The Gnostic
Revolt
Against the God of Judaism
the Demiurge
and the Wisdom Dialogue
by Mark Gaffney

They teach the insidious doctrine
that there is another God besides the Creator.
—Irenaeus, Against Heresies
For many heretics have said that the God
Of the Old Testament is one,
and the God of the New Testament is another.
—Ambrose, On the Holy Spirit, I, 4
In the first centuries of our era,
Gnostic Christians overthrew the Jewish God Yahweh and attributed the work of
Creation to a lesser deity or demiurge, known as Ialdabaoth (also spelled
Yaldabaoth, or Jaldabaoth). The word has been translated as: “begetter of
Sabaoth,” a pejorative pun for YHWH Sabaoth, one of the names of Yahweh in the
Old Testament.1
The fact that Ialdabaoth turns up in the Nag Hammadi Library and is mentioned in
the Naassene Sermon, i.e., the Refutation of All Heresies compiled by Hippolytus,
raises important questions that Christian scholarship has never satisfactorily
addressed, among them: Did Jesus teach or ratify the demiurge concept?
Origins Within Judaism
Most scholars regard the demiurge
as a Gnostic rebellion against Judaism.2
But the rebellion was not a simple phenomenon. Certainly it was not always a
matter of either/or. While many Gnostics summarily rejected the Old Testament,
not all did. At least one Gnostic sect, the Jewish-Christian community of the
Naassenes, based in cosmopolitan Alexandria, retained the Old Testament. The
Naassenes are especially important because they claimed to have received their
spiritual ideas from James the Just, the brother of Jesus.
Another question is simply: Why
did the Gnostics rebel against the God of the Jews? The fact is partially
explained by historical events, namely, the three failed Jewish revolts against
Roman rule. The first and best known of these was the Jewish War of 66-73 AD. A
second less well-known uprising was put down during in 115-117 AD, during the
rule of Trajan. And a third and final insurrection, the Bar Kokhba rebellion,
was crushed in 135 AD. There is no doubt that these failed political revolts
against Rome seriously undermined the prestige of Yahweh. For which reason the
Gnostic demiurge could date to anytime after 70 AD, the year of the cataclysmic
destruction of the famous temple of Herod.
3
But political history does not tell the
full story. The devaluation of Yahweh was also rooted in a process of religious
reform that had been underway within Judaism for centuries, and which only
attained its full fruition in the person of Jesus. To understand this reform,
and how it came about, we must look to the Old Testament, in particular, to the
seminal book of Job. (Many scholars have sought answers in Genesis, which is
understandable, given that the demiurge is associated with Creation, but with
less satisfactory results.)
Most Christians probably assume
that the God of the Hebrews in the days of Abraham was the same as the God of
Moses and, furthermore, that this God was also equivalent to the Father
mentioned by Jesus with such love and devotion. Any such assumptions are false,
however, but not because God changed. God’s nature, being absolute and eternal,
never changes. What does change is human understanding. The human conception of
God, the God concept, has changed many times over the course of history and will
continue to evolve in the future. In a famous essay called "The God of the
Fathers," first published in 1929, the Old Testament scholar Albrecht Alt
explored whether such a transformation had occurred at the time of Moses. Alt
found clues in the Pentateuch suggesting that the Elohist scribe had amended the
earliest accounts to bring the more archaic God-concept of the early Hebrews,
the God of the patriarchs, in line with the later (and more pure) monotheism of
Moses. Alt's paper touched off a lively debate among biblical scholars that
continues to this day.
4
The reform I am about to discuss is
another example of the sort of evolution observed by Alt. The need for reform of
the Old Testament God-concept was real enough. While some Old Testament passages
describe Yahweh as merciful, loyal, forgiving, and benevolent, he is at least as
often portrayed as jealous, grouchy, wrathful, irritable, proud, boastful,
unforgiving, temperamental, cruel, vengeful, and even bloodthirsty, prepared to
sanction cold-blooded murder or mass slaughter, including the annihilation of
entire cities. Given the numerous examples of God-sanctioned mayhem in
scripture, it is no wonder that discriminating readers have sometimes doubted
whether this same Yahweh can inspire our confidence and trust, to say nothing of
love, devotion, respect and emulation. Oftentimes, fear and trembling seems a
more likely human response. And while fear of divine retribution can be a
powerful force for good, and, at times, perhaps, a necessary motivator, if the
goal is to uplift humanity from a moral standpoint, the example set by Yahweh in
the Old Testament falls short of inspirational (to say the least).
The Book of Job
The Old Testament Book of Job,
whose author is unknown, has two main themes: the question of evil, and the
character of Yahweh. Many scholars rightly regard Job, along with Isaiah,
Jeremiah, and Ezekiel, as representative of the high-water mark of the Old
Testament.5
The central part of the book is a series of poems that was probably composed
sometime in the fifth or sixth century B.C.E. Part folk tale, prophetic oracle,
hymn, lamentation, didactic treatise, and epic, Job makes use of almost every
genre in the Bible. The question it raises is no less pertinent today: Why does
evil flourish while good people suffer? The answer the story provides broke
sharply with Judaic tradition, and for this reason Job was surely controversial
in its day. Tradition held that God would eventually reward the good man,
regardless of his sufferings. Like the prophet Jeremiah, however (see Jeremiah
13:14, 24–25 and 15:6–7), the author of Job adopts a much more pessimistic
outlook that probably reflects the bleak aftermath of the conquest and
destruction of Judah by Nebuchadnezzar in the early sixth century B.C.E.
Although the precise composition date of Job is not known, the book is obviously
from the time of exile or later.6
The story openly portrays Yahweh in
league with Satan. God torments the good man (Job) despite the fact that he
keeps the Law and lives a morally upright life. Job's many trials are the work
of Satan, Yahweh's servant (or possibly his son), who whispers false accusations
in God's ear and receives permission to punish Job in order to test him and
expose the wickedness allegedly concealed in his heart. Job’s flocks are
stripped from him, his servants are slaughtered, and his sons and daughters are
killed in a mighty whirlwind. He himself is stricken with a terrible wasting
disease that causes great suffering and brings him to the edge of the grave.
Job’s body literally becomes an open wound. To make matters worse, Job’s wife
and his friends also turn against him: His wife urges him to curse Yahweh and to
abandon all faith in God; meanwhile, his friends make superficial religious cant
and castigate Job for having the temerity to maintain his innocence. One after
another they admonish him, insisting that because Yahweh is punishing him, ipso
facto, he must be guilty. They advise him to submit quietly to his sufferings,
which obviously have been ordained by God. But Job will have none of it. Like a
rock he holds fast to principle. Stubbornly he maintains his innocence and
insists upon justice. Yet, at the same time, he remains faithful to Yahweh,
refusing to condemn or even criticize the Almighty.
What is shocking about the story is the
ease with which Yahweh succumbs to Satan's false witness about Job's alleged
faithlessness. Being omniscient, Yahweh should be able to easily verify Job's
goodness and constancy. But instead he hands Job over to Satan with a single
proviso: "He is in your power," Yahweh says. "But spare his life." Though Job
remains faithful throughout, before his terrible ordeal is done he curses the
day of his birth. No less shocking is Yahweh's failure to acquit Job even after
his innocence has been established. There is to be no moment of truth and no
justice under heaven. Instead of vanquishing Satan for making false accusations,
Yahweh turns on the victim. Instead of offering solace and comfort to the
innocent, he badgers Job and bullies him, sneers at him with rhetorical
questions, and then confronts the hapless man with a mind-boggling display of
divine wrath.
In the end poor Job is beaten down and
brought to his knees. But how can it be otherwise, given Yahweh's overwhelming
might? The rod of God is an awesome thing. In the end Job is reduced to a
stuttering simpleton. He repents, even though he is innocent, and admits that he
has been talking about things far beyond his ken. Having seen the omnipotence of
Yahweh, he is prepared to eat dust. In this vein Job responds: "What reply can I
give to you, I who carry no weight?" (Job 40:4; 42:2) In a final prose epilogue
Yahweh shows a loving touch by restoring Job's health and property, but there is
no mention of restoring his dead servants and children. Indeed, the somewhat
cheery conclusion feels out of step with the rest of the composition, as if a
later scribe who was no less shocked than we by Yahweh's repulsive behavior
added it to redeem God’s tarnished image. Indeed, so subversive is the Book of
Job that it is remarkable the book was retained in the bible. Probably the
scribal “correction” saved it from being thrown out, this and the fact that Job
is a literary masterpiece. Of course, even with its modified ending, the story
is far from satisfactory. Job’s total submission in the face of brute force
seems a lame solution to the problem of evil. Nonetheless, the book is momentous
because the questions the story fails to resolve were to redound over the
centuries, as we shall see, and preoccupy the final books of the Old Testament.
Yahweh's Deficiency
So what is the root of the matter in the
story of Job? Carl Jung, the founder of analytical psychology, points out in his
able commentary Answer to Job that for all of his infinite power Yahweh
ultimately damns himself. By humiliating Job, by making him eat dust, God
unwittingly reveals his own deep character flaw, brutishness, while at the same
time elevating the impotent but righteous human. Job may be powerless before the
Almighty, yet he remains free to choose, and by choosing well he shows
impressive moral strength. Indeed, Job’s fortitude stands in marked contrast
with Yahweh's rage and reproaches the deity’s ratification of evil. To be sure,
Yahweh carries the day. With infinite power at his disposal, the outcome is not
in doubt. Yet, from a moral standpoint Yahweh’s display of heavenly fireworks
and thunder fails to impress. This is the beautiful and terrible irony of the
story: that Job, despite his relative impotence, comes to stand in righteous
judgment over God himself. As Jung put it:
“We do not know whether Job
realizes this, but we do know from the numerous commentaries on Job that all
succeeding ages have overlooked the fact that a kind of Moira . . . rules over
Yahweh, causing him to give himself away so blatantly. Anyone can see how
unwittingly he raises Job by humiliating him in the dust. By so doing he
pronounces judgment on himself and gives man the moral satisfaction whose
absence we [find] so painful in the Book of Job.”7
The word Moira refers to fate or
destiny. In Greek religion Moira was one of the three personified seasons that
accompanied Zeus, and were often pictured hovering just above his shoulder. The
point is that Zeus was governed by them even though he was the most important
Greek deity. The mere thought that such a thing might also hold in monotheistic
Judaism is shocking. Surely the Godhead cannot be subject to fate. It is God,
after all, who determines the destinies of others. Nonetheless, from the story
it is clear that despite his omnipotence Yahweh is lacking in something. Job
apparently intuits this because in his suffering he asks: “But tell me, where
does Wisdom come from? Where is understanding to be found?” (Job 28:12) In the
very next verse Job answers his own question. “Wisdom?” he says. “It is fear of
the Lord.” Here, as Jung notes, Job shows that he is unaware of his own
achievement. He does not seem to understand that in holding firm, standing on
his innocence, and insisting on justice he has won a tremendous moral victory,
not just for himself, but for all mankind. Job’s answer may seem unsatisfactory,
but it is important because during the apocalyptic age it became the grist for
the scribal mill, as we shall see.
Now back to the problem raised by Jung,
that Yahweh is ruled by fate: Even though Yahweh as God must have access to all
knowledge, in the story of Job, as we have seen, he has neglected or forgotten,
as Jung phrases it, “to consult his own omniscience.” It seems that Yahweh has
been split off from a part of himself, which means that he is not fully
conscious. Which is incredible! And what of his boasting? Indeed, what could
possibly compel an all-powerful and all-knowing Being to stoop to bluster and
threats in the first place? This discomfiting aspect of Yahweh's behavior,
analyzed long ago by the unknown author of the Secret Book of John, one of the
Gnostic gospels found at Nag Hammadi, was the key Gnostic insight:
“[H]e [Yahweh] said to them, ‘I am
a jealous God and there is no other god beside me.’ But by announcing this he
indicated to the angels who attended to him that there exists another God, for
if there were no other one, of whom would he be jealous?”8
Of whom, indeed? No scholar in the
modern era has understood the theological question implicit in the Book of Job
better than the Gnostic scribe of old. Nor has anyone stated it more succinctly.
While the phrase "I am a jealous God..." does not appear in the text of Job, it
is implied, and it does occur in Exodus 20:5 and Isaiah 14:5–6. In addition,
numerous other passages in the Old Testament, eg., Deuteronomy 4:35; 6:15–16;
and 32:19–21 and Isaiah 4:8; 44:6; 45:5, 21; and 46:4, convey a similar meaning.
In fact, Yahweh’s jealous tantrums are a prominent feature of the Old Testament,
running through scripture like the surly residue of the old Canaanite storm god,
which is precisely the point. It is of interest that the famous heretic hunter
Irenaeus, writing two generations before Hippolytus, quotes the very same line
about the jealous Yahweh in his lengthy treatise, Against Heresies.9
Was it mere coincidence that Irenaeus devoted the largest portion of his
five-volume opus to an attempted refutation of the Gnostic demiurge? Or was it
an accurate indication of the historical importance of Yahweh’s character
defect? There is no question that the controversy surrounding the demiurge was
one of the major battle lines separating the Gnostics from orthodox
Christianity.
Let us now investigate why Yahweh would
allow Satan’s experiment to be foisted on an innocent man. Jung was apparently
intrigued by the same question, for he writes:
“It is indeed no edifying
spectacle to see how quickly Yahweh abandons his faithful servant [Job] to the
evil spirit and lets him fall without compunction or pity into the abyss
of...suffering. From the human point of view, Yahweh's behavior is so revolting
that one has to ask oneself whether there is not a deeper motive hidden behind
it. Has Yahweh some secret resistance against Job? That would explain his
yielding to Satan. But what does man possess that God does not have?10
The psychologist goes on to suggest that
Yahweh's behavior is driven by an ulterior concern, namely, the divine suspicion
that our frail human consciousness is more keen than his own. The very idea is
stunning. Consider, though, that driven by the ever-present knowledge of our own
severe limitations as well as our relative impotence, we humans are required to
cultivate consciousness simply to survive. Yahweh, on the other hand, has no
such need for introspection because he is unchallenged, has no opposition, and
encounters no obstacles; nothing requires him to reflect upon himself.
Stranger still is the conclusion that
follows from a related question: Why would Yahweh instruct Satan to spare Job's
life? Judging from Yahweh’s sadistic behavior, the reason can have nothing to do
with compassion. Yahweh is perfectly content to wreak mayhem on Job without
regret or remorse. Nor can the reason involve a former loyalty, namely, the
Mosaic convenant; for the Book of Job reflects the period following the
destruction of the first temple, when the old covenant must have seemed a moot
article. In fact, in Job there is not the slightest pretense of a covenant. Why
then does Yahweh spare Job’s life? Does he enjoy having someone present to
witness his thundering about heaven? Can it be that Yahweh actually needs Job?
Quite probably he does, which would explain Jung’s purpose in mentioning Moira,
the season of destiny.
Here, an example from the Greeks
may help. We know from the oldest extant account from Greek mythology, the Hymn
of Demeter, that when Hades abducted Demeter's beautiful daughter, Persephone,
and took her to his realm of the dead, Demeter, the grain goddess, became so
heartsick that she refused to extend her usual bounty upon the earth.11
Stricken by a year-long drought and resulting crop failures, humanity faced
extreme privation, even mass starvation. In this dire circumstance mighty Zeus
was compelled to intervene and arrange a compromise: Zeus ordained that
henceforth Persephone would spend part of the year above ground with her mother,
Demeter, and the rest below it with her new consort, Hades. And why would Zeus
be concerned enough to intervene? Quite simply, something had to be done because
a mass die-off of humanity would leave no human supplicants to perform the daily
sacrifices and rituals in honor of the gods!12
Just as humankind needed the gods, so also did the Greek gods need humankind.
In the story of Job we find hints of a
similar phenomenon. Yahweh makes Job suffer, yes, but he dare not exterminate
him because he needs a living and breathing Job to honor and glorify his divine
name. It is Yahweh’s fate to require worship. Of course, the relationship
between God and human is not between equals. An enormous gulf separates Yahweh
from the puny and subservient Job. Nevertheless, it is a reciprocal
relationship. Yahweh needs humans as much as humans need him. The deeper
conclusion to which this leads is never openly stated in the Book of Job. But it
is certainly implied, which explains why Job was (and remains) so controversial:
If Yahweh is subject to fate and if he requires worship, how can he truly be the
penultimate Godhead, the first without a second? Of course, he cannot. Yahweh as
presented in Job is but a figurehead, a demiurge on a par with Zeus and the
other pagan storm gods.
Job's query regarding Wisdom takes us to
the heart of the matter, for Wisdom is the quality Yahweh lacks. The Greek word
for her is Sophia. She is the Divine Mother, the feminine companion to God. She
is well known in the East, where she is the active principle in the Godhead,
with many names. In the various Hindu traditions she appears as Kali, Shakti,
and Durga, among others. It is she who both manifests the world, sustains it,
and transforms it. But, East or West, she is inseparable from the Godhead. In
Judaism, however, awareness of her nature and importance was a late development.
That it happened at all may have been due in no small part due to the anonymous
scribe responsible for the Book of Job.
The problem is how reconcile her
gentle and wise nature with the gruff and irritable Yahweh. The temperamental
patriarch of old stubbornly resists the intrusion of her feminine presence. The
Hebrew God prefers to stand alone, imperious in his majesty, bristling with
archetypal wrath. Indeed, in his raging aspect Yahweh is almost the antithesis
of Wisdom. It is no wonder that many of the Old Testament descriptions of Yahweh
closely resemble the old Canaanite gods El and Baal, the raw matter for so much
of his composite character.13
In the sixth century B.C.E. these dross elements were still very much in
evidence.
The patriarchal storm God dies hard.
Yet, change (i.e., evolve) God must, because from the moment the author of Job
exposes Yahweh's dark underside, his deficiency can no longer be ignored,
neither on earth nor in heaven. Thus, we find her, Sophia, Wisdom, described in
the eighth Proverb, where we are told that her presence is as old as Creation:
“The Lord possessed me in the beginning
of his way,
before his works of old.
I was set up from everlasting, from the beginning,
or ever the earth was.
When there were no depths, I was brought forth;
when there were no foundations abounding with water.
When he established the heavens, I was
there,
When he marked out the foundations of
the earth,
then I was by him, as a master worksman,
and I was daily in his delight,
rejoicing always before him,
rejoicing in his habitable earth;
and my delights were with the sons of men. (Proverbs 8: 22–24, 27, 29–31)
Parts of Proverbs are very old and
may even date to the time of Solomon, but the chapters about Wisdom, including
the ones cited above, were composed much later, although an exact date has never
been established. Dating Proverbs has proved difficult. Jung interpreted the
presence of Wisdom as evidence of Greek influence and dated the above passage to
the third or fourth century B.C.14
While this has yet to be confirmed, there is no doubt about the very late date
of a similar description of Wisdom in Ecclesiasticus 24:3–30:
“I came forth from the Most High,
And I covered the earth like mist.
I had my tent in the heights,
and my throne in a pillar of cloud.
Alone, I circled the vault of the sky,
and I walked on the bottom of the deeps.
Over the waves of the sea and over the whole earth,
and over every people and nation I held sway.
...From eternity, in the beginning, he created me,
and for eternity I shall remain.”
Here she is the spirit of God who broods
upon the waters in the moment of Creation. Thus, there is no doubt about her
antiquity. Yet, Ecclesiasticus dates to no earlier than around 200 B.C.E. The
description is meant to be taken retroactively, but the passage itself was a
late addition to scripture, and is firm evidence of a process of reform of the
Jewish God-concept.
The same theme also repeats in the Song
of Songs, in Ecclesiastes, and again in the Book of Wisdom. All of these books
are part of what is today known as the Wisdom literature. All were written after
the time of Job, during the apocalyptic age, and all are heavily indebted to
Job, again and again taking up themes that first appear in that book. For
example, the preacher of Ecclesiastes 9:16-17 states: “Wisdom is better than
might, but a poor man's wisdom is never valued and his words are disregarded.
The gentle words of the wise are heard above the shouts of a king of fools.” And
in the Book of Wisdom 5:1–2 the scribe offers firm support for Job's right to
demand justice: “[T]he virtuous man stands up boldly to face those who have
oppressed him, those who thought so little of his sufferings.”
In the Wisdom literature we also learn
more about the nature of the great feminine companion to the Deity. As it
happens, she is a marvelous boon to mankind. Wisdom 10:17 waxes eloquent about
her:
“To the saints she gave the wages of
their labors;
she led them by a marvelous road;
she herself was their shelter by day
and their starlight through the night.
And in the Song of Songs, which pretends
to be the composition of Solomon (but isn’t), we find details of the wondrous
union, or syzygy, of both sides of God, male and female.
The Wisdom Dialogue Continues
In the centuries before Jesus, the
scribal dialogue about Yahweh’s better half (his feminine side) was played out
in the last books of the Old Testament. This was a positive and important
development because it produced a deeper awareness of the sublime attributes of
the Godhead. The process continued in the person of Jesus, who campaigned
vigorously against every kind of superstitious nonsense, including society’s
morally reprehensible treatment of lepers.15
At issue, time and again, was the old Judaic belief in a vindictive God. The
affirmation of Wisdom by Jesus is evidenced also by his respectful treatment of
women. That this new awareness of the Divine Mother was also absorbed into
Gnostic Christianity is confirmed by the text of the Naassene Sermon, which was
embedded en toto in the Refutation of Hippolytus. The Sermon quotes a hymn
honoring the Mother as the companion to the Father: “From thee [comes] Father
and through thee [comes] Mother, two names immortal, progenitors of Aeons...“16
(Refutation 5.6.5)
We know from a lost scripture
called the Gospel according to the Hebrews that Jesus made another extraordinary
contribution to the Wisdom dialogue. Though this gospel was suppressed and thus
did not survive, from the descriptions of early writers it seems that it closely
followed the Gospel of Matthew, except that it was written in Hebrew or Aramaic
instead of Greek; hence its name. The scripture was apparently so popular that
it was referred to as the “fifth gospel.” Most important, it included the
following key passage quoting Jesus, which was preserved (in two separate
places) in the writings of Origen, and also in Saint Jerome: “Even now did my
Mother the Holy Spirit take me by one of my hairs, and carry me away to the
great Mountain of Tabor.”17
Here, the words of Jesus explicitly link the Holy Spirit with the Divine Mother;
and virtually the same idea occurs in the Gospel of Thomas (101):
“[Jesus said,] Whoever does not
hate his father and his mother as I do cannot become a disciple to Me. And
whoever does [not] love his father and his mother as I do cannot become a
[disciple] to Me. For my mother [gave me falsehood], but [my] true [Mother] gave
me life.18
The passage is also noteworthy for its
use of the word life, a word specifically used by Jesus in reference to
spiritual life. The idea that the Spirit (spiritual life) flows from the Divine
Mother was unprecedented in Judaism, and thus was a momentous development in the
West. But the idea had long been understood in the East. In the Hindu traditions
the same Divine Mother who brings the world into existence and sustains it also
makes available a very special form of her own divine Self: a divine grace that
is the Eastern equivalent of the Holy Spirit. Hindus believe that by means of
this extremely subtle energy, known as the Chitti Kundalini or the Shakti
Kundalini, the Divine Mother brings about the dramatic reversal of the flow that
leads to the heavenly source. Today, the living traditions of Hinduism describe
this key concept of the reversal of the flow reversal in almost exactly the same
language used by Gnostics in the first centuries of Christianity. The only
difference is that Hindus describe the “descent” of Spirit as an awakening from
within. Either way, it is the decisive turning point in the spiritual life of
the disciple.
The Gnostic Response
More than 1900 years after the
fact it is very difficult for us to comprehend the extent of the calamity that
enveloped Judea during 66–73 C.E., and again in 115 and 135 C.E. From the
riveting account of Josephus, the consequences must have been horrific, much
worse than the damage wreaked by Nebuchadnezzar six centuries before. In the act
of breaching the walls of Jerusalem and destroying the great temple, the Roman
general Titus proved the prophecies of the apocalyptic age to be a colossal
failure, indeed, a collective fantasy. Many Jews survived the siege, the famine,
and the final battle only to be crucified. Tens of thousands of others were
carried off into slavery, or were thrown to the lions in the great Coliseum of
Rome. Traumatized by war, many Jews in its aftermath must have questioned their
faith, including the darker attributes of Yahweh. In 1927 a scholar named A.
Marmorstein found evidence of this in rabbinical texts.19
For Jews who had believed in the grand apocalyptic vision, there were only three
possible options. According to scholar Robert Grant, they could rewrite the
apocalypse and postpone history; they could explain the failed prognostications
by trying to show that the sacred writings had been misinterpreted; or they
could simply abandon their faith.20
Little has been written about the
war’s impact on the first Christian community of the Nazarenes. One scholar who
did study the matter, S. G. F. Brandon, concluded that the impact was no less
horrendous.21
The war scattered Jewish Christians far and wide. And if the followers of Jesus
were as angry with their Jewish brothers as they were with the Romans, they had
good reason: The zealots had hijacked Judaism and brought ruin upon the nation.
For which reason Jewish Christians probably shared the conviction that if only
more of people had listened to Jesus, events might have turned out very
differently. Anyone with an eye in his head, after all, could see that the
zealots had been blind. The entire nation had been led off the cliff like a pack
of lemmings. To think the fools had believed that Yahweh would come down out of
the sky and destroy the Romans! Where was Yahweh? Was he sleeping? Or was
something the matter with the national God-concept?
The scattered remnants of the
original Jerusalem Church found it difficult to regroup. We know that Roman
pursuit continued, and was intense.22
Eventually, Jewish Christian sects did emerge, including the Ebionites and
Elchaisites, and held on in places like Alexandria. But Jews would never again
dominate the Jesus movement. The war and the subsequent Jewish revolts had set
in motion a great reshuffling of men and ideas, and out of the rubble emerged
Gentile Christianity.
So began a new phase of the Wisdom
dialogue within the rich and diverse literature of Gnostic Christianity; and
Alexandria was one of the primary cauldrons. Increasingly, the teachings of
Jesus passed into Gentile hands. Probably for this reason, as time passed, there
was less sympathy for Yahweh’s noisy tantrums, less tolerance for the residue of
the old pagan storm god. There may also have been a feeling that the Wisdom
literature did not go far enough. To many it probably seemed that events had
completely discredited the Jewish God along with his people. Thus, the God of
the Jews suffered the fate history has always accorded losers. Yahweh was
demoted to the lesser status of a demiurge. To be sure, the Fathers of the
Church vociferously resisted this trend. Irenaeus devoted much of his leaden
prose, including the greatest portion of Against Heresies, to refuting the
Gnostic “error.”23
Notwithstanding the views of men like Irenaeus, the Gnostic repudiation of
Yahweh was not a case of apostasy. Indeed, to many Christians it must have
seemed like an advance. Certainly the demotion of Yahweh was not the end of God
or heaven. The Godhead, after all, had not changed. What had changed was the
concept of God, which simply reconstituted itself in human understanding.
Indeed, the sloughing off of the less desirable elements in Yahweh's character
surely helped many to clarify the nature of the Godhead. Yahweh was rechristened
as Saklas, “the fool,” and as Samael, “the blind.” Behind Yahweh, unseen by him,
stood Wisdom (the Divine Mother, Sophia, Achamoth, the Ogdoad, Barbelo, and so
forth), now recognized as the true boss. Yahweh was simply the hired man. Above
Wisdom, indeed, over all, presided the incomprehensible Father about whom Jesus
had spoken in such loving terms.24
It is interesting to note that although Wisdom was often ranked below the
Father, their relationship was intimate: Wisdom was an integral part of the
Godhead.
The fate of the old Yahweh was not
a happy one. Some of the more extreme Gnostics dealt harshly with him. In the
Hypostasis of the Archons, one of the Gnostic scriptures found at Nag Hammadi,
Ialdabaoth is cast down into dark Tartarus, the hellish realm beneath Hades
where the Titans had been hurled after the defeat of Cronus.25
The Naassene Sermon, however, mentions no such dismal fate. In its milder tone
we may see maintained the sturdy link with the Old Testament.
Just as it is difficult for us moderns
to understand the full measure of the destruction wreaked upon Judea by the
Romans, so also it is difficult to apprehend the Gnostic resynthesis that
occurred in the war’s aftermath, and why, especially from the perspective of
places like Alexandria, that reform was so necessary.
© Mark Gaffney 2005
This article is an edited chapter
taken from Mark Gaffney's book, Gnostic Secrets of the Naassenes, released by
Inner Traditions in May 2004. Mark's first book, Dimona: the Third Temple?, was
a pioneering 1989 study of the Israeli nuclear weapons program. For links to
more of Mark's stuff check out his web site
www.gnosticsecrets.com Mark can be reached for
comment at
mhgaffney@sbcglobal.net
SYNOPSIS of the book Gnostic
Secrets of the Naassenes
by Mark Gaffney
Gnostic Secrets of the Naassenes
investigates a key Gnostic source text from the early period of Christianity.
Known as the Naassene Sermon, the document was only discovered in 1842, after
being lost for many centuries. First translated into English in 1868, it
continues to be widely ignored by Christian scholars, yet it is of inestimable
importance, because the Naassene scribe who composed it claimed to have received
secret instruction from James the Just, the brother of Jesus. Ironically, the
Naassenes were also one of the first Christian sects to be branded as heterodox.
We know of their existence only because the orthodox Bishop Hippolytus, who
regarded them as the root of all heresy, embedded the text of their Sermon in
book five of his Refutation of All Heresies.
Fortunately, the text preserved by
Hippolytus supports a detailed reconstruction of Naassene spirituality. In his
book Mark Gaffney decodes this exciting material and shows that Hippolytus did
not understand what had passed into his hands. Intended for advanced seekers,
the Naassene Sermon was nothing less than a handbook for higher consciousness.
Gaffney argues that the Naassenes, based in Alexandria, were a satellite
community of the original Jerusalem Church. This revolutionary book documents a
half-dozen major breakthroughs in our understanding of the origins of
Christianity.
Notes
1. The demiurge was not a Gnostic
invention, however. Nearly 500 years before Christianity, Plato described a
similar Creation scheme in his Timaeus. In fact, as we know from a number of
pagan theogonies that have come down to us, the same formula existed throughout
the ancient world. For a detailed study of various Greek theogonies see M.L.
West’s brilliant book, The Orphic Poems, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1983; for a
look at the Egyptian theogony see Robert Bauval and Adrian Gilbert, The Orion
Mystery, New York, Crown Books, 1994; for a discussion of the Sumerian gods see
Samuel Noah Kramer, The Sumerians, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1963,
chapter 4.
2. Most scholars have followed Hans
Jonas, The Gnostic Religion, Boston, Beacon Press, 1958, pp. 92-93.
3. For a good discussion see Yehoshafat
Harkabi, The Bar Kokhba Syndrome, Chappaqua, NY, Rossel Books, 1983.
4. Also see Albright, Yahweh and the
Gods of Canaan, Garden City, NY, Doubleday, 1968, p. 168; also see Frank Moore
Cross, Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic, Cambridge, Harvard University Press,
1973, pp. 3-75.
5. For example, see Michael Grant, The
History of Ancient Israel, New York, Scribners, 1984, p. 175.
6. W.F. Albright noted the absence of
references in Job to any of the prophetic books, and cited this as evidence that
Job was composed before these books, i.e., in the seventh century BC, or even
earlier. Albright drew the same conclusion based on allusions in Job to Chaldea.
But I take a very different view. Where Jeremiah criticizes King and nation Job
goes farther and critiques God himself, that is, the all male God-concept that
is pervasive even in the Books of Jeremiah and Isaiah. There was good reason for
Job to stand apart! Allusions to Chaldea also point to a late (post-exilic)
rather than an early date. The presence of the Son of Man in Ezekiel, Second
Isaiah, and Job all points to a common eastern source. Albright, Yahweh and the
Gods of Canaan, 1968, pp. 260-261.
7. Carl G. Jung, Answer to Job, trans.
by R.C. Hull, Princeton, NJ. Princeton University Press, 1958, p. 23.
8. James M. Robinson, The Nag Hammadi
Library, San Francisco, Harper and Row, 1977, p. 106.
9. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, I, 29, 4;
30, 6.
10. Jung, Answer to Job, p. 13.
11. R. Gordon Wasson, Albert Hofman, and
Carl A.P. Ruck, The Road to Eleusis, New York, Harcourt Brace, 1978, p. 59.
12. Ibid, p. 67.
13. Twentieth century Archaeology
established the prevalence of goddess worship in ancient Israeli folk religion.
Which was in sharp contrast with the official state religion: the pure Yahwism
of the temple priesthood. For some reason, although Yahweh assimilated to
himself the various epithets and qualities of male Canaanite gods such as Baal
and El, the same did not happen with the pagan goddess. Ephraim Stern, “Pagan
Yahweism”, Biblical Archaeology Review, May-June 2001, p. 21. Also see Israel
Finklestein and Neil Asher Silberman, The Bible Unearthed, New York, Free Press,
2001, pp. 241-241.
14. According to W.F. Albright the
eighth Proverb swarms with Canaanite words and expressions that refer to the
pagan goddess. Albright dated it to as early as the seventh century BC. Yet, as
Albright notes, paeans to Wisdom can be found in the literature from Ugarit
dating back well into the second millennium BC. All of this is curious. If
Wisdom entered into Judaism as early as Albright asserts, how then do we explain
the all male character of Yahweh? Albright never explained this. The fact is
that Yahweh did not assimilate aspects of Wisdom until very late. Albright, From
the Stone Age to Christianity, Baltimore, Johns Hopkins U. Press, 1940, p. 368.
15. If the late Israeli archaeologist
Yigael Yadin is correct, the village of Bethany was a leper's colony in the
first century. Hershel Shanks, ed., Understanding the Dead Sea Scrolls, New
York, Random House,1992, p. 104. In which case Jesus surely defiled himself in
the eyes of the Essenes and other strict Jews by spending time there. Matthew
21:17; 26:6; Mark 11:11; 14:3; Luke 24:50; John 11:1; 12:1. His visits were
probably meant as a strong protest against the extremism of Jewish purity laws.
the Jews were a superstitious people, as evidenced by the Old Testament, a
people who regarded leprosy as a curse visited upon the wicked. II Kings 5:7; II
Chronicles 26:20.
Consider the case of Miriam, sister of Moses, who, we are told, was so stricken
because she opposed her brother's leadership during the wanderings in the
wilderness. Numbers 12:9-10 That the incident is spurious, an obvious scribal
attempt to inflate the image of the patriarch Moses, is attested by the Book of
Jasher, which describes the same events in a very different light. (Jasher is
mentioned in Joshua 10:12-13 and II Samuel 1:18-27.) Jasher was regarded as a
lost book, until a copy turned up in England in 1721. It was first published in
1829. Albinus Flaccus Alcuinus, The Book of Jasher, Kessinger Publishing
(reprint), Montana, 1829. The contrast with the Numbers version of events is
remarkable. In Jasher 12-15 Miriam's stature as a prophetess is so great that
she overshadows even her brother. In Jasher 12 it is Miriam, not Moses, who
finds water in the desert. Miriam's importance is affirmed in the Talmud, which
assigns her a status equal with Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Aaron, and even Moses,
the only woman so named. Raphael Patai, The Hebrew Goddess, New York, Avon
Books, 1978, p. 117. Although Numbers 12:9-10 describes Miriam's sudden attack
of leprosy as an angry intervention by Yahweh, in Jasher leprosy is never
mentioned. The punishment meted out to Miriam is more credible. Moses places his
sister under house arrest for reasons of political expedience. Moreover, he is
forced to release her when Miriam’s many supporters flock to her defense. Miriam
is even credited with an important oral relic, the “Song of the Sea” (also known
as the “Song of Miriam”), which established her unique place in Hebrew history.
The song celebrates the Red Sea crossing, and is archaic, one of the oldest
fragments of oral tradition in the Bible (See Chapter Seven). All of this
appears to have been understood by the Naassenes. The Sermon mentions Miriam and
describes her as “the one who is sought after.” (Ref., 5.8.2)
King Uzziah was another Old Testament figure cursed by leprosy. Uzziah was
stricken for entering (and thus defiling) the temple sanctuary. II Chronicles
26:19-21. Curious that no such fate was visited upon Pompey, the Roman general
who was despised for a similar offense.
16. The hymn refers to the
hermaphroditic Primal Man. But clearly his androgynous nature mirrors the
Godhead. The very next line even states that, “the knowledge of him [Primal Man]
is the originating principle of the capacity for knowledge of God.”
17. Montague Rhodes James, The
Apocryphal New Testament, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1924, pp. 1-2.
18. Robinson, 1977, pp. 128-129.
19. Cited in Robert M. Grant, Gnosticism
and Early Christianity, New York, Columbia U. Press,1966, (chapter 6, n. 23),
p.33.
20. Grant, 1966, p. 35.
21. S.G.F.Brandon, The Fall of Jerusalem
and the Christian Church, London, S.P.C.K., 1951, chapter 9.
22. In his history Eusebius reports that
the Romans pursued the family of David for many years. The successor of James
the Just was finally hunted down and executed during the reign of Trajan.
Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, chapters 11,12, and 32.
23. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, 4, 4.
24. For an abundance of detail see the
Secret Book (Apocryphon) of John, Robinson, The Nag Hammadi Library, p. 98.
25. Ibid, p. 158.
This article is provided by kind permission of Mark
Gaffney. This article MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED without the permission of the
author.
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