Why is Gnosticism so spiritually compelling? I am quite certain it is completely wrong, but it is fascinating and beautiful.
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46He's just a silly lil guy.
It's like Christianity but with your favorite mods installed.
It gives a fulfilling answer to the "why is everything so messed up" question while offering a way out of this mess through the acquisition of knowledge. It gives hope that if you can see through the construct of the Demiurge that you can be freed from reviving in the Black Cube again.
In short, it offers an escape from a worldview that fundamentally makes you submit to an unjust authority, while offering you the higher philosophy that can only flourish in the absence of a controlling anthropomorphic god.
Tl;dr: The soul inherently knows there's something very wrong in the Judeo-Christian worldview, and Gnosticism offers those already inducted in it a path beyond it.
Gnosticism is inherently incompatible with Christianity.
Either all of what God has created is good or all matter is wicked and is constructed by a false god.
Another thing I find particularly troublesome in a lot of Gnostic branches is the focus on Jesus. Early Gnosticism is all about anointing YOURSELF as the Christ (in fact, "Christ" was originally a Gnostic title) in order to be master of your own qualia, but a lot of what survives after the Christian purges of Gnostic material focuses on Jesus as "THE Christ" instead, just like Christianity does. Jesus Christ as "The Way" and all that. I've even seen (prolific) Gnostic material that claims Jesus as the only pneumatic. It's sad when you come across a Gnostic text called something like "THE TRUE AND HIGHMOST REVELATION OF SETH" that turns out to be a lot of babble about Jesus.
How does this not make Christianity and Gnosticism incompatible?
You cannot both save yourself and have need of Christ, exactly. Christ is the liberating factor in Christianity. Not your acquisition of knowledge.
>excited
it's that simple, most people decide to spent their time fretting about work and debt and other social constructs instead
bobr.mp4
The only way "gnostic" fits in front of Christian is with a great deal of bending of Christianity to the point that it isn't, like the Moonies or so.
<kjv /knowledge
>
Romans 10:1-3 Brethren, my heart's desire and prayer to God for Israel is, that they might be saved.
2 For I bear them record that they have a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge.
3 For they being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God.
1 Timothy 2:4 Who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth.
2 Timothy 3:7 Ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.
2 Peter 3:18 But grow in grace, and [in] the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To him [be] glory both now and for ever. Amen.
The knowledge referred to, for example, in 2nd TImothy, is knowledge of salvation through Christ.
Pulling verses out of context and suggesting that they endorse gnosticism requires not reading verses like John 14:6 which explicity reject the idea of gnosis/self-salvation.
1. treating gnosticism like one thing
2. not considering it can be present in degrees.
1. I explicitly said gnosticism was a category of beliefs, not "one thing."
2. By degrees sidesteps the issue of essence. What is it ESSENTIALLY. IF you have two things that are contradictory (Christianity and Gnosticism), it is ultimately one or the other because the two are irreconcilable, it cannot be both.
To say "present in degrees" doesn't really define anything usefully.
Finally, in 1 Timothy 6:20-21, St. Paul explicitly rejects gnosticism by name (though usually translated into English as "science" and "knowledge":) "O Timothy, guard the deposit entrusted to you. Avoid the irreverent babble and contradictions of what is falsely called “knowledge,” for by professing it some have swerved from the faith."