -which -is -not arose
through the will of Him, for He it is who
commands the All to come into being. In this
THE UNTITLED APOCALYPSE. 551
wise hath He made the holy Pleroma: four Gates,
and in it (the Pleroma) are four Monads, a Monad
for each Gate, and six Supporters for each Gate,
making four and twenty Supporters, and four
and twenty myriads of Powers for each Gate ;
and nine Ennads for every Gate, and ten Decads
for every Gate, and twelve Dodecads for every
Gate, and five Pentads of Powers for every Gate, and
an Overseer who hath three faces — an ingenerable,
a true, and an ineffable face, for every Gate.
" One of his faces looks without the Gate to the
outer yEons, and the other looks on Setheus, and the Three-faced
and Two-
third looks upwards — to the Sonship in each Monad faced Space.
[i.e., the one Sonship contained in the four Monads],
where [i.e., above] is Aphredon with his twelve
Righteous Ones. There [above] is the Forefather;
in that space is Adam [the Man] who belongs to
the Light, and his three hundred and sixty-five
^Eoiis, and there is the Perfect Mind, [all three]
surrounding a Basket [? network, representing a
conical swirl of forces or atoms] that knows no
death.
" The ineffable face of the Overseer looks
within to the Holy of Holies — that is, to the Bound
less one, he being the head of the Holy Place
(Shrine). He has two faces; one opens to the space
of the Depth and the other opens to the space of the
Overseer who is called the ' Child/ And there is
there [within] a Depth which is called the ' Light ' or
the ' Shining One,' in which is hidden an Alone-born
(yuoyoyew/?), who manifests three Powers and is mighty
in all Powers.
552 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
" He [the Alone-born] is the Indivisible ; He it is
who is never divided ; it is for Him that the All has
opened [? divided] itself, for to Him belong all the
Powers."
The above passages, taken in order from the first
pages, according to Schmidt's arrangement of the
leaves, will give the reader some idea of the nature of
the unabridged contents of this apocalyptic treatise.
For the rest we must content ourselves with a trans
lation of some of the more intelligible or striking
The original seer seems to have endeavoured to
The View describe his vision of the inner spaces from different
of the Com- . .. A
mentator. points oi view, or rather to have seen the same
mystery from various points of view, or aspects,
in a series of visions. Interspersed we find the
comments of another writer. The first indubitably
clear instance of this is a passage of which
unfortunately sad havoc has been made by the
Coptic translator. The commentator tells us
that the subject is very difficult, nay that it is
utterly impossible to describe those things with the
" tongue of flesh " ; nevertheless he does not think
that any one could succeed any better than has the
original seer, or those who spoke or wrote through
him. These spaces and beings are more excellent
than the intellectual powers in man, and therefore it
is impossible for any one to understand them, unless
he have the good fortune to meet with a " kinsman "
of those higher ones — that is to say, a " relative of the
mystery " — one who has learned the mystery, that is
to say, has experienced these states of consciousness ;
THE UNTITLED APOCALYPSE. 553
and even then the Mystery of the Father cannot
be expressed in its reality, as has been stated
by even such advanced seers as Marsanes and and
•MT. c f Phosilampe
Nicotheus, former seers 01 the Gnosis; all the
Perfect have seen Him, and have sung His
praises each as best he could, but they have
all failed to reveal Him. And a little later, in
commenting on the " Metropolis of the Alone-
begotten," the same writer quotes from another
Master of the Gnosis, who, when he had understood,
said : " Through Him is That-which-really-is and
That- which -really-is-not, through which the Hidden-
which-really-is and the Manifest-which-really-is-not
exists." The Gnostic from whom this sentence is
quoted is called Phosilampes ; but the ideas are so
identical with those of Basilides, that I cannot but
think Phosilampes is merely some cryptonym of the
school for this teacher.
The Logos and His creative powers and self-
emanation is the subject of much of our treatise. To
take one instance out of many :
" This is Setheus, who dwells in the Shrine as a
King and God. He is the Logos-Creator ; it is He The Creative
who commandeth the All to work. He is the
Creative Mind according to the command of God,
the Father; whom the creature adores as God, and
as Lord, and as Saviour, and is subject to Him; at
whom all things stand in wonder because of His
grace and beauty ; for whose head the inner universe
forms a crown, and the outer is set under His feet,
while the middle universe surroundeth Him, praising
Him and saying :
554 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
" ' Holy, holy, holy is He, the [here follow the
seven ^ vowels each three times repeated] ; that is to
say : Thou art the Living One among the living ;
Thou art the Holy One among the holy; Thou art
Being among beings; Thou art Father among the
fathers ; Thou art God among the gods ; Thou art Lord
among the lords ; Thou art Space among the spaces/
" Thus too do they praise Him : ' Thou art the
House and Thou art the Dweller in the House.' And
yet again do they praise and address the Son hidden
in Him : ' Thou art, Thou art the Alone-begotten,
Light, Life, and Grace.' "
We are told of the descent of the Light-spark or
Light-stream from on high, and how it finally reaches
matter.
" Then the Veils were opened and Light pene-
Tbe Descent trated to Matter below, and to those which possessed
Light-spark, no form and no likeness; and thus have they
gained for themselves the likeness of the Light.
Some indeed rejoiced that the Light had come to
them, and that they had become rich; others wept,
because they had become poor, and what was theirs
had been taken away from them. Thus came Grace
in that which had come forth. And captivity was
taken captive and praised the ^Eons who had
received the Spark in themselves. And Guardians
were sent them . . . ; they gave help to those
who had believed in the Light-spark."
" And this [the Light-spark] is the Indivisible,
The which led the struggle for the universe ; and all
Atom. things were bestowed upon him, through Him who
is exalted above all things; and the immeasurable
THE UNTITLED APOCALYPSE. 555
Depth was bestowed upon him, together with the
countless fatherhoods that' are therein."
In the field of its being is the God-bearing or
God-generating Land. And the powers of him who
is crowned with this Light- wreath, sing praises to the
King, the Alone-begotten, the Logos, saying :
" Through Thee have we won fame, and through
Thee have we seen the Father of all, and the Mother Hymn to
of all things hidden in all spaces, the Conceiver
of all aeons. She is the Conceiver of all gods and
all lords; she is the Gnosis of all invisibles. Thy
Image is the mother of all Uncontainables and the
power of all Impassables. . . . Through Thy
Image we saw Thee, fled to Thee, stood in Thee,
and received the unfading wreath, which has been
known through Thee. Praise to Thee, for ever and
ever, O Thou Alone- begotten One. Amen ! "
Of such a one we learn : " He became a body of
light and penetrated into the aeons of the Indivisible, The Christ.
until he reached the Alone-begotten, who is in the
Monad [the Father] who dwells in silence alone.
And they [his powers] received the Grace of the
Alone-begotten, that is to say His goodness, and he
received the eternal wreath. He [the Logos] is the
Father of all the Light-sparks; His is the chief
of all immortal bodies ; this is He for whose
sake resurrection is granted to these [immortal]
bodies."
Higher and higher grades of being are described,
and we hear of the Perfected One " who has received
the Grace of the Unknowable, and thereby such a
Son-ship as the Pleroma could not endure, because
556 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
of the superfluity of its light and the brilliancy
which was in Him."
Still higher soars the intuition of the Gnostic
The seer, and we read further of the Losros-Demiurcros,
Glorified
of the "with whom is a host of powers having wreaths
(or crowns) on their heads. Their crowns send
forth rays ; the brilliancy of their bodies is as
the life of the space into which they are come ;
the word (logos) that comes out of their mouth
is eternal life, and the light that comes forth
from their eyes is rest for them; the movement of
their hands is their flight to the space out of which
they are come, and their gazing on their own faces
is knowledge of themselves ; the going to themselves
is a repeated return, and the stretching out of their
hands establishes them ; the hearing of their ears is
the perception in their heart, and the union of their
limbs is the in-gathering of the dispersion of Israel ;
their holding to one another is their fortification
in the Logos. . . .
" And the whole at-onement was accomplished
The of the Creator-Logos with those who had come forth
from the re-ordering which had been brought to
pass. And they became all One, as it is written :
' They became all One in the One and Only One.'
" Then the Logos-Creator became Divine Power,
and Lord, and Saviour, and Christ [or Righteous —
frequently occurring throughout the MS. for
, and Good, and Father, and Mother. He it
is whose labour has succeeded ; He was honoured and
became the Father of them who believed. He became
the Lord and the Mighty One."
THE UNTITLED APOCALYPSE. 557
In this consummation, all things are ordered anew
for the Victor. " To Him is given the first fruits of Soteriology.
the sacrifice of the Sonship, whereby He is given
power to become thrice-powerful. And He
received the vow of the Sonship, because the
universe has been sold [? into slavery]; and He
received the struggle [task] which was entrusted to
Him. He raised up the whole purity of matter and
made it into a World, an ^Eon, and a City, which is
called ' Immortality ' and ' Jerusalem.' And it is also
called the ' New Earth,' and * Self-sufficing,' and
' Perfect Freedom.' That Land is a god-bearing and
a quickening land."
The Wreath and Robe of the glorified is sung of.
" This is the Wreath of which it is written : ' It was
given to Solomon on the day of the joy of his heart.'
"The first Monad has sent Him an ineffable
Vesture, which is all Light, and all Life, and all The .
Ineffable
Resurrection, and all Love, and all Hope, and all Vesture.
Faith, all Wisdom, and all Gnosis, and all Truth,
and all Peace. . . . And in it is the universe,
and the universe has found itself in it, and
known itself therein. And it gave them all
light in its ineffable Light, myriads of myriads of
powers were given it, in order that it should raise up
the universe once for all.
" It [? the Monad] gathered its vestures to itself,
and made them after the fashion of a veil, which
surrounds it on all sides, and poured itself over them,
and raised up all, and separated them all according to
orders and laws and forethought.
" And that-which-is separated itself from that-
558 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
which-is-not, arid that-which-is-not is the evil
The which has manifested itself in matter. And the
of the Vesture-power separated that-which-is from that-
Nature. which-is-not, and called that-which-is ' eternal '
(seonian), and that-which-is-not ' matter ' ; and it
divided in the midst that-which-is from that-which-
is-not, and laid between them veils and purifying
powers in order that they might cleanse and purge
them."
The future work of the Glorified is further
The World- described : " And myriads of myriads of glories and
angels and archangels and ministers were given Him
to serve Him — those of matter. And authority over
all things was given Him, and He created for
. Himself a mighty ^Eon, and in it laid a vast
Pleroma, and in it a mighty Sanctuary, and all
the powers He had received He placed in them.
And He rejoiced in them, as He brought forth His
creatures once again, according to the commandment
of the Father who is hidden in silence, who sent
Him these treasures. And the crown of Father
hood was given Him, for He (the Father) has
established Him as father of those who arose after
Him [namely, His disciples, the disciples of the
Master].
"And He cried out and said: ' My children, with
whom I travail until the Christ is formed in you ' ;
and again He cries : ' Yea, I would set beside a holy
virgin an only husband Christ/
" So when He had seen the Grace with which the
hidden Father had endowed Him, He himself desired
to lead back the universe to the hidden Father, for
THE UNTITLED APOCALYPSE. 559
His [the Father's] will is this, that the universe
should return to Him.
"And they [those who repented] fled before the
matter of the [lower] aeon, abandoning it, and soared Thc Promis6-
upward to the ^Eon of Him who is father to Himself
alone, and took the vow on themselves which was
vowed for them by Him who says : ' He who hath
forsaken father and mother, brother and sister, wife
and child, and possessions, and will take up his cross
and follow Me, he will receive the promises which I
have vowed to him ; and I will give such the mystery
of the hidden Father, for they have loved what is
His and have fled from him who has pursued them
with force.'
" So he gave them Glory, Joy, Jubilation, Gladness,
Peace, Hope, Faith, Love, and Truth imperishable.
This is the ninefold which is given unto them who
have fled from matter. And they have become
blessed and perfect, and have recognized the True God,
and known the mystery which is given to the Man,
for which cause He hath revealed Himself until they
saw Him, for He [the True God] is in truth invisible ;
for their sakes hath He revealed in words His Logos,
so that they might know Him and become gods and
perfect."
Still speaking of the First-born and His glories,
the cosmic powers of His spiritual vesture are again
described :
" They gave Him a Vesture to consummate every
thing in Him. And in it are all bodies : the body of ^P owers
fire, the body of water, the body of ether, the vesture.
body of earth, the body of air, the body of
560 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the angels, the- body of the archangels, the body
of the powers, the body of the mighty ones, the
body of the gods, and the body of the lords; in
one word, in it are all bodies, so that none may
prevent Him from going upwards and downwards
to the under-world.
" He is the First-born to whom the Inner and
the Outer have promised everything He may desire.
He it is who hath separated all matter; and as He
hath poured Himself over it, 'like a hen which
spreadeth her wings over her chickens,' so hath the
First-born prepared matter and raised up myriads
and myriads of species and kinds. And when the
matter had grown warm, it set free the multitude of
powers which are His; and they sprang up like
herbs, and were separated according to kinds and
species. And He gave them the law — to love one
another, and to honour God, and praise Him, and
seek for Him, who He is, and what He is, and to
wonder at the place whence they have come out, for
it is narrow and difficult, and not to return thither
again, but to follow Him who hath given them
the law.
" And He raised them out of the darkness of
The matter, which is their mother, and told them what
of Men. Light is, for they had not yet known of the Light,
whether it existed or not. Then He gave them
the commandment never to injure one another,
and went from them to the Mother of the
universe, beside the Father, that they might [in
turn] give laws to those who have come out of
matter."
THE UNTITLED APOCALYPSE. 561
And the powers of the Mother sing a hymn
to the Son, praising the One and Only One, and
saying :
"Thou alone art the Boundless; Thou alone the
Depth ; Thou alone the Unknowable ; Thou art He The Song of
for whom all seek, and yet [unaided] find Thee the Mother
not, for no one can know Thee against Thy will, and
no one can praise Thee against Thy will. Thy will
alone is it which became space for Thee, for no one
can contain Thee, for Thou art the space of all.
I pray Thee give orderings to those of the world, and
regulations to my offspring according to Thy will.
And grieve not my offspring, for no one is ever
grieved by Thee; yet no one hath ever known Thy
counsel. Thou art He of whom they all, both inner
and outer, stand in need, for Thou alone art uncon-
tainable, and Thou alone art beyond all vision,
and Thou alone art beyond all substance; Thou who
alone hast given seals [distinguishing marks or
characteristics] to all creatures, and manifested them
in Thyself.
" Thou too art Creator of those which have not
yet manifested themselves. Thou alone knowest S16,?"
these ; we know them not. Thou alone indicatest
them to us, that we [the powers] may pray
Thee for her [the Mother Sophia's] sake to
manifest them to us, for we can know them through
Thee alone. Thou alone hast exalted Thyself
to the host of hidden worlds, that they might know
Thee; it is Thou who hast given them to know
Thee, that Thou hast brought them to birth in
Thy incorporeal body, and Thou hast taught them
NN
562 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
that Thou hast begotten the Man in Thy self-born
Mind, and in Thy Reflection and Conception.
" He is the Man begotten of Mind, to whom
The Man. Reflection gave form. Thou hast given all things
to the Man. He weareth them like these garments,
and putteth them on like these vestures, and
wrappeth Himself with the creation as with a
mantle. This is the Man whom the universe prays
to learn to know. Thou alone hast commanded the
Man that he should manifest himself, that Thou
shouldst be known through him, that Thou hast
begotten him. Thou hast manifested Thyself accord
ing to Thy will. Thou art He to whom I pray,
Thou Father of all fatherhood, God of all gods,
Lord of lords — the ' I ' who implores Him that
He may order my forms and offspring, that I may
prepare joy for them in Thy name and in Thy
power."
[The hymnody becomes confused as the mystic
identifies himself with the Sophia.]
" Thou One and Only King, Thou who changest
not, give me a power, and I will cause my offspring
to know Thee, that Thou art their Saviour."
The infinite Light-spark descends on the Sophia ;
the world-ordering is consummated in the world-
drama ; the purification of the inner nature achieved
in the individual soul.
" And the Lord of Splendour descended and
The Lord of separated the matter and divided it into two parts
Splendour.
and into two regions ; and He gave boundaries to
each region, regions that come from one father and
one mother. And they who had fled to Him adored
THE UNTITLED APOCALYPSE. 563
Him ; He gave them the place on His right, and
bestowed on them eternal life and deathlessness.
And He called the right the ' Place of Life/ and
the left the ' Place of Death ' ; the right the ' Place
of Light ' and the left the ' Place of Darkness' ; the
right the ' Place of Rest ' and the left the ' Place of
Suffering.' And He drew boundaries and veils
between them, so that they should not perceive each
other, and placed watchers at the veils. And He
gave to them who worshipped Him many honours,
and exalted them above those who resisted and
opposed Him. And He extended the space on the
right into countless spaces, and made them into
many orders, many aeons, many worlds, many
heavens, many firmaments, many regions, many
places, many spaces ; and He established laws for
them and gave them regulations. ' Be steadfast in
My word and I will give you eternal life, and send
you powers ; and I will strengthen you in spirits His Promise
of power, and give you authority according to your Believe.
will. And no one shall hinder you in what ye
desire; and ye will beget for yourselves aeons,
worlds, and heavens, in order that the mind-born
spirits may come and dwell therein. And ye will
be gods, and will know that ye come from God,
and will see Him that He is God in you, and He
will dwell in your aeon.'
" These words said the Lord of the universe to
them, and disappeared from them, and hid Himself
from them.
" And the births of matter rejoiced that they had
been remembered, and were glad that they had come
564 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
out of the narrow and difficult place, and prayed to
the hidden Mystery :
" ' Give us authority that we may create for
The Prayer ourselves aeons and worlds, according to Thy word,
Earth-born, upon which Thou didst agree with Thy servant;
for Thou alone art the changeless one, Thou alone
the boundless, the uncontainable, self -thought, self-
bdrn, self -father; Thou alone art the unshakeable
and unknowable ; Thou alone art silence, and love,
and source of all ; Thou alone art virgin of matter,
spotless; whose race no man can tell, whose mani
festation no man can comprehend.
" ' Hear me, in sooth, Father imperishable, Father
immortal, God of the hidden worlds, Thou only Light
and Life ; Thou the only invisible, ineffable, unstain-
able, invincible ; Thou alone prior to all existence !
Hear our prayer, with which we pray Him who is hid
in all places ; Hear us and send us spirits incorporal,
that they may dwell with us and teach us of those
things that Thou hast promised us ; that they abide
in us and we may be bodies for them. For Thy will
is this, that this may be ; may it be ! Give law to our
work and establish it, according to Thy will and
according to the statute of the hidden aeons, and
c?
regulate us of Thyself, for we are Thine ! ' '
In answer to this prayer it is described how that
The Powers the mysteries (sci.t of baptism and the rest) were
nation are given to those who repented ; these mysteries being in
Given Them. , ,. . ft . . , , .,
grades or purification, whereby the man rises to
higher grades of consciousness, by the purity of his
inner vehicles, which correspond with certain states
or regions.
THE UNTITLED APOCALYPSE. 565
" And He hearkened to them and sent out
separating powers, which know the statute of the
hidden aeons. He sent them out according to the
command of the hidden ones, and established
orderings, according to the ordering of the height and
according to the hidden statute. They began from
below upwards, so that the building might be duly
erected in all its courses.
" He created the air- world as a resting-place for
those who had come forth [from matter], so that they The Ladder
might abide there until the establishing of those Purification,
beneath them ; thereafter the true dwelling-place [?] ;
within this the place of repentance ; within this
the setherial reflections [? of the mansions of the
Inheritance]; within these the self -born reflections.
At that place they baptize themselves in the Name
of the Self -born, who is God over them ; and powers
are established there beside the spring of the Water
of Life. . . .
" Within these is the Pistis Sophia and the pre
existing and setherial Jesus with his twelve aeons."
The names of the powers in the last two spaces
are given, but unfortunately a lacuna follows in the
MS., and the following leaves are damaged in
numerous places. Still higher and higher spaces are
described as the purified souls mount the Great Ladder.
The Heavenly Man, and the Lord of the Pleroma,
is sung of : " The Father has sealed Him as His Son The Son
in their interior, in order that they should learn to
know Him in their interior. And the Name moved
them in their interior, so that they saw the Invisible
Unknowable. And they praised the One and Only
566 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
One, and Conception, and the Mind-born Logos,
praising the three, who are one, for through Him
they became supersubstantial. And the Father took
their whole likeness and made it into a City or
into a Man ; He limned the universe in His like
ness — that is to say, all these powers. Each one
of them knew Him in this City ; all began to sing
myriads of songs of praise of the Man or the City of
the Father of the universe. And the Father has
taken his glory and made it into a Vesture without
for the Man. . . . He created his body in the
type of the holy Pleroma."
Hereupon follows the whole configuration of the
Limbs of the Heavenly Man. The rest of the MS. is
taken up with a Hymn to the Light quoted from
some other Gnostic hymn-maker, introduced by the
words " he says," ajid runs as follows :
" I praise Thee, O Father of all fathers of the
Lignt; ! praise Thee, O boundless Light more
excellent than all the boundless ones ; I praise
Thee, O uncontainable Light surpassing all uncon-
tainables ; I praise Thee, O ineffable Light, before
all ineffables."
And so on through an infinity of praise-givings,
frequently of great beauty, until the MS. breaks off
suddenly in the middle of a sentence.
NOTES ON THE A. AND B. CODICES. 567
NOTES ON THE CONTENTS OF THE BRUCE
AND ASKEW CODICES.
THE attentive reader will have already perceived that
the contents of the Pistis Sophia treatise, of the
Extracts from The Books of the Saviour, and of the Treatises
fragments given under the title The Book of the Great
Logos according to the Mystery, are closely related
together; they indubitably belong to the same
school. The result of the researches of Schmidt
into this very interesting question may be most
clearly seen in his reply to Preuschen's criticism
on his work, a copy of which was kindly sent me
by Schmidt himself. (See Zeitschrift fur wissen-
schaftliche Theologie, Pt. iv., 1894.) Schmidt here
sums up his position, bringing together the results
of his researches.
If I might myself venture a general opinion on so
difficult and abstruse a subject, I would say that all
the three compilations we are considering, belong
not only to the same school, but also to one and the
same effort at syntheticizing and reformulation. It is
evident that each of them contains older materials,
and it is almost certain that the writer of the Pistis
Sophia was acquainted with the material of the
Extracts of the leou and Baptism expositions. The
far more difficult question is the relationship of the
Extracts to The Book of the Great Logos, and the
most difficult question of all is the school and authors
to which to assign them.
568 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
So far there is nothing absolutely proved as to
Date. date, except that the compilers of these documents
had access to the same Sayings-material as the
compilers of the Canonical Gospels; the terminus
a quo may, therefore, be placed somewhere
about the end of the first quarter of the second
century. But the curious phrase used in introducing
a quotation from the Pauline Letters (" Thou didst say
unto us aforetime by the mouth of Paul our brother ")
shows such complete indifference to the Canonical
Acts account, that it argues an early date. Because of
the complex nature of the contents, however, they
have been ascribed by some to the third century ; but
this does not seem to me to be sufficient reason for so
late a date, when we consider the complex nature
of the new-found pre-Irenseic Gnostic work, and
the exceedingly abstruse character of the contents
of the superior untitled MS. of the Codex Brucianus,
the contents of which Schmidt places well in th«
second century.
Some of the materials are undoubtedly very old
Authorship, indeed, but it is the compilation-problem that at
present engages us. I think that all three were
compiled by the same group, or even by the
same writer (though the latter will seem a very
rash hypothesis to some). It is evident that the
treatises pertain to the most intimate centre of
Gnosticism, familiar with the inmost traditions, the
most secret documents, and the practical inner experi
ences of the school. It matters not whether you call
this stream of the Gnosis, " Ophite," " Barbelo-
Gnostic," " Gnostic, or " Valentinian " ; such names
NOTES ON THE A. AND B. CODICES. 569
could have meant little for the compiler or compilers
of these documents.
Now it is evident that the Extracts and part of
The Book of the Great Logos are both based on the
same original. It is true that the text of the
Baptism extract of the Askew Codex differs slightly
from the text of the same rite in the Bruce Codex,
but they are probably translated by different hands,
and both translators used great freedom in their
version, and were often puzzled how to put the Greek
into Coptic, as is evident in many passages.
A certain reformulation of the Gnosis is, then,
referred to as The Books of the Saviour or The The Title*.
Book of the Great Logos ; perhaps the original
Greek document or documents had no title, and
it was the copiers, or the Coptic translators and
scribes, who added these titles. The Pistis Sophia
treatise, however, refers to a work called The Two
Books of leou, and further adds that they were
given by the Saviour to Enoch and preserved from
the Flood.
Now it seems to me that if these references in
the Pistis are not interpolations, The Two Books of ^t
leou cannot be identical with the common
document in the Extracts and The Book of the
Great Logos, but that this document was an
overworking and reformulation of these two
Books. The Books of leou belonged presumably
to some ancient tradition, probably Egyptian, con
taining a host of symbols and seals, pass-words
and mystery-names, and much else which were
referred to what Manetho calls "the Egypt before
570
FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
The
Probable
Author.
The
Obscurity
of the
Subject.
the Flood" (the Egypt of the "First Hermes" or
Agathodaemon), the traditions of which were equated
with the Semitic traditions by Jewish and Christian
Gnostic circles. I have dealt with this subject at
length in my work on the Trismegistic literature.
I believe, then, that the common document in
the Extracts and The Book of the Great Logos was
not the actual Books of leou referred to in the
Pistis Sophia, but that it contained the substance
of the leou Books, worked up by a Gnostic
writer into a new form. I further suggest that
this writer was the same as the author of the
Pistis Sophia treatise, who reformulated the Books of
leou in the light of the Gnosis of the Living Master.
These things, however, do not seem to have been done
in order; they were more probably the various
attempts at some consistent synthesis of the old
wisdom, attempts which in all probability did not
satisfy the writer. They were presumably the results
of a long life of labour, and may have been several
times revised or recast. Who can say in our present
ignorance of all historical data?
And if it be asked : Who could have made such
an attempt? I can find no answer, on reviewing
the whole list of known Gnostic writers, than that
Valentinus alone could in any way have attempted
it. But that this can ever be proved beyond
cavil I have no hope, for we know practically
nothing of him and his writings ; we only
know of his great reputation, and of his attempted
reformulation of the Gnosis. Indeed so-called
Valentinianism helps us not at all in this speculation ;
NOTES ON THE A. AND B. CODICES. 571
on the contrary, if we are to believe in any way
the indications of the Church Fathers, " they of
Valentinus" seem to have formulated things some
what differently, and their ideas form only a small
worked-in part of the great syntheses with which
we have been dealing. But the information of the
Church Fathers is very defective, and they seem for
the most part to have dealt with the semi-popular
phase of Gnosticism. Such abstruse subjects and
such inner teachings as our Codices contain, could not
possibly have been circulated publicly; they were
meant for " disciples." It is true that the Pistis is in
parts in a far more popular form, but if it had been
widely circulated ; it is strange that no mention of so
marvellous an exposition should remain.
I, however, put forward this speculation with all
hesitation ; it means a totally different reading of
Valentinianism, a reading from within and not from
without. Our ideas on Gnosticism have, however,
been so often of late revised by new discoveries, that
it may still be hoped that some new find may yet
throw a clear light on this (at present) entirely
obscure problem.
In the Introduction to my translation of the Pistis
Sophia, I find that I have stated my conclusions
somewhat more crudely than I should now do.
I will, therefore, in repeating what I there said
as to the probable story of the adventures of the
contents of the Askew Codex, slightly modify some
expressions.
The original Greek treatise which is now
called the Pistis Sophia may, then, probably
572 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
have been compiled by Valentinus in the latter
The half of the second century, perhaps at Alex-
Pistis andria. By " compiled " I mean that this Apocalypse
Treatise. or Gospel, or whatever its title may have been,
was not invented from first to last by Valen
tinus ; the framework of the narrative, the selection
of texts and ideas from other scriptures, Hebrew,
Christian, Egyptian, Chaldsean, Greek, etc., and the
adaptation of the nomenclature, were his share of the
task.
Of this original doubtless several copies were
The Coptic made, and mistakes may have crept in. One of these
Translation. ^ r
copies was presumably carried up the Nile and
translated into the vernacular, Greek being but
little understood so far up the river. The translator
was evidently not a very accurate person ; moreover
his knowledge of the subject was so imperfect
that he had to leave many of the technical
terms in the original, and doubtless made guesses
at others. It is also probable that some things
were added and others subtracted on the score
of orthodoxy. The wearisome length of the Psalms,
for instance, which Pistis Sophia recites in her
repentances, followed by the shorter Salomonic Odes,
leads one to suppose that the compiler originally
quoted only a few striking verses from each psalm,
and that the later and more orthodox translator,
with that love of wearisome repetition so charac
teristic of monkish piety, whether of the East or
the West, added the other less apposite verses,
with which he was very familiar, while he was
compelled to leave the Salomonic Odes as they
NOTES ON THE A. AND B. CODICES. 573
stood, owing to his lack of acquaintance with the
originals.
Moreover, the translator must have translated or
possessed a translation of other similar documents, Tf
which he or a later scribe styles The Books of the Saviour.
Saviour, and from them he extracted what he
considered to be passages apposite to the subject in
hand, and appended them to the Pistis translation.
These Books also, in my opinion, came from the
literary workshop of Valentinus.
The whole MS. of the Coptic translator seems to
have been copied by some ignorant copyist, who The Copyist.
made many mistakes of orthography. It was
copied by one man as a task, and hurriedly
executed ; and I would suggest that two copies
were then made and occasionally a page of one
copy substituted for a page of the other ; and, as the
pages were not quite exact to a word or phrase, we
may thus account for some puzzling repetitions and
some equally puzzling lacunae. This copy was con-
jecturally made towards the end of the fourth century.
What was the history of the MS. after this
date is impossible even to conjecture. Its history
must, however, have been exciting enough for it to
have escaped the hands of fanatics — both Christian
and Mohammedan. During this period some of the
pages were lost.
The contents of the inferior MS. of the Bruce
Codex presumably had somewhat similar adventures,
may even have come from the same distributing
Coptic centre.
It would be entirely out of place in these short
574 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
sketches to enter on a critical investigation into
the nature of the aeonology, cosmology, soteriology,
christology, and eschatology of these documents, and
attempt to trace their modifications. The evolution
of the universe is according to a certain order, but its
involution seems to change that order; the soteriology
modifies the seonology and cosmology. It is, in my
opinion, because of this, rather than for any other
reason, that the scheme underlying the Extracts and
The Book of the Great Logos is said to be an " older
form " than that underlying the Pistis treatise.
The scheme underlying the Pistis Sophia has
Scheme pre- keen industriously analysed by Kostlin and revised
supposed anci corrected by Schmidt, who has also endeavoured
in these
Treatises. to trace the modification of the general scheme
underlying the Extracts (hitherto erroneously called
the Fourth Book of Pistis Sophia) and The Book
of the Great Logos, and of the scheme pre
supposed in the Pistis Sophia, — modifications
brought about by the revelation of the new
glories of the three Spaces of the Inheritance in
the last treatise.
As the general outlines of the scheme underlying
the Pistis Sophia may be of service to the reader, we
will give it here, but it should be understood that
it represents only one configuration of the cosmic
mystery, at a certain moment of time, or in a certain
phase of consciousness.
The Ineffable.
The Limbs of the Ineffable.
I. The Highest Light- world, or The Kingdom of Light,
i. The First Space of the Ineffable.
NOTES ON THE A. AND B. CODICES. 575
ii. The Second Space of the Ineffable, or the
First Space of the First Mystery.
ii. The Second Space of the First Mystery.
II. The Higher (or Middle) Light-world,
i. The Treasure of Light,
ii. The Place of the Right,
iii. The Place of the Midst.
III. The Lower Light- or ^Eon-world (The Mixture
of Light and Matter),
i. The Place of the Left.
f 1. The Thirteenth ^Eon.
J2. The Twelve ^Eons.
(3. The Fate.
1 4. The Sphere.
The Rulers of the Ways of the
Midst.
6. The Lower Firmament,
ii. The World of Men.
iii. The Under- world.
1. Amenti.
2. Chaos.
3. Outer Darkness.
We now come to a brief consideration of the
superior MS. of the Bruce Codex. Here also we
must rule out of place any attempt to grapple with
an exposition of the system presupposed by the
compiler or compilers, in spite of the following
opinion and high appreciation of Schmidt, who in
his Introduction (pp. 34 and 35) writes :
" What a different world on the contrary meets
us in our thirty-one leaves ! We find ourselves
in the pure spheres of the highest Pleroma,
576 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
see step by step this world, so rich in heavenly
bein£8> coming into existence before our eyes;
each individual space with all its inmates is
minutely described, so that we can form for our
selves a living picture of the glory and splendour
of this Gnostic heaven. The speculations are not
so confused and fantastic as those of the Pistil*
Sophia and our two Books of Jeu ; here every
thing is in full harmony and logical sequence. The
author is imbued with the Greek spirit, equipped
with a full knowledge of Greek philosophy, full of
the doctrine of the Platonic ideas, an adherent of
Plato's view of the origin of evil — that is to say Hyle
(Matter). Here it is not Christ who is the organ of
all communications to the disciples; it is not Jesus
who is God's envoy, and the redeemer and bringer
of the mysteries; but we possess in these leaves a
magnificently conceived work by an old Gnostic
philosopher, and we stand astonished, marvelling at
the boldness of the speculations, dazzled by the
richness of the thought, touched by the depth of soul
of the author. This is not, like the Pistis Sophia,
the product of declining Gnosticism, but dates from
a period when Gnostic genius like a mighty
eagle left the world behind it, and soared in
wide and ever wider circles towards pure light,
towards pure knowledge, in which it lost itself
in ecstasy.
" In one word, we possess in this Gnostic work
as regards age and contents a work of the very
highest importance, which takes us into a period of
Gnosticism, and therefore of Christianity, of which
NOTES ON THE A. AND B. CODICES. 577
very little knowledge has been handed down to
us."
While cordially agreeing with Schmidt in his last
paragraph, and in his high appreciation of the Not to be
sublimity of the contents of this MS., we must to a Single
Author.
venture to differ from him as to the clearness
and logical order of the contents as at present
preserved to us. If all is so clear and in
such logical sequence, it is surprising that
Schmidt has made no attempt to explain the
contents. Many and many an hour have I puzzled
over the contents of his translation and tried to get
them into order, but I have as yet always failed.
The result of my study, however, has led me to
differ from Schmidt's assumption that the work is
by a single author.
CONCLUSION,
forward as entirely tentative, is that the underlying The
J ' Apocalyptic
matter was originally in the form of an Basis,
apocalypse, a series of visions of some subtle
phase of the inner ordering and substance of
things. I would suggest that these visions
were not in an ordered sequence, but were written
down, or taken down, at different times as the
seer described the inner working of nature from
different points of view. The original writer was
clearly, as it seems to me, an adherent of the
Basilidian Gnosis, imbued with its teaching and
nomenclature; but he had his own illumination as
well, and, seeing some of the things of which he had
been taught, in high enthusiasm and inspired con
fidence, he sang of the greater things by analogy
oo
578 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
with the lower he had seen — even these lower being
so glorious that he could not express them as they
really are.
These apocalyptic visions were elaborately
Thepver- expanded and annotated and welded into a unity
(the first part being cosmogonical, and the second
soteriological) by a writer of great knowledge and
wide reading, who was not only familiar with all
the Gnostic literature of his time, but also had seen
the things for himself; he laboured to make a
consistent treatise with the apocalyptic material,
011 which he set a very high value, as a basis; but
he often did not succeed, and clearly states that it
is impossible for any " tongue of flesh " to tell of
such sublime mysteries.
I am strongly persuaded that the overwriting of
this apocalypsis belongs to the same circle of literary
activity of which we have been already treating. In
it I think we have another specimen of the attempts
to re-edit and syntheticize the Gnosis, of which the
main attempt is associated with the activity of
Valentinus. As to the history of the Greek original,
it parallels presumably that of the Pistis Sophia
original. It was probably translated about the same
time, and had adventures of a somewhat similar
nature.
NOTES ON THE A. AND B. CODICES. 579
THE AKHMIM CODEX.
WE have now to lay before our readers what little
information is at present available with regard to
the latest find in Gnosticism. Ten years ago, Dr.
Carl Schmidt informed me that he had hopes of
bringing out a work on the subject (including pre
sumably a text and translation) in some two years ;
but unfortunately his anxiously-awaited labours have
not yet seen the light. We are, therefore, entirely
dependent upon the report of the important communi
cation made by him to the Royal Prussian Academy
of Sciences (Kgl. preuss. Acad. d. Wissenschaften)
published in the Transactions, and dated July 16th, 1896.
Schmidt's communication, entitled A " Pre-irenseic
Gnostic Original Work in Coptic " (" Ein vorirenae-
isches gnostisches Original - werk in koptischer
Sprache "), proves the enormous importance of the
happy discovery. His paper is of course exceedingly
technical and learned, but the following summary
will give the reader a general idea of a subject
which at present can only appeal to a very limited
number of specialists, but which ought in time to
be familiar to all serious students of Christian
theosophy.
In January, 1896, Dr. Rheinhardt procured at
Cairo, from a dealer of antiquities from Akhmim, The MS.
this precious papyrus MS., which he asserted had Contents.
been discovered by a fellah in a niche in a wall.
The MS. is now in the Berlin Egyptian Museum,
each leaf being carefully protected with glass.
580 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Unfortunately the MS. is not entirely perfect; it
contained originally seventy-one leaves — six of which
are now missing ; each page contains about eighteen
to twenty-two lines. The writing is of extraordinary
beauty, and points to the fifth century.
After a short preface, the MS. bears the super
scription Gospel according to Mary, and on p. 77 the
subscription Apocryphon of John ; immediately on
the same page follows the title Wisdom of Jesus
Christ, and on p. 128 the same subscription ; the
next page begins without a title, but at the end of
the MS. we find the subscription Acts of Peter.
The MS. therefore contains three distinct treatises,
The Gospel of Mary and The Apocryphon of John
being the same piece.
The first work begins with the words : " Now it
The Gospel came to pass on one of these days, when John the
„ ~\f
brother of James — the sons of Zebedee — had
gone up to the temple, that a Pharisee, named
Ananias (?), came unto him and said unto
him : ' Where is thy Master, that thou dost not
follow him ? ' He said unto him : ' From whence
He came thither is He gone (?).' The Pharisee said
unto him : ' With deceit hath the Nazarsean deceived
you, for he hath . . . you and made away with
the tradition of your fathers.5 When I heard this
I went away from the temple to the mountain
unto a solitary place, and was exceedingly sorrowful
in heart and said : ' How now was the Saviour chosen ;
and wherefore was He sent to the world by His Father
who sent Him ; and who is His Father ; and what is
the formation of that seon to which we shall go ? "
THE AKHMIM CODEX. 581
While he is sunk in these thoughts, the heavens
open, and the Lord appears to him and to the dis
ciples, in order to resolve his doubts. The Saviour
then leaves them, and again they are sorrowful and
weep. They said : " How can we go to the heathen
and preach the gospel of the kingdom of the Son
of Man ? If they have not received Him, how will
they receive us ? "
Then Mary arose, and, having embraced them all,
spake unto her brethren : " Weep not, and be not
sorrowful, nor doubt, for His grace will be with you all
and will overshadow you. Let us rather praise His good
ness that he hath prepared us, and made us to be men."
Peter requests her to proclaim what the Lord
had revealed to her, thus acknowledging the great
distinction which the Lord had always permitted
her above all women. Thereupon she begins the
narrative of an appearance of the Lord in a dream ;
unfortunately some pages are here missing.
Hardly has she finished, when Andrew rises, and
says that he cannot believe that the Lord has given
such novel teachings. Peter also rejects her testimony
and chides her. And Mary in tears says unto him :
" Peter, of what dost thou think ? Belie vest thou
that I have imagined this only in myself, or lied
as to the Lord ? "
And now Levi comes forward to help Mary, and
chides Peter as an eternal quarreller. How the dispute
went on we cannot determine, as two pages are missing.
On p. 21 a new episode begins and continues to
the end of the first treatise without a break.
The Lord appears again to John, and John
582 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
immediately repairs to his fellow-disciples and relates
what the Saviour had revealed unto him.
Schmidt suggests that the original title was The
Apocalypse or Revelation, and not The Apocryphon
of John.
The book of the Wisdom of Jesus Christ begins
The Wisdom with the words : "After His resurrection from the
Christ. dead His twelve disciples and seven women
disciples had gone into Galilee to the mount
which .... for they were in doubt as to
the hypostasis of the All .... as to the
mysteries and holy economy. Then did the
Saviour appear unto them not in His prior form but
in the invisible spirit. His form was that of a great
angel of light, His substance indescribable, and He
was not clothed in flesh that dieth, but in pure, perfect
flesh, as He taught us on the mountain in Galilee
which was called . . . He said : ' Peace be unto
you ; My peace I give unto you.' " And they were all
astonished and were afraid.
And the Lord bids them lay all their questions
before Him; and the several disciples bring forward
their doubts and receive the desired replies.
The Acts of Peter are likewise of Gnostic origin,
and belong to the great group of apocryphal stories
of the Apostles. This third document treats of an
episode from the healing- wonders of Peter.
The importance of the whole MS. is, not only that
irenams it hands down to us three hitherto unknown Gnostic
Quotes from
the Gospel writings, but especially that it gives us a work
which was known to Irenseus, our first important
" authority " on Gnosticism among the Fathers —
THE AKHMIM CODEX. 583
a work from which he made extracts, but without
giving the sources of his information or quoting
the title of the book. This work is The Gospel
of Mary.
Irenasus begins the last section of his first Book
(29-31) with the words: "And besides these, from
among those whom we have before mentioned as
followers of Simon, a multitude of Barbelo-Gnostics
hath arisen, and they have shown themselves as
mushrooms from the ground."
In cap. 29 he treats mostly of a group of so-called
Barbelo-Gnostics, with regard to whom he gives the
contents of one of the books they used, a teaching
which we do not find put forward by either the
earlier or later haeresiarchs. Theodoret (I. 13) among
the rest of the Refutators alone knows of this
teaching, and he simply copies Irenseus.
This source is our Gospel of Mary ; and we can
now for the first time control Irenaeus point by point,
and see how little the Church Father succeeded or could
succeed in reproducing the exceedingly complicated
systems of the Gnostic schools. A few examples will
be sufficient to establish this point abundantly.
Irenaeus begins his exposition with these words:
" Some of them suppose a certain never-asfeiiiir An
^ ' tionofhis
^Lon in a Virginal Spirit, whom they name Statement*.
Barbelo. Where they say is a certain unnameable
Father."
This " Father of All " is characterized in our
new document (p. 22) as the Invisible ; as Pure The Father.
Light, in which no one can see with mortal eyes;
as Spirit, for no one can imagine how He is
584 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
formed ; the Everlasting, the Unspeakable ; the
Unnameable, for no one existed before Him to give
Him a name. Of Him it is said : " He thinketh His
Image alone and beholdeth it in the Water of Pure
Light which surroundeth Him. And His Thought
energized and revealed herself, and stood before Him
in the Light-spark ; which is the Power which existed
before the All, which Power hath revealed itself ;
which is the perfect Forethought of the All; the
Light, the Likeness of the Light, the Image of the
The Mother. Invisible; that is, the perfect Power, the Barbelo,
the ^Eon perfect in glory— glorifying Him, because
she hath manifested herself in Him and thinketh
Him. She is the first Thought, his Image; she
becometh the First Man ; that is, the Virginal Spirit,
she of the triple Manhood, the triple-powered one,
the triple-named, triple-born; the ^Eon which ages
not, the Man-woman, who hath come forth from
His Forethought."
According to this, the " Father of the All " stands
at the head of the system, the " Invisible." After
Him comes His " Image," that is, the "jBarbelo," the
" perfect Power," the " unageing ^Eon " of Irenaeus.
By thinking of His Image, His Thought reveals
herself in the Light-spark, that is, in Barbelo.
Irenseus gives all this in a short, incomprehensible
abstract as follows: "And that He was fain to
manifest Himself to the same Barbelo. And that
Thought came forth and stood before Him, and asked
for Foreknowledge."
Our text then proceeds: "And Barbelo besought
The Pentad. Him to give unto her Foreknowledge. He nodded,
THE AKHMIM CODEX. 585
and when He had thus nodded assent, Foreknow
ledge manifested herself and stood with Thought,
that is Forethought, and glorified the Invisible and
the perfect Power, the Barbelo, for that through
her she had come into existence.
"Again this Power besought that Incorruptibility
be given unto her. He nodded, and when He had
thus nodded assent, Incorruptibility manifested her
self and stood with Thought and Foreknowledge,
glorifying the Invisible and Barbelo, in that through
her she had come into existence.
" For their sakes she besought that Everlasting-
Life be given them. He nodded, and when He had
thus nodded assent, Everlasting Life manifested
herself, and they stood and glorified Him and
Barbelo, because through her they had come into
existence in the manifestation of the Invisible Spirit.
" This is the pentad of the ^Eons of the Father,
that is, the First Man, the Image of the Invisible;
that is, Barbelo, and Thought, and Foreknowledge,
and Incorruptibility and Life Everlasting."
At the request of Barbelo, also, the Invisible
causes to come forth after Thought the three
following feminine ^Eons, according to Irenseus ;
" Thought asked for Foreknowledge ; Foreknowledge
also having come forth, again upon their petition
came forth Incorruptibility ; then afterwards Life
Eternal ; in whom Barbelo rejoicing, and looking
forth into the greatness, and delighted with her
conception, generated into it a Light like unto it;
her they affirm to be the beginning of the
enlightening and generation of all things; and that
586 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
the Father seeing this Light anointed it with His
goodness to make it perfect ; and this they say is the
Christ."
In this passage without doubt Irenaeus had before
his eyes the words : " He is the decad of the Mous,
that is, He is the Father of the ingenerable Father.
Barbelo gazed into Him fixedly . . . and she
gave birth to a blessed Light-spark. Nor doth
it differ from her in greatness. This is the
Alone-begotten, who hath manifested himself in the
Father, the self -generated God, the first-born Son of
the All, the pure Light-spirit. Now the Invisible
Spirit rejoiced over the Light, which had come into
existence, which had first of all manifested itself in
the first Power — that is, His Forethought — in
Barbelo. And He anointed him with His goodness,
that he might be made perfect."
This Alone-begotten is consequently identical witli
the Light or the Christ. Irenseus offers us here no
enlightenment, and further on he only gives us the
sentence : " Therefore the First Angel, who stands
near the Alone-begotten," etc.
The Alone-begotten asks for Mind to be given
him ; when this has been done, he praises, as Mind,
the Father and Barbelo.
Irenseus continues : " And this, they say, is Christ ;
who again requests, as they say, that Mind may be
given to help him ; and then came forth Mind ; and
after these the Father sends forth the Word."
In this place Irenaeus has omitted a stage and
quite forgotten the third male ^Eon, namely, Will.
Our MS. gives us the following :
THE AKHMIM CODEX. 587
" The Invisible Spirit willed to energize. His Will
energized and revealed itself and stood with the Mind
and the Light praising Him. The Word followed the
Will, for through the Word hath Christ created all
things."
With this the upper Ogdoad is shut off from the
Decad, the lower aeon proceeding from separate pairs. The Christ.
Next we have the Self-begotten from Thought,
the Word, of whom it is written : " Whom
He hath honoured with great honour, because
he came forth from His first Thought. The Invisible
hath set him as God over the All. The True God
gave him all powers, and made the Truth that is in
Him subject unto him, that he might think out the
All."
Irenaeus reproduces this as follows : " Then after
wards, of Mind and the Word, they say, was sent
forth the Self-begotten, to represent the Great Light,
and that he was highly honoured, and all things
made subject unto him. And the Truth was sent out
also with him, and that there is a conjunction of the
Self-begotten and Truth."
(It is impossible at present to attempt to
analyze the system from the above frag
ments; it may, however, be suggested that the
treatise is here exposing the three root-phases, or
moments of emanation, of the Pleroina, or ideal
world: (a) the In-generable, (b) the Self-generable,
and (c) the Generable — the Father, the Logos, the All.
The Gnosis, however, is more elaborate than any other
known system, and its idealistic intuitions of primal
processes know no limits.)
588 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
From the Light of the Christ and the Incorruptible
proceed forth four great Lights to surround the
Self -begotten. Their names are Harmozel, Oroiael,
Daveithe and Eleleth. From Will and Everlasting
Life proceed four others : Charis, Synesis, Aisthesis
and Phronesis. Irenseus writes :
" And from the Light which is Christ, and
Incorruptibility, four Luminaries were sent forth to
surround the Self -begotten ; and that from Will
again and Life Everlasting, four such emanations
were sent forth to minister under the four Luminaries,
which they call Grace (Charis), Free-will (Thelesis),
Understanding (Synesis), and Prudence (Phronesis).
And that Charis for her part was conjoined with the
great and first Luminary ; and this they will have to
be the Saviour, and call him Harmogen ; and Thelesis
with the second, whom also they call Raguel; and
Synesis with the third, whom they name David ; and
Phronesis with the fourth, whom they name Eleleth."
This passage is of interest in many ways. We
learn the correct names ; we notice that three of them
(Eleleth, Daveithe, Oroiael) are also to be found in
the Codex Brucianus, and thus we establish the
relation of this important Codex with the first piece
in our MS.
These proofs are sufficient to establish the point
The * that The Gospel of Mary was composed before A.D.
Egyptian
Origin 180, and that the Greek original, from which the
Treatise/ Coptic translation was made, was earlier than
Irenseus. In the opinion of Dr. Schmidt, the
work originated in Egypt. The School which
used it was the same as that designated by
THE AKHMIM CODEX. 589
Irenaeus as the Barbelo-Gnostics, or, as they
usually called themselves, simply the Gnostics; this
School was further subdivided into many single
denominations, whose names and teachings Epiph-
anius has given us in detail. Among them were
circulated many books under the name of Mary;
thus Epiphanius (Hcer., xxvi. 8) speaks of The
Questions of Mary, both The Great and The Little,
and even in xii. of The Genealogy of Mary. Celsus
had previously also met with this School, and perhaps
was acquainted with our work, for he informs us that
some heretics derive their origin from Mary and
Martha, and gives the well-known diagram of the
so-called Ophites. Yet more ; our original work
shows us that Irenaeus " copied " from our book only
up to a certain place ; and in I. 30, he used a second
work of the same School which had fallen into his
hands.
So far Dr. Schmidt, whose interesting communica
tion is followed by a note of Professor Harnack.
Harnack gives his opinion as follows :
" This find is of the first importance to primitive
Church history ; not only because we have one The Opinion
(or perhaps three) original Gnostic works °
of the second century — (is the Wisdom of
Jesus Christ possibly the famous work of
Valentinus ?) — but kind fate has also added to our
debt that Irenaeus has quoted from one of the three
treatises. We are thus for the first time in a position
to control by the original the presentation of a
Gnostic system as rendered by the Church Father.
The result of this examination shows, as we might
590 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
have expected, that owing- to omissions, and because
no effort was made to understand his opponents, the
sense of the by no means absurd speculations of the
Gnostics has been ruined by the Church Father.
Another fact — which can only with the greatest
difficulty be extracted from the writings of their
opponents — is that the system treats of a psycho
logical process within the first principle, which the
Gnostics desired to unfold. Tertullian certainly says
once ( Adv. Valent., iv.) : ' Ptolemaeus, the pupil of
Valentinus, split up the names and numbers of the
aeons into personified " substances," external to deity,
whereas Valentinus himself had included these in the
very summit of the godhead as the impressions of
sensation and feeling' — but which of the Church
Fathers has given himself the trouble thus to under
stand the speculations of Valentinus and of the other
Gnostics ?
" According to Hippolytus (Philos., vi. 42), the
followers of the Gnostic Marcus complained of the
misrepresentation of their teaching by Irenaeus; the
followers of our newly discovered book could also
have complained of the incomprehensible fashion in
which Irenaeus had represented their teachings.
" Thus, we had previously known a Gnostic work
which probably originated in Egypt in the second
century, only through an epitome of it by a Gallic
bishop about the year 185, and now we find it again
in a Coptic translation of the fifth century — verily a
paradoxical method of transmission ! "
If, however, the last chapters of Book I. of Irenaeus
are copied from the lost Syntagma of Justin or some
THE AKHMIM CODEX. 591
other earlier work, as the best critics have previously
maintained, then the original of our new document
has a considerably earlier date than Schmidt or
Harnack assign to it in the above Transaction.
The student of Gnosticism will at once perceive
that the importance of the new find cannot be over- The
estimated. The new documents throw light not Of the MS.
only on the Codex Brucianus, but also on the
system of the Pistis Sophia. We have now these
three original sources on which to base our
study of Gnostic theosophy; and there is hope
that at last something may be done to rescue the
views of the best Gnostic doctors from obscurity, and
from the environment of pious refutation in which
they have been previously smothered. The task of
the sympathetic student should now be to find
appropriate terms for the technicalities of the Gnosis,
place the various orders of ideas in their proper
relation, and show that the method of the Gnosis,
which looked at the problems of cosmogony and
anthropogony from above, may be as reasonable in its
proper domain as are the methods of modern scientific
research, which regard such problems entirely from
below. We should not forget that men like Valen-
tinus were theosophists, engaged on precisely the
same studies as their brethren the world over. The
greatest cosmogonies of the world are of the same
nature as Gnostic cosmogenesis, and a study of these
will convince us of the similarity of source. Gnostic
anthropogenesis has many points of similarity with
general theosophical ideas, and Gnostic psychology is
in a great measure borne out by recent research. The
592 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Gnostic technical terms are no more difficult of com
prehension than those found in other theosophical
writers; and there is an exact parallel between
the varying use made of such terms by different
writers on the Gnosis and the misrepresentation of
the views of the Gnostics by the Church Fathers,
and the various meanings given to like terms by
other theosophical writers and the misrepresentation
of such writers by their critics. The Gnostics were
themselves partly to blame for their obscurity, and
the Church Fathers were partly to blame for their
misrepresentation. In brief, the same standard of
criticism has to be applied to the writings of the
Gnostics as the discriminating student has to apply
to all such literature. It is true that to-day we speak
openly of many things that the Gnostics wrapped up
in symbol and myth ; nevertheless our real knowledge
on such subjects is not so very far in advance of the
great doctors of the Gnosis as we are inclined to
imagine ; now, as then, there are only a few who
really know what they are writing about, while the
rest copy, compare, adapt, and speculate.
SOME FORGOTTEN SAYINGS. 593
SOME FORGOTTEN SAYINGS.
IN the early centuries of Christianity there were
in circulation many traditions, legends, and religious
romances, called Memoirs, Acts, and Gospels, which
contained Sayings-of-the-Lord or Logoi. These Logoi
or Logia were oracles, or oracular utterances, couched
in the same language and of much the same tenour
as the prophetic utterances of the members of the
Schools of the Prophets, which were introduced by the
solemn formula, "Thus saith the Lord," when recorded
in the books of the Old Covenant of the Jewish race.
In course of time certain of these traditional,
legendary and mythical settings of the Logoi were
declared to be alone historical, and a canon of
orthodox tradition was evolved from the second half
of the second century onwards. I use the term
" mythical " in its best sense, that is to say, stories
embodying in a designed symbolic fashion the
teachings of the mysteries, concerning the nature of
God, the universe and the human soul.
As only a few out of the many writings were
selected, a large number of Logoi was thus rejected. Rejected
The latest collection of these rejected Logoi has been
made by Resch, and was published in 1889 in
Gebhardt and Harnack's series of Texte und
Untersuchungen, under the title of Agrapha :
A ussercanonische Evangelienfragmente.
Some of these extra-canonical fragments are
variants of the familiar canonical Sayings, and are of
interest mainly for the reconstruction of one of the
pp
594 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
root-sources from which the synoptic compilers drew
their information. A few have been preserved in the
Pauline Letters. Others are entirely unfamiliar to
those who are only acquainted with the canonical
selection of the books of the New Covenant, generally
called the New Testament. These Logoi are of
special interest to students of the origins, and I
therefore append a selection of them translated from
Resch's text.
It may be mentioned that some of these Logoi
have been worked into a religious novel by a Jewish
writer, under the title As Others Saw Him, published
in 1895, at London, by William Heinemann.
Be merciful that ye may obtain mercy ; forgive
that it may be forgiven unto you ; as ye do so shall
it be done to you ; as ye give so shall it be given unto
you ; as ye judge so shall ye be judged ; as ye do
service so shall service be done to you; with what
measure ye mete, with the same shall it be measured
to you in return.
Wisdom sendeth forth her children.
He who is near Me is near the fire ; and he who is
far from Me is far from the kingdom.
If ye observe not the little [sci., mystery], who
will give you the great ?
They who would see Me and reach My kingdom
need must attain Me with pain and suffering.
Good must needs come, but blessed is he by whom
it cometh ; in like manner also evil must needs come,
but woe unto him by whom it cometh.
The weak shall be saved by the strong.
SOME FORGOTTEN SAYINGS. 595
Guard the mysteries for Me and for the sons of
My house.
Cleave to the holy ones, for they who cleave to
them are made holy.
The fashion of this world passeth away.
[Fashion — that is, configuration (a-xwa), for there
are other worlds and other phases of this world].
As often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup
make proclamation of My death and confession in My
resurrection and ascension until I come [to you].
[A variant gives the saying in the third person,
and speaks of the " death of the Son of the Man,"
the Logos. The Master promises to return to His
disciples at the time of the performance of a certain
holy rite.]
Be ye mindful of faith and hope, through whom is
born that love to God and man which giveth life
o
eternal.
There is a mingling that leadeth to death, and
there is a mingling that leadeth to life.
Beholding a certain man working on the Sabbath,
He said unto him : Man, if thou knowest what thou
doest thou art blessed ; but if thou knowest not, thou
art accursed and a transgressor of the law.
Why do ye wonder at the signs ? I give unto you
a mighty inheritance which the whole world doth not
contain.
When the Lord was asked by a certain man, When
should His kingdom come, He saith unto him : When
two shall be one, and the without as the within, and
the male with the female, neither male nor female.
Call not any one " Father " on earth, for on earth
596 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
there are rulers [only] ; in heaven is the Father from
whom is every descent [that is, " blood descent from a
father " (-Trarpia)] both in heaven and on earth.
Grieve not the Holy Spirit which is in you, and
put not out the Light which hath shone forth in you.
As ye see yourselves in water or mirror, so see ye
Me in yourselves.
As I find you, so will I judge you.
Seek for the great [mysteries] and the little shall
be added to you; seek for the heavenly and the
earthly shall be added to you.
Be ye approved money-changers, rejecting the bad
and retaining the good.
Keep thy flesh pure.
Because of the sick I was sick ; because of the
hungry I was ahungered ; because of the thirsty
I was athirst.
Not rendering evil for evil, or railing for railing,
or fist for fist, or curse for curse.
Love hideth a multitude of sins.
There are false christs and false teachers who
have blasphemed the Spirit of Grace, and have spit
forth its gift of grace; these shall not be forgiven
either in this aeon or in the aeon to come.
[Grace is the " power above," the power of the
Logos which makes a man a " christ." Charis or
Grace is the consort of the Logos, His power or
shakti. The false " christs " are those who have
been " initiated " and broken their vows. The aeon is
a certain time-period.]
For the Heavenly Father willeth the repentance
of the sinner rather than his chastisement.
SOME FORGOTTEN SAYINGS. 597
For God willeth that all should receive of His
gifts.
Keep that which fchou hast, and it shall be
increased into more.
Behold, I make the last as the first.
I am come to end the sacrifices, and if ye cease
not from sacrificing, the wrath shall not cease from
you.
[Woe unto him] who hath made sad the spirit
of his brother.
And never rejoice unless ye see your brother
[also] happy.
He who hath wondered shall reign, and he who
hath reigned shall rest.
[This is a dark saying; it has been compared
to the phrase of Plato : " There is no other beginning
of philosophy than wondering" — that is to say,
regarding the works of the Deity with wonder and
reverence. This is the beginning of philosophy, or
gnosis, and the end of it makes the man king of
himself, and thus master of gods and men ; thus
is he at peace.]
My mother, the Holy Spirit, even now took me
by one of the hairs of my head and carried me to
the great mountain Tabor.
[The hairs of the head may perhaps symbolise
the nadi's, as they are called in the Upanishads, by
which the soul goes forth from the body; the
mountain is the way up to the spiritual regions.]
He who seeketh me shall find me in children from
seven years [onwards]; for hidden in them I am
manifested in the fourteenth period (aeon).
598 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
[This may refer either to the higher ego or light-
spark from the Logos, or to certain degrees of
initiation, the initiated having to become as " little
children."]
When Salome asked how long should death hold
sway, the Lord said unto her : So long as ye women
bring forth ; for I came to end the works of the
female. And Salome said unto Him : I have then
done well in not bringing forth. And the Lord
answered and said : Eat of every pasture, but of that
which hath the bitterness [of death] eat not. And
when Salome asked when should those things of
which she enquired be known, the Lord said : When
ye shall tread upon the vesture of shame, and when
the two shall be one, and the male with the female
neither male nor female.
["Shame" is presumably the same as the "mingling"
in one of the Logoi quoted above. To tread on the
vesture of shame is to rise above the animal nature.]
Pray for your enemies ; blessed are they who
mourn over the destruction of the unbelievers.
I stood on a lofty mountain, and saw a gigantic
man and another, a dwarf ; and I heard as it were a
voice of thunder, and drew nigh for to hear ; and He
spake unto me and said, I am thou and thou art I ;
and wheresoever thou mayst be I am there. In all
am I scattered, and whencesoever thou wiliest, thou
gatherest Me; and gathering Me thou gatherest
Thyself.
[Here again we have the mountain of initiation.
The initiate beholds the vision of the Heavenly Man,
-the Logos, and of himself, the dwarf; of the Great
SOME FORGOTTEN SAYINGS. 599
Man and the little man, the light-spark which sits in
the heart.]
May thy Holy Spirit come upon us and purify us !
[From a very ancient version of the Lord's Prayer,
instead of the clause " Thy kingdom come."]
Possess nothing upon the earth.
Though ye be gathered together with me in My
bosom, if ye do not My commandments, I will cast
you forth.
Gain for yourselves, ye sons of Adam, by means of
these transitory things which are not yours, that
which is your own, and passeth not away.
For even among the prophets after they have been
anointed by the Holy Spirit, the word of sin has been
found among them.
[That is to say, after they have been made
" christs " (/xeTa TO ^pKrOrjvai avTOug ev TrvevjULCiTt
ay/co). The " word of sin " means apparently
erroneous prophetical utterances.]
If a man shall abandon all for my name's sake, at
the second coming he shall inherit eternal life.
[" For my name's sake " signifies the power of the
Great Name which the Master used in his public
preaching ; the second coming is the descent of the
Christ-spirit upon the candidate at his initiation.
" Eternal life " is the life of the seons or spiritual
existences, whose lives are an eternity.]
If ye make not the below into the above and the
above into the below, the right into the left and the
left into the right, the before into the behind [and the
behind into the before], ye shall not enter into the
kingdom of God.
600 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
[That is to say, ye shall not enter into the central
point and so pass into the spiritual region.]
I am to be crucified anew.
I recognised myself, and gathered myself together
from all sides ; I sowed no children for the ruler, but
I tore up his roots, and gathered together [my] limbs
that were scattered abroad; I know thee who thou
art, for I am from the realms above.
[This is the apology, or defence, of the soul of the
initiate as it passes through the realms of the unseen
•world, each of which is in charge of a ruler, the
minister of Death. As the Logos gathers together his
children (the light-sparks, the limbs of his body), and
takes them home into his bosom, so does the ego
collect its limbs and becomes the Osirified.]
What ye preach with words before the people, do
ye in deeds before every man.
Thou art the key [who openest] for every man,
and shuttest for every man.
[This saying is put in the mouth of the disciples ;
in the direct formula it would read, "I am the
key," &c.]
Numerous other Logoi could be added from
The Gnostic literature, especially from the contents of
chus the Coptic Codices; but enough has been given
to show the reader that much of the Sayings-
material has been rejected and forgotten. How
precious some of this matter was, has been
lately shown by a recent discovery. The ancient
papyrus-fragment discovered on the site of
Oxyrhynchus by Grenfell and Hunt, in 1897, pre
serves for us the most primitive form of the Logoi
SOME FORGOTTEN SAYINGS. 601
known to us. Of the six decipherable Sayings it
contains, one is familiar to us, two contain new
matter and important variants, and three are entirely
new. If the proportion of now unknown to known
sayings was as high in the rest of the MS. as in the
solitary leaf which has reached us, then we have
indeed lost more by the Canon than we have gained.
The new-found Sayings run as follows, omitting
the one already familiar to us :
Jesus saith : Except ye fast to the world, ye shall
in no wise find the Kingdom of God ; and except ye
sabbatize the Sabbath, ye shall not see the Father.
Jesus saith : I stood in the midst of the world,
and in flesh was I seen of them, and I found all
drunken, and none found I athirst among them.
And My soul grieveth over the souls of men, because
they are blind in their heart and see not. . . .
Jesus saith : Wheresoever there be two, they are
not without God ; and wherever there is one alone,
I say, I am with him. Raise the stone, and there
thou shalt find Me ; cleave the wood, and there am I.
[The first part of this saying is exceedingly
imperfect; I have followed Blass's conjectures. See
Taylor's Oxyrhynchus Logia, Oxford ; 1899].
Jesus saith: A prophet is not acceptable in his
own country, neither doth a physician work cures
upon those that know him.
Jesus saith : A city built on the top of a high hill
and stablished can neither fall nor be hid.
Jesus saith : Thou hearest with one ear (but the
other thou hast closed).
Since the publication of the first edition of this
602 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
work the rubbish heaps of ancient Oxyrhynchus have
yielded yet another battered scrap of papyrus con
taining material from a similar collection of sayings,
the decipherable portions of which run as follows in
Grenfell & Hunt's edition (New Sayings of Jesus ;
London, 1904) :
These are the . . . words which Jesus the
Living (One) spake to ... and Thomas, and He
said unto (them): Every one who hearkeneth to
these words shall never taste of death.
Jesus saith : Let not him who seeketh . . .
cease until he findeth, and when he findeth he shall
wonder ; wondering he shall reign, and reigning shall
rest.
Jesus saith : (Ye ask ? Who are these) that draw
us (to the kingdom if) the kingdom is in Heaven ?
. . . the fowls of the air, and all beasts that are
under the earth or upon the earth, and the fishes of
the sea (these are they that draw) you ; and the
Kingdom of Heaven is within you ; and whosoever
shall know himself shall find it. (Strive therefore ?)
to know yourselves, and ye shall be aware that ye
are the sons of the . . . Father ; (and ?) ye shall
know that ye are in (the City of God ?), and ye are
(the City ?).
Jesus saith : Everything that is not before thy
face and that which is hidden from thee shall be
revealed to thee. For there is nothing hidden which
shall not be made manifest, nor buried which shall
not be raised.
CONCLUSION,
O Light of God, adorable ! we worship Thee, that Thou
rnay'st pour Thy light into our minds !
Based on the Gayatrl.
AFTERWORD.
READER, if you have read so far, you may have
journeyed with me or have been taken by some other
way; but if you have come so far upon the road?
then it seems — to me at least — as though we had
journeyed together to some region of light. We have
for some short hours been privileged to enjoy con
verse with those who loved and love the Master.
With their words still ringing in our ears, with the
life of their love still tingling in our veins, how can
we venture to speak ill of them ? " Come unto Me,
ye weary ! " In such a light of love, how shall we
find the heart to condemn, because they went out
unto Him with all their being ? Reading their words
and looking upon their lives, I, for my part, see the
brand " Heresy," writ so large upon their horizon for
many, disappearing into the dim distance, and instead
behold the figure of the Master standing with hands
of blessing outstretched above their heads. I do not
know why this side of earliest Christianity has been
allowed to be forgotten. Doubtless there was a
purpose served by its withdrawal ; but to-day, at the
605
606 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
beginning of the twentieth century, in the greater
freedom and wider tolerance we now enjoy, may not
the veil again be lifted? The old forms need not
return — though surely some of them have enough of
beauty ! But the old power is there, waiting and
watching, ready to clothe itself in new forms, forms
more lovely still, if we will but turn to Him who
wields the power, as He really is, and not as we
limit Him by our sectarian creeds.
How long must it be before we learn that there
are as many ways to worship God as there are men
on earth ? Yet each man still declares : My way
is best; mine is the only way. Or if he does not
say it, he thinks it. These things, it is true, transcend
our reason; religion is the something in us greater
than our reason, and being greater it gives greater
satisfaction. To save ourselves we must lose our
selves ; though not irrationally, if reason is transcended.
If it be true that we have lived for many lives before,
in ways how many must we not have worshipped
God or failed to do so? How often have we con
demned the way we praised before ! Intolerant in
one faith, equally intolerant in another, condemning
our past selves !
What, then, think ye of Christ ? Must He not
be a Master of religion, wise beyond our highest
ideals of wisdom ? Does He condemn His worship
pers because their ways are diverse ; does He
condemn those who worship His Brethren, who also
have taught the Way ? As to the rest, what need
of any too great precision ? Who knows with the
intellect enough to decide on all these high subjects
AFTERWORD. 607
for his fellows ? Let each follow the Light as he
sees it — there is enough for all ; so that at last we
may see " all things turned into light — sweet, joyous
light." These, then, are all my words, except to
add, with an ancient Coptic scribe, " O Lord, have
mercy on the soul of the sinner who wrote this ! "
BIBLIOGRAPHIES.
As nothing which may really be called a bibliography
of the subject exists, I append an attempt at a
preliminary contribution towards a full Bibliography
of Gnosticism. Every work (and article) of import
ance is (I am almost certain) included, and I think that
the list of work done on the Coptic Gnostic writings
may be said to be fairly complete ; there is, however,
a certain number of articles in periodicals and publi
cations of learned societies (French especially) which
is still to be added, though I do not think that
this number is large. I might have added more
O O
references to Encyclopaedias, but the vast majority of
articles in such publications is of very little value.
I have divided the General Bibliography into : (i.)
Early Works; (ii.) Critical Studies prior to 1851;
(iii.) Works subsequent to the Publication of the
Text of the Philosophumena in 1851. Division i.
contains works generally of very little value ;
Division ii. suffers from ignorance of the contents of
Hippolytus' Philosophumena, the text of which was
first published by Miller at Oxford in 1851. Its
608
GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY. 609
contents may be said to have revolutionized the study
of Gnosticism. I have also kept apart the Biblio
graphy of the work done on the Coptic Gnostic
writings, which will, I believe, in the future still
further revolutionize our ideas on the Gnosis. I have
made a remark or two on the most popular sources of
information in English, but have refrained from all
other notes as out of place in so general a work as
the present.
GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY.
Early Works.
1569. Marcossius (G. P.). De Vitis, Secretis, et Dog-
matibus omnium Haereticorum . . . Elen-
chus alphabeticus. Colonise.
1659. Macarius (I.). Abraxas seu Apistopistus quse est
antiquaria de Gemmis basilidianis Disquisitio
et cet. Antverpise.
1664. Siricius (M.). Simonis Magi Haereticorum omnium
Patris Pravitates et cet. Giessse.
1667. Michaelis (1). Dissertatio de Indiciis Philosophise
gnosticse Tempore LXX., in Syntagma
comment. Gcettinga?. Pt. 2, pp. 269 ff.
1690. Ittig (T.). T. Ittigii . . . de Haaresiarchis
JStvi apostolici et apostolico primi, seu primi
et secundi a Christo nato Seculi, Dissertatio.
Lipsise. 2 pts. 1690—96. 2 ed. Lipsise 1703
(append. 1696 ed.).
1709. Ittig (T.). Dissertationis Ittigianae de Hseresiarchis
. . . adversus Catalecta F. Lotharii Marise
a Cruce , , ,. Pefensio. Lipsiae,
610 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
1710. Strunz (F.). Friderici Strunzii Historia Bardesanis
et Bardesanistarum et cet. Wittenburg.
1710. Massriet (B.). Prolegomena to his edition of
Irenaeus. Paris.
1734. Beausobre (I. de). Histoire critique de Manichee
et du Manicheisme. Amsterdam. 2 vols.
1734, 1739. Vol. ii., pp. 1—142. Disserta
tion on Basilides, Marcion and Bardesanes
as precursors of Mani.
1739. Mosheim (J. L. v.). Institutiones christianae
majores. Helmstadi. Vol. i., pp. 376 ff. An
able dissertation on the Dositheans.
1750. (?). Mosheim (J. L. v.). Geschichte der Schlangen-
briider. Helmstadt (]). Not in British
Museum.
1753. Mosheim (J. L. v.). De Rebus christianis ante
Constantinum magnum Commentarii. Helm-
stadtii.
1756. Schumacher (J. H.). Erlauterurig der Lehrtafel
der Ophiten. Wolfenbiittel. Not in British
Museum.
1773. Tittmann (C. C.). Tractatus de Vestigiis Gnosti-
corum in N. T. frustra qmesitis. Lipsise.
1790. Munter (F. C. C. H.) Versuch iiber u. s. v. (Essai
sur les Antiquites ecclesiastiques du Gnos-
ticisme). Anspach. Quoted by Amelirieau
in his Essai. Not in British Museum.
1795. Schelling (F. W. J. V.). De Marcione Epistoiarum
paulinarum Emendatore. Tubingen. Not in
British Museum.
Critical Studies prior to 1851.
1818. Lewald (E. A.)- Commentatio ad Historiam
GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY. 611
Religionum veterum illustrandam pertinens de
Doctrina gnostica. Heidelberg.
1818. Neander (J. A. W.). Genetische Entwickelung
der vornehmsten gnostischen Systeine. Berlin.
1819. Halm (A.). Bardesanes gnosticus Syrorum primus
Hymnologus. Commentatio historico-theologica.
Lipsise.
1819 (?) Hahn (A.). Dissertatio de Gnosi Marcioiiis.
Not in British Museum.
1820. Bellermann (J. J.). Ueber die Gemmen der Alten
mit dem Abraxasbilde. Berlin (1). Not in
British Museum.
1820. Bellermann (J. J.). Ueber die Abraxas-Gemmen.
Berlin. 3 programmes, 1820-1822.
1821. Fulder (1). Art. De Carpocratianis, in Ilgen's
Historisch-theologische Abhandlungen der
Gesellschaft zu Leipzig. Not in British
Museum.
1821. Hahn (A.). Antitheses Marcionis. Konigsberg.
Not in British Museum.
1823. Hahri (A.). Evangelium Marcionis ex Auctoritate
veterum Monumentorum. Konisberg.
1823. Giesler (J. C. L.). Grit, of Neander, in Allgeineine
Literatur-Zeitung. Halle. Nr. 104, pp.
835—38.
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1825. Neander (J. A. W.). Allgemeine Geschichte der
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612 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
(J.) from 2nd ed. London. 9 vols., 1847 — 55;
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Vol. ii., "The Gnostic Sects," pp. 1—195.
1828. Matter (A. J.). Histoire critique du Gnosticisaie et
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1829. Burton (E.). An Enquiry into the Heresies
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1831. Mohler (J. A.). Versuch iiber den Ursprung des
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1834. Neumann (C. F.). Art. Marcion's Glaubens-
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ischen Annalen fur Vaterlandskunde und
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1835. Baur (F. C.). Die christliche Gnosis, oder
die christliche Religions-Philosophic in ihrer
geschichtlichen Entwiklung. Tubingen.
1839. Hildebrand (]). Philosophise gnosticse Origines.
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1841. Simson (A.). Art. Leben und Lehre Simons
GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY. 613
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1841. Scherer (?). De Gnosticis qui in N. T. impugnari
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1843. Norton (A.). The Evidences of the Genuineness
of the Gospels. Vol. i., Boston, 1837 ; vol. ii.,
1843; 2 ed., London, 1847. The whole of
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1846. Gratz (H.). Gnosticismus und Judenthurn.
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1847. Migne (J. P.). Dictionnaire des Heresies,
des Schismes, des Auteurs et des Livres
jansenistes, des Ouvrages mis a 1'Index, des
Propositions condamnees par PEglise, et des
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1852. Volkmar (G.). Das Evangelium Marcions. Text
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1852. Jacobi (J. L.). Basilidis Philosophi gnostici
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1852. Matter (A. J.). Une Excursion gnostique en
Italic. Strasbourg.
1853. Le Vaillant de Florival (P. E.). French transla
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1853. Baur (F. C.). Das Christenthum und die
christliche Kirche der drei ersten Jahr-
hunderte. Tubingen. 2 ed., 1860.
614 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
1854. Hase (C. H.). Kirchengeschichte. Leipzig. 1854
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1855. Gundert (?). 3 Arts, in Zeitschrift fur die
lutheranische Theologie. 1855, pp. 209 ff. ;
1856, pp. 37 ff., 443 ff. Name not men
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1855. Volkmar (G.). Art. Die Kolarbasus-Gnosis, in
Zeitsch. f. d. histor. Theolog. Leipzig. Vol.
iv., pp. 603 ff.
1855. Volkmar (G.). Die Quellen der Ketzergeschichte
bis zum Nicanum kritisch untersucht, Erstes
Band : Hippolytus und die rbmischen Zeit-
genossen ; oder die Philosophumena und die
verwandten Srhrit'ten na.ch Qrapmng, Com
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1855. Uhlhorn (G.). Das basilidianische System mil
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1856. Hilgenfeld (A.). Art. Das System des Gnostikers
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1856. Baur (F. C.) Art. Das System des Gnostikers
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1857. Harvey (W. W.). Sancti Irentei Libri quinque
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1860. Moller (E.W.). Geschichte der Kosrnologie in der
griechischen Kirche bis auf Origenes mit
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1860. Noack (L.). Art, Simon der Magier. Psyche:
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1860. Baxmann (R.)- Art. Die Philosophumena und
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1861. Baxmann (R.). Art. Die haratische Gnosis.
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1863. Reiian (J. E.). Histoire des Origines du Christ
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1863. Lipsius (R. A.). Art. Ueber die ophitischen
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1864. Hilgenfeld (A.). Bardesanes der letze Gnostiker.
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616 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
1864. Gruber (J. N.). Die Ophiten. Historische Inau-
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1865. Lipsius (R. A.). Zur Quellenkritik des Epiphanios.
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1867. Lipsius (R.A.). Art. Ueber die Zeit des Markion
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1867. Lipsius (R.A.). Rev. on the original (not in British
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1868. Hofstede de Groot (P.). Basilides am Ausgang
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1868. Hilgenfeld (A.). Art, Der Magier Simon.
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1868. Fabiani (E.). Notizie di Simon Mago, tratte dai
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1873. Lipsius (R. A.). Rev. on Heinrici's Valentini
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1873. Berger (P.). Etudes des Documents nouveaux
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1873. Revillout (E.). Vie et Sentences de Secundus
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1874. Harnack (A.). De Apellis Gnosi monarchica.
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1875. Lipsius (R. A.). Die Quellen der altesten Ketzer-
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1876. Hiickstadt (E.). Art. Ueber das pseudo-tertull-
ianische Gedicht adv. Marcionem. Zeitschr.
f. wiss. Theolog. Jena. Vol. i., pp. 154 ft'.
1876. Harnack (A.). Art. Beitrage zur Geschichte der
marcionitischen Kirchen. Zeitschr. f. wiss.
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1876. Ludemann (M.). Art. Literarisches Central-
blatt. No. xi. Not in British Museum.
1877. Jacobi (J. L.). Art. Gnosis. Herzog's Real
Encyclopadie. Leipzig. 2 ed., 18 vols.,
618 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
1877 — 1888. American ed. New York and
Boston. 1882—1883.
1877. M oiler (E. W.) Art, Simon Magus. Herzog's
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1877. Jacobi (J. L.). Art. Das urspriingliche basilidian-
ische System mit eingehender Riicksicht auf
die bisherigen Verhandlungen. Zeitschr.
f. Kirchengesch. Gotha. Vol. i., pp. 481—544.
1877. Smith (W.) and Wace (H.). A Dictionary of
Christian Biography. London. 4 vols.
1877 — 1887. Contains an article on every
important teacher of the Gnosis, and short
notices of many of the principal technical
terms by Hort, Salmon, and Lipsius.
1878. Hilgenfeld (A.). Art. Der Basilides des Hippo-
lytus, in Zeitschr. f. wiss. Theolog. Jena.
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1879. Tulloch (J.). Art. Gnosticism. Encyclopaedia
Britannica. London. 9th ed. Very short
and unworthy of the subject; the sole source
from which the general reader in England
gets his information.
1879. De Pressense (E. de). Art. Gnosticisme.
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1880. Menendez y Pelayo (M.). Historia de los Hetero-
doxos Espanoles. Madrid. 3 vols.
1880. Hilgenfeld (A.) Art. Der Gnosiiker Valentinus
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1880. Meyboom (H. U.). Marcion en de Marcioniten.
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1880. Joel (M.). Blicke in die Religionsgeschichte zu
Anfang des zweiten christlichen Jahrhunderts.
GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY. 619
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1880. Hilgenfeld (A.). Art. Der Gnostiker Valentinus
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1881. Kaufmann (G.). Die Gnosis nach ihrer Tendenz
und Organization. Zwolf Thesen. Breslau.
1881. Hilgenfeld (A.). Art. Cerdon und Marcion.
Zeitschr. 1 wiss. Theolog. Leipzig. Pt. i.,
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Ptolemy to Flora. Ibid., p. 214.
1881. Harnack (A.). Art. Tatiari's Diatessaron und
Marcion's Commentar zum Evangelium bei
Ephraem Syr us. Zeitschr. f. Kirchengesch.
Gotha. Pt. iv., pp. 471—505.
1881. Funk (F. X.). Art. 1st der Basilides der Philo-
sophumena Pantheist1? Theol. Quartalschrift.
Tubingen. Vol. ii., pp. 277 ff.
1881. Funk (F. X.). Art. Ueber den Verfasser
der Philosophumena. Theol. Quartalschrift.
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1883. Hilgenfeld (A.). Art. Valentiniana. Zeitschr.
f. wiss. Theolog. Jena. Vol. iii., pp. 356 — 360.
1884. Giraud (?). Ophitae, Dissertatio de eorum Origine,
Placitis et Fatis. Paris. Not in British
Museum ; referred to by Carl Schmidt, who
had, however, not met with a copy.
1884. Hilgenfeld (A.). Die Ketzergeschichte des
Urchristenthums. Leipzig. Summing up the
results of his previous researches.
1885. Zahn (T.). Art. Die Dialoge des Adamantinus
(for Marcion). Zeitschr. f. Kirchengesch.
Gotha. Vol. ix., pp. 193 ff.
620 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
1885. Salmon (G.). Art. The Cross-references in the Philo-
sophumena. Hermathena. Dublin. Pp. 389 ff.
1887. King (C.W.). The Gnostics and their Remains,
ancient and mediaeval. London. 2 ed. 1st
ed., 1864, very much smaller and containing no
reference to the Pistis Sophia.
1887. Amelineau (E.). Essai sur le Gnosticisme egyptien
ses Developpements er son Origine egyptienne.
Annales du Musee Guimet. Paris. Vol. xiv.
1888. Harnack (A.). Art. Valentinus. Encyclopaedia
Britannica. London. 9th edition. A longer
article than Tulloch's on the whole of
Gnosticism.
1888. Zahn (T.). Adopts Salmon's Philosophumena
theory. Geschichte des N. T. Kanons.
Erlangen. Vol I. i. p. 24, n. 2.
1889. Usener (H.). Religionsgeschichtliche Untersuch-
ungen. Th. i. Das Weihnachtsfest. Bonn.
1889. Harnack (A.). Grit, on above. Theologische
Literaturzeitung. Leipzig. Nr. viii., pp.
199—211.
1889. Honig (A.). Die Ophiten. Ein Beitrag zur
Geschichte des jiidischen Gnosticismus. Berlin.
1889. Harnack (A.). Grit, of Amelineau's Essai.
Theolog. Literaturztg. Leipzig. Nr. ix., pp.
232 ff.
1890. Stahelin (H.). Die gnostischen Quellen Hippolyts
in seiner Hauptschrift gegen die Haretiker
Texte und [Jntersuchungeri. Leipzig. Vol.
vi., pt. 3.
1890. Harnack (A.). Sieben neue Bruckstiicke der
Sillogismen des Apelles. Text. u. Unter.
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1890. Kurtz (J. H.). Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte.
GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY. 621
Leipzig, llth ed., 1890. English trans, by
Macpherson (J.). Church History. London.
3 vols., 1888—1890. Vol. i., pp. 98—125.
1891. Blunt (J. H.). Dictionary of Sects, Heresies,
ecclesiastical Parties and Schools of religious
Thought. London. New ed. Very unsatis
factory.
1891. Brooke (A. E.). The Fragments of Heracleon
newly edited from the MSS. with an Intro
duction and Notes. Cambridge. Texts and
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1892. Mead (G. R. S.). Simon Magus. An Essay.
London.
1893. Harnack (A.). Geschichte der altchristlichen
Litteratur bis Eusebius. Leipzig. 2 vols.
1894. Anrich (G.). Das antike Mysterienwesen in seinem
Einiluss auf das Christentum. Gottingen. Der
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dem Mysterienwesen. Pp. 74 — 105.
1894. Harnack (A.). Lehrbuch der Dogmengeschichte.
Freiburg i. B. u. Leipzig. 3 vols., 3rd ed.
1st ed., 1886. Die Versuche der Gnostiker
u. s. w. Vol. i., pp. 211—253.
1894. Harnack (A.). History of Dogma. English trans.
by various hands. London. 7 vols. The
Attempts of the Gnostics to create an
Apostolic Dogmatic and a Christian Theology;
or the Acute Secularising of Christianity,
Vol. i., pp. 222—265.
1894. Kunze (J.). De Historic Gnosticismi Fontibus
novae Qusestiones criticse. Leipzig.
1894. Harnack (A.). Rev. of Kunze's thesis. Theolog,
Literaturztg. Leipzig. Pp. 506 ff.
622 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
1895. Amelineau (E.). Le nouveau Traite gnostique de
Turin. Paris.
1895. Anz (W.) Zur Frage nach dem Ursprung des
Gnostizismus. Texte u. Untersuch. Leipzig.
Vol. xv.
1897. Nau (F.). Une Biographic inedite de Bardesane
PAstrologue. Paris.
1897. Bevan (A. A.). The Hymii of the Soul
[attributed to Bardesan] contained in the
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1898 Friedlander (M.). Der vorchristliche jiidische
Gnosticismus. Gottingen.
1899. Nau (F.). Bardesane 1'Astrologue : Le Livre des
Lois des Pays. Paris.
1899. Burkitt (F. C.). The Hymn of Bardaisan,
rendered into English. London.
1900. Mead (G. R. S.). Fragments of a Faith Forgotten.
Some Short Sketches among the Gnostics,
mainly of the First Two Centuries. A Con
tribution to the Study of Christian Origins.
London.
1900. Preuschen (E.). Die apokryphen gnostichen
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setzt.
1900 (?). Kreyenbiihl. Das Evangelium der Wahrheit.
2 vols. Vol. ii. 1905 ('?). Not in British
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adversus Marcionem. Ein Beitrag zur
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zur Quellenkritik des Marcionitismus. Darm
stadt.
1902. Liechtenhari (R.). Art. Die pseudepigraphe
GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY. 623
Literatur der Gnostiker. Zeitschr. f. d.
neutest. Wissenchaft. Giessen. Fascc. iii.,
xiv.
1903. Hoffmann (G.). Zwei Hymnen der Thomasakten.
Zeitschr. f. d. neutest. Wissenchaft. Giessen.
Vol. iv., pp. 273—309.
1903. De Faye (E.). Introduction a 1'etude du Gnosti-
cisme au II" et III6 Siecle. Paris.
1904. Waitz (W.). Die Pseudoklementinen Houailien
u. Rekognitionen. Texte u. Untersuchungen.
Leipzig. N. F. Bd. x. Hft. 4.
1904. Hi]genfeld (A.). Art. Der Konigssohn und
die Perlen. Ein morgenlandischer Gedicht.
Zeitschr. f. wissenschaft. Theologie. Leipzig.
Vol. xlviii., (N. F. xii.). Hft. ii., pp.
229—241.
1904. Preuschen (E.). Zwei Gnostische Hymnen.
Giessen.
1905. Harnack (A.). Ed. The Letter of Ptolemy to
Flora. Cambridge.
1905. Kriiger (G.) Art. Das Taufbekentniss der
romischen Gemeinde als Niederschlag des
Kampfes gegen Marcion. Zeit. f. d. neutest.
Wiss. Heft i.
1906. Mead (G. R. S.). Thrice - Greatest Hermes.
Studies in Hellenistic Theosophy and Gnosis.
Being a Translation of the Extant Sermons
arid Fragments of the Trismegistic Literature,
with Prolegomena, Commentaries and Notes.
London. 3 vols.
624 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
THE COPTIC GNOSTIC WORKS.
The student will find critical notices on most of
the following works in the Introduction to my
translation of the Pistis Sophia.
1770. Art. in Brittische theolog. Magazin (1). See
Kostlin infra. I can find no trace of this
in the British Museum.
1773. Woide (C. A.). Art. in Journal des Savants.
Paris.
1778. Woide (C. A.). Art. in Cramer's (J. A.) Beytrage
zur Beforderung theologischer und andrer
wichtigen Kentnisse. Kiel und Hamburg.
Pp. 82 if.
1799. Woide (C. A.). Appendix ad Editionem Novi
Testimenti grseci e Codice ms. Alexandrine
et cet. Oxonii. P. 137.
1812. Miinter (F. C. C. H.). Odrc gnosticse Salomon
tribute, thebaice et latine. Prefatione
et Adnotationibus philologicis illustrate.
Hafnise.
1838. Dulaurier (E.). Art. in Le Moniteur. Paris.
Sep. 27.
1843. Matter (J). Histoire critique du Gnosticisme.
See General Bibliog. above. 2 ed. Vol. ii.,
vol. ii., pp. 69 ff., 163 ff.
1847. Dulaurier (E.). Art. Notice stir le Manuscript
copte-thebain, intitule La Fidele Sagesse ; et
sur la Publication projetee du Texte et de
la Traduction fran§aise (k< oe Manuscript.
THE COPTIC GNOSTIC WORKS. 625
Journal asiatique. Paris. 4th series. Vol.
ix., juin, pp. 534—548.
1851. Schwartze (M. G.) Pistis Sophia, Opu.s gnosticum
Valentino adjudicatnm, e Codice manuscripto
coptico londinensi description. Text and
Latin translation (1853) by Schwartze, ed.
by Petermann (J. H.). Berlin.
1852. Bimsen (C. C. J.). Hippolytus und seine Zeit.
Anfange und Aussichten des Chris tenth urns
und der Menschheit. Leipzig. Vol. i., pp.
47, 48. Hippolytus and his Age. London.
Vol. i., pp. 61, 62.
1853. Baur (F. C.) Das Christenthum und die christ-
liche Kirche der drei ersten Jahrhunderte.
Tubingen. Notes pp. 185, 186 and 205
206.
1854. Kostlin (K. R.). Art. Das gnostische System des
Buches Pistis Sophia. Theolog. Jahrbiicher.
Tubingen. Vol. xiii., pp. 1 — 104, 137—196.
1856. Migne (J. P.). Le Livre de la fidele Sagasse.
An anonymous translation in Migne's
Dictionaire des Apocryphes. Paris. Vol. i.
append., pt. ii., coll. 1181 — 1286.
I860. Lipsius(R. A.). Gnosticismus. Leipzig. Pp. 95 ff.,
157 ff. See Gen. Bibliog-.
1875. Wright (W.). The Paheographical Society. Fac
similes of MSS. and Inscriptions. Oriental
Series. Ed. by W. W. London. Plate xlii.
1877. Jacobi (J. L.). Art. Gnosis. Herzog's Theolog.
Real Encycl. See Gen. Bibliog.
1887. King(C. W.). The Gnostics and their Remains.
Contains a translation of a number of pages
of P. S. See Gen. Bibliog.
1887. Lipsius (R. A.). Art. Pistis Sophia, Smith and
626 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Wace's Dictionary of Christ. Biog. See Gen.
Bibliog.
1887. Amelineau (E.). Essai sur le Gnosticisme egyptien.
Especially pt. iii., pp. 106—322. See Gen.
Bibliog.
1889. Harnack (A.). Crit. of above. See Gen. Bibliog.
1890. Amelineau (E.). Art. Les Traites gnostiques d'
Oxford. Etude critique. Revue de 1'
Histoire des Religions. Paris. Pp. 1 — 72.
1891. Schmidt (Carl). Art. Ueber die in koptischer
Sprache erhaltenen gnostischen Originalwerke.
Sitzungsber. der konigl. preuss. Akad. di
Wissensch. Berlin. Phil.-hist. Klasse. xi.
1891. Harnack (A.). Ueber das gnostische Buch Pistis.
Sophia. Leipzig. Text, und Untersuch. Vol
vii., pt. 2.
1891. Ryle (H. E.) and James (M. R.). Psalms of the
Pharisees, commonly called the Psalms of
Solomon. Cambridge. For the five Salomonic
Odes quoted in the P.S. See Introd. for full
bibliog. of subject.
1891. Amelineau (E.). Notice sur le Papyrus gnostique
Bruce. Texte et Traduction. Paris.
1891. Schmidt (C.). Crit. on Amelineau's Notice.
Gottingische gelehrte Anzeigen. Gottingen.
Nr. xvii., pp. 640—657.
1891. Amelineau (E.). Art. Le Papyrus Bruce. Reponse
aux Gottingische gelehrte Anzeigen. Revue
de 1'Histoire des Religions. Paris. Vol.
xxiv., no. 3, pp. 376—380.
1892. Schmidt (C.). Final reply of Schmidt. Gott.
gelehr. Anz. Nr. vi., pp. 201—222.
1892. Schmidt (C.). Gnostische Schriften in koptischer
THE COPTIC GNOSTIC WORKS. 627
Sprache aus dem Codex brucianus, herausge-
geben, iibersetzt und bearbeitet. Leipzig.
Text. u. Untersuch. Vol. viii., pts. 1, 2.
1894. Preuschen (E.). Grit, on above. Theolog. Litt.-
Ztg. Leipzig. Nr. 7.
1894 Schmidt (C.). Reply. Die in rlem koptisch-gnos-
tischen Codex brucianus enthalteneri " beiden
Biicher Jeu " in ihrem Verhaltnis zu der Pistis
Sophia. Zeitschr. f. wiss. Theolog. Leipzig.
Pt. iv., Nr. xxiv., pp. 555 — 585.
1895. Amelineau (E.). Pistis Sophia. Ouvrage gnos-
tique de Valentin, traduit du copte en frai^ais,
avec une Introduction. Paris.
1896. Mead (G. R. S.). Pistis Sophia. A Gnostic Gospel
(with Extracts from the Books of the Saviour
appended) originally translated from Greek into
Coptic, and now for the first time Englished
from Schwartze's Latin version of the only
known Coptic MS. and checked by Amelineau's
French Version, with an Introduction. London.
1896. Schmidt (C.). Art. Ein vorirenaeisches gnos-
tisches Originalwerk in koptisher Sprache.
Sitzungsber. der konigl. preuss. Akad.
der Wissenschaft, zu Berlin. Pp. 837-847.
1898. Schmidt (C.). Review on Amelineau's trans, of
P.S. Sonder-Abdruck aus den Gottingisch.
gelehr. Anzeigen. Nr. vi.
1901. Liechtenhaii (R.). Untersuchungen zur koptisch-
gnostischeri Literatur. Die Offenbarung im
Gnosticismus. Gottingen.
1905. Schmidt (C.). Koptisch-gnostische Schriften. Die
Pistis Sophia. Die beiden Biicher des Jeu.
Unbekanntes altgnostisches Werk. Leipzig.
Vol. 1.
628 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
REVIEWS AND ARTICLES IN ENGLISH AND
AMERICAN PERIODICALS.
These are taken mostly from Poole's (W. F.) Index
to Periodical Literature. Boston. 3rd ed., 1885,
with Supplements up to 1898. The British Museum
press marks are conveniently given in the tables of
abbreviations, etc., of this publication.
1828. Notice on Matter's Histoire (1st ed ). The
Foreign Quarterly Review. London. Vol.
iii., pp. 307—309.
1830. Review on the same. Ibid., vol. v., pp. 569—598.
1830. Art. Gnosticism. The Methodist Magazine.
London. Vol. liii., pp. 325 ff.
1831. Art. History of Gnosticism. The Eclectic-
Review. London. Vol. liv., pp. 373 ff.
1833. Cheever (G. B.). Art. The Philosophy of the
Gnostics. The American Biblical Repository.
New York. 2 ser. vol. iii., pp. 353 ff.
1833. Cheever (G. B.). Art. The Phil, of the Gnostics.
Ibid., vol. vi., pp. 253 ff.
1837. Parker (T.). Art. History of Gnosticism. The
Christian Examiner. Boston. Vol. xxiv., pp.
112 ff.
1858. Schaff (P.). Art. Analysis of Gnosticism. The
Mercersburg Review. Mercersburg. Vol. x.,
1858. Harwood (E.). Art. Gnosticism. The American
Church Review. New Haven and New York.
Vol. x., pp. 259 ff.
1865. Rev. on King's Gnostics and their Remains. The
REVIEWS AND ARTICLES. 629
Christian Remembrancer. London. Vol. i.,
1865. Art. Gnosticism. The Art Journal. London.
Vol. xvii. pp. 41 ff.
1867. Clarke (J. C. C.). Art. Gnosticism Outlined.
The Baptist Quarterly Review. Philadelphia.
Vol. i., pp. 35 ff.
1868. Sears (E. H.). Art. Gnosticism. The Monthly
Religious Magazine. Boston. Vol. xli., pp.
101 ff.
1870. Harmon (H. M.). Art. de Groot on Gnostic
Testimonies to the N. T. The Methodist
Quarterly. New York. Vol. xxx., pp. 485 ff.
1874. Art. Gnosticism. The Dublin Review. Dublin.
Vol. Ixxvi., pp. 56 ff.
1875. Rev. on Mansel's Gnostic Heresies. The
Christian Observer. Vol. Ixxv., pp. 438 ff.
1878. Allen (J. H.). Art, Gnosticism. The Unitarian
Review. Boston. Vol. x., pp. 543 ff.
1885. Salmon (G.). Art. The Cross-References in the
" Philosophumena." Herrnathena. Dublin.
Vol. v., pp. 389—402.
1887. Rev. on King's Gnostics (2 ed.). The Saturday
Review. London. Vol. Ixiv., pp. 641 ff.
1887. Lang (J. M.). Art. Gnostic Sects of the Second
Century. The British and Foreign Evangelical
Review. London. Vol. xxxvi., pp. 226 ff.
1889. Conder (C. R.). Art. The Gnostics. The
Asiatic Review. London. Vol. v., pp. 84 ff.
1891. Art. Gnosticism. The London Quarterly. Vol.
I xvii., pp. 120 ff.
1895. Stokes (G. T.). Art. Gnosticism and Modern
Pantheism. Mind. London. Vol. xx., pp.
320 ff.
630 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
1898. Cams (P.). Art. Gnosticism in Relation to
Christianity. The Monist. Chicago. Vol.
viii., pp. 502 — 546.
1898. Scott (C. A.) Rev. on Ariz's Zur Frage nach
dera Ursprung des Gnosticismus.
(JNCANONICAL ACTS.
The following may serve as an introduction to
the subject. Lipsius' exhaustive work will supply
data for a full bibliography.
1851. Tischendorf (C. de). Acta Apostolorum apocrypha.
Leipzig.
1871. Wright (W.). Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles.
Syriac Text and English Translation. London.
2 vols.
1880. Zahn (T.). Acta Joannis. Erlangen.
1883. Lipsius (R. A.) Die apokrypheri Apostelgeschichten
und Apostellegenden. Ein Beitrag zur alt-
christlichen Literaturgeschichte. Braunschweig.
3 vols., 1883, 188-1, 1890.
1883. Bonnet (M.). Supplementum Codicis apocryphi.
Acta Thorase. Leipzig.
1891. Lipsius (R. A.) and Bonnet (M.). Acta Aposto
lorum apocrypha. Leipzig. 2 pts., pt. i. ed.
by L., 1891, pt. ii. by B., 1898.
1897. James (M. R.). Apocrypha Anecdota II. Cam
bridge. Texts and Studies. Vol. v., No. 1.
1897. Bevan (A. A.). The Hymn of the Soul contained
in the Syriac Acts of St. Thomas. Cambridge.
Texts and Studies. Vol. v., No. 3.
GNOSTIC GEMS. 631
GNOSTIC (?) GEMS AND ABRAXAS-STUDIES.
For works prior to 1828 see Matter's Histoire,
1st ed., vol. ii., pp. 52, 53, where a very fair biblio
graphy is to be found. See also King's Gnostics
and their Remains. For more recent researches see :
1891. Dieterich (A.). Abraxas. Studien zur Religions-
geschichte des spa tern Altertums. Leipzig.
GNOSTIC WORKS MENTIONED BY ANCIENT
WRITERS.
For a list of Gnostic works, fragments of some
of which are still extant, but of the majority the
titles only, see :
1893. Harnack (A.). Geschichte der altchristlichen
Literature bis Eusebius. Leipzig. 2 vols.
Gnostische, marcioriitische und ebionitische
Literatur. Vol. i., pp. 143—231.
THE MOST RECENT TEXTS OF THE HJERE-
SIOLOGICAL CHURCH FATHERS AND
THEIR ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS.
Corpus Hseresiologicum. Oehler (F.). Berlin. 3 vols.
1856, 1859, 1861. Vol. i. continens Scriptores
hasresiologicos minores latinos. Philastrius,
Augustinus, Prsedestinatus, Pseudo-Tertullian,
Pseudo-Hieronymus, Isidorus Hispalensis,
Paulus, Honorius Augustodunensis, Gennadius
Massiliensis. Vols. ii., iii. Epiphanii Panaria.
632 FRAGMENTS OF A FAITH FORGOTTEN.
Justin Martyr. Otto (J. C. T. v.). Jena. 3 vols. 2 ed.
1847 — 1850. Also in Corpus Apologetarum
ehristianorum Sseculi secundi. 3 vols. 1876
—1881.
Eng. Trans, by Dods (M.) and Reith (G.), in
Ante-Nicene Christian Library. Edinburgh.
1867.
Clemens Alexandrinus. Dindorf (G.). Oxford. 4 vols.
1869.
Eng. Trans, by Wilson (W.), in Ante-N.
Ch. Lib. Edin. 2 vols. 1867, 1869.
(Protrepticus und Paedagogus). Stahlin
(O.). Leipzig Herausg. v. d. Kirchenvater-
Commission der k. Preuss. Akad. d. Wiss.
Iremeus. Stieren (A.). Leipzig. 2 vols. 1848.
Eng. Trans, by Roberts (A.) and Rainbaut
(W. H.), in Ante-N. Ch. Lib. Edin. 2 vols.
1868, 1869.
Tertullian. Oehler (R). Leipzig. 3 vols. 1853,1854.
Eng. Trans, by Holmes (P.), in Ante-N.
Ch. Lib. Edin. 4 vols., 1868-1870.
(De Praescriptione Hsereticorum). Bindley
(T. H.). Oxford. 1893.
Preuschen (E.). 1892. (Sammlung ausge-
wahlter kircheri und dogniengeschichlicher
Quellen-Schriften. Heft iii.).
Hippolytus. (Philos.). Dunker (L.), and Schneidewin
(F. G.). Gottingen. 1859. Cruice (P.)
Paris. 1860.
Eng. Trans, by MacMahon (J. H.), in
Ante-N. Ch. Lib. Edin. 1868.
Origen. (C. Celsum). Lommatzsch (C. H. E.). Berlin.
3 vols., 1845, 1846. Selwyn (W.). Cambridge.
1873. Bks. i.— iii. only.
Tftxxs. 633
Eng. Trans, by Crombie (F.), in Ante-N.
Ch. Lib. Edin. 2 vols., 1869, 1872.
Eusebius. Dindorf (G.). Leipzig. 4 vols., 1867—1871.
Eng. Trans. (Ecc. Hist.) by Cruse (C. F.)
in Bonn's Ecclesiastical Library. London.
New ed., 1894. (Church Hist., Life of Con-
stantine, etc.) by McGiffert (A. C.) and others,
in Select Library of Nicene and Post-Nicene
Fathers of the Christian Church. New Series.
Oxford. 1890.
Epiphanius. Dindorf (G). Leipzig. 5 voJs., 1859 — 1863.
No Trans, exists in English.
Philastrius. Marx (F.). Vienna. 1898.
No Trans, exists in English.
Theodoret. Migne (J. P.) Patrologiae Cursus Completus.
Series Grseca. Paris. Vols. 80, 84. 1857.
No. Trans, exists in English.
Works by G. R. S. MEAD, B.A., M.R.A.S.
Apollonius of Tyana :
THE PHILOSOPHER-REFORMER OF THE FIRST CENTURY A.D.
A critical Study of the only existing Record of his Life, with some Account of the War of
Opinion concerning him, and an Introduction on the Religious Associations and Brother
hoods of the Times and the possible Influence of Indian Thought on Greece.
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS.
i. Introductory, ii. The Religious Associations and Communities of the First Century,
iii. India and Greece, iv. The Apollonius of Early Opinion, v. Texts, Translations and
Literature, vi. The Biographer of Apollonius. vii. Early Life. viii. The Travels of
Apollonius. ix. The Shrines of the Temples and the Retreats of Religion, x. The Gymno-
sophists of Upper Egypt, xi. Apollonius and the Rulers of the Empire, xii. Apollonius
the Prophet and Wonder-Worker. xiii. His Mode of Life. xiv. Himself and his Circle,
xv. From his Sayings and Sermons, xvi. From his Letters, xvii. The Writings of
Apollonius. xviii. Bibliographical Notes.
160 pp. large Svo. Cloth. 3* Qd. net,
SOME PRESS OPINIONS.
" Mr. Mead is already favourably known to scholars as a well-informed writer on the
origins of religion. His particular province of study is that which passes by the name of
' occult ' — a word that may be little more than a euphemism for our ignorance. . . .
Mr. Mead's work is careful, scholarly, and critical, yet deeply sympathetic with those
spiritual ideals of life which are far greater than all the creeds Will be found
very useful to English readers." — Bradford Observer.
" With much that Mr. Mead says about Apollonius we are entirely disposed to agree."
— Spectator.
" Mr. Mead's sympathetic monograph is based upon a careful study of the literature
of the subject Writes with moderation, and has rendered good service by
examining Apollonius from a fresh point of view." — Manchester Guardian.
" We give a specially cordial welcome to Mr. G. R. S. Mead's ' Apollonius of Tyana.
. . . . It is a book which all well-instructed spiritualists will be able to appreciate
and understand." — Light.
" A charming and enlightening little work, full of knowledge, bright with sympathy,
and masterly in style."— The Coming Day.
" It is not only interesting, it is fair, and to a great degree scholarly although it is slight
and popular in conception. The spirit and tone are admirable. Mr. Mead neither flouts
what he thinks mistaken nor states uncritically what he believes He uses his
authorities with care and judgment, and gives exact references. Some good suggestions are
made in the book." — Literature.
" Through this jungle of fable, controversy, and misunderstanding, Mr. Mead has
heroically set himself to cut his way to the man as he was. Practically ne regards him as a theo-
sophist of the first century, who nad been initiated into the loftier orders and commissioned
to regenerate the cults at many of the larger sanctuaries. The author has studied the original
authorities carefully, and also the work of his predecessors. It is, of course, impossible to
say whether his attempt to get back to the real Apollonius has been successful. In most
THE THEOSOPHICAL PUBLISHING SOCIETY, LONDON AND BENARES.
WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
respects his account is plausible, and quite possibly may represent the facts At
any rate, impartial students will be grateful for his sympathetic vindication of Apollonius
from the too frequent charge that he was nothing better than a charlatan. He thinks that
Apollonius must surely have visited some of the Christian societies, and have met with Paul,
if not earlier, at least at Rome in 66. It seems to us very problematical that he should have
taken any interest in the Christians, though the probability would be much ennanced if Mr.
Mead's view of primitive Christianity could be substantiated." — The Primitive Methodis
Quarterly Review.
" Students of the religious history of the earlier centuries of the Christian era are already
indebted to Mr. Mead for his elucidations of more than one obscure document of that remote
age. His account of Apollonius of Tyana will be all the more welcome because, treating its
subject without theological or denominational prepossessions, it reveals the ancient philo
sopher in a new light, which may very well be also a true one. . . . Mr. Mead gives
a readable and well-studied account of him, reviewing what little remains known of his life,
and inquiring, without controversy, what must have been the character of one who had so
real an influence on the religious life of his time The book is rich in sugges
tions of the actualities of the religious life of the ancient world when Christianity was still
in its infancy. It is well worthy of the attention of all who are interested in the subject." —
The Scotsman.
" This little book is an attempt to tell us all that is definitely known of one of the most
extraordinary figures in history. . . . It is done in the main with absolute impartiality,
and with considerable learning. It is not a satisfactory book, but it is useful and interesting,
and, in default of anything better, it may be recommended." — Saturday Review.
" The task Mr. Mead has set himself is to recover from Philostratus' highly romantic
narrative the few facts which can be really known, and to present to the public a plain and
simple story which shall accord with the plain and simple life of the humble Tyanean ; and
he has achieved no little success. His book is thoroughly readable, the manner of writing
most attractive, and his enthusiasm evidently sincere Mr. Mead's last work is
a thoroughly scholarly one, and he has contributed a very valuable page to philosophical
history." — Chatham and Rochester Observer.
" Mr. Mead's works are always worth reading. They are characterised by clearness,
sanity, and moderation ; they are scholarly, and are always conceived in a profoundly
religious spirit. The bibliographies are excellent. With Mr. Mead's workmanship we have
only one fault to find. In order to give elevation to the utterances of his hero, he not only
affects poetical expressions — which is permissible — and poetical inversions of speech — which
are not permissible — but he indulges in a whole page of irregular blank verse. Mr. Mead is
master of an excellent prose style, and Pegasus is a sorry hack when Pegasus goes lame."—
Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society.
" This well -written volume afford? a critical study of the only existing record of the
life of Apollonius of Tyana His principles, his mode oi teacning. his travels in
the east and in the south and west, his mode of life, his sayings, letters, and writings and
bibliographical notes, are all set forth in a clear and interesting style.'' — Asiatic Quarterly
Review.
" Verfasser will auf Grund der philoetratischen Biographic ein Bild vom Leben and
Wirken des Apollonius geben. Es fehlt ihm dazu nich an besonnenen Urteil, eben so wenig
an der notigen Belesenheit in der einschlagigen Litteratur Verf . halt sich auch,
obwohl offenbar selbst Theologe, frei von der theologischen Voreingenommenneit, die bei
der Beurteilung des Apollonius so fruh und so lange Unheil gestiitet hat."— Wochenschrift
fur klassische Philologie.
'O x.. Mead >yp%^£A Atav yXa^Upw?, TrpayjutaTEfsrai dt TO Ofp-a TOV
fljcova TOU a-v^po?. — Erevna.
THE THEOSOPHICAL PUBLISHING SOCIETY, LONDON AND BENAEES.
WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
THE GOSPELS AND THE GOSPEL :
A STUDY IN THE MOST RECENT RESULTS OF THE
LOWER AND THE HIGHER CRITICISM.
SYNOPSIS OF CONTENTS.
Preamble — A Glimpse at the History of the Evolution of Biblical Criti
cism — The " Word of God " and the " Lower Criticism " — The Nature of
the Tradition of the Gospel Autographs — Autobiographical Traces in the
Existing Documents — An Examination of the Earliest Outer Evidence —
The Present Position of the Synoptical Problem — The Credibility of the
Synoptists — The Johannine Problem — Summary of the Evidence from all
Sources — The Life-side of Christianity — The Gospel of the Living Christ.
200 pp. Large octavo. Cloth, 4s. 6d. net.
SOME PRESS NOTICES.
" A clear, intelligent, and interesting account of the history of the development of
Biblical criticism .... a thoughtful and learned, yet readable book, which well deserves
the attention of readers interested in its subject." — The Scotsman.
" Mr. Mead begins with a sketch of the recent progress of Biblical criticism. The tone
is not altogether what one would wish — the ' Conservatives ' were, after all, fighting for what
they held to be very precious — but it is substantially true." — Spectator.
" Mr. Mead describes his book as ' a study in the most recent results of the higher and
the lower criticism.' The description is incomplete rather than inadequate, for the study
is made from a neo-Gnpstic point of view, and under neo-Gnqstic prepossessions.
Mr. Mead has shown, in previous volumes, how the fascinating glamour of their writings
has attracted him, and, though they are mainly represented by imperfect but suggestive
fragments, he has done his best to reconstruct them and to revive, where possible, their lin
gering vitality. His work, on these lines, has met with due appreciation He
regards Gnosticism as a suppressed religion which may yet result in an all-embracing creed,
which will combine and focus the scattered rays now dispersed abroad among divergent
faiths."— Sheffield Daily Telegraph.
" In his modest preamble the author describes himself as neither scientist nor theologian,
but as ' a friendly spectator, who, as a devoted lover of both science and religion, has no
partisan interest to serve, and, as a believer in the blessings of that true tolerance which per
mits perfect liberty in all matters of opinion and belief, has no desire to dictate to others
what their decision should be on any one of the many controversial points touched upon.'
Further on he strongly advises the ' disturbed ' reader, ' who fears to plunge deeper into
the free waters of criticism,' to ' leave the matter alone, and content himself with the creeds
and cults of the churches.' We, therefore, cannot complain if in the sequel he puts forth
conclusions widely different from those generally held, even in this ' advanced ' age, by the
average thoughtful student. He claims to treat the subject ' without fear or favour,' and,
while disclaiming the ' ultra-rationalism ' of the ' extreme school ' of criticism, he neverthe
less ' feels himself compelled largely to accept the proofs brought forward of the unhistorical
nature of much in the Gospel narratives, and also the main positions in all subjects of Gospel
criticism which do not involve a mystical or practical religious element.' As a theosophist,
he seems to have a peculiar affection, on mystical grounds, for the fourth Gospel, which,
however, he sees fit to class with Hermes Trismegistus. It would be far too elaborate a task
to attempt to deal with the details of his argument here. Its results claim to be based on
Nestle's deservedly popular work. Anyone who wishes to see Nestle theosophically inter
preted may well read Mr. Mead's lucid and interesting pages for himself There
are many other points we should criticise if we had space. But there are many points, on
the other hand, which call for hearty commendation ; not least, Mr. Mead's crusade against
book- worship." — The Guardian.
" This work consists of various chapters which have appeared from time to time iu a
Review devoted to the study of religion from an entirely independent point of view, and
perused by a class of readers belonging to many Churches of Christendom, to schools or sects
of Brahmanism, Buddhism, Mohammedanism, Zoroastrianism, and others wno follow no
religion. The author considers that the controversies which have been waged under the term
of the ' Higher Criticism ' have almost exclusively been that of progressive knowledge of
physical facts (natural, historical, and literary) and the conservatism of theological tradi
tional views, and never, at any time, between Science and Religion in their true meaning."
— Asiatic Quarterly Review.
" While Mr. Mead is thus in general agreement with the extreme left wing in criticism,
he is very far from adopting their rationalistic point of view As to dates, the
author assigns all the Gospels to the reign of Hadrian. The phenomena of the Synoptic
THE THEOSOPHICAL PUBLISHING SOCIETY, LONDON AND BENARES
WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
Gospels, he thinks, point to concerted effort, and he believes that they were written in Egypt.
It is not surprising that he lays much stress on Gnosticism, but he has no wish to revive it.
He rather pleads that we should study it with a view to recovering precious truths that have
been lost. The book is written in a pleasant style, and we have read it with interest, but
we cannot regard it as Mr. Mead's most successful effort." — The Primitive Methodist
Quarterly.
" This anlysis of the ' Gospels,' however, is preliminary to a vindication of that eterna
' Gospel ' which lies beneath all such literature. Mr. Mead contends that this Gospel may be
discovered in Gnostic writings which were condemned by the early Christian Church as
heresies. He admits freely that the forms of the ancient ' Gnosis ' cannot now be revived,
but he finds in the popular Evangelical doctrine of the living Christ an adumbration of the
ancient wisdom of the condemned Gnostics. But the Christ of Mr. Mead's teaching is one
of a sacred brotherhood, including Buddha, Krishna, Zoroaster, and other great enlighteners
of the race. These are all living spiritual energies, inspiring and guiding mankind in its toil
some quest for truth and righteousness. Readers will find in Mr. Mead's thoughtful and
scholarly pages much that will help in that rational and spiritual reconstruction which ia
the great religious task of the hour." — Yorkshire Daily Observer.
TOJV &p%u>v rov ;£pi£rTtavi<y]u,o>j x. G. K.. >S. Mead \
ivirtv apri JU-?XET»!V Trspi r-nc ^pto-rtavtJt^r ^UXotfo^tac Ifo^w; did'ajcTtJtnv. . O
K. Mea<l fivs sis TWV KQfVQetun <7x.a7ravEOJv rns Ipivwiriyjric roe,i/rric spyacr*a£ nai
Trav o , TI ypa<£>?t Kfivit) *ota.£bi/<7»K TTpOiro^rs aftov. . . . 'E/x7rv?0|UHv&c tTro
Trie vyiovc rocvrvic ap^r,^ o x. Mead <7Vv?T5?iE(Tsv lo-^arwr Qau^acnov "pyov."-
Erevna.
DID JESUS LIVE 100 B.C. ?
An Enquiry into the Talmud Jesus Stories, the Toldoth Jeschu, and
some Curious Statements of Epiphanius — Being a Contribution to the
Study of Christian Origins.
440, xvi. pp. Large octavo. Cloth, 9s. net.
SOME PRESS NOTICES.
" A close and learned investigation Mr. Mead is a theosophical scholar
whose previous works dealing with Gnosticism and Gospel criticism are of some value not
only to theosophists, but to theologians." — The Times.
" On the examination of these little known tales Mr. Mead expends an amount of
patience, labour, and learning which the ordinary man .... would deem ridiculous.
Happily, however, the world is not yet peopled exclusively with fat, plump, commonplace
people, and those who follow Mr. Mead can be sure of reward in matter which will set them
thinking. . . . These researches are contributions to the study of the origins of Chris
tianity, and their uniqueness lies in the fact that very few writers ever enter the fields where
Mr. Mead works with such praiseworthy diligence. The ordinary reader trusts too implicitly,
in these matters, to his Geikie and his Farrar, and even the student who has the dash of the
heretic in him is too easily contented with his Zienan. For both these classes of readers Mr.
Mead's chapters will open up new fields of thought. The reader will find himself in the midst
of those fierce fanaticisms, and weird, occult theosophies which were part of the atmosphere
in which infant Christianity grew. Without an adequate acquaintance with these, Christian
origins cannot be understood. This knowledge Mr. Mead's readers will obtain if they follow
him closely, and their view of the beginnings of Christianity will be correspondingly full and
true." — The Yorkshire Daily Observer.
" Mr. Mead's previous wanderings in historic by-ways have resulted in much curious
lore associated with Gnosticism and the Neo-Platonists, and he seems to have been
attracted to this adjacent field as one likely to contain hidden treasure For
those who desire an introduction to this branch of literature, Mr. Mead has made it easily
accessible."— Tie Sheffield Daily Telegraph.
" Written by a professed theosophist, this work is yet entirely free from the taint of
dogmatism of any kind. It is indeed a valuable contribution to the literature on the subject,
which is as abundant as it is chaotic. The author has collected and reviewed this mass, and
has summarised and criticised it until he has shaped it into something of a coherent whole.
The Rabbinical and other Hebrew legendary and historical matter dealing with the reputed
origin and life of the Messiah is carefully sifted, and the subject is approached with befitting
reverence That the book is most valuable from a suggestive point of view
cannot be denied. It merits the attention of all interested in Christian criticism." — The
Scotsman.
THE THEOSOPHICAL PUBLISHING SOCIETY, LONDON AND BENARES.
WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
" This book, with its remarkable title, deals in a very critical spirit with the origins of
Christianity. . . . Although critical in the highest degree, the author does not dogmatise
and preserves a philosophical calm thought." — The Chatham and Rochester Observer.
" The author of this learned work is not propounding a mere theological riddle, nor can
he be said to be coming forward wantonly merely to increase the number of puzzles that
confront the student of Christian origins The author has been a very diligent
student of the Talmud, and perhaps his lengthened account of that extraordinary body of
traditions is one of the best in our language The argument throughout is marked
by great erudition and remarkable modesty." — The Glasgow Herald.
" The question is not a fool's question. It is serious, and Mr. Mead takes it seriously."
— The Expository Times.
" Mr. Mead has done much first-rate work, on un traditional lines, in early Church his
tory, and has propounded theorems of which a good deal more will be heard. He always
writes as a scholar, with complete avoidance of infelicities of theological utterance such as
too often have handicapped suggestive heterodoxies." — The Literary World.
" The materials for the further pursuit of the inquiry are all brought together in this
volume, and the author is at very evident pains to hold the balance carefully as between
the different authorities whom he quotes. He has read everything of any importance that
has been published relating to the subject of which he treats. He is evidently a very widely
read man, and is possessed of much critical acumen, as also of all the best qualifications of
historical inquiry and original research. The work will, we doubt not, be largely read by
Christian theologians." — The Asiatic Quarterly Review.
" This is the fifth book by Mr. Mead that we have had the pleasure of bringing before
our readers. In our notices of his earlier volumes we have been glad to recognise, whether
we agreed with him or not, the learning, the earnestness, the scientific method, and the deep
religious spirit by which they have been animated. The title of the present volume will,
we anticipate, cause many readers to regard it as a piece of cranky speculation. . . .
It is not, however, a work to be dismissed with a mere shrug of the shoulders. . . .
Mr. Mead has brought out not simply an interesting but a valuable work, even apart from
the special thesis which he investigates." — The Primitive Methodist Quarterly Review.
" I would direct the attention of educated scholarly men to a very remarkable book
. written by G. R. S. Mead I invite our educated and serious-
rninded Protestant clergymen everywhere to read this book and tell me, privately, what
they think about it." — Standish O' Grady, in The All Ireland Review.
" A much more remarkable collection of apocrypha is the subject of a curious book by
Mr. Mead, known to the small public who are interested in such things as learned in the fan
tasies of Gnosticism We have not often read a learned book from which we
dissent so widely with more genuine interest, and we are bound to recognise the dignified
and scholarly fashion in which Mr. Mead puts forward his theses, strange and impossible as
some of them seem to us to be. — The Pilot.
PISTIS SOPHIA: A Gnostic Gospel.
(With Extracts from the Books of the Saviour appended.) Originally
translated from Greek into Coptic, and now for the first time
Englished from Schwartze's Latin Version of the only known Coptic
MS., and checked by Amelineau's French version. With an Intro
duction and Bibliography. 394, xliv. pp. large octavo. Cloth.
7s. 6d. net.
(Out of Print. A Revised Edition is contemplated.)
SOME PRESS OPINIONS.
" The ' Pistis Sophia ' has long been recognised as one of the most important Gnostic
documents we possess, and Mr. Mead deserves the gratitude of students of Church History
and of the History of Christian Thought, for his admirable translation and edition of this
curious Gospel." — Glasgow Herald.
" Mr. Mead has done a service to other than Theosophists by his translation of the
' Pistis Sophia.' This curious work has not till lately received the attention which it deserves
. . . . He has prefixed a short Introduction, which includes an excellent bibliography.
Thus, the English reader is now in a position to judge for himself of the scientific value of
the only Gnostic treatise of any considerable length which has come down to us." — Guardian
" From a scholar's point of view the work is of value as illustrating the philosophico-
mystical tendencies of the second century." — Record.
" Mr. Mead deserves thanks for putting in an English dress this curious document from
the early ages of Christian philosophy." — Manchester Guardian.
THE THEOSOPHICAL PUBLISHING SOCIETY, LONDON AND BENARES
WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
THE THEOSOPHY OF THE GREEKS,
PLOTINUS.
With Bibliography. Octavo. Cloth, Is. net.
THE THEOSOPHY OF THE VEDAS.
THE UPANISHADS : 2 Volumes.
Half Octavo. Cloth, Is. 6d. each net.
VOLUME I.
Contains a Translation of the Isha, Kena, Katha, Prashna, Munclaka, and
Mandukya Upanishads, with a General Preamble, Arguments, and
Notes by G. R. S. Mead and J. C. Chattopadhyaya (Roy Choudhuri).
VOLUME II.
Coit-ains a Translation of the Taittirlya, Aitareya, and Shvetashvatara
Upanishads, with Arguments and Notes.
FRENCH TRANSLATION.
LA THEOSOPHIE DES VEDAS : NEUF UPANISHADS.
Traduction fra^aise, de E. Marcault. Paris : Librairie de 1'Art Independant,
10 rue Saint- Lazare.
SIMON MAGUS : An Essay.
Quarto. Wrappers, 5s. net. (Out of print.)
THE WORLD MYSTERY : Four Essays.
Contents : The World-Soul ; The Vestures of the Soul ; The Web of
Destiny; True Self-reliance. Octavo. Cloth, 3s. 6d. net. (Out
of print.)
Orpheus.
With three Charts and Bibliography. Will serve as an Introduction
to Hellenic Theology. Octavo, Cloth, 4s. 6d. net. (Out of
print.)
THE THEOSOPHICAL PUBLISHING SOCIETY, LONDON AND BENARES.
WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
THRICE=QREATE5T HERMES.
Studies in Hellenistic Theosophy and Gnosis. Being a Translation of
the Extant Sermons and Fragments of the Trismegistic Literature, with
Prolegomena, Commentaries, 'and Notes.
Vol. I. — Prolegomena. — pp. xvi., 481.
Vol. II.— Sermons. — pp. xi., 403.
Vol. III. — Excerpts and Fragments. — pp. xii., 371.
Vol. I. — i. The Remains of the Trismegistic Literature ; ii. The History
of the Evolution of Opinion ; iii. Thoth the Master of Wisdom ;
iv. The Popular Theurgic Hermes-Cult in the Greek Magic Papyri ;
v. The Main Source of the Trismegistic Literature — Manetho High
Priest of Egypt ; vi. An Egyptian Prototype of the Main Features
of the Pcemandres' Cosmogony ; vii. The Myth of Man in the
Mysteries ; viii. Philo of Alexandria and the Hellenistic Theology ;
ix. Plutarch Concerning the Mysteries of Isis and Osiris ; x.
" Hernias " and " Hermes " ; xi. Concerning the /Eon-Doctrine ;
xii. The Seven Zones and their Characteristics ; xiii. Plato Con
cerning Metempsychosis ; xiv. The Vision of Er ; xv. Concerning
the Crater or Cup ; xvi. The Disciples of Thrice-greatest Hermes.
Vol. II. — i. The Corpus Hermeticum ; ii. The Perfect Sermon.
Vol. III. — i. Excerpts by Stobseus ; ii. References and Fragments in
the Fathers — Justin Martyr, Athenagoras, Clement of Alexandria,
Tertullian, Cyprian, Arnobius, Lactantius, Augustine, Cyril of
Alexandria, Suidas ; iii. References and Fragments in the Philoso
phers — Zosimus, Jamblichus, Julian the Emperor, Fulgentius the
Mythographer ; iv. Conclusion ; v. Index.
Large 8vo, cloth ; 30s. net.
TRANSLATIONS.
Apollonius de Tyane
Chez Bailly, rue Saint- La zare, 11, Paris.
Apoionio de Tyana
Bihlinteca Orientalista, Tapineria, 24, Barcelona.
THE THEOSOPHICAL PUBLISHING SOCIETY, LONDON AND BINARM.
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UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO LIBRARY
Mead, George Robert Stowe
Fragments of faith for
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