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#Post#: 204--------------------------------------------------
April D. DeConick
By: forbitals Date: February 4, 2022, 4:49 pm
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The Gnostic New Age
by April E. DeConick
To clarify, 2nd century Gnostic rites fall into four categories
1. ceremonies to awaken or quicken the spirit from
unconsciousness\
2. ceremonies to purge the soul of its demons
3. ceremonies to mature the fledgling spirt into an adult
divinity
4. ceremonies to integrate the mature spirit, the reals self,
with its transcendent root. This process brings healing because
it repairs the separation that was the root cause of the
person's anxiety and fear, without completely wiping out the
individual's identity.
She deals with Darren Aronofsky, director of Requiem for a
Dream, which has been talked about on this board. But she deals
with another of his films
Darren Aronofsky
Pi (1998)
HTML https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0138704/?ref_=nm_knf_i1
She deals with John's Gospel, a Gnostic reading. And she looks
at Chapter 4, the Samaritan Woman at the well. Gnosticism did
focus on recruiting Samaritans, and Simon Magus was a big part
of this. As Tobias Churton writes, "He was the original Jesus."
Now lets look at more of DeConick's references:
Clinard, Marshall B., and Robert F. Meier, 2008, Sociology of
Deviant Behavior, 13th ed
Couliano, Ioan P. 1992 The Tree of Gnosis: Gnostic Mythology
from Early Christianity to Modern Nihilism
Bloom 1992
The American Religion
1996
Omens of Millennium: The Gnosis of Angels, Dreams, and
Resurrection
Smoley 2006
Forbidden Faith: The Secret History of Gnosticism
Burfeind, Peter M. 2014
Gnostic America
Wilson Eric G. 2006
Secret Cinema: Gnostic Vision in Film
Fuller, Robert C. 2001
Spiritual, but Not Religious: Understanding Unchurched America
Sheldrake, Philip 2007
A Brief History of Spirituality
Kaufman, Gordon D. 1993
In Face of Mystery: Constructive Theology
Mastrocinque, Attilio, From Jewish Magic to Gnosticism (2005)
Markschies, Christopher, Gnosis: An Introduction (2003)
A lot of talk about Plato, and about The Truman Show.
She is saying that Gnosticism started in Egypt.
Broek, Roelof van den, Gnostic Religion in Antiquity, (2013)
Atum was the hermaphrodite who created himself.
The first Ogdoad was
Shu and Tefnut (manifestation of Maat)
Get and Nut
Osiris, Isis, Nephthys, and Seth
And this is going by both the Coffin Texts and the Pyramid
Texts.
Framkfurter, David. 1994
The Magic of Writing and the Writing of Magic: The Power of the
Word in Egyptian and Greek Traditions
1998
Religion in Roman Egypt: Assimilation and Resistance
She really emphasizes The Truman Show.
And what Gnosticism is really about is the realization that the
God Almighty that people profess allegiance to and that keeps
the pews and collection plates full is an idol. And so people
come to see themselves as higher than this God.
pg 54
"
The Gnostics believed that they had gnosis because they had
found and met the hidden God directly, by undertaking an
ecstatic quest. What was chocking was that the God they found
was not numbered among the gods of the Babylonian, Egyptian,
Jewish, or Greek myths that were being worshipped in the temples
down the street.
"
Two interesting books, both written about the same time, and
both starting with Ezekiel's Vision of the Chariot. These books
span the gap between religious and occult kabbalah, and the
later does not use the Tree of Life diagram.
Kabbalah (1998)
Three Thousand Years of Mystic Tradition
Hanson, Kenneth, 1953-
The Essential Kabbalah (1994)
the Heart of Jewish Mysticism
Daniel C. Matt
more of DeConick's references:
Garth Fowden (1986) The Egyptian Hermes: A Historical Approach
tot he Late Pagan Mind
This Simon Magus was really quite a character.
There had been Dositheus, a successor to John the Baptist, and
he had this woman Luna. He was challenged by Simon of Gitta
(later known as Simon Magus) and he took over the operation and
over Luna, who's real name was Helena.
DeConick sees the good in Paul and she shows why a lot of
Gnostics like him. But she also shows how he doubled back on
himself and on his Damascus Vision.
She works a lot with these movies with religious themes which
promote gnosticism.
She shows how John's Gospel was liked by both Catholics and
Gnostics, and it does seem to be in part drawn from Gnostic
sources.
From other sources, it is believed that John's Gospel was
promulgated to replace the Thomas Gospel.
The Gnostic New Age (2016)
April D. DeConick
She is dealing with religiously themed SciFi, like:
The Truman Show
And then talking about Paul though this, and showing why
gnostics like much of what he wrote:
Dogma (1999)
www.imdb.com
Seems to be a very dark themed film, and she uses this to show
the gnostic interpretation of John's Gospel, and the original
author's intent remains unclear. But John is very moving, and
this is why:
Dark City (1998)
www.imdb.com
And then she gets into initiatic experiences with:
Altered States (1980) dir Ken Russell
www.imdb.com
She talks about one Cerinthus, a gnostic interpreter of John.
Michael Allen Williams (1996) Rethinking "Gnosticism": An
Argument for Dismantling a Dubious Category.
Each of these gnostic groups has its own story of cosmology,
creation, fall, and reintegration. They just don't always call
them by these names. They always have some explanation for why
life might seem off balance. Or to use the Sanskrit term,
samsara, the wagon wheel squeaks on its axle.
p176
Second-century Gnostic rites fall into four categories:
ceremonies to awaken or quicken the spirit from unconsciousness;
ceremonies to mature the fledgling spirit into an adult
divinity; and ceremonies to integrate the mature spirit, the
real self, with its transcendent root. The process brings
healing because it repairs the separation that was the root
cause of the person's anxiety and fear, without completely
wiping out the individual's identity.
So the Gnostics were not Buddhists. The spirit does not
experience emptiness, nor is it reabsorbed into its root so that
it no longer exists individually. The Gnostic rites ensure that
the personal spirit has grown its own identity, which then
unites with its source.
Henry More in 17th Century first coined term Gnosticism
HTML https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joni_Mitchell
The 40 Best Joni Mitchell Songs: A Beginner's Guide
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BsWVRN8DDjs&list=PLkPIAonut3gCtrRYG3hFQbzrRT0TB2ApW
Steely Dan - Can't Buy a Thrill (1972) - full album
HTML https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jmdiKePVUy8&list=PLfGibfZATlGq9jnvz7I1gw5Xp_FYMQ60p&index=1
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