Letters from the International School
Gnosticism by Laurence Freeman
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The occasion for the first great divide in the history of Christian
spirituality was an esoteric and eclectic form of mysticism that
is still with us and erupts from time to time in Hollywood blockbusters.
‘The truth is out there’, the Da Vinci Code or Stigmata
claim and ancient secrets concealed by nefarious Catholic cardinals
and albino monks are finally revealed for all by American anthropologists
on the run from the Vatican and the police. Since the discovery
of a cache of Gnostic (from gnosis, knowledge) texts in the Nag
Hammadi find in Upper Egypt in 1945 there has been a hugely renewed
interest in this tradition and its relation to orthodox Christianity.
Coinciding with feminism and the public exposure of the human weakness
of the clergy and of religious institutions this movement developed
an exaggerated importance. It created a market in a spiritual vacuum
that suppliers of religious revelations were quick to fill. Probably
half of western undergraduates think there is something substantial
in the Jesus-Mary Magdalene myth; and that, once upon a time there
really was a feminist, liberal, humanist, democratic Christianity
suppressed by centralisers and inquisitors. In fact hierarchy and
liturgy developed very early in the life of the Church. Heresies
are not necessarily always the repressed forms of an early perfection.
They can also be experiments in which there is much to admire (the
Greek for heresy means choice) but that are later found to be wanting.
Gnosticism is an important shaping element of our tradition which
is why most Gnostics considered themselves Christian. Yet it is
as difficult a movement for scholars to define, as is our own ‘New
Age’. It is also difficult for Christians to reject Gnosticism
in its totality, just as one cannot deny that a wayward relative
or black sheep does belong to the family. The First Letter of John
with its sublime teaching on love - that could not be found in a
Gnostic text - becomes sharp when it refers to those ‘many
antichrists’ who broke ranks with its community. ‘They
never really belonged to us; if they had they would have stayed
with us’ (2: 19). This is the bitter language of hurt family
feelings. Maybe the Doubting Thomas of the Gospel of John (20:24),
who touches the physical body of the risen Jesus and believes, is
a riposte to the Gnostic Thomas and his inability to accept the
full meaning of Word made flesh.
The oral and literary material of memories about Jesus was collected
in the synoptic gospels between the years 70 and 90. But it was
another three centuries before a definitive canon was established
omitting, for example texts such as the Shepherd of Hermas but including
a problematic one like the Book of Revelation. It helps to focus
if we compare the Gospel of Thomas, a Syrian text of disputed date
but probably about 75AD, with the mystical and indeed partially
Gnostic doctrine of the Johannine scriptures, the Gospel and Letters.
Thomas is not a narrative but a collection of sayings of Jesus –
‘the secret sayings that the living Jesus spoke’ (1)
– some of which some scholars believe to have a claim to authenticity.
The esoteric tone of the text characterises Gnosticism but is not
altogether lacking in the canon either: ‘To you the secret
of the kingdom of God has been given; but to those who are outside
everything comes by way of parables’ (Mk 4:11). This is a
saying echoed in all the synoptics although their overall sense
is not to speak of a hidden teaching but one openly given and often
misapprehended even by the close disciples: ‘Do you still
not understand? Are you minds closed? You have eyes. Can you not
see?’ Jesus asks the Twelve. (Mk 8:17-18).
In both Thomas and in John there is an emphasis on immanence, the
divine presence indwelling. But the Gnostic text adds an impersonal
omnipresence: ‘Split a piece of wood and I am there. Lift
up the stone, and you will find me there’ (78). In John Jesus
personalises this presence while raising it to the highest mystery
of his union with the Father: ‘As you Father are in me and
I in you, so also may they be in us’ (Jn 17:21). There is
a sense of discipleship in Thomas but the disciple is called to
a self-reliance and self-realisation that makes it a different kind
of discipleship than that found in canonical teaching. In Thomas,
Jesus can be asked questions but tells the disciples to go off and
work it out for themselves. In John the ‘friendship’
Jesus shares with the disciple makes it a warmer relationship than
any we glimpse in the disconnected sayings of the Gnostic: “Jesus
said I am not your teacher. Because you have drunk, you have become
intoxicated from the bubbling spring I have tended’ (13).
The Gnostic Christian is essentially equal to Jesus because the
same light and divine nature pertains to both. The catholic Christian
becomes one with Christ, by grace, a child of God by ‘adoption’.
The language overlaps but the sense is distinct. But when John says
‘we shall become like him because we shall see him as he really
is’ the proximity of the two kinds of mystical language is
obvious.
The Gnostic call of Jesus is from chaos to a meaningful quest to
find oneself as a child of God: ‘Jesus said, “Those
who seek should not stop seeking until they find. When they find
they will be disturbed. When they are disturbed they will marvel
and will rule over all’ (2). This has an obviously different
tone from the main gospels as does the call to renunciation. Behind
Thomas’ asceticism lingers what has been called the ‘cosmic
paranoia’ of Gnosticism and the deep dualism of a cosmology
that rejected the first chapters of Genesis. The world for the Gnostic
is a mistake not a divine creation which God contemplated and found
to be good. The ‘singleness’ of the Gnostic is different
from the unity of the catholic Christian
Gnosis is nevertheless an important element in the New Testament,
especially in John and Paul. Clement of Alexandria, as we will see
next week, called the mature Christian a ‘Gnostic’.
The influence of Gnosticism on the development of Christian mystical
tradition has been powerful, though largely by negation rather than
affirmation. It set boundaries, defined for example by the polemic
of the ‘Against Heresies’ of Ireneaus of Lyons, that
later Christian mystics had to be prudent about crossing. In the
end, however, the argument was not about the value of knowing but
about its content and meaning. This meaning was defined by the addition
of two other key themes used to express and interpret the mystical
experience of the Christian, faith (pistis) and love (agape). For
Paul the ‘greatest of these is love’ and for John ‘God
is love’. For Thomas salvation comes through gnosis. For the
New Testament gnosis arises from the marriage of faith and love.
What is above all conspicuously absent from Thomas’ Gospel
is the theme of forgiveness and the love of enemies. It is this
that makes the mysticism of the catholic tradition a real and transformative
incarnation.
The implications of these differences for mystical theology are
immense because they shape the identity and tone of a community.
What difference, if any, do they make to the mystical experience
in itself? This is a difficult question at the heart of all mystical
traditions and one that today opens up the dialogue between religions.
No description of an experience escapes the skin of language or
the life of its community. Only silence does that. Yet the experience
of silence creates community, deserving to be called ‘catholic’
by being unified in the total diversity of its members. Yet again,
not all interpretations of this experience are of equal integrity
just as not every understanding of scripture is right. Thus we see
sadly some truth in Cardinal Newman’s quip that ‘mysticism
begins in mist and ends in schism’. The catholic/ gnostic
dispute shows that we must beware of ignoring the resonance between
different interpretations of the silence found in mystical experience
– the meanings of knowledge, faith and love. But the same
dispute shows that there is also a need for the authority of tradition
and its interpreters in order to defend the unity of a spiritual
community which itself helps to prepare us for and sustains us in
the never-ending journey into this silence.
Laurence Freeman OSB |