Thursday, October 30, 2008

Sabians


An article on the Mandaeans which I hadn't come across before and which has plenty of photographs (more photos on the original web page.) Puzzlingly, the article refers to them as Sabians throughout, never once mentioning the name "Mandaean". Could this be for some political convenience, or was it merely the ignorance of the journalist?

http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/iraq/2007-09-27-iraqweek_N.htm

BAGHDAD — Dressed in gleaming white robes, a small group of Sabians gathered on a Sunday afternoon to wash away their sins — and to forget about the problems facing Iraq and the followers of their ancient religion.

The Sabians belong to a centuries-old sect that follows the teachings of John the Baptist but is neither Muslim nor Christian. Flowing water plays a symbolic role in their faith, and several people were baptized at the recent ceremony, including three couples who were getting married.

Long famed in Iraq as jewelers and gold merchants, the Sabians describe themselves as pacifists — which leaves them especially vulnerable in today's climate of sectarian warfare. Even the white color of their robes is meant to symbolize peace.

"Our religion has no tribal background that protects us from violence, so when the government becomes weak, we can't protect ourselves," says Uday Asa'ad Khamas, a spokesman for Sabians in Iraq, a local group.

The Sabians are one of the oldest groups in the Mesopotamia region, but their numbers in Iraq have dwindled from about 40,000 before the U.S. invasion to fewer than 10,000 now, Khamas says. About 57 Sabians have been killed since February of last year, he says, many by sectarian militias who seek to occupy their homes.

There is only one Sabian sheik left in Baghdad who conducts baptisms on Sundays. The ceremonies used to take place in the Tigris River but have been moved to a pool inside the church for security reasons, Khamas says.

The group was persecuted under Saddam Hussein's regime, which forced many Sabian women to be wives for Muslim men, says Raed Hassoun, a Sabian journalist for Iraqi television. He says the group became even more of a target after Saddam was deposed, forcing many of his friends and relatives to flee the country.

"The extremists consider us infidels, despite the fact our religion is very close to Islam and we even use Muslim names," says Ghassan Kareem, 27, who runs a computer shop in Baghdad.

Other Iraqis tend to believe Sabians are wealthy, which has posed added problems, Kareem says. "My father was a goldsmith," he says, "but he died a long time ago, and I paid the price for that. These militias kidnapped me in the middle of the day and I got treated like an animal."

The militias asked for a $100,000 ransom — unusually high for Iraq — believing, incorrectly, that Kareem's family was still wealthy. With great difficulty, his relatives were able to gather $30,000, and Kareem was released.

"The good thing is I am still alive, because in most cases even when you pay, you get killed," Kareem says.

Many in the group have started going by names that are both Sunni and Shiite in origin, hoping to avoid being targeted at illegal checkpoints erected by sectarian militias around Baghdad.

Some Sabians have moved to the northern Kurdistan region, where security is much better. Those who remain in Baghdad seek comfort in their faith and try to find companionship when they gather on Sundays.

"Like any other sect in Iraq, the Sabians live the good times and the bad times together," Hassoun says.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Massacre of the Pure

It's amazing what one can find on the Internet these days. This is a Time Magazine article from 1961 on the Cathars and Neo-Catharism.

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,897752-1,00.html

"These heretics are worse than the Saracens!" exclaimed Pope Innocent III, and on March 10, 1208, he proclaimed a crusade against a sect in southern France that became one of the bloodiest blots in European history.

The heretics called Cathari (from the Greek word for pure), or Albigenses, from the town of Albi, one of their centers in Languedoc, were stamped out in 35 ruthless years of fire and sword. But as the centuries rolled on, they have had a measure of revenge against the Roman Catholic Church. The hatred generated by the crusade prepared the way for Protestantism. And in modern France, where popular apostasy from Catholicism is today wider and deeper than anything Pope Innocent could have imagined, the ancient heresy of Catharism is enjoying a remarkable revival of interest.

The long-lived tradition of anticlericalism in southern France, which recruited the Huguenots in the 16th century and fueled Communism in the 20th, is finding a new outlet in a spreading bush fire of enthusiasm for the vanished sect whose 750-year-old lost cause against the church gave anticlericalism its biggest beachhead in France. Some 30 books have been published during the last 15 years about their beliefs and practices and their slaughterous persecution—most of them highly favorable to the heretics and critical of the church. Several plays have been written about them, and literary reviews have published long articles. Hundreds of weekenders are climbing the 4,000-ft. rock atop which stands Montségur, the holy citadel of Catharism, where 300 soldiers and 200 unarmed, pacifist Cathari stood off an army of 10,000 for ten months before being burned at one huge stake for their "pure Christian" beliefs.

...

Friday, October 24, 2008

Budapest


Tessa and I are off to Budapest for a week or so, where we will meet my best friend Ashford Brown, whose poetry collection, Songs of Sorrow and Joy, is published by Bardic Press. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/09745667211/thegospeoftho-20


I should have a blog post or two queued up, but I will otherwise be offline for a week.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Evil Gnostics

What do these people mean by "Gnostics" and Gnosticism"?

Il Sussidiario.net :: DEBATE/ Culture: what men and women cherish

"

Given that the Supreme court of the state of Connecticut by a 4-3 vote has now decreed that marriage will be made legal for same -sex couples, despite the state legislature action to the contrary, in your opinion are we seeing this latter day form of Gnosticism that you describe , predominantly in the nations that called themselves “developed" ?

Yes, the notion that "marriage," the primordial sacrament, can mean anything we want it to mean is about as pure a form of Gnosticism as you can find."


How do you square that this trend to deny the exercise of conscientious objection in health care appears predominantly (if not always) to involve the realm of sex and its consequences, like procured abortion ?

Abortion is not a matter of sexual morality, but of public justice: the fifth commandment, not the sixth. If, on the other hand, you're talking about prescribing contraceptives, etc., it's no accident that the New Gnostics want to use state power to coerce the Catholic conscience, because the Catholic Church is the last major, nationwide institutional barrier to their victory and the victory of the dictatorship of relativism.



Monday, October 20, 2008

Jerusalem Commands

I've just finished Jerusalem Commands, the third novel in Michael Moorcock's Colonel Pyat quartet. Pyat is a Ukrainian half-Jew who is an anti-semitic monster, an unreliable narrator on an odyssey through the first half of the twentieth century. In his rants he appeals to the glory of Byzantium (Pyat is a late convert to the Orthodox Church) against the brutality of Carthage.

This passage begins with a pipe-dream of Utopia, describing Hollywood, of all places as a new Byzantium,

"I walk along her palm boulevards, beside her ocean, secure and tranquil beneath a beningn golden sun. And here the great spires and domes which rise above her tall trees shall be dedicated not to the cruel and drooling patriarch who shits upon the world like an ancient losing control of his bowels, but to his Son, his Successor, who is God re-born, God cleansed and whole, God not as our brooding master but as our partner in self-improvement. I speak of the Christian God, no God that Jew or Arab can claim. Their God is the God of Carthage, senile and confused, yet full of the blind brute rage which brought the Minotaur to ruin. He is a God of the bloody past. This is not a God to advise on the subtle problems of urban living. To call upon such a God in Notting Hill would be tantamount to summoning the devil. I speak of the God who revealed himself through Jesus Christ. I speak of that self-regenerated God who proclaimed the age of Peace and then watched in dismay as He saw what Man made of it."
Jerusalem Commands (Vintage, 2006) p.559


This is a fascinating theology--God is old and feeble and cruel, so he is replaces by his son Jesus. It could add an entirely new twist to the Gnostic myth!

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Hello All You Educated Men of Fifty and Above

I came across a site Quantcast, a site that provides visitor demographics for other websites. According to this, the Bardic Press site "reaches fewer than 2000 U.S. monthly people. The site appeals to a HH income up to $60k, more educated, 50+, rather male audience"

Then there is a set of graphs breaking down visitors by age, sex, race, etc. It all seems rather unbelieavable. Are 13% of visitors really aged between 12-17 and 34% above 50? 12% Hispanic? 74% don't have children? Where do they get this stuff from?

Sphinx Radio

I've just finished beiong interviewed by William Kennedy of Sphinx Radio. http://www.sphinxradio.com/

The interview is about 20-25 minutes long and Bill gives me ample opportunity to plug my books. He told me that the Bardic Press editions of Hafiz and Omar Khayyam are popular in traditionalist circles! The interview should go out on Saturday 25h October. MP3s of previous interviews are available. He guests include Colin Wilson, Michael Moorcock, Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Bauval.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

American Thinker: Obama's Religious Ruse: The Cult of the Marxist Messiah

American Thinker: Obama's Religious Ruse: The Cult of the Marxist Messiah

"New Age Gnostics identify Obama as an angelic lightworker bringing the world to a higher plane of consciousness."

!!!


The rabid right-wing tone of the article ("
The ruse that he is a Christian must be exposed for what it really is: Obama's cloak to conceal that he is a Marxist from a Muslim background, for which he holds widespread support in the Islamic world. ") is equalled by some of the more grandiose claims about Obama by his supporters. ("He is not the Word made flesh, but the triumph of word over flesh, over color, over despair. . . . Obama is, at his best, able to call us back to our highest selves, to the place where America exists as a glittering ideal, and where we, its honored inhabitants, seem capable of achieving it, and thus of sharing in its meaning and transcendence."")

Monday, October 13, 2008

The Mind of God

I recently read a book by physicist Paul Davies, The Mind of God: Science and the Search for Ultimate Meaning. I found it a refreshing contrast to scientific atheism, for instance Dawkins' The God Delusion. Davies argues from purely scientific and mathematical grounds that "the physical universe is put together with an ingenuity so astonishing that I cannot accept it merely as a brute fact. There must, it seems to me, be a deeper level of explanation. Whether one wishes to call that deeper level "God" is a matter of taste and definition. Furthermore, I have come to the point of view that mind--i.e., conscious awareness of the world--is not a meaningless and incidental quirk of nature, but an absolutely fundamental facet of reality. That is not to say that we are the purpose for which the universe exists. Far from it. I do, however, believe that we human beings are built into the scheme of things in a very basic way."
The Mind of God (Penguin, 1992), p. 16.

I don't really have a scientific disposition. I love the big, crazy ideas of modern physics, and I can follow the arguments well enough (when I studied maths I could always understyand the proofs but rarely reproduce them.) This book also draws on theory of computing, which I studied and enjoyed at university. Davies mentions the Gnostics a couple of times--although he is not a religious person himself, he takes theology as theory as he does scientific cosmology. Yet even highly intelligent people trip over when they leave behind their familiar fields, and Davies is no exception. "... the position taken by the Christian Gnostics, who regarded matter as corrupt, and therefore as a product of the devil rather than God." p.43.
Well, this might describe the Bogomils or Cathars, but certainly not the ancient Gnostics, for whom the material world is typically a later stage brought into being by the fall of Sophia. Davies' Gnostics resemble an absolute dualism. Still, this is a minor quibble and I found the book stimulating and helped to diminish that slight yet nagging voice of rational nihilism that occasionally invades my head and heart.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Interview Today and Tomorrow

You can listen to me being interviewed by Miguel Conner on Saturday 11 October and Sunday 12 October, or you can purchase it later for a couple of dollars. The focus was on my new book The Gnostics: History*Tradition*Scriptures*Influence. Just visit http://thegodabovegod.com

Miguel describes the program thus:

"The origins and history of Gnosticism are as captivating as they are still mysterious. Although we have almost exhausted all its theories and revelations, a new book has come out that touches on overlooked aspects of the old heretics. We learn about the latest discovery in Gnostic rituals, unnoticed influences on Gnosticism, new and fresh anthropological findings on the Gnostics and much more. We also partake in a refresher course on the history and evolution Gnosticism. We also discuss an upcoming magazine dealing solely with the Gnostics."

Friday, October 10, 2008

Heresy Hunting in the New Millennium

Tony Burke on Heresy Hunting in the New Millennium

A cottage industry of books has emerged in the past few years responding to apparent "attacks" on the Christian faith by such perceived enemies as the Jesus Seminar, Bart Ehrman, Dan Brown's novel The Da Vinci Code, and the discoverers of the so-called Jesus Tomb.[1] Targeted also in these books are the texts of the Christian Apocrypha (CA). The books are transparently apologetic with the aim of disparaging the CA and the Gnostics who (they say) wrote them so that their readers will cease being troubled by the texts' claims.


Society of Biblical Literature

Garden of Contemplation: The Pleroma and the Inner Workings of the Spirit

Garden of Contemplation: The Pleroma and the Inner Workings of the Spirit

I've just been alerted to a novel by M. John Harrison, The Course of the Heart, which is said to contain Gnostic themes. Harrison was one of the "New Worlds" writers I believe.

Apparently, " The Pleroma is described in Harrison's The Course of The Heart that is a religious or philosophical concept of confused proportions."

Interview Reminder

You can listen to me being interviewed by Miguel Conner on Saturday 11 October and Sunday 12 October, or you can purchase it later for a couple of dollars. The focus was on my new book The Gnostics: History*Tradition*Scriptures*Influence. Just visit http://thegodabovegod.com

Miguel describes the program thus:

"The origins and history of Gnosticism are as captivating as they are still mysterious. Although we have almost exhausted all its theories and revelations, a new book has come out that touches on overlooked aspects of the old heretics. We learn about the latest discovery in Gnostic rituals, unnoticed influences on Gnosticism, new and fresh anthropological findings on the Gnostics and much more. We also partake in a refresher course on the history and evolution Gnosticism. We also discuss an upcoming magazine dealing solely with the Gnostics."

Thursday, October 09, 2008

Soul and Spirit

In my book Gnostic Writings on the Soul I include a potted history of the concept of the soul and use the Exegesis on the Soul and the Hymn of the Pearl to examine the Gnostic view of the soul. One of the most important distinctions is between the soul and the spirit. The preface to Bennett's A Spiritual Psychology (p.9 in the 1974 version) contains a grerat summary of the difference between soul and spirit:-

"Man's noblest quality is the will to discover an imperishable Reality beyond the changes and chances of this mortal world. This quality is what I mean by "spiritual." Man's spirit is his will. This is what Thomas Aquinas taught and it is the secret of understanding our human nature. The soul is an artifact, the result of our life experience. It may be transient and it may be immortal, depending whether or not our will, that is, our spirit, has taken possession of it. Those who deny the will in man deny the spirit. Those who affirm the will, affirm the spirit--whether they realise it or not."

Wednesday, October 08, 2008

John G Bennett

I'm starting to read some of J. G. Bennet's works again. Bennett was a pupil of Gurdjieff and then Ouspensky and was influenced by many other teachings including Subud and various strains of Sufism. He's considered something of a maverick by more orthodox Gurdjieffans. I read several of his books around 15-20 years ago, but not to any great extent since. I remember reading his Deeper Man when I was 20, taking it around Europe with me in my backpack as I went Interrailing. There's no formal continuation of his teaching, but his sons and several of his students occasionally host workshops or extended courses. See http://www.jgbennett.net/ or http://www.duversity.org/institute_2.htm . The musician Robert Fripp (of King Crimson fame) studied in Bennett's school and Fripp's Guitar Craft technique draws on his experience with Bennett's teaching.

Anyway, I've just picked up Bennett's A Spiritual Psychology, and I've already found a few passages that are important, and one that I'd like to quote.

On creating one's own worldview:-
"The largest and most important part of my own spiritual psychology has come from Gurdjieff, but I am convinced that we all have to create our own picture of 'Man, the World and God.' The fragments from which the mosaic is constructed reach us from various sources and they are put together by our own search and cemented by our own spiritual travail. Even if we are unable to create a new world-picture, the one that we finally accept must be our own, tested in our experience and lived in our lives. " A Spiritual Psychology, Lakemont, Ga.: CSA Press, 1974.)

I'm sure that my study of Gnosticism has contributed several fragments to the mosaic of my worldview.

Is Gnosticism a Way?

Is Gnosticism a Way? I would say that personally I'm unable to consider it a living way in itself. I can adopt aspects of the Gnostic worldview and mine the literature for insights, and I'm happy to be called a Gnostic, but I can't consider it my way in any unique or fundamental sense. And then, there are many ways of interpreting Gnosticism, and so many traditions that feed into modern Gnosticsm, such as Buddhism, the western occult tradition, the Jungian approach, the independent Catholic tradition. Perhaps Gnosticism is now more of a vehicle than a way? Any comments?

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

It's not the Messiah, Just an Old Cup

The discoveryy and interpretation "Jesus the Magician" cup is continuing to be interesting but is unlikely to refer to Christ. April DeConick has proposed that the cup may have a Sethian connection: http://forbiddengospels.blogspot.com/2008/10/magical-cup-has-nothing-to-do-with.html

And the following message board has an ongoing discusssion:-
http://www.iphpbb3.com/forum/64774768nx21631/other-interesting-matters-f22/mysterious-crestou-inscription-t82.html

Interviewed on Aeon Byte

I was interviewed by Miguel Conner last week for Aeon Byte (formerly Coffee, Cigarettes and Gnosis--I must say that I preferred the original title.) The current interviews only seem to be available at the weekends now, so you can listen to my interview on Saturday 11 October and Sunday 12 October, or you can purchase it later for a couple of dollars. I've also done three other interviews with Miguel. I thought that the interview went well, and I was pleased that I could come up with some fresh thinking about the various topics. The focus was on my new book The Gnostics: History*Tradition*Scriptures*Influence. Visit http://thegodabovegod.com

Miguel describes the program thus:

"The origins and history of Gnosticism are as captivating as they are still mysterious. Although we have almost exhausted all its theories and revelations, a new book has come out that touches on overlooked aspects of the old heretics. We learn about the latest discovery in Gnostic rituals, unnoticed influences on Gnosticism, new and fresh anthropological findings on the Gnostics and much more. We also partake in a refresher course on the history and evolution Gnosticism. We also discuss an upcoming magazine dealing solely with the Gnostics."

Thursday, October 02, 2008

Earliest reference describes Christ as 'magician' - Discovery.com- msnbc.com


Earliest reference describes Christ as 'magician' - Discovery.com- msnbc.com

A bowl, dating to between the late 2nd century B.C. and the early 1st century A.D., is engraved with what may be the world's first known reference to Christ. The engraving reads, "DIA CHRSTOU O GOISTAIS," which has been interpreted to mean either, "by Christ the magician" or, "the magician by Christ."

(Thanks to LucidusV for the Palm Tree Garden for pointing this out.)