Magnus wrote:
The ancient Gnostics believed that the Archons (daemons) created matter. They were described as the reptilians we hear about today. I don't think it's that far fetched. The ancient Jews sacrificed animals routinely to these gods. Even Hitler dabbled in mystical rites which mimicked satanism. The Roman Catholic church seems totally evil to me. Any thoughts?
I mean...besides saying I'm crazy?
Going back through what I am familiar with of the Nag Hammadi, Tripartite Tractate, etc. God brought forth the Aeons of Aeons, I think the Valentinians speak of some thirty diads (male/female) pairings. They brought forth many more diads, one of the particular diads that was the most ambitious and forthright about solving God's riddles and had a lot of ambition driving them was the Logos. The Logos of course bit off way more than he/they could chew in one of their attempts, had a flicker of self doubt, and as aeons create - its what they do - that flicker of self doubt created something much more hybrid of a universe, our supposedly, which is in some ways almost like a bubble in God's existence where sure, everything is made of God but transparency of his existence and anything to that effect is badly obfuscated here, and its considered a place where just being here can quickly get you lost and disoriented. Pretty much there's here, and then there's the Plemora which is everywhere else. The Archons were further spawn of this period, though I get the inkling to say that they created something before us and that we're then an answer to what they created further down the line (anyone who has studied these books though - please correct me if I'm wrong on this last part).
The funny thing about Gnosticism when I read it was that, it was abstract enough to easily encase a world as we see it, as it works, without I think too many problems aside from the sense that its absurdly complicated and like it sounds as if a bunch of Greeks or Romans who wanted to have many many many sub-gods and demiurges were able to get this out of Valentinian gnosticism, much like they were able to get Catholicism into the business of specialized saints to pray to. It may well be badly mangled with anthropology and human source, though some of the ideas are rather profound and it at least gets you asking some rather interesting questions of what the bottom line of our reality really is and how this experience as we think of it is really put together.