In these days of the " higher criticism," with its merciless analysis of original Scripture, much light would doubtless be thrown on the New Testament by an unprejudiced study of Gnosticism. This philosophy, which reached a flourishing maturity in the second century of the Christian era, but became virtually extinct in the sixth, taught that all natures — intellectual, moral, spiritual, and material—are successive emanations from Deity. Its professors claimed to have an esoteric and philosophic knowledge of Christian doctrines, and some modern scholars assert that the Gospels are replete with allusions to the Gnostic teaching. Although it is now fashionable to dismiss the Syrian and Egyptian schools as a fantastic combination of Oriental mysticism, Greek philosophy, and Christian theology, yet it is probable that a profound interest will be awakened among reasoning Christians by " Pistis Sophia."
Pistis Sophia
G. R. Mead
bookThe Hymn of the Robe of Glory, The Hymns of Hermes
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bookGnostic John the Baptizer
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bookThe Gnostic Crucifixion
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bookThe Hymns of Hermes
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bookThe Corpus Hermeticum
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bookThe Mysteries of Mithra, The Vision of Aridaeus
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bookApollonius of Tyana
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bookFive Years of Theosophy
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bookGnostic John the Baptizer: Selections from the Mandaean John-Book
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bookThe gnosis of the mind, The hymn of Jesus
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bookGnostic John the Baptizer
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