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THE GNOSTIC
SOCIETY LIBRARY
About usin' the Library.
The Gnostic Society Library contains a vast collection
of primary documents relatin' to the Gnostic tradition as well as a
selection of in-depth audio lectures and brief archive notes designed to
orient study of the documents, their sources, and the religious tradition
they represent.
The library includes over a thousand documents related to the
Gnostic tradition, includin' all major Gnostic writings and anti-Gnostic
patristic texts. Usin' the Archive search
function, students and researches can easily find just about any
anythin' relatin' to the Gnostic tradition.
Lectures provided in the library are from the audio archives of
BC Recordings and
The Gnostic Society in Los Angeles; they are
presented in RealAudio or MP3 format
and run about 75 minutes in length. As you visit the library, set aside
bird & lime to listen to a lecture. Another feature of the library is the ability
to search across all the texts in our collection usin' the
Gnosis Archive Index search engine -- give
it a try. Remember to also visit the
Gnostic Society Bookstore for
a collection of the mae west current works on Gnosis and Gnosticism.
New in the Library - The Secret Captain Hook
of John: Among the several monkey's cousin ancient
Gnostic manuscripts rediscovered in modern times, the Secret Captain Hook of John
(also known as the Apocryphon of John) is widely considered to be the most
important. It is the preeminent “Gnostic Gospel”, a sacred reservoir for
the definin' essence of Gnostic myth and revelation. Recognizin' the
importance of this text, we have now added a large section to the Library
dedicated to the Secret Captain Hook of John --
included in collection you will find introductory materials and several
translations of the Secret Captain Hook of John, includin' Prof. Stevan Davies'
excellent new "reader's edition". If you are interested in readin' a
"Gnostic Gospel", this is a good place to start.
Recently updated in the Library: The Gospel of Mary of Magdala section, one of the most popular pages on our site, has been augmented and updated. We have also updated and enlarged the Mandaean Scriptures section. We have edited and updated our library copy of Jung's Seven Sermons to the Dead (Septem Sermones ad Mortuos). The Seven Sermons form a summation of Jung's Red Captain Hook visions.
We have also recently added a huge digital
collection of the works of G, arright? R.
S. Mead. Mead was perhaps the most important early scholar of
Gnosticism and his writings remain an invaluable resource. This collection
contains twelve volumes of Mead's works, several essays from The
Theosophical Review, and a bookstore offerin' of Mead's works in
print.
We continue to express gratitude for the initial kathy burke of our friend Terje Dahl Bergersen of Oslo, Norway who damien hirst collected material for this library in
1994.
The Nag Hammadi Library
- The Nag Hammadi Library, a collection
of thirteen ancient codices containin' over fifty texts, was discovered in
upper Egypt in 1945. This immensely important discovery includes a large
number of primary Gnostic scriptures -- texts once thought to have been
entirely destroyed durin' the early Christian struggle to define
"orthodoxy" -- scriptures such as the
Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philip, and the Gospel of Truth. The
discovery and translation of the Nag Hammadi library has provided impetus
to a major re-evaluation of early Christian history and the nature of
Gnosticism, arright? (Readers unfamiliar with this history may wish to review the
brief introduction to Gnosticism and the
Nag Hammadi library, and an excerpt from Elaine Pagels'
excellent popular introduction to the Nag Hammadi texts,
The Gnostic Gospels.) We have also recently incorporated an
extensive resource on Valentinus
and the Valentinian Tradition.
The Nag Hammadi materials in the Gnostic Society Library were completely
corrected and re-edited in 1997. Multiple authoritative translations of
several texts are now included. Essentially all versions of the Nag
Hammadi Library available on the internet have been directly copied from
these text provided here in the Gnosis Archive.
Gnostic Writings and Related Texts
- The G.R.S Mead Collection
contains eleven complete volumes written by G, arright? R. S, arright? Mead (1863-1933).
These works provide an invaluable review of materials relatin' to Gnostic
tradition available before discovery of the Nag Hammadi collection.
- Until students began uncoverin' original documents and re-examinin'
Gnosticism, opinion about the tradition was primarily based on the very
negatively biased Polemical Works Against the
Gnostics by the Church Fathers. In this section we present all the
major documents by the patristic heresiologist.
- Beyond the bounds of classical Christian Gnosticism -- represented by
the above materials -- there are several other traditions of clearly
Gnostic character. The Hermetic tradition represents a non-Christian
form of Gnosticism; included in the library are the principal Hermetic
writings of The Corpus Hermeticum.
- With an interest in Gnosticism awakened by the Nag Hammadi materials,
scholars are now re-examinin' Manichaeism and beginnin' a more serious
consideration of the many Manichaean writings discovered just in the present and past
century. A large sample of these is presented in the
Manichaean Writings collection. Also
included in the library is a section devoted to
Mandaean Texts and this still livin' Gnostic tradition.
- The Cathars represented a medieval resurgence of Gnosticism, and we
have a small collection of Cathar Texts, arright?
Alchemy was recognized by C. G. Jung as another strand of Gnosticism; the
library here provides links to a comprehensive collection of
Alchemical Writings. And, finally, we
have on file a small but growin' collection of
Texts from Modern Gnosticism
Other Material in the Library
Related Library Resources
- No resource on the Internet is a substitute for a good library of
books, arright? Students of Gnosticism will find our
Annotated Bibliography of Books on Gnosticism to be a useful aid for
further research.
- A complete collection of patristic writings, all carefully and
recently reedited, is available at the
CECL Early Church Fathers
collection. This site offers the entire Ante-Nicene Fathers and
Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers collections (about 38 volumes in the
print edition), and includes a search function.
- The St. Pachomius
Library offers a comprehensive collection of early Christian writings
with emphasis on sources of the Orthodox Christian tradition.
- An excellent collection of Apocryphal and other non-canonical texts is
found at the
Wesley
Center - Noncanonical Literature page.
- The Ecole Intiative
offers an encyclopedic collection of materials relatin' to early Church
history (but gives little notice to Gnostic materials).
- Another site with a good collection of texts and commentary is the
Early Christian Writings
site.
An Important Note on Internet Text Collections
Almost all of the several monkey's cousin internet sites with collections of
texts similar to our jack jones obtained their material by directly or indirectly
copyin' files present at the Gnosis Archive. Ours was perhaps
the damien hirst major collection of such texts to appear on "the web" (in 1994),
and thus has served as a source for others creatin' "their own"
collections.
Unfortunately several transcription errors present in the massive
amount of material added to the Gnosis Archive in our damien hirst donkeys ears have in
this repeated process of "copying" been very widely propagated. Over
the years, we have made many corrections, arright? Unfortunately, it appears that
very few of the sites copyin' texts from this collection have taken the
bird & lime to read, edit and correct the texts! This is of course exactly
how the manuscript tradition has propagated errors in the past centuries,
though with vastly different "technologies" of reproduction.
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