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The Controversial Questions of Mary – Sacred Sex Rites between Jesus and Mary Magdalene?

Jesus & Mary kissing

The Questions of Mary (also called the Questions of Mary to Jesus) is a lost or highly fragmented early Christian or Gnostic text, of which only a few references survive. Some scholars believe it was an esoteric or Gnostic dialogue between Mary Magdalene and Jesus, likely containing secret teachings—possibly of a mystical or even sexual nature.

What We Know About the “Questions of Mary”

  • The text does not survive in full, and what we know comes mainly from Epiphanius of Salamis, a 4th-century Church Father who condemned it in his anti-heresy work Panarion (26:8).
  • He claimed the text belonged to a Gnostic sect called the Phibionites (or Borborites), whom he accused of sexual libertinism and ritual practices involving semen and menstrual blood.
  • According to Epiphanius, the text described Jesus revealing secret teachings to Mary Magdalene, possibly in an esoteric or intimate context.
Jesus Christ & Mary Magdalene

Did the “Questions of Mary” Contain Sexual or Tantric Elements?

Epiphanius states that this text described Jesus taking Mary up a mountain and revealing secret knowledge through a physical act. He claims (possibly as an exaggeration or polemic) that this involved Jesus causing Mary to swallow his semen as a sacramental act.

However, there are a few key issues with this account:

  1. We only have Epiphanius’ word for it—and he was hostile toward Gnostic groups, often exaggerating or misrepresenting their beliefs.
  2. No surviving fragments confirm this directly, so it’s unclear whether this was an authentic Gnostic teaching or a misinterpretation.
  3. Many scholars believe Epiphanius was projecting his polemical accusations about the Borborites onto this text.

Possible Esoteric Meanings

If the Questions of Mary did include sexual symbolism, it might have been:

  • A metaphor for the transmission of divine knowledge (similar to some Tantric traditions).
  • A misunderstood esoteric ritual that was later demonized by orthodox critics.
  • A later sectarian addition not representative of mainstream Gnostic thought.

What we know for sure is :

  • The Questions of Mary is largely lost, and the claim that it contained a sexual act with Jesus comes only from Epiphanius, a hostile source.
  • Some scholars believe it could have contained esoteric sexual symbolism, but this is speculative.
  • If true, it may reflect Gnostic or Tantric-like ideas about sacred sexuality rather than a literal event.

Epiphanius’ Account of the Questions of Mary

The main (and only) known source mentioning the Questions of Mary comes from Epiphanius of Salamis, a 4th-century Christian bishop and heresiologist, in his work Panarion (26:8). He describes the text as belonging to the Borborites (Phibionites), a Gnostic sect accused of practicing ritualistic sexual rites.

In his account, Epiphanius states that:

  1. The Borborites used “a Gospel called the Questions of Mary,” which contained secret teachings from Jesus to Mary.
  2. The text allegedly described Jesus taking Mary Magdalene up a mountain and revealing deep mystical knowledge to her.
  3. In this account, Jesus produces his seed, which Mary consumes, supposedly as part of a sacred ritual.

Key Questions About This Account

1. Is This a Genuine Gnostic Teaching or a Misrepresentation?

  • We only have Epiphanius’ version of the story, and he was writing against Gnostics.
  • He frequently accused heretical groups of sexual libertinism—but these accusations were often exaggerated or fabricated.
  • Many scholars believe his claims were meant to demonize the Borborites, rather than accurately report their beliefs.

2. Were There Gnostic or Esoteric Ideas of Sacred Sexuality?

  • While most Gnostic groups promoted asceticism (rejecting physical desire), some sects (such as the Borborites and the Carpocratians) allegedly practiced ritualistic sexual acts.
  • Some esoteric traditions viewed semen as a sacred life-force or divine essence, similar to Tantric ideas of sexual energy transformation.
  • If this was part of a real Gnostic ritual, it could have been:
    • symbolic act representing the transmission of divine knowledge.
    • misinterpreted or later distortion of mystical teachings.

3. Are There Parallels in Other Gnostic Texts?

While there is no surviving direct parallel to this account, some Gnostic texts emphasize intimate, mystical bonds between Jesus and Mary Magdalene:

  • The Gospel of Philip describes Jesus kissing Mary and teaching her secret wisdom.
  • The Pistis Sophia gives Mary Magdalene a privileged role in receiving hidden knowledge.
  • Some Hermetic and later occult traditions incorporate sexual mysticism in ways that could resemble esoteric interpretations of this lost text.

What Can We Conclude?

  • The Questions of Mary is a lost and highly obscure text, known only through the writings of its enemies.
  • Epiphanius’ account cannot be taken at face value, as he was a polemical writer with an agenda.
  • If the Borborites did have a sexual mysticism component, it might have been symbolic rather than literal.
  • This could be a real esoteric tradition, similar to Tantric sexual alchemy, or it could be a smear campaign by orthodox Christianity.
Yeshua & Maria Magdalena

Sacred Sexuality in Gnosticism, Esotericism, and Tantra

Many esoteric traditions have viewed sexual fluids—especially semen—as spiritually powerful, often associating them with divine energy, enlightenment, and transformation. Below, let’s explore:

  1. Gnostic and Early Christian Esoteric Views on Sexuality
  2. Western Esoteric and Alchemical Traditions
  3. Tantric and Eastern Mystical Practices
  4. Sacred Semen Rituals in Occult and Magical Traditions

1. Gnostic and Early Christian Esoteric Views on Sexuality

A. The Borborites and the Questions of Mary

  • As discussed, the Borborites (Phibionites) allegedly engaged in sexual rituals where semen and menstrual blood were consumed.
  • In Epiphanius’ account (Panarion 26:8), Jesus produces semen and has Mary Magdalene consume it as part of a mystical teaching.
  • While this may be propaganda, it suggests that some Gnostic sects may have believed in semen as a transmitter of divine energy or gnosis.

B. The Gospel of Philip: Sexual Union as a Path to Gnosis

  • The Gospel of Philip (Nag Hammadi) suggests that Jesus and Mary Magdalene were spiritually bonded and that the bridal chamber ritual was the highest form of initiation.
  • It states:”The mystery of the bridal chamber is the perfect redemption… if anyone receives this mystery, they are no longer Christian, but Christ.”
  • Some scholars suggest that sexual intercourse (or its spiritual counterpart) was a sacrament in certain Gnostic sects.

C. The Carpocratians and Sacred Sexuality

  • The Carpocratians (a 2nd-century Gnostic sect) believed in transcending earthly laws through sexual freedom.
  • They may have practiced ritual sex as a means to escape karma and return to the divine.
  • They viewed semen as a form of divine creative energy, but there is no direct mention of its consumption.

2. Western Esoteric and Alchemical Traditions

A. Alchemy and the “Elixir of Life”

  • Some Western alchemists believed that semen contained the Philosopher’s Stone in a biological form.
  • They described a “divine fluid” or “red tincture” that could transform the soul when properly processed.
  • Some later alchemical sex magic (such as in Rosicrucianism) emphasized semen retention or absorption for mystical insight.

B. The O.T.O. and Thelema (Aleister Crowley)

  • The Ordo Templi Orientis (O.T.O.), under Aleister Crowley, taught that semen was the true Eucharist in certain high-level rituals.
  • In The Book of Lies, Crowley describes a ritual in which the initiate drinks consecrated sexual fluids to absorb divine power.
  • Crowley believed semen contained the vital life force and spiritual energy necessary for enlightenment.

C. Kabbalistic Sexual Mysticism

  • Some Kabbalistic texts describe semen as containing the “divine spark” (Nitzotzot Ha-Kodesh).
  • The Zohar (a foundational Kabbalistic text) suggests that sexual energy can be channeled for spiritual ascension.
  • In some mystical Jewish traditions, semen is considered the physical manifestation of divine creative power.

3. Tantric and Eastern Mystical Practices

A. Tantra: The Role of Semen in Spiritual Transformation

  • Tantric practices from India and Tibet describe semen as a carrier of divine energy (Bindu or Amrita).
  • Left-hand Tantra sometimes involves ritualistic sexual practices, where bodily fluids are seen as sacred offerings.
  • In some Tantric schools, consuming semen is believed to:
    • Grant spiritual enlightenment.
    • Preserve vital life force (Ojas).
    • Transform lower energies into divine consciousness.

B. Vajrayana Buddhist Sexual Alchemy

  • In Tibetan Vajrayana Buddhism, there are esoteric practices involving sexual fluids as sacred substances.
  • The Kalachakra Tantra describes sexual union as a method of achieving Buddhahood.
  • Some Tibetan Tantric rituals (such as those practiced by the Nyingma school) describe semen as “the white bodhicitta”, which, when properly utilized, awakens higher consciousness.

4. Sacred Semen Rituals in Occult and Magical Traditions

A. Egyptian and Greek Mysticism

  • In some ancient Egyptian temple rites, sexual fluids were thought to be divine substances used to invoke deities.
  • The Greek Orphic Mysteries associated semen with the divine fire of Prometheus, passed on to initiates.

B. Esoteric Christianity and the “Blood and Water” Symbolism

  • Some mystical Christian groups reinterpreted the Eucharist in sexual-alchemical terms, seeing it as a transformation of sexual fluids into divine essence.
  • Certain medieval Christian mystics linked the “blood and water” from Christ’s side to esoteric sexual symbolism.

C. Modern Esoteric Sex Magic (Chaos Magic, Luciferianism, etc.)

  • Many modern occult groups (e.g., The Temple of Set, Chaos Magic practitioners, and Luciferian sects) incorporate sexual fluids into magical workings.
  • Some rituals involve the consumption of sexual fluids as a sacrament, echoing older traditions.

Conclusion: Is the “Questions of Mary” Part of a Larger Tradition?

  • While we can’t confirm whether the Questions of Mary genuinely included a ritual involving semen, it does fit within a broader pattern of esoteric traditions that view sexual fluids as spiritually potent.
  • The Borborites’ alleged practices mirror Tantric and Western sex magic traditions, where semen is seen as an elixir of enlightenment.
  • The idea of consuming sexual fluids for spiritual power appears in Alchemy, Tantra, Thelema, and some Gnostic interpretations.
Jesus & his wife & children

Did Jesus Teach Sexual Gnosis?

  • If the Questions of Mary was a real Gnostic text (rather than just an attack by Epiphanius), it may have contained symbolic sexual teachings, similar to Tantra.
  • While mainstream Christianity rejected sexual mysticism, esoteric traditions across cultures have long viewed sexual fluids as sacred substances.
  • Whether Jesus himself taught this is unknown, but later esoteric groups certainly embraced the idea of sacred sexuality.

Sacred Sex Rituals :

There are specific rituals and practices from various esoteric traditions where sexual fluids—especially semen—were considered holy, powerful, and transformative. Let’s cover:

  1. Gnostic and Early Christian Esoteric Practices
  2. Tantric and Eastern Mystical Rituals
  3. Western Esoteric and Alchemical Traditions
  4. Occult and Modern Sex Magic Practices

1. Gnostic and Early Christian Esoteric Practices

A. Borborite (Phibionite) Eucharist Ritual

  • Epiphanius (Panarion 26:8) claims that the Borborites mixed semen and menstrual blood into a Eucharist-like sacrament.
  • They allegedly consumed these fluids as a way to absorb divine energy and transcend the material world.
  • If true, this practice parallels later alchemical and Tantric ideas where bodily fluids are seen as spiritually potent.
  • However, because Epiphanius was an enemy of the Gnostics, it’s unclear whether this was a real ritual or anti-Gnostic propaganda.

B. The Bridal Chamber and Sacred Union in Gnostic Christianity

  • In the Gospel of Philip, the Bridal Chamber is described as the highest mystery, leading to full divine enlightenment (gnosis).
  • Some scholars believe this refers to a secret sexual rite, where divine knowledge is transmitted through sexual union.
  • The passage states:”The mystery of the Bridal Chamber is not for the flesh, but for the soul… It is the fulfillment, not a marriage of defilement, but of purity.”
  • Some later esoteric Christian groups reinterpreted the Eucharist in sexual-alchemical terms, where semen became a symbol of divine essence.

2. Tantric and Eastern Mystical Rituals

A. Left-Hand Tantra (Vama Marga) – Consumption of Semen as Amrita

  • Tantric rituals in Hinduism and Buddhism sometimes involve the consumption of sexual fluids as sacred substances.
  • Semen (Bindu or Amrita) is believed to contain spiritual essence, and when properly consumed, it can:
    • Enhance spiritual power and enlightenment.
    • Transform sexual energy into divine consciousness.
    • Strengthen psychic abilities and longevity.
  • Some Tantric rites involve the priestess drinking the semen of the initiate or guru as an act of spiritual transmission.
  • In certain sects of Kali worship, sexual fluids are offered to the goddess as a form of divine communion.

B. Vajrayana Buddhist “White Bodhicitta” Rituals

  • In Tibetan Buddhist Tantra, semen is called “White Bodhicitta”, meaning “awakened mind essence”.
  • Some advanced Tantric rituals involve the practitioner or consort consuming semen to absorb spiritual power.
  • In the Kalachakra Tantra, semen is described as a transformative elixir that helps awaken higher consciousness.
  • These practices are highly secretive and often misunderstood by outsiders.

3. Western Esoteric and Alchemical Traditions

A. Alchemical “Red Tincture” and the Elixir of Life

  • In Western alchemy, semen was sometimes described as a sacred elixir, akin to the Philosopher’s Stone.
  • Some alchemists believed that by consuming a purified version of semen, one could achieve enlightenment and immortality.
  • This practice was associated with the transmutation of base matter (the body) into gold (spiritual perfection).

B. Thelema and Aleister Crowley’s “Cake of Light” Ritual

  • Aleister Crowley, founder of Thelema, taught that semen was the true Eucharist in certain high-level rituals.
  • In Liber Agape, he describes a Eucharist-like rite where semen was mixed with honey and consecrated before being consumed.
  • This ritual was meant to:
    • Channel the divine power of the Solar Logos (Christ/Horus).
    • Enhance the magician’s ability to manifest reality.
    • Serve as a sacramental bond between initiates and the divine.
  • Crowley linked this to ancient mystery religions, particularly Dionysian and Egyptian rites.

C. Kabbalistic Sexual Mysticism (Zohar and Sefer Yetzirah)

  • Some Kabbalistic texts suggest that semen is a manifestation of divine creative power.
  • Certain sects practiced “Shemhamphorasch” rituals, where sacred fluids were used to invoke angelic or divine forces.
  • In some mystical Jewish traditions, semen was seen as containing the “divine spark” of creation.

4. Occult and Modern Sex Magic Practices

A. Ordo Templi Orientis (O.T.O.) Sex Magick

  • The O.T.O. (Ordo Templi Orientis), an esoteric order associated with Crowley, practices sex magic rituals where semen is consumed for spiritual empowerment.
  • The XI° (11th degree) initiation involves advanced sex magic techniques, including:
    • Oral consumption of semen as a way to absorb divine energy.
    • Using sexual fluids as a sacramental substance to charge magical workings.
    • Connecting semen with the Holy Grail as a vessel of divine power.

B. Luciferian and Chaos Magic Practices

  • Some modern occult groups (e.g., Luciferian sects, Left-Hand Path practitioners, and Chaos Magicians) incorporate semen into magical workings.
  • These practices include:
    • Consecrating magical sigils with semen to enhance their power.
    • Using sexual fluids as offerings in summoning rituals.
    • Semen consumption as a symbolic act of absorbing divine power.

Is There a Connection Between These Traditions?

There seems to be a common esoteric idea across multiple cultures and time periods that:

  1. Semen contains divine energy and is a sacred substance.
  2. Consuming semen can be a spiritual act of enlightenment, transformation, or power absorption.
  3. Sexual rites can serve as a direct path to divine union or gnosis.

Whether in Gnostic Christianity, Tantra, Alchemy, Kabbalah, or modern occultism, the sacralization of sexual fluids has persisted in mystical traditions worldwide.

The Questions of Mary (also called The Great Questions of Mary) survives only in hostile quotations, mainly from Epiphanius of Salamis in his Panarion (late 4th century). He cites it as a “heretical” Gnostic gospel in which Jesus allegedly reveals secret mysteries to Mary. One of the most controversial claims Epiphanius preserves is that it describes a ritual where Jesus performs a sexual act with Mary Magdalene on a mountain, and has her consume his semen. According to Epiphanius, this was used to justify sacred sexual rites among certain Gnostic groups such as the Borborites/Phibionites.

The preserved fragment reads (Panarion 8:2):

8:2 For in the so-called ‘Greater Questions of Mary’—there are also ‘Lesser’ ones forged by them—they claim that he reveals it to her after taking her aside on the mountain, praying, producing a woman from his side, beginning to have sex with her, and then partaking of his emission, if you please, to show that ‘Thus we must do, that we may live.’

This shocking description was almost certainly written down by critics to portray the sects as scandalous. Still, some scholars suggest it reflects a real esoteric teaching where semen was regarded as a sacred elixir of life—a notion echoed in other Gnostic, Tantric, and alchemical traditions, where sexual fluids are treated as carriers of divine power or gnosis.

The Questions of Mary, preserved only in Epiphanius’ hostile report, describes Jesus taking Mary up a mountain, producing semen, and having her consume it, saying, “Thus must we do, that we may live” (Panarion 26.8). While likely polemical distortion, it may echo a genuine Gnostic “Bridal Chamber” mystery, where sexual union and the sharing of vital fluids symbolized divine gnosis, the reunion of spirit and matter, and the soul’s ascent to eternal life.

Read the full text from Epiphanius

Epiphanius writes the following about the Gnostics, and this is our only source for the contents (Panarion, 26.8.1 – 26.9.5)

8:1 And they too have lots of books. They publish certain ‘Questions of Mary’; but others offer many books about the Ialdabaoth we spoke of, and in the name of Seth. They call others ‘Apocalypses of Adam’ and have ventured to compose other Gospels in the names of the disciples, and are not ashamed to say that our Saviour and Lord himself, Jesus Christ, revealed this obscenity.

8:2 For in the so-called ‘Greater Questions of Mary’—there are also ‘Lesser’ ones forged by them—they claim that he reveals it to her after taking her aside on the mountain, praying, producing a woman from his side, beginning to have sex with her, and then partaking of his emission, if you please, to show that ‘Thus we must do, that we may live.’

8:3 And when Mary was alarmed and fell to the ground, he raised her up and said to her, ‘O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?’

8:4 And they say that this is the meaning of the saying in the Gospel, ‘If I have told you earthly things and ye believe not, how shall ye believe the heavenly things?’ and so of, ‘When ye see the Son of Man ascending up where he was before’—in other words, when you see the emission being partaken of where it came from.

8:5 And when Christ said, ‘Except ye eat my flesh and drink my blood,’ and the disciples were disturbed and replied, ‘Who can hear this?’40 they say his saying was about the dirt.

8:6 And this is why they were disturbed and fell away; they were not entirely stable yet, they say.

8:7 And when David says, ‘He shall be like a tree planted by the outgoings of water that will bring forth its fruit in due season,’41 they say he is speaking of the man’s dirt. ‘By the outgoing of water,’ and, ‘that will bring forth his fruit,’ means the emission at climax. And ‘Its leaf shall not fall off’ means, ‘We do not allow it to fall to the ground, but eat it ourselves.’

9:1 And so as not to do more harm than good by making their proof texts public, I am going to omit most of them—otherwise I would cite all their wicked sayings and go through them here.

9:2 When it says that Rahab put a scarlet thread in her window, this was not scarlet thread, they tell us, but the female organs. And the scarlet thread means the menstrual blood, and ‘Drink water from your cisterns’ refers to the same.

9:3 They say that the flesh must perish and cannot be raised, and this belongs to the archon.

9:4 But the power in the menses and organs is soul, they say, ‘which we gather and eat. And whatever we eat—meat, vegetables, bread or anything else—we are doing creatures a favour by gathering the soul from them all and taking it to the heavens with us.’ Hence they eat meat of all kinds and say that this is ‘to show mercy to our race.’

9:5 And they claim that the same soul has been implanted in animals, insects, fish, snakes, men—and in vegetation, trees, and the fruits of the soil.

Jesus & Mary Magdalene

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Yeshua & Mary Magdalene

Nazorean Baptism

John baptizing Jesus (Ethiopian depiction)

John the Baptist (Yahya Yuhana) baptizing Yeshua the Nazorean Christ (Yeshua Ha Mashiah / Yishu Mshiha / Jesus Christ)

In Mandaean and early Nazorean Gnostic traditions, baptism is a central ritual symbolizing spiritual purification, enlightenment, and the soul’s connection to the divine world. Unlike the Christian concept of baptism as a one-time act for salvation, Mandaean baptism (masbuta) is a repeated, sacred act performed in flowing, living waters, representing the soul’s continual cleansing and ascent toward the Lightworld. It is a powerful rite of renewal and protection, believed to wash away darkness and negative influences while reconnecting the individual with divine truth and the higher spiritual realms. For early Nazoreans, baptism also carried esoteric significance as a transformative journey—an initiation into hidden wisdom and an alignment with cosmic forces. Both groups viewed John the Baptist as the master of this sacred practice, elevating baptism as a mystical path to liberation and unity with the divine.

The Gnostic Rejection of Violence and Sacrifice

Jesus / Yeshua the Nazorean

Gnosticism, as a broader movement, typically emphasizes asceticism, the rejection of materialism, and the pursuit of spiritual enlightenment. The material world, including acts of violence such as killing animals, is often seen as the creation of the demiurge (a lesser, corrupt deity). Many Gnostics sought to transcend this world through non-violence and spiritual purity, which is why vegetarianism was widely practiced among various Gnostic sects.

  • Animal Sacrifice as Violence: Most Gnostics viewed the material world as inherently flawed and violent. Acts like animal sacrifice were often seen as perpetuating this corruption. Instead, Gnostics advocated for spiritual practices that aligned with non-violence, inner purity, and the rejection of worldly desires, including the consumption of meat.
  • Gnostic Scriptures and Teachings: Texts like the Gospel of Thomas emphasize direct spiritual knowledge (gnosis) and inner enlightenment, rejecting the need for external rituals like sacrifices. Similarly, early Christian Gnostics often cited Jesus’ opposition to the temple’s sacrificial system (e.g., his cleansing of the temple in Matthew 21:12-13) as evidence of his rejection of such practices.
  • Jesus and the Sacrificial System: Jesus’ identification as the “Lamb of God” symbolizes a spiritual sacrifice that replaces the need for physical sacrifices. This aligns with the Gnostic view that true spiritual transformation comes from within, not through external rituals.

 “Consuming God” in Gnosticism

  • Metaphorical, Not Literal: The idea of “eating and consuming God” in Gnosticism is primarily metaphorical. It represents spiritual communion, enlightenment, and the assimilation of divine wisdom, not the literal consumption of animal flesh.
  • Eucharistic Symbolism: Early Gnostic interpretations of the Eucharist (the symbolic eating of Christ’s body and blood) emphasize its spiritual, not material, significance. Gnostics often interpreted this act as a mystical union with the divine, rejecting the physicality of consuming literal flesh and blood.
  • Non-Material Spirituality: The Gnostic worldview consistently prioritizes the spiritual over the physical. The idea of literally consuming God through animal sacrifices would contradict their fundamental belief in transcending materiality and rejecting the violence of the physical world.

Historical Evidence of Gnostic Vegetarianism

  • Ebionites and Nazoreans: Many early Christian Gnostic sects, such as the Ebionites and Nazoreans, explicitly rejected meat consumption and animal sacrifice. These groups saw vegetarianism as a way to embody Jesus’ teachings of non-violence, mercy, and compassion.
  • Essenes and Similar Groups: While some Essenes practiced animal sacrifice, other ascetic Jewish sects, including those with Gnostic leanings, rejected it altogether. The diversity within these groups highlights the broader trend of rejecting animal sacrifice among those pursuing spiritual purity.
  • Ethical Vegetarianism: Gnostics often tied their rejection of meat to ethical concerns, viewing the killing of animals as an unnecessary act of violence that perpetuated the corrupt material world created by the demiurge.

Vegetarianism was superior in many Gnostic groups because it aligned with their rejection of the material world’s violence and corruption. Sects like the Manicheans and Cathars practiced vegetarianism as a reflection of their commitment to spiritual purity, non-violence, and detachment from the material realm. Unlike sacrificial traditions in other faiths, Gnostic thought often viewed abstaining from meat as essential to transcending the physical world’s base desires, making vegetarianism a natural extension of their cosmology and ethics.

Jesus the Good Shepherd

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The Pistis Sophia

✪ Pistis Sophia book translated by G.R.S. Mead (about the Gnostic tradition of Mary Magdalene, Jesus and disciples. The book is a Gnostic text discovered in 1773, possibly written between the 3rd and 4th centuries AD. It relates one Gnostic group’s teachings of the transfigured Jesus to the assembled disciples, including his mother Mary, Mary Magdalene, and Martha. In this text, the risen Jesus had spent eleven years speaking with his disciples, teaching them only the lower mysteries. After eleven years, he receives his true garment and is able to reveal the higher mysteries revered by this group. The prized mysteries relate to complex cosmologies and knowledge necessary for the soul to reach the highest divine realms. 🪬📯

Christ the Mystic Buddha Yogi Messiah

✪ Christ the Mystic Buddha Yogi Messiah. The Pearl of the Gnostic Hymn of the Pearl, the Blue Jewel (Mani) 💎 of the Buddhas : Om Mani Padme Hum (The Jewel or Pearl within the Sacred Lotus 🪷) the Secret within Your Soul. 🧿

The Tau Cross

The sacred Tau Cross, Raised Bronze Serpent of Moses, the Egyptian Cross of Saint Anthony, the favorite Cross of Saint Francis of Assisi, the original Egyptian Ankh and Astrological Cross. 𓋹