(urth) Abraxas
Sergei SOLOVIEV
soloviev at irit.fr
Tue Oct 25 10:02:34 PDT 2011
From "Seven sermons to the dead" by C. G. Jung (I've seen it in the
appendix to
Memories, Dreams, Reflections by C.G. Jung, Vintage Books, 1961.).
I cannot quote all, but I think it is important for the understanding of
BoTNS and Wolfe
ideas (at least as a context). The text is openly "gnostic". Jung writes
it in the name of
Basilide of Alexandria.
...
From Sermo III
Hard to know is the deity of Abraxas. Its power is the greatest, because
man perceiveth it not.
From the sun he draveth the summum bonum; from the devil the infimum
malum; but from Abraxas
LIFE, altogether indefinite, the mother of good and evil.
...
The power of Abraxas is twofold; but ye see it not, because for your
eyes the warring opposites of
this power are extinguished.
What the god-sun speaketh is life.
What the devil speaketh is death.
But Abraxas speaketh that hallowed and accursed word which is life and
death at the same time.
...
Everything that ye create with the god-sun giveth effective power to the
devil.
That is terrible Abraxas.
It is the the mightiest creature, and in it the creature is afraid of
itself.
It is the manifest opposition of creature to the pleroma and its
nothingness.
...
From Sermo IV
...
Each star is a god, and each space that a star filleth is a devil. But
empty-fullness
of the whole is the pleroma.
The operation of the whole is Abraxas, to whom only the ineffective
standeth opposed.
Four is the number of principal gods, as four is the number of the
world's measurements.
One is the beginning, the god-sun.
Two is Eros; for he bindeth twain together and outspreadeth himself in
brightness.
Three is the Tree of Life, for it filleth space with bodily forms.
Four is the devil, for he openeth all that is closed. All that is formed
of bodily nature
doth he dissolve; he is the destroyer in whom everything is brought to
nothing.
More information about the Urth
mailing list