This is currently the lead on Beliefnet.com and drawing lots of outraged 
responses. I'm very interested in renewed Gnosticism because it seems to me a step 
in the right direction. First we had an utterly empty public square--then we 
had an inrush of "spirituality" of all shapes and sizes--and now we have a 
category of people saying "Can't I be spiritual and have Christianity too?" 

The main defense of Gnosticism seems to be that it allows you to contact the 
divine within, without intermediaries. I'd say that Christianity does the 
same, and it provides guidelines so you can compare your experience with others', 
and not just fall into delusion. It appears the Gnostics' response is 
"delusion is impossible." Whatever you find inside that sounds right, is right. 

I don't believe that they can really believe that--the world is littered with 
too many sad stories of people who fell into self-deception with the best 
intentions and greatest conviction. Only a year or so ago, Andrea Yates--and 
think about those who intentionally deceive others, to destruction, like Jim 
Jones. I don't think even Gnostics believe that whatever you find inside is good. 
But that will be the next step in the discussion. 

*************************

What Heresy? 

The things NeoGnostic seekers want in Christianity--experiential insight, 
mysticism, a direct link to God-are already there.

By Frederica Mathewes-Green

I can't be the only Christian reading "Beyond Belief," Elaine Pagels' 
celebration of Gnostic theology and texts, and thinking, "What's so heretical about 
this?"

This best-selling book, and its accompanying train of reviews and author 
profiles, presents a familiar cast of characters. The Gnostics, developers of a 
variety of Christ-flavored spiritualities in the earliest centuries of the 
Christian era, are enthroned as noble seekers of enlightenment. The early Church, 
which rejected these theologies, is assigned its usual role of oppressor, 
afflicting believers with rigid Creeds. It's the old familiar story of oppressive 
bad guys and rebellious good guys, and Americans never tire of it.

But a look at the supposedly scandalous material comes up short. The 
most-cited Gnostic text, the Gospel of Thomas, mixes familiar sayings of Jesus with 
others of more mystical bent. These are sometimes cryptic, but hardly 
outrageous. They're not far different from Christian poetry and mysticism through the 
ages. Where's the problem?

Well, not here. Early Christians rejected Gnosticism, all right. But what 
Pagels presents is not the part they rejected. What they rejected, Pagels does 
not present. 

Let's look at the first part of that statement. Pagels in fact does 
Christianity a service by calling us afresh to the truth that God is within and 
permeates all creation. Every person can awaken to this and experience God directly. 
This truth gets emphasized or neglected according to the pressures of the 
surrounding culture; most recently, Christianity had to cope with Enlightenment 
rationalism, which held suspect all things supernatural. Followers of many 
religious traditions have benefited from recent years' new openness. 

But even in hostile environments, direct encounter with the divine can't be 
fully suppressed, because it is true. It keeps bursting out, in the form of 
Christian mysticism or as charismatic and evangelical movements. When a preacher 
says you can have a "personal relationship with Jesus" or have "Jesus in your 
heart," that's what he's talking about. It's a direct, personal, and probably 
electrifying encounter with the interior presence of God. 

You don't have to be a full-time contemplative to experience this; lightning 
can strike anywhere, any time. When it first hit me, I was a non-Christian 
tourist strolling around an Irish church. Teens praying after a Christian rock 
concert, a Hispanic Catholic woman on silent retreat, a Greek Orthodox man with 
an icon by his computer--anyone can experience this dynamic presence of God, 
because God is within everything he creates. There's no way to force this 
experience, but it never hurts to be open, to ask.

So "The Kingdom of God is within you" is hardly a heretical statement. 
Today's NeoGnostics would find a crowd around them, from 17th century Spanish nuns 
to polyester-clad Pentecostals, saying, "That sounds like what I'm talking 
about." 

Now let's take a look at the second half of the previous statement. "That 
=sounds like= what I'm talking about" is a qualified endorsement-a gesture of 
openness till we hear more. There is such a thing as self-deception, and 
confusion can bloom in unfamiliar spiritual realms. Though such experiences are 
indisputably beyond words, after we have them we try to talk about them. We want to 
share them with others, and we want to check whether we simply flipped out. 

Say that it's like going to Paris. Everyone takes a photo of the Eiffel 
Tower. When we get home, we compare them; some snapshots are fuzzy and some from 
funny angles, but we can recognize them as depicting the same thing. The snaps 
don't capture the reality; nothing can; but they're OK as records. 

The Creeds are photos everyone agreed on. They are minimal and crisply 
focused, not fancied-up. They are not a substitute for personal experience, but a 
useful guide for comparison, for discernment. If someone's snap shows King Kong 
climbing up the Tower, we can say, "Hey, you're off base there. Something's 
messing with your head." If Kong is wearing a lei and a paper party hat we might 
say, "Aw, now you're just making stuff up." 

That's what early Christians said to the Gnostics. The problem wasn't the 
insistence that we can directly experience God. It was that the Gnostics' schemes 
of how to do this were so =wacky=. 

Preposterous stories about creation, angels, demons, and spiritual 
hierarchies multiplied like mushrooms. (Even some erstwhile Christians, like Origen 
and 
Clement of Alexandria, dabbled in these fields.) The version attributed to 
Valentinus, the best-known Gnostic, is typical. Valentinus supposedly taught a 
hierarchy of spiritual beings called "aeons." One of the lowest aeons, Sophia, 
fell and gave birth to the Demiurge, the God of the Hebrew Scriptures. This 
evil Demiurge created the visible world, which was a bad thing, because now we 
pure spirits are all tangled up in fleshy bodies. Christ was an aeon who took 
possession of the body of the human Jesus, and came to free us from the prison 
of materiality.

"Us" didn't mean everybody. Not all people have a divine spark within, just 
intellectuals; "gnosis," by definition, concerns what you *know*. Some few who 
are able to grasp these insights could be initiated into deeper mysteries.  
Ordinary Christians, who lacked sufficient brainpower, could only attain the 
Demiurge's middle realm. Everyone else was doomed. Under Gnosticism, there was no 
hope of salvation for most of the human race.

Now you can begin to see what the early Christians found heretical. 
Gnosticism rejected the body and saw it as a prison for the soul; Christianity 
insisted 
that God infuses all creation and that even the human body can be a vessel of 
holiness, a "temple of the Holy Spirit." Gnosticism rejected the Hebrew 
scriptures and portrayed the God of the Jews as an evil spirit; Christianity looked 
on Judaism as a mother. Gnosticism was elitist; Christianity was egalitarian, 
preferring "neither Jew nor Greek, male nor female, slave nor free." 

Finally, Gnosticism was just too complicated. Christianity maintained the 
simple invitation of the One who said, "Let the little children come unto me." 
Full-blown science-fiction Gnosticism died under its own weight. 

Pagels does not endorse this aspect of Gnosticism. But the Gnostics would not 
endorse her version either. They did not think of these elaborate schemes as 
mythopoeic (which is how NeoGnostics describe them), but as factual. Your 
salvation depended on getting it right, and Gnostics argued with each other much 
as theologians do today. Some claimed that the body was so evil you had to give 
up sex; others said the body was so illusory that it didn't matter what you 
did with it. A well-meaning modernist who murmured "You're both right" would be 
reviled for not grasping what's at stake.

NeoGnostics share our culture's penchant for pick-and-choose religion, and in 
this case that's better than inhaling the original whole. But every 
pick-and-choose religion has this limitation: the follower can never grow any larger 
than his own preconceptions. He has established himself a priori as the ultimate 
authority, and his thoughts will never be larger than his hat size.

Two heads, or a billion, are better than one. This is the reason for 
community. We might think there are two ways of determining truth, either top-down 
authority, or every-man-for-himself. But there is an alternative: consensus. We 
see it from the start of Christian history, in the discussions of Acts 15; we 
see it in St. Vincent of Lerins' handy rule that we trust "what has been 
believed everywhere, always, and by all." A modest core of Creeds and scriptures 
tells us all we require, while a generous circle of liturgies, devotional 
writings, and commentaries cast more light.                                     

"Light" is the key word for the NeoGnostics. As an Eastern Orthodox 
Christian, I feel strong empathy with their yearning for this encounter. But I'm 
puzzled that they still seem to be expecting that this experience will be mainly 
intellectual. "Light" for them means insight. 

Christians would say to them, as we did to the original Gnostics, that there 
is something better. It will permeate your whole self, not just your mind; it 
embraces all of creation, celebrates good food and marital communion, and 
cares enough about this material world to build hospitals and work to free slaves. 
The thing you are seeking is not an idea but a Person, a Person who is 
mysteriously your Creator, and thus already present, waiting, at your deepest levels.
 
The NeoGnostic writings seem to me evocative but theoretical, a little 
distant, like they don't quite know yet what they are looking for. I will be glad to 
see how these light-seekers evolve. Where there is an open heart there is 
always good hope, because as Jesus promised, "He who seeks, finds." 



*****
Frederica Mathewes-Green
www.frederica.com
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