Codex IX: Melchizedek, Norea, and the Testimony of Truth
Codex IX—fragmentary and obscure texts including Melchizedek, Thought of Norea, and Testimony of Truth. Specialist material with unique perspectives.
Codex IX—fragmentary and obscure texts including Melchizedek, Thought of Norea, and Testimony of Truth. Specialist material with unique perspectives.
Codex VIII—Zostrianos, the longest text in the library, describing heavenly ascent through multiple realms. Plus the Letter of Peter to Philip.
Codex VII—Sethian technical theology at its most challenging. Critique of martyrdom, crucifixion interpretation, and rare Gnostic ritual texts.
Codex V—the codex of apocalypses. Visions of Paul, James, and Adam, plus Eugnostos the Blessed. Gnosticism in its most visionary mode.
Codex IV—the scholar’s codex containing longer versions of Apocryphon of John and Gospel of the Egyptians. Essential for textual comparison and understanding Gnostic textual fluidity.
Codex III—Sethian cosmology meets philosophical dialogue. Features the unique Dialogue of the Saviour, two versions of Apocryphon of John, and the Christianised Sophia of Jesus Christ.
Codex I (The Jung Codex)—the first discovered, containing Valentinian masterpieces including the Tripartite Tractate, Gospel of Truth, and Treatise on the Resurrection.
The Apocryphon of John—the foundational text of Sethian Gnosticism. The fall of Sophia, the birth of Yaldabaoth, the creation of humanity as prison for the divine spark.
Thunder: Perfect Mind—the most literary and mysterious text in the Nag Hammadi Library. A voice speaking in contradictions, claiming every identity, transcending them all.
The Gospel of Thomas—114 secret sayings of Jesus, stripped of narrative, demanding interpretation. The most accessible and radical text in the Nag Hammadi Library.