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- From: deane@netcom.com (Dean Edwards)
- Subject: Gnosis-Overview
- Message-ID: <deaneEIKDnt.Foo@netcom.com>
- Followup-To: poster
- Summary: This document contains a general overview of gnosis.
- It should be read by anyone interested in understanding the
- what gnosis is and what differentiates it from other forms
- of mystic experience.
- Keywords: gnosis,mysticism,spirit,consciousness,logos,sufi,marifat
- Sender: deane@netcom13.netcom.com
- Reply-To: deane@netcom.com (Dean Edwards)
- Organization: La Casa del Paese Lontano
- Date: Fri, 24 Oct 1997 16:26:17 GMT
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: Fri, 12 Dec 1997 23:59:59 GMT
- Lines: 127
- Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu alt.religion.gnostic:8185 alt.consciousness:43697 soc.religion.christian.bible-study:62518 soc.history:93356 alt.sufi:1948 alt.religion.islam:60765 sci.answers:7276 soc.answers:8796 alt.answers:29822 news.answers:115280
-
- Archive-name: gnosis/overview
- Last-modified: 9 June 1995
- Version: 1.1.2.3
-
- Gnosis Overview
- This document is posted monthly to soc.religion.gnosis and to other
- relevant newsgroups. It is maintained by deane@netcom.com (Dean
- Edwards).
-
- **********************************************************
- COPYTIGIGHT INFORMATION AND DISCLAIMER
- The following general overview of gnosis is not intended to be
- the last word or the definitive work on this subject. Rather it
- is, as its title implies, intended to provide the participant or
- reader with a set of guidelines that will familiarize them with
- the general use of the terms for gnosis. Beyond that it will seek
- to review the historical and contemporary trends, techniques,
- practices and developments of gnosis, Gnosticism, ma'rifat, irfan,jnana,
- mystical ecstasy and other related terms.
-
-
- The Gnosis-Overview is intended to serve as a general on-line
- reference about gnosis in the soc.religion., talk.religion., sci.
- and alt. hierarchies (among others). It may not be sold or resold
- without permission of the author. It is also used to support the
- discussions in soc.religion.gnosis. Please send comments to
- deane@netcom.com (Dean Edwards).
-
- GNOSIS-OVERVIEW
- c 1994 Dean Edwards
-
- Gnosis comes from a Greek word meaning 'to know' in the sense of 'to
- be acquainted'. Gnosis in a more specific religious sense refers to
- the knowledge of God and the fullness of the true spiritual realms
- through direct personal experience. Similar terms are jnana
- (Sanskrit) and ma'rifat (Arabic). A gnostic is someone who has had
- such an experience or who has been initiated into a tradition which
- provides access to such personal revelations. (Please note that as a
- term 'jnana' should not be confused with jnana yoga, which as a system
- of yoga is also concerned with the study of knowledge rather than the
- topic of gnosis as in 'direct acquaintance or experience. The true
- or 'sat' jnana, while it can be discussed or written about, has its
- real value in direct experience.)
-
- Gnosis is not simply a synonym for mysticism, paranormal, occult,
- metaphysics, esoteric or knowledge. It is a distinct category of
- mystical experience beyond the physical or psychic levels of being.
- (Psychic experiences, such as speaking in tongues, are not considered
- to be an experience of gnosis.)
-
- A gnostic religious-philosophical movement flourished during the
- first several centuries of the current era. During the Second
- Century C.E., a series of systems of gnosis emerged in Alexandria
- and the ancient Mediterranean world. These systems, most of which
- were associated with early Christianity are usually referred to by
- historians of religion by the term "Gnosticism". When Gnosticism is
- used in this document, it is with that meaning in mind. 'Gnosis'
- and 'gnostic' retain their broader meanings.
-
- Gnostic practices and ideas have long been present within many, if
- not most, religious and spiritual traditions. What occurred in
- the Second Century C.E. was the emergence of gnostic systems which
- focused on gnosis itself as the goal around which these early
- (classical) Gnostics formed their own approaches to spirituality.
-
- There would seem to have always been traditions of secret knowledge
- within various religious systems. What is referred to here was the
- emergence of systems in which gnosis itself was the principal goal
- and experience. In these systems it was not just another thread in
- a larger tradition.
-
- The effects of the presence of Gnosticism as a systematized religious
- and spiritual practice were felt throughout Europe, Asia and North
- Africa. These effects continue to be felt today. While much of the
- focus in gnostic studies has been with the early Christian forms of
- gnosis, Jewish, Islamic, Hindu, Taoist, Buddhist, pagan and other
- forms are also present in the historical and contemporary record. An
- active academic debate about the origins of Gnosticism and gnosis is
- a major focus for many scholars. The discussion and study of gnosis
- as an approach to spirituality cannot be easily tied to any single
- religion.
-
- Gnosis involves direct "knowledge" and experience of the sacred,
- rather than relying exclusively on faith, belief or study of sacred
- texts. The gnostic (Arabic: 'arif) draws upon this inner experience
- and knowledge to describe the origin and true nature of all things.
-
- The world is often seen as a training ground or prison for Soul as
- it seeks spiritual liberation, a return to its true home in the
- Pleroma or realms of pure spirit beyond the physical and psychic
- regions of matter, emotion and the mind. The true nature of Soul is
- as a divine spark which originally issued forth from the fountain-
- head of God. Gnostic traditions often teach that only through the
- intercession of a messenger from the pure spiritual realms can the
- Soul become acquainted with God. The original Greek word 'gnosis',
- as noted above, meant knowledge in terms of being 'acquainted with'.
- The gnostic in any form is a 'friend of God'.
-
- Please note that Soul in the above paragraph refers to the spark of
- individualized spiritual essence that dwells within the consciousness
- or mind. In some systems the word 'spirit' itself is used instead of
- Soul. Soul then becomes interchangeable with mind. In Greek, for
- instance, the word 'psyche' means both mind and soul. 'Pneuma' on
- the other hand means spirit, wind, breath, air. The ancient Egyptians
- used the word Ba for mind/soul and used Sa for the spiritual essence
- which dwelt within the Ba. In some traditions the terms for soul and
- spirit often have the same meaning and are used interchangeably.
-
- Today, new schools of gnosis such as the Ecclesia Gnostica have
- emerged in the West. The ancient movement still thrives in several
- Sufi orders of Islam, which continue to attract many new adherents.
- There are also strong gnostic influences in Jewish wisdom tradition,
- Kabbalah, Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism. Similar patterns are found
- in India in the teachings of the Fifteenth Century poet Kabir and in
- the Sikhism.
-
- As a field of academic study Gnosticism has risen to prominence as a
- result of the discovery of the Nag Hammadi Library materials in Egypt
- in 1945 and earlier discoveries of Manichaean writings. This document
- is intended to serve as a foundation for a continuing serious exchange
- of information, questions and views about historical and contemporary
- gnosis, gnostics and Gnosticism.
-
- Additional information is also available by looking up Gnosticism,
- Sufism and related subjects at most libraries in the subject
- index.
-
-