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The Tripartite Tractate—the most systematic Valentinian theology in the library. Covers pleroma, creation, and salvation with detailed tripartite anthropology (spiritual, psychic, material).
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A doctrine-focused reading path through the Nag Hammadi library for theologians.
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The Gospel of Philip—Valentinian Christianity at its most sensual. Sacramental theology, mystical eroticism, and the bridal chamber as highest mystery.
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Codex XIII—Trimorphic Protennoia, the most complete expression of the feminine divine in Nag Hammadi. Three forms of First Thought: Father, Mother, Son.
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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.
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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.
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Codex II contains the Nag Hammadi Library’s crown jewels: Gospel of Thomas, Gospel of Philip, Apocryphon of John, and four other essential texts. Your guide to the most accessible and influential codex.
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A complete reader’s guide to the Nag Hammadi Library—52 texts discovered in 1945 that revolutionised our understanding of early Christianity. Navigate by codex, theme, or reading path.
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Long before the periodic table mapped matter to ninety-four naturally occurring elements, the sages of every tradition recognised that reality could be understood through a simpler grammar–four fundamental qualities that combine in infinite variation to produce the world we experience. Earth, water, fire, and air are not primitive chemistry but sophisticated categories of consciousness–modes of…
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You have been misreading the Bible. This is not your fault–the misreading has been encouraged by institutions with vested interests in surface meanings, by literalists who fear what lies beneath, and by your own reluctance to believe that a text so ancient might still possess teeth sharp enough to bite. But the Bible was never…