The Gospel of Philip: Jesus, Mary Magdalene, and the Gnosis of Sacred Union
By Jean-Yves Leloup and Jacob Needleman
5/5
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Christianity
Gnosticism
Gospel of Philip
Mary Magdalene
Spirituality
Spiritual Awakening
Religious Text
Ancient Manuscripts
Hidden Knowledge
Epistolary Novel
Ancient Secrets
Philosophical Inquiry
Mystical Experience
Religious Exploration
Mystical Experiences
Jesus
Love
Consciousness
Holy of Holies
Gospels
About this ebook
• Emphasizes an initiatic marriage between the male and female principles as the heart of the Christian mystery
• Bears witness to the physical relationship shared by Jesus and Mary Magdalene
• Translated from the Coptic and analyzed by the author of the bestselling The Gospel of Mary Magdalene (over 90,000 sold
The mainstream position of the Christian church on sexuality was perhaps best summed up by Pope Innocent III (1160-1216) when he stated that “the sexual act is so shameful that it is intrinsically evil.” Another Christian theologian maintained that the “Holy Ghost is absent from the room shared by a wedded couple.” What Philip records in his gospel is that Christ said precisely the opposite: The nuptial chamber is in fact the holy of holies. For Philip the holy trinity includes the feminine presence. God is the Father, the Holy Ghost is the Mother, and Jesus is the Son. Neither man nor woman alone is created in the image of God. It is only in their relationship with one another--the sacred embrace in which they share the divine breath--that they resemble God.
The Gospel of Philip is best known for its portrayal of the physical relationship shared by Jesus and his most beloved disciple, Mary of Magdala. Because it ran counter to the direction of the Church, which condemned the “works of the flesh,” Philip’s gospel was suppressed and lost until rediscovered at Nag Hammadi in 1947. Orthodox theologian Jean-Yves Leloup’s translation from the Coptic and his analysis of this gospel are presented here for the first time in English. What emerges from this important source text is a restoration of the sacred initiatic union between the male and female principles that was once at the heart of Christianity’s sacred mystery.
Jean-Yves Leloup
Jean-Yves Leloup is a theologian and founder of the Institute of Other Civilization Studies and the International College of Therapists. His books include Jesus and Judas, The Sacred Embrace of Jesus and Mary, The Gospel of Mary Magdalene, The Gospel of Philip, and The Gospel of Thomas. He lives in France.
Read more from Jean Yves Leloup
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Reviews for The Gospel of Philip
1 rating1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Jean-Yves has a way of going beyond the surface of teachings that is pretty amazing to me. What so many interpret from a dualistic and simplistic viewpoint he has the gift of going deeper and thus revealing what lies underneath certain texts, still within the limitations of words themselves, which are unable to reveal what can be only Known in the Hebrew sense of the word Know. A knowledge which goes beyond the language of Logos, but one that reveals itself through symbols, myth, art, poetry.
I am amazed of his capability of going much deeper than other teachers are able to. I am thankful to have found his teachings. And I recommend it to anyone who is open enough to let common concepts, dualistic concepts be challenged by paradox and deeper truths.
Book preview
The Gospel of Philip - Jean-Yves Leloup
CONTENTS
Cover Image
Title Page
List of Abbreviations
Foreword by Jacob Needleman
Introduction
THE INVENTION OF THE GOSPELS
THE GOSPEL OF PHILIP
PHILIP
THE MAJOR THEMES OF THE GOSPEL OF PHILIP
THE SACRED EMBRACE, CONCEPTION, AND BIRTH
THE BREATH THAT UNITES: THE KISS OF YESHUA AND MIRIAM
THE BRIDAL CHAMBER, HOLY OF HOLIES
THE GOSPEL OF PHILIP
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Footnotes
About the Author
About Inner Traditions • Bear & Company
Books of Related Interest
Copyright & Permissions
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
FOREWORD
The discovery in 1945 of manuscripts that have come to be known as the Gnostic gospels was one of the most momentous archaeological finds of our time. Accidentally unearthed by an Egyptian peasant near the desert village of Nag Hammadi and dating from the very beginnings of the Christian era, these texts have exerted a profound influence on our thinking about the origins and nature of Christianity, an influence that continues to grow with every passing year.
Like many of these Gnostic
documents, the text of the Gospel of Philip consists mainly of sayings and doctrines attributed to Jesus—here called Yeshua*2—which point to an astonishing body of knowledge about man and the cosmic world and about the practices leading to inner freedom and the power to love. As is common in all the great spiritual traditions of the world, this knowledge is expressed mainly in allegory, myth, and symbol, rather than in the intellectual language we have become accustomed to in science and philosophy.
How are we modern men and women to understand these ancient sayings and symbols? What are they telling us about the illusions that suffocate our minds and freeze our hearts—and about the way of life that can actually awaken us to what we are meant to be? Do these texts ask us to deny essential doctrines of Christianity that throughout the ages have brought hope to millions? Many observers view them in that way. For others, the effect of these documents has been to provoke a hardened skepticism that dismisses them with such labels as superstition,
or heresy.
Yet another widespread reaction has been to treat this material as justification for either uncritical speculation about the life and mind of Jesus or blanket condemnation of those who sought to stabilize the institution of the Church in the turbulent centuries immediately following the death of Jesus.
The work of Jean-Yves Leloup presents a wholly different approach to these writings, one that is formed by a rare combination of spiritual questioning and masterful erudition. As has already been shown in his translation and study The Gospel of Mary Magdalene, these Gnostic
codices must be offered to us in a way that helps us to hear them—to hear what they actually may be saying in response to our era’s newly awakened need. It is as though after two thousand years of Abrahamic religion—Judaism, Christianity, Islam—the unending barbaric violence and moral desolation of humankind has finally brought the whole of our global world to a life-or-death hunger for a new kind of knowing and moral direction.
Can the ideas and practical indications contained in the Gospel of Philip and the other Nag Hammadi texts be approached as something more than fascinating curiosities far from the so-called mainstream of our culture’s canons of knowledge and faith? Is the world itself, or enough people in the world who can make a difference, ready to hear with new ears the forgotten wisdom of humankind offered in a language free of the opinions and emotional associations that have decayed into illusory certainties and eviscerated moral sensibilities?
Perhaps such texts as the Gospel of Philip contain, necessarily in the form of symbolic language, a treasury of answers that we as individuals might have all but given up hope of finding. In a time when the role of religion in human life has become one of our world’s most agonizing concerns, texts such as the Gnostic gospels invite us to risk stepping back in a new way from many of our most cherished opinions not only about the teaching and acts of Jesus, but about who and what we are as human beings. As this book indicates, it is in this specific new effort of separating from our own thoughts and feelings that an entirely unexpected source of hope may be glimpsed, both for ourselves and for our world.
To begin to understand this text, we need to have a question, and to question ourselves. That said, the issue then becomes not only what are our questions, but how do we ask them? What does it really mean to have a serious question of the heart and to ask it from the whole of ourselves, or at least from the part of ourselves that is able to hear an answer? For one of the most remarkable aspects of spiritual knowledge (in the ancient meaning of the term gnosis) is that its answers can be fully received only in response to a real question, a real need. And it is no doubt true—and also often forgotten—that the inner meaning of all scripture, whether canonical or not, can be received only in the state of spiritual need. If approached without this need or genuine state of questioning, texts such as the Gospel of Philip are likely to be either regarded at arm’s length as mere scholarly and archaeological riddles or curiosities, or greedily appropriated as fuel for fantasy. The first step then toward a new kind of questioning, a new kind of knowing, is a step back into ourselves, apart from all that