Blavatsky is well-known as a pioneer in the study of Jewish and Christian
Gnosticism and towards the end of her life, delivered a masterful set of
lectures on the Pistis Sophia, the great mystical classic of Christian
Gnosticism. (with the able assistance of
Hermetic/Gnostic scholar G.R.S. Mead) Her comments can be quite complex and
intricate and presupposes familiarity with the full text and not just the extracts presented; however, the selected passages presented in the next series of posts form a solid explanation of some of the general concepts underlying this great
work.
The reader should carefully study the recital of the “Fall” of Sophia, as
told in the Philosophumena (p. 107) and compare it with the allegorical drama
of the text which follows. It will be noticed that the first and last of the
female Aeôns of the Dodecad, are respectively PISTIS and SOPHIA.
The Soul was the one subject, and the knowledge of the Soul the one object of
all the ancient Mysteries. In the “Fall” of PISTIS-SOPHIA, and her rescue by
her Syzygy, JESUS, we see the ever-enacted drama of the suffering and
ignorant Personality, which can only be saved by the immortal Individuality, or
rather by its own yearning towards IT. In reading this portion of the
Pistis-Sophia, the mysterious Duality of the Manas should always be
remembered, and this key applied to every line.
As Wisdom was the end of the Gnôsis, so the pivot of the whole Gnostic
teaching was the so-called “Sophia-Mythus.” For whether we interpret the
allegory from the macro- or from the micro-cosmic standpoint, it is always the
evolution of MIND, that the Initiates of old have sought to teach us. The
emanation and evolution of Mahat in cosmogenesis, and of Manas in
anthropogenesis, was ever the study of the One Science. The dwelling of Sophia
was in the Midst, between the Upper and Lower Worlds, in
the Ogdoad. Below was the Hebdomad or Seven Spheres,
governed by seven Hierarchies of Rulers. Truly hath “Wisdom built for
herself a House, and rested it on Seven Pillars” (Proverbs ix, 1 and again:
“She is on the lofty Heights; she stands in the midst of the Paths, for she
taketh her seat by the Gates of the Powerful Ones (the Rulers), she tarrieth at
the Entrances” (Ibid., viii, 2).
Moreover, Sophia was the Mediatrix between the Upper
and Lower Region, and at the same time projected the Types or Ideas
of the Plerôma into the Universe. Now, why should Sophia, who was
originally of a Pneumatic or Spiritual Essence, be in the Middle
Space, an exile from her true Dwelling? Such was the great mystery which
the Gnôsis endeavoured to solve. Seeing again that this “Fall of the Soul” from
its original purity involved it in suffering and misery, the object that the
Gnostic teachers had ever before them, was identical with the problem of
“Sorrow,” which Gautama Sâkyamuni set himself to resolve. Moreover, the
solution of the two systems was identical in that they traced the Cause of
Sorrow to Ignorance, and to remove this, pointed out the Path to
Self-knowledge. The Mind was to instruct the Mind: “self-analyzing reflection”
was to be the Way. The Material Mind (Kâma-Manas) was to be purified and
so become one with the Spiritual Mind (Buddhi-Manas). In the
nomenclature of the Gnosis, this was expressed by the Redemption of Sophia
by the Christos, who delivered her from her ignorance (agnoia)
and sufferings. It is not then surprising that we should find Sophia, whether
regarded as a unity, or as a duality, or again as cosmic mind, possessed of
many names.
Among these may be mentioned the Mother, or All-Mother, Mother of
the Living or Shining Mother; the Power Above; the Holy
Spirit (all from the macrocosmic standpoint); and again She of the
Left-hand, as opposed to Christos, He of the Right-hand; the Man-woman;
Prounikos or the Lustful-one; Matrix; Paradise; Eden;
Achamôth; the Virgin; Barbelo; Daughter of Light; Merciful
Mother; Consort of the Masculine One; Revelant of the Perfect
Mysteries; Perfect Mercy; Revelant of the Mysteries of the whole
Magnitude; Hidden Mother; She who knows the Mysteries of the
Elect; the Holy Dove, which has given birth to the two Twins; Ennoia;
Ruler; and The Lost or Wandering Sheep, Helena. In the
Valentinian System, Sophia gives birth to the Christos “with a
Shadow.”
The above terms are taken from Smith and Wace’s Dictionary of Christian
Biography, art. “Sophia,” where we read: “In the Syriac text of the Acts
published by Dr. Wright (Apocryphal Acts of Apostles, pp. 238-245) we find the
beautiful Hymn of the Soul, which has been sent down from her heavenly home to
fetch the pearl guarded by the serpent, but has forgotten here below her
heavenly mission till she is reminded of it by a letter from ‘the father, the
mother, and the brother,’ performs her task, receives back again her glorious
dress, and returns to her old home.” (Blavatsky, Collected Writings, vol. 13,
pp. 40-41)
Part 2
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