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GNOSIS

http://www.geocities.com/rayearth_1985/cosagrafica2.html
New Dawn
Interview With Tobias Churton
By Richard Smoley
Tobias Churton is one of today’s most
lively and spirited investigators of that underground stream of the Western
tradition known as Gnosticism. He first became interested in the Gnostics while
reading for a degree in theology at the University of Oxford in the 1970s.
Soon after leaving, he became interested
in exploring these ideas for television. “I’d got it into my head that there had
never been any religious television – only programmes about religion,” he later
recalled. “I had written a paper on the subject which recommended a new kind of
television for this most neglected area, something on the lines of television, a
kind of programme which would enter into the very nature of the religious
experience and not simply observe it.”
Churton got his opportunity in the
mid-1980s, when he produced a series on the Gnostics for British television. To
accompany his series, he wrote his first book, The Gnostics, a history of this
elusive esoteric movement from early Christianity to modern manifestations in
such figures as Giordano Bruno and William Blake, and even in Mary Shelley’s
Frankenstein.
In the years since then, Churton has
pursued and deepened his appreciation for the Western esoteric traditions. He
was the Founder Editor of Freemasonry Today magazine, and during the last year
has published two new books. The Golden Builders: Alchemists, Rosicrucians, and
the First Freemasons explores the background of Masonry from its antecedents in
the alchemical and Hermetic traditions of antiquity through its modern
manifestations. His latest book, Gnostic Philosophy: From Ancient Persia to
Modern Times, casts an even wider net, tracing the Gnostic heritage from its
roots in Zoroastrianism, Mithraism, and the Essenes to the 20th century magus
Aleister Crowley and manifestations of gnosis in pop culture. Churton currently
makes his home in Britain. – Richard Smoley
How exactly would you describe gnosis?
What does it mean to you?
How would I describe gnosis? I should
like to describe gnosis as the experience of knowing or having intimacy with
what we call God. God, the Bible tells us, wishes to be known. The word
‘Gnostic’ – one who has experienced gnosis – was first used as a nickname by
those who opposed the whole idea or thought it was all too much for human beings
to claim.
In a way, it really is the most enormous
act of cheek to say that one has had experience of God! John’s Gospel for
example says that “no man hath seen God at any time.” Hospitals for the mentally
sick are full of people who claim the most extraordinary intimacy with powers
beyond themselves. In the Gnostic tradition broadly, sanity or peace of mind is
a fruit of gnosis. And ‘sanity’ means becoming clean, or ‘whole’ so there is a
moral as well as a physical and psychological dimension to be considered. It
might be argued that one has got to share in Christ to know God. But clearly
there has been gnosis outside of the Christian tradition. So God obviously wants
to be known by everyone!
Gnosis to me personally means receiving
a gift – a gift that carries with it certain responsibilities. It’s quite a
heavy thing to be lightened – or enlightened! There’s a lot we carry that
prevents us from rising and growing in divine knowledge. For me, gnosis means a
love of truth, a sensitivity to the magical aspects of life, and above all, a
permanent struggle with material consciousness. People would rather see a person
burnt than their own money burnt. That, we would say, is only natural.
Politicians are adept at appealing to us on this level. Being gnostic does
involve an unusual attitude to the natural order. The merely human in us does
come under scrutiny – the light shows up the shadows and darkness in us, if you
like. Obviously, no one likes being ‘shown up’, so we persecute the
light-bringers and hide ourselves behind images of who we think we are. Gnosis
is light and, if I may say so, “my burden is light.”
Is it possible to experience gnosis for
oneself?
I obviously believe it is possible to
experience gnosis for oneself. One could hardly experience it for other people!
But the experience changes and one might not always be aware that one is
experiencing gnosis. It is not a single state. It is not the same as ‘instant
satori’. The universe itself is a projection of gnosis, if limited. I should say
that if one has no experience of gnosis, one can hardly say one has been truly
alive.
Could you explain a little about the
Gnostic schools of antiquity, and what happened to them?
There were many Gnostic schools in late
antiquity, as far as we can tell, surrounding some particular teacher, or the
self-proclaimed followers of such a teacher. They had visions, dreams,
statements, stances and orders of followers. Some were probably charlatans and
some ‘the real thing’, as one would expect.
The orthodox Christian teachers who made
it their business to denigrate and destroy the Gnostic movement in the Church
always tended to isolate the teacher. Naming names was a big part of the
anti-Gnostic propaganda. Thanks to their efforts, we have some dim records of
men like Basilides, Carpocrates, Marcus, Marcion, Valentinus, Simon Magus,
Dositheos. The orthodox apologists Irenaeus, Hippolytus, Epiphanius and
Tertullian, for example, made it their business to present these Gnostic
teachers as demented quacks leading their followers into what Irenaeus called –
in about 180 CE – “an abyss of madness and blasphemy.” I don’t know how
seriously one can take their presentations of the evidence. It’s a bit like
asking George Bush whether he prefers Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
to Revolver!
The Gnostics represented a kind of
counter-culture and therefore exposed themselves to persecution and ridicule.
You can’t imagine Gnostics wandering around in suits and ties with briefcases
talking about real estate values! Some seem to have met in catacombs and private
places. There were Gnostics in the first ever monasteries of Saint Pachom in the
Thebaid of Egypt. Indeed, it is arguable that the first monastic movement was
chiefly inspired by the desire for a place to get away from the world and
experience God, i.e.: a Gnostic inspiration. Clearly the monasteries have always
had a special role in promoting authentic spiritual life, if usually in secret.
The walls had ears.
Sadly, the British and German
Reformations, in attacking the monasteries in the name of the Protestant
tendency, tended to throw the baby out with the bath-water, so the position of
today’s Gnostic has some kinship with that of the early Christian Gnostics.
Where do we go?, they might ask. San Francisco obviously didn’t work for
everyone!
However, as we know from the story of
the Nag Hammadi Library, even in the desert monasteries the Gnostics were not
safe. Official visitations weeded out the offending literature and condemned it
to the flames. Soon the offending Gnostics would meet the same fate. The Church
hooked up with the State in the 4th century CE and the true Gnosis was exiled.
Just one good reason to keep religion out of politics!
How did this Gnostic legacy survive
after the end of the old Gnostic schools? What sort of heritage did they bestow
on our civilisation?
Thanks be to God, the Gnostic experience
and challenge did just survive the end of the Roman eagle’s flight. As one might
expect, it survived on the fringes of the old Empire – in Syria, Iraq, Bulgaria,
Turkestan and Bosnia – possibly Ireland. Even, for a while, in Mongolia and
China. The flame was kept alive through untold numbers of military campaigns,
massacres and violent conflicts of kings, sultans, demigods, semi-gods,
dictators and emperors. It was carried into the bosom of the Islamic Empire
after the 7th century in the form of Hermetic philosophy as an inspiration to
science and philosophy – examining God in His works and wonders. The Sabians of
Harran – who were not Muslims but Sabians and permitted by the Koran – their
role is extraordinarily important in keeping the flame alive.
The appearance of Islamic mysticism – or
rather, gnosis – among the so-called Sufis in the ninth and tenth centuries was
highly significant. Magic, philosophy, science, mysticism – in short, human
progress, were fostered by the enlightened circles of the Islamic world – always
playing, it should be noted, a kind of shadow-boxing game with the hard-line
authorities who cared as little for personal experience of the divine kingdom as
did the Roman Church in the west.
The annihilation of the so-called
‘Cathars’ in southern France and northern Italy in the 13th century showed just
how far the authorities were prepared to go in attempting to destroy spiritual
existence that was not controlled by the status quo – the ever-present
authorities we find in every age: the manifest powers of invisible spiritual
opposition, as the Gnostic sees it. The Gnostics have been the light of the
world and the leaven in the bread. A world without gnosis would be a very dark
place indeed. The Gnostic greets the Sun, the ‘visible god’. He or she is first
to see the dawn – first, you might say, in the garden of resurrection.
Some scholars suggest that the term
“Gnostic” is too problematic to be valuable, and should be replaced by something
else. Do you agree?
Some scholars, you say, suggest the term
‘Gnostic’ is too problematic and should be replaced. Well, I’m sorry for them.
Gnosis itself will always be problematic in this world. The day it fits cosily
into some scholar’s dictionary will be the day it has ceased to have power. No,
‘Gnostic’ – like ‘Christian’ – began as a nickname and like all such names
should be borne with pride in a blind world. Yes, there are problems of
definition. In 1966 there was a Colloquium of scholars at Messina intended to
define the term ‘Gnosticism’, but it could not hold the term down. So I, without
even the benefit of the Italian sun, cannot do it for you in this interview. The
subject could fill a book. There is, however, another tack we can follow. That
is, Why should it be defined? Definition – like a census – leads to control.
Much better that the Gnostic tradition bears the unique quality of resisting
definition! There is no doubt that the issue has been muddied by the activities
of the Christian churches that dominate thinking in the West to a greater degree
than we perhaps realise.
When I was a student at Oxford
University for example, it took me a long time to realise the full implications
of the fact that the Theology courses were run by church leaders chiefly for
their benefit. Admittedly, it would have been odd if they had been run by
industrial chemists! But the point was that ‘Gnosticism’ for example dealt with
a universal experience in terms only of its presence or exile from the orthodox
Christian Church. Theologising it denied its root in authentic experience. If we
cannot trust our deepest most personal and absolutely authentic experience, what
can we trust? Anyhow, it would have been better, I think, in retrospect, to
study the entire field of Gnostic philosophy, religion and so on as a stream of
its own that interpenetrates – necessarily – with all of the so-called ‘great
religions’ of the world.
One of the interesting things about the
orthodox Church – if we may for just a second see the plethora of conflicting
bodies as a broad unity – is that it finds it can eventually accommodate
everything – everything, that is, except gnosis! By this I mean that Darwin was
more or less accepted by the Church of England by the time of World War One.
Church leaders – by no means all, I know – made accommodations with Hitler,
Stalin and Mussolini and – let’s face it, the Church has pretty well made its
peace with the world. Gnostic types do not find themselves in such a comfortable
position with regard to the world as it is.
There are many people who are on the
road to gnosis who perhaps do not realise it, who out of love of God and fear of
God – and fear of themselves and others – find themselves wasting years in very
unsatisfactory Church gatherings which – in the name of God – demand their
sacrifice and allegiance. I’ve always found that it was the most selfish groups
that preached self-abnegation.
But to get back to the point, what other
tame word could replace the tattered glory and battered bread of the words
Gnostic, Gnosis – even that scholars’ word ‘Gnosticism’? Mysticism is too misty.
Magick has been bowdlerised and Disneyfied. Spirituality – well! It used to have
meaning, now it means anything and probably nothing. It’s only a matter of time
before car manufacturers come up with a car that meets your spiritual needs! I
really don’t know what people mean when they talk about ‘spirituality’. It’s so
vague as to be useful to every pseudo-religious charlatan and greedy politician
in the world! When you say ‘Gnostic’, you always have to explain it. And when
you do, people are always fascinated, whether they admit it or not! So that’s
what we’ve got and we have to make the best of it. Gnosis means knowledge. Get
it?
What do you make of current attempts to
revive Gnosticism? What value do they have?
You ask about recent attempts to revive
Gnosticism. This is a difficult question for people like myself who prefer
authentic experiences with some real history attached. This is the scholar and
antiquarian in me speaking. My path is not your path.
I don’t believe ‘Gnosticism’ – that word
really refers to the Gnostic groups that came into conflict with Christian
orthodox authorities in the first five centuries of the known life of the
Christian Church – can or needs to be ‘revived’. The patient is not dead –
though the world might well be. “The dead are not alive,” as the Gnostic gospel
has it, “and the living will not die.” This is my personal favourite among the
many great Gnostic logia. The dead are not alive and the living will not die.
How true.
Besides, there are several great
authentic Gnostic streams still going strong – though at least one of them is
severely persecuted. The Yezidis of northern Iraq, western Iran, Georgian
Armenia – that is to say Transcaucasian Kurdestan – have the most unbelievably
inspiring tradition. There’s nothing to compare with it in the whole world. It
is in a class of its own. The Yezidis have been persecuted cruelly by those in
power about them because they are not regarded as “people of a book” as defined
– there’s that word again! – in the Koran. They have long been accused of ‘Devil
worship’, but that kind of cruelty has been common among oppressors since Jesus
was accused of being a devil’s mouthpiece all those years ago. It’s the oldest
trick in the book and works because people fear every type of evil – except
their own.
Yezidis are today being attacked and
killed in and around Mosul and denied police protection in Georgian Armenia.
This is fact.
The second tradition I was thinking of
was that of the Mandaeans of lower Iraq, who claim John the Baptist as a special
prophet and have referred, interestingly, to ‘Christ the Roman’. As far as
‘Gnostics’ go, these people are undoubtedly the ‘real thing’.
When I made the TV series Gnostics in
1985-87, we wrote to the Iraqi Embassy in London, and they denied any knowledge
of the Mandaeans. I was worried that they had been wiped out under the last
miserable Iraqi regime, but to my delight, I now observe that they have survived
– though still having to justify themselves, surrounded as they are by the
various Islamic traditions. I think they qualify as Sabians in the Koran and are
therefore protected. The wonderful Yezidis, on the other hand, have been
persecuted for 1300 years and have no such protection.
An independent Kurdistan would probably
offer these unique and admirable people a future that may otherwise be in
jeopardy. This would be a very good thing to come out of the current mess in
Iraq. The great powers have been screwing up the Middle East since the fall of
the Roman Empire, so one may legitimately question whether the mad, bad game of
sharing out the property of the vulnerable will end in our lifetimes. We must
hope, have faith and love. Spare some love for the Yezidis – even though most
people have probably never heard of them.
This, to answer your question, would be
a good way to care for the Gnostic tradition – the tradition, I should say, of
the authentic spirit of man, enslaved in, and by, the world. The love of money
is the root of all evil. The way to revive Gnosis, is to be revived by Gnosis.
Why are people so interested in
Gnosticism these days?
I think people are interested in
Gnosticism these days because there is clearly a spiritual vacuum at the heart
of our culture. Science and mass production have done much for the outside of
the cup, but the inside is empty and cannot be sated by drugs, sex and rock ‘n’
roll. The promised liberation is a brief delight followed by a swift fall. Grace
looks away and the victim, must, if he or she be lucky, look within.
Even in countries which have not been so
saturated by big business as we have – where washing machines, central heating
and personal stereos and computers might be very welcome – there is a now
well-articulated complaint that with all the money and the “promise of freedom
and liberty for all” comes a great threat.
The threat is to the life of the heart
and the delicate, invisible life – the thousand links with God – which have kept
people alive for centuries in the face of countless dangers and privations. I
don’t wish to romanticise here, but one must ask, ‘Who needs the most help?’ The
East or the West? Clearly both suffer from poverty – material poverty and
spiritual poverty – and, of course there is plenty of material poverty in the
West and doubtless spiritual poverty in the East. But can’t we help each other?
And thereby help ourselves? But how do we do this?
Well, Jesus offers a clue: “First clean
the inside of the cup.” Clean it? we may cry – most of us don’t even know it’s
there! Where is this ‘inside of the cup’? Where is this kingdom of heaven (a
kingdom, note, not a democracy!) that is supposed to be “nigh and within” us?
Well, the example and uncompromising commitment to spiritual reality is such a
strong and powerful river surging through the Gnostic tradition, that it would
be extraordinary if our bone-dry world did not desire to take a dip in its
life-giving waters!
Until we sort ourselves out, we can only
export our own confusion.
Could you say a little bit about the
Western esoteric traditions as a whole? What is their situation today? What do
they have to contribute to our civilisation?
You have asked me to say a little bit
about the Western esoteric traditions as a whole and what they may contribute to
our civilisation. The second part of that question is simple. What they have to
contribute is civilisation. What is civilisation? It is clearly not power and
might or the ability to force change. Otherwise we must rank Attila the Hun and
Chingiz Khan as leaders of civilisation! Civilisation really boils down to the
ability of a range of people to live in a city, organise themselves and get on
with each other without falling into chaos. That which promotes the life of the
busy hive may be described as a civilising influence. Civilisation is not then
an arbiter of truth but of what works well. However, wise men and women have
tended – against the odds – to the ancient conviction that nothing works quite
as well as the truth, and that a rotten branch – rotten with corruption – will
not even support itself for very long – never mind the burden of civilisation.
Truth is good.
When I think of Western civilisation
with all its inequalities of ability and social status, its wide variety of
racial and religious types, its sheer density of pulsating human existence, its
vulnerability to natural forces, disease, despair, hysteria, false expectation,
boredom and so on, I can’t help thinking that organisations like Freemasonry and
discreet societies of personal development are important. While corrupting
forces always aim to work within the carcass, the healing agents must also work
within the fabric of the human hive – not in fearful secrecy but with a modesty
and love that is suspicious of fame, vainglory and social attention. The cool
breeze works well unseen. This is perennial wisdom. I think the best of the
masonic tradition has contributed hugely to understanding of tolerance and
barrier-breaking social idealism. Occasionally, we even find a spiritual insight
occurring in some of the most stubborn mental material!
Whatever good men and women try to
achieve with this floppy idiot called man, the sincere busy bee is always up
against our biological and moral heritage. This inheritance is surely dark
enough to make strong men and women weep and give ample reason to despair or
take refuge in a cynical stoicism of the type that Gore Vidal, for example,
exemplifies with such taste and class.
There is much to be said for
contemporary Rosicrucian societies for introducing people to the world of
imaginative spiritual development. Many find insight in the worlds of Theosophy,
Thelema and Anthroposophy, for example. This is all well and good, as far as it
goes, but human society can be corrosive – even destructive.
Human beings really aren’t very nice –
unless they’re in some kind of love with one another – and even then... well!
The divorce rates with all their sad tales of acrimony and greed testify to the
fragility of oaths built on enthusiasm and a lottery win. The Psalmist was being
simply realistic when he uttered the words: “None is righteous. No, not one.”
Involving oneself in groups may stifle the creative and divine spirit. But
aloneness can be hard, and loneliness is, as Jimi Hendrix sang, “a drag.”
Perhaps we need to revive in some adapted way the concept of the monastery –
not, may I stress, that sad alternative, the ‘commune’. The hippies were hip to
everything but their own depravity. Peter Coyote and the Diggers would doubtless
tell me I just never saw the real hippies. He would be right. Maybe I was one of
them – and how often do we see ourselves?
I suppose in the life of a person, one
will, as one puts one’s hand into the hand of God – as much as we may know of
Him – for guidance, one will find oneself encountering all kinds of groups and
people. No one way works for all people or all occasions. That is how it must
be. Those who require absolute certainties will be prepared to believe anything.
The One is always present, if unseen.
Experience shows that there are many
hidden veins to the cosmic life of humanity and I – for one – am glad – and have
reason to be glad – that they exist. Gnosis is, as I said earlier, a gift. One
has to be in the right place to receive it. No organisation can do that for
anyone. The Spirit bloweth where it listeth. Heed the Spirit above all – and
keep the powder dry!
Could you talk a little bit about your
own background, how you came to be interested in this area, and what meaning it
has for you personally?
You ask about my background. I am an
Englishman born in Birmingham – the English Midlands – in 1960, who grew up to
believe that something was seriously ‘out of kilter’ in my own dear country and
in the world at large. This was something I found in myself as I grew older and
travelled about the busy world. I had no special financial or educational
advantages, but my father – a railwayman by choice in his later years – said
“Seek and ye shall find.” I loved the past and had great respect for the
ancients. I was always suspicious of words like ‘modern’ and ‘new’. No one knows
the future and if, as someone once said, “the future is a poor place to store
our dreams,” then I should say that a dream stored is a dream over. King Arthur
will sleep so long as we do.
I cannot remember when I first became
interested in the authentic tradition of spiritual life. It seems to have always
been with me. I suppose studying the Gnostics at Oxford in the late 70s made me
realise that I was not alone, but there were always shadows and intimations of
gnosis in books, films – especially old films (the new stuff is generally too
cocksure, superficial and loud to have anything to say worth hearing) – and in
music.
I have often tried to ‘get away’ from
Gnosis, rather like Jonah sailing to sea to avoid Nineveh, but I keep coming
back to port, whether I like it or not. Often, I don’t like it at all. I’ve
spent a fair amount of time in the cold belly of the whale. The world, however,
needs this insight, even if for me it now seems an old story. Somehow, it comes
alive afresh again with each telling. And I discover so many new aspects to it,
each time I willingly return to its study. It makes us wise and makes fools of
us. Gnosis means creation because we do what we know. Creation is the fiery
dragon whose scolding breath burns away the void and leaves the golden tree. We
pick its fruit and create nothing.
I was lucky (by modern standards) to
have both parents and that both parents believed in the individual and believed
in the mystery and magick of life, and that they were plain speaking, virtuous
and down to earth as well as being receptive to higher influence. That was a
gift too. Come to think of it – it’s all been a gift. I’ve done little to
deserve such a theatre of sorrow and joy! There’s so much more to do and life is
really both too long and too short. We’re here and we’d better make the best of
it. Long may She reign over us.
Could you tell us about your recent
books, The Golden Builders and Gnostic Philosophy? What are they about?
My books The Golden Builders and Gnostic
Philosophy took me ten years to write and were continuations of a work begun in
1986 when I wrote my first book, The Gnostics, at the age of 25. You could say
that the new books are the considered works of research and experience – an
attempt to bring readers of the first book into deeper acquaintance with the
extraordinary Gnostic tradition. I was very aware that some terrible books have
appeared in the last 20 years which have exploited the whole subject area and
confused people with a lot of journalistic twaddle and conspiracy tales. Some
have inspired a recent best-selling novel that suggested Leonardo Da Vinci
worked with a code that could be understood by an idiot demented by marijuana.
I wanted to put the record straight. The
truth is stranger than fiction and a good deal more interesting. The trouble
with fiction is that you can’t live on it; you always want more. Perhaps if you
wanted to define the Truth, you might – with tongue in cheek – call it NON
FICTION. There is NON FICTION in magick, Gnosis, mysticism and spiritual
understanding – but then, I suppose, your readers know this already, or they
would not be suffering this interview with a distant star.
Richard Smoley is author of Inner
Christianity: A Guide to the Esoteric Tradition and coauthor, with Jay Kinney,
of Hidden Wisdom: A Guide to the Western Inner Traditions. His latest book is
Forbidden Faith: The Gnostic Legacy from the Gospels to The Da Vinci Code. In
the 1990s he was editor of Gnosis magazine. His web site is
www.innerchristianity.com. The above article appears in New Dawn No. 91
(July-August 2005)
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