Tag Archives: God

The Buried Gospels: 5 Mind-Bending Revelations from the Nag Hammadi Library

In December 1945, beneath the limestone cliffs of Nag Hammadi in Upper Egypt, a local farmer named Mohammad Ali was unearthing fertilizer when his shovel struck a large, red earthenware jar. Fearing it might contain a malevolent spirit, he hesitated; but driven by curiosity, he shattered the clay. Instead of a jinn, he discovered thirteen leather-bound papyrus codices—a silent library that had been interred for over fifteen centuries. These manuscripts, now known as the Nag Hammadi Library, did more than fill a historical gap; they resurrected a lost, mystical landscape of early Christianity that the institutional church had sought to erase from the human record.

These “buried gospels” offer a radical vision of existence that bridges the gap between ancient Coptic wisdom and the cutting-edge inquiries of modern philosophy. They invite us to reconsider the very nature of the divine, the self, and our responsibility to the living world.

1. The Divine is Hiding in Plain Sight

Traditional Western theology has long favored a “transcendent” God—a distant judge presiding over a separate, celestial realm. The Nag Hammadi texts, however, unveil a God of profound immanence. In this framework, the divine is not a destination to be reached after death, but a presence that permeates the very fabric of the material world.

In the Gospel of Thomas, Jesus famously rejects the idea that the “Kingdom” is a geographical location in the sky or the sea. Instead, he asserts that the Kingdom is a present reality that is simultaneously “inside of you and outside of you” (Saying 3). This shifts spirituality away from a quest for the “beyond” and toward a deep, immediate recognition of the sacredness of the “here.” It suggests that we are not strangers in a secular universe, but participants in a single, unified reality.

“Jesus said: I am the light that is above them all, I am the All… Split a piece of wood; I am there. Lift up the stone, and you will find me there.” — Gospel of Thomas, Saying 77

2. Sin Isn’t a Moral Failure—It’s a Misunderstanding

Perhaps the most transformative revelation within the Nag Hammadi texts is the dismantling of the traditional concept of sin. In the Gospel of Mary, sin is not presented as a legalistic transgression or an inherent stain on the soul. Instead, it is described as an ontological error—a state of “missing the mark” regarding one’s true nature.

To understand this, we must look to the original Greek terms: hamartia, often translated as “sin,” literally means “missing the mark,” while metanoia, or “repentance,” signifies a “turning about of the mind.” In this light, “sin” is simply an act born from the habits of a “corrupted nature” that has forgotten its divine roots. This ancient perspective finds a startling ally in the 17th-century philosopher Baruch Spinoza, a “moral anti-realist” who argued that “good” and “evil” are merely human labels born from “mutilated and confused” perceptions. For both the Gnostic and the Spinozist, the solution to human suffering is not penance, but the cultivation of adequate knowledge.

“There is no sin. It is you who make sin exist, when you act according to the habits of your corrupted nature.” — Gospel of Mary

3. Mary Magdalene Was the True Philosophical Successor

The discovery of these texts has effectively shattered the “prostitute” myth—a character assassination formalized by the Church in the sixth century. The Gospel of Mary and the Gospel of Philip portray Mary Magdalene not as a marginal follower, but as the “Apostle of the Apostles,” a visionary leader who possessed a uniquely direct understanding of the Savior’s esoteric teachings.

The Gospel of Philip goes so far as to describe a relationship of profound intimacy and “sacred union,” stating that Jesus “loved her more than all the disciples” and would “often used to kiss her on the mouth.” This intimacy was not merely romantic but intellectual and spiritual; it sparked a recorded conflict with Peter and Andrew, who questioned why a woman should receive secrets they were ignorant of. This friction serves as a timeless metaphor for the tension between institutional authority, which relies on tradition, and visionary authority, which relies on a direct, unmediated experience of truth.

4. The Ancient Architecture of Immanence

These ancient insights bridge a 1,500-year gap to the Enlightenment, specifically to Spinoza’s “Architecture of Immanence.” Spinoza’s famous formula Deus sive Natura (“God or Nature”) mirrors the Gnostic concept of the “return to roots.” Both systems propose that all formations, creatures, and elements of nature are “interwoven and united,” acting as transient modes of a single, eternal Substance.

Crucially, both the Gospel of Mary and Spinoza’s Ethicssuggest that “ascent” or “salvation” is not a journey through space to a higher heaven. Rather, it is a change in understanding—a cognitive shift from perceiving the world as a collection of separate objects to seeing it as a unified, sacred whole. This lineage of thought provides the foundation for a modern ecological theology. If nature is not a mere resource but a direct expression of the divine essence, then our care for the planet becomes an ethical and spiritual imperative.

5. The “Nous”—An Internal Eye for the Unique Essence

The Nag Hammadi texts describe a specific mechanism for spiritual vision called the Nous. According to the Gospel of Mary, the Nous is the faculty of conscious awareness that sits “between the soul and the spirit.”

This faculty corresponds to Spinoza’s Scientia Intuitiva, or the “third kind of knowledge.” Unlike logical reason, which deals with properties shared by many things, the Nous provides an immediate, holistic “glance” at the unique essence of a singular thing. This is the “treasure” mentioned in the gospels. To see through the Nous is to see the “divine ground” of your own being—to recognize your own eternal necessity within the infinite flow of God. It is an ascent of consciousness that transforms the individual from a “stranger” in the universe into a conscious participant in its eternity.

“Lord, when someone meets you in a moment of vision, is it through the soul that they see, or is it through the Spirit?” The Teacher answered: “It is neither through the soul or the Spirit, But the nous between the two which sees the vision… There where is the nous, lies the treasure.” — Gospel of Mary

Silence and the Forward Look

The enduring power of the Nag Hammadi Library lies in its refusal to offer us a God we can hold at arm’s length. By placing the divine in the splitting of wood, the lifting of stones, and the very structure of the human mind, these gospels transform our daily perception into an act of worship. They suggest that the “treasure” we seek is never further away than our own awareness.

If all things are truly interwoven and return to a single root, then the way we treat a forest, a neighbor, or our own minds is the way we treat the Divine. Recognizing this immanence is not merely an intellectual exercise; it is the path to a profound “rest” beyond the fluctuations of time.

I go now into Silence.

Nature and God

ature and God

I have been enlightened ,humans have existed a very long time, much longer than modern science understands ,,however humans evolved ,,,Any! entity. If they wanted to leave a message they would not right a book they would embedded that in our DNA. We are very sophisticated and complex there have been trillios of humans and no entity would only save some and not all there is emerging evidence that we have been here millions of years ,not, housands perception it’s not reality a awarement is reality.
,,
ira Warren Whiteside

ira  Warren  Whiteside thank you

Spiderman, Robot Reincarnations, and the Secret Bloodlust of Benedict Spinoza

The Silicon Ghost in the Machine

Imagine a sterile laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where the air hums with the cooling fans of a supercomputer. Here, a team of “studious little worker bees” has attempted the impossible: downloading the consciousness of history’s greatest minds into robotic frames. Among these “Great Antithesizers” are two of the loneliest figures in the canon: Benedict Spinoza and Friedrich Nietzsche.

In this metallic second birth, the personas have shifted. Nietzsche, ever the advocate for the “overcoming” of physical limits, has dubbed himself Hercules. He views his counterpart—the 17th-century lens-grinder—with a mixture of reverence and mockery, calling him Spiderman. For Hercules, the name is a jab at Spinoza’s intricate metaphysical webs and a peculiar, visceral hobby. But as these two ghosts in the machine begin to clash, they reveal a profound, counter-intuitive map of the human condition—one that suggests our “free will” is a fairytale and our reason is the only thing keeping the planet from a self-inflicted end.

A Saint Among Spiders: The Visceral Logic of the Lens-Grinder

To many, Spinoza is the “secular saint,” a reclusive figure of pure logic. Yet, the historical reality is grittier. Before he died at forty-five—his lungs ravaged by the “glass filaments” he inhaled while grinding lenses for microscopes—he spent his leisure hours in a way that suggests a dark fascination with the mechanics of struggle.

The biographer Johannes Colerus provides a startling glimpse into Spinoza’s private “play”:

He took pleasure in smoking a pipe of tobacco; or, when he had a mind to divert himself somewhat longer, looked for some spiders and made them fight together, or he threw some flies into the cobweb, and was so well pleased with the result of that battle that he would some-times break into laughter.

While a later, likely apocryphal account by Lodewijk Meyer suggests Spinoza even encouraged betting on these battles as a “rational act” in a determined world, the historian views such legends with a skeptical eye. Whether the gambling occurred or not, the “spider-fighting” serves as a perfect philosophical allegory. For a man who viewed the universe as a rigid, determined machine, these battles were not “cruelty” but a front-row seat to the necessary laws of nature. As “Spiderman” watched the web, he wasn’t just killing time; he was observing the same “bloodthirsty necessity” that governs human empires.

The Loneliest Dualitude: Nietzsche’s 17th-Century Soulmate

It is one of history’s great intellectual romances: the “anti-herd” Nietzsche finding his only true precursor in a sickly, ascetic Jew from Amsterdam. In the summer of 1881, Nietzsche sent a frantic postcard from Sils-Maria, breathless with the shock of recognition. Despite his usual contempt for the “sickly” and the “decadent,” he realized that the “Spiderman” had anticipated his most radical departures by two centuries.

Hercules might mock Spiderman’s “decrepit lungs” today, but the real Nietzsche found in Spinoza a metaphysical soulmate. He identified five pillars of agreement: the denial of free will, teleology, a moral world order, the unegoistic, and evil.

I am utterly amazed, utterly enchanted. I have a precursor, and what a precursor! I hardly knew Spinoza: that I should have turned to him just now was inspired by ‘instinct.’ Not only is his over-all tendency like mine – making knowledge the most powerful affect – but in five main points of his doctrine I recognize myself… (Friedrich Nietzsche, 1881)

The Rock that Thinks it Wills: The Anatomy of an Illusion

The central friction between our two robots concerns the “will.” We move through life under the “emotion of command,” believing we are the masters of our movements. Spinoza famously dismantled this with the analogy of the rock: if a falling stone were suddenly conscious, it would believe it was falling because it wanted to. In reality, it is pushed by an infinite chain of external causes.

Hercules, the robot Nietzsche, takes this further into the realm of psychology. He argues that what we call “freedom” is simply our ignorance of the “complex constellations of sensations, thoughts, and feelings” driving us. We remember the “emotion of command” and forget the biological and environmental stimuli that actually pulled the trigger. To both men, we are not authors of our lives; we are readers of a script written by necessity.

The Striving Machine: Conatus and the Metaphysical Glue of Existence

At the heart of Spinoza’s Ethics lies the concept of Conatus—the “effort” or “striving” to persist in being. It is the metaphysical glue that binds the human heart to the cooling stone. It suggests that a rock strives to remain a rock, a plant to reach the light, and a human to flourish.

This concept blurs the line between the organic and the mechanical. Everything in existence is “pushing back against not existing.”

  • Joy is the sensation of our power to exist increasing.
  • Sadness is the sensation of that power being diminished.

When our robotic Hercules experiences “the will to power,” Spiderman would argue he is simply describing Conatus with more poetic “vigor.” We act not because we choose, but because our essence demands we persist.

God in the Machine: The Paradox of the Pious Atheist

Spinoza is history’s most famous “atheist” who couldn’t stop talking about God. His radical claim—Deus sive Natura (God or Nature)—argued that God is not a bearded judge in the sky, but the infinite, necessary substance of the universe itself.

Hercules scorns this as “terminological hocus pocus,” a clever mask for a man who lacked the “courage” to be an open atheist. He points to the signet ring the historical Spinoza wore, inscribed with the word Caute(Caution). Nietzsche suspected Spinoza used the word “God” to save his skin from the Dutch authorities who had already excommunicated him.

Spiderman, however, remains unmoved. To him, the “intellectual love of God” is the only affect powerful enough to sustain a man. He didn’t use the word out of fear, but because “God” was the only term beautiful enough to describe the sacred, rational totality of reality. He wasn’t hiding; he was synthesizing the “order” of the Apollonian with the “flux” of the Dionysian.

The Final Recurrence: Can Reason Save a Planet of Passions?

As the MIT simulation draws to a close, the two robots leave us with a choice that feels increasingly urgent. Nietzsche (Hercules) offers the “Will to Power” and the “Eternal Recurrence”—a call to embrace the “passions” and affirm life as a creative, instincts-driven act.

But Spinoza (Spiderman) issues a sobering warning. He argues that while Nietzsche’s “instincts” and “heroic myths” make for grand drama, they also fuel the “warring camps” and “global conflicts” that threaten our survival. In an age where technology has given us the weaponry to seal our fate, can we afford to trust our “passions”?

Spiderman’s final argument is that human reason—boring, disciplined, and universal—is the only vehicle left for our salvation. Without it, there will be no “recurrence” of anything, eternal or otherwise. In the end, we are left to wonder: are we the masters of our destiny, or just conscious rocks, hurtling toward a fate we are only beginning to understand?

Awarement or Perception is Perception “Awareness is Reality” Part Duex

Recently our friend Andy Leonard had an interesting post. regarding his faith, changing priorities and achieving what I believe is “Awarement”, which I found inspirational and thought provoking.

“Awarement” is the established form of awareness. Once one has accomplished their sense of awareness they have come to terms with awarement.

As I have experienced many of us who are driven to love and provide for our families can get caught up in creating a “Perception” of ourselves to achieve greater income, normally through titles or recognition by our peers, and this can compete with our family time, due the “perception” it has higher priority.

As we gain success we achieve an Awarement of success and thereby a perception of success. however as times goes on and events overtake us our Awarement is changed due to our own self perception evolving, so the reality that was our perception is revised. “Perception is reality” I don’t think so.

My own transformation was few years back when Tessie and I faced death and through the grace of God moved past it.

Perception is Perception “Awareness is Reality

If I might suggest I have also studied some of the The Gospel of Mary as found in the Berlin Gnostic Codex, and find them helpful.

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excerpt – – – –
8) And she began to speak to them these words: I, she said, I saw the Lord in a vision and I said to Him, Lord I saw you today in a vision. He answered and said to me,

9) Blessed are you that you did not waver at the sight of Me. For where the mind is there is the treasure.
10) I said to Him, Lord, how does he who sees the vision see it, through the soul or through the spirit?

11) The Savior answered and said, He does not see through the soul nor through the spirit, but the mind that is between the two that is what sees the vision and it is […]

I have included some of Platos teachings and writings in my exploration and understanding of “Awarement” via the Allegory of the Cave

Ira

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Last but no least I also find Yoda quite interesting.

"Do, or do not. There is no try."

"Karo yaa na karo, koshish jaisa kuch nahi hai."