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Originally posted by Mabus the Forsaken
You know, it seems to me that Gnosticism was and is a form of Christianity that is in many ways superior to Christian orthidoxy, for instance:
Morals were a matter of personal responsibility, rather than rules set in stone.
Gnosticism placed women on an even footing with men (gospel of St. Mary Magdeline etc.)
Meditation and reflection rather than prayer.
Non compulsion, if you didn't want to be Gnostic they couldn't force you.
Do you think it was a shame it was suppressed or don't you?
Gnosticism praised self reflection and the pursuit of knowledge while Catholacism and the like demands unconditional faith and almost supresses new ideas.
I won't be happy until I see Gnostic temples being erected next to Catholic and Protestant cathedral
And Gnosticism, as you said, is far more appealing to a larger scope of people thanks to its far more tolerant teachings and its flexibility moral-wise.
Originally posted by Mabus the Forsaken
Well I must say, you do put up a good argument, I guess I'm just a bit curious as to how things would have turned out if Gnosticism (and by this I do mean Christian Gnosticism) had been a major religion.
Originally posted by Nygdan
??? Where does it say this??? Gnostic christianity is supposed to come from the word for knowledge, and also is thought sometimes to have links to pre-christian gnostics, but I don't recall them specifically being moral relativists or anything like that.
Originally posted by Nygdan
What is a prayer but meditation? Gnostics applied philosophical thinking to theology. I don't see why this is especially unique or relevatory.
I won't be happy until I see Gnostic temples being erected next to Catholic and Protestant cathedral
Originally posted by AkashicWanderer
Most info you will find on the internet regarding Gnostics is false
Meditation requieres no thought, prayer does.
Do not people meditate upon certain things?? I know that there is are some zen like meditations that try to get ride of all thought and sensation, but thats not the only kind of meditation that is out there, and even then its an attempt to commune with the divine.
Originally posted by Nygdan
Gnostics don't publish to the internet?? What sources for gnosticism are you using??
Do not people meditate upon certain things?? I know that there is are some zen like meditations that try to get ride of all thought and sensation, but thats not the only kind of meditation that is out there, and even then its an attempt to commune with the divine.
Originally posted by James J Dierbeck
Though I have a good collection of extra Biblical scriptures, I still don't know exactly what Gnosticism is, until I can read the supposed heresy in the lost books of the Bogomils, etc.
Originally posted by James J Dierbeck
I've still never found the writings that supported the alleged Gnostic beliefs entirely. The Heliand is only available in ancient Saxon language. The NT section is titled Christ and Satan, as with the Junius II, and I believe the Cathars also used that book still not in my collection of extant extrabiblical writings.
Originally posted by AkashicWanderer
[quote/]
"This is because there are no alleged Gnostic beliefs. It is not a doctrine. The duality of Manichaeanism is not present in Modern Gnosticism, nor do I believe was it present in the Valentinian era.
You might have a look at some of his books, for Gnostic beliefs" [ /quote] by AkashicWanderer]
Originally posted by James J Dierbeck
You talk to me like I'm ignorant about this. I've "The Other Bible" by Harper Collins Books, which has the Vaelntinian & Manichean stuff, & I don't see any origin of the dualist belief or That Christ was a ghost, as was stated prior.
The very books missing ARE the source, that I cannot discern for myself. That's some kind of suppression, if not Gnostic. I also have "The Gnostic Scriptures"-Bentley Layton with Doubleday Books, where I don't find basis for such beliefs.
I don't want to take a researchers' word for their beliefs, because the Bogomils & Catars were exterminated, & Church spread rumors untrue about Bogomils, about sacrifices, unfounded by any extrabiblical writings. Extermination is suppression at its' worst.
A list of books I'd like to find in a bookstore of the Bogomils; Vision of Isaiah, Oration on the Cross, and Two Outlaws by Saint Gregory, Lament of Fallen Angels, Secret Book of the Bogomils, On Adam & Eve and the End of the World, Legend of the Cross. Are they not suppressed?
Originally posted by James J Dierbeck
I've "The Other Bible" by Harper Collins Books, which has the Vaelntinian & Manichean stuff, & I don't see any origin of the dualist belief or That Christ was a ghost, as was stated prior.
I don't want to take a researchers' word for their beliefs, because the Bogomils & Catars were exterminated, & Church spread rumors untrue about Bogomils, about sacrifices, unfounded by any extrabiblical writings.
Originally posted by AkashicWanderer
You will certainly not find much information about their values, message, and vision.
www.newadvent.org...
great, if not the greatest, part of Gnostic literature, which has been saved from the general wreck of Gnostic writings, is preserved to us in three Coptic codices, commonly called the Askew, the Bruce, and the Akhmim Codex. The Askew Codex, of the fifth of sixth century, contains the lengthy treatise "Pistis Sophia", i.e. Faith-Wisdom. This is a work in four books, written between A.D. 250 and 300; the fourth book, however, is an adaptation of an earlier work. The first two books describe the fall of the Æon Sophia and her salvation by the Æon Soter; the last two books describe the origin of sin and evil and the need of Gnostic repentance.
To me it is to be void of thought, and is very different from prayer
Know where I can buy a copy of the ancient Book of Zerubabel?
The final four verses (Hag 2:20-23) eulogize Zerubabel as the universal eschatological ruler. Yehouah will overthrow the “throne of kingdoms”, the chariot and its riders and the strength of the nations. It sounds like a call to rebellion, but Zerubabel might mean Zoroaster. Is there here Zoroastrian mythology about the eschaton misunderstood and written into history? Have we an edited version of what was originally the expression of the Saoshyant, a descendent of Zoroaster, appearing when God shook the earth at the End Time?
Sitting on bookstore shelves is what I consider availably extant.
I've still never found the writings that supported the alleged Gnostic beliefs entirely
A list of books I'd like to find in a bookstore of the Bogomils; Vision of Isaiah
citeEqually rare in world literature is the following account of Isaiah's visit to heaven, a Russian Slavonic copy of a late tenth or eleventh-century Old Bulgarian translation from Greek. Since only a fragment of the Greek original is extant, the Slavonic is all the more precious. There also remain a longer, Ethiopian version, as well as a Latin rendition which is closely tied to the Slavonic (more on this below).
Are they not suppressed?
Go to the research page at www.truthquestonline.info... to see a copy of the Jesuit oath to murder for the Church
Anon.: The Female Jesuit. London, 1851
Anon.: The Mystery of Jesuitism. London, 1658
Anon.: The Secret Instructions of the Jesuits. London, 1824
Anon.: The Secret Instructions of the Jesuits. London, 1824
oath is taken from the book Subterranean Rome by Carlos Didier, translated from the French and published in New York in 1843
In the 1912 elections, the two candidates for Congress from the Seventh Congressional District in Pennsylvania were Eugene C. Bonniwell, a Democrat, and Thomas S. Butler, a Republican. Mr. Bonniwell, the unsuccessful candidate, filed an objection with the Speaker of the House, asking that Mr. Butler not be seated to represent the district. [...]"The Hon. Thomas S. Butler, the Republican nominee for Congress, was born and reared in the Society of Friends, and is proud of his Quaker ancestry. His opponent, Eugene C. Bonniwell, is a Roman Catholic."[...]On August 28, 1912, the Chester Republican reprinted this editorial. Coincident with the two said editorials messengers in the employ of supporters of Thomas S. Butler traversed the district, having in their possession and circulating a blasphemous and infamous libel, a copy of which is hereto attached, pretended to be an oath of the Knights of Columbus, of which body the contestant [Bonniwell] is a member. So revolting are the terms of this document and so nauseating its pledges that the injury it did not merely to the contestant but also to the Knights of Columbus and to Catholics in general can hardly be measured in terms.I charge that the circulation of this oath and the publication of the two editorials herein referred to were part of a conspiracy . . . for the purpose of arousing religious rancor and of defeating the Democratic nominee. The Constitution of the United States prohibits any religious test for office
Catholic Source
So likewise is the so-called Jesuit oath, a clumsy fabrication of the forger Robert Ware, exposed by Bridget in "Blunders and Forgeries".