The Nag Hammadi texts whisper something the official traditions rarely permit: the God most people worship may not be the highest God. Between the kneeling worshipper and the pure, boundless light of the Pleroma stand three tiers of divine reality — Yahweh the craftsman, Elohim the many-within-the-one, and El Elyon the Invisible Spirit, beyond all name, form, and gender. And where does Jesus stand in this order? When he says the Kingdom is within you, the Gnostic texts suggest he is not pointing toward the covenant God — but toward the light that was never absent from any soul that ever drew breath.
Tag: Jung
Children of the Light — The Origins, Vision, and Suppression of the Gnostics
Before the Nag Hammadi scrolls were buried in the Egyptian desert, before the councils and the condemnations, before the burning — there was a vision. The Gnostics called themselves children of the light. They drew from Plato’s Athens, Persia’s ancient dualism, Egypt’s mystery temples, and the Jewish mystical tradition, and synthesized them into something the ancient world had never seen: the conviction that every human soul already carries the divine, directly, without intermediary, without permission. This is their story — where they came from, what they believed, and what it cost them.
*The Last Veil Is Feeling
The soul sees through the body. The wave continues. For those built with Solar Plexus Authority, feeling is not the obstacle to awakening — it is the last and most intimate veil. The Last Veil Is Feeling — now on Numinous Waves.
The Loosening
The soul doesn’t want to escape the body. It wants to stop being mistaken for it. The loosening isn’t morbid — it’s a form of coming home. The Loosening — now on Numinous Waves.