Simon Magus eBook

G. R. S. Mead
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about Simon Magus.

Simon Magus eBook

G. R. S. Mead
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 122 pages of information about Simon Magus.

Compare this with the teaching of Simon that the “fruit” of the Tree is placed in the Store-house and not cast into the Fire.

In his aeonology, Simon, like other Gnostic teachers, begins with the Word, the Logos, which springs up from the Depths of the Unknown—­Invisible, Incomprehensible Silence.  It is true that he does not so name the Great Power, He who has stood, stands and will stand; but that which comes forth from Silence is Speech, and the idea is the same whatever the terminology employed may be.  Setting aside the Hermetic teachings and those of the later Gnosis, we find this idea of the Great Silence referred to several times in the fragments of the Chaldaean Oracles.  It is called “God-nourished Silence” ([Greek:  sigae theothremmon]), according to whose divine decrees the Mind that energizes before all energies, abides in the Paternal Depth.[107] Again: 

     This unswerving Deity is called the Silent One by the gods, and is
     said to consent (lit. sing together) with the Mind, and to be known
     by the Souls through Mind alone.[108]

Elsewhere the Oracles demonstrate this Power which is prior to the highest Heaven as “Mystic Silence."[109]

The Word, then, issuing from Silence is first a Monad, then a Duad, a Triad and a Hebdomad.  For no sooner has differentiation commenced in it, and it passes from the state of Oneness ([Greek:  monotaes]), than the Duadic and Triadic state immediately supervene, arising, so to say, simultaneously in the mind, for the mind cannot rest on Duality, but is forced by a law of its nature to rest only on the joint emanation of the Two.  Thus the first natural resting point is the Trinity.  The next is the Hebdomad or Septenary, according to the mathematical formula 2^{n}-1, the sum of n things taken 1, 2, 3 ... n, at a time.  The Trinity being manifested, n here =3; and 2^{3}-1 = 7.

Thus Simon has six Roots and the Seventh Power, seven in all, as the type of the Aeons in the Pleroma.  These all proceed from the Fire.  In like manner also the Cabeiric deities of Samothrace and Phoenicia were Fire-gods, born of the Fire.  Nonnus tells us they were sons of the mysterious Hephaestus (Vulcan),[110] and Eusebius, in his quotations from Sanchuniathon, that they were seven in number.[111] The Vedic Agni (Ignis) also, the God of Fire, is called “Seven-tongued” (Sapta-jihva) and “Seven-flamed” (Sapta-jvala).[112]

In the Hibbert Lectures of 1887, Prof.  A.H.  Sayce gives the following Hymn of Ancient Babylonia to the Fire-god, from The Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western Asia (iv. 15): 

     1.  The (bed) of the earth they took for their border, but the god
     appeared not,

     2. from the foundations of the earth he appeared not to make
     hostility;

     3. (to) the heaven below they extended (their path), and to the
     heaven that is unseen they climbed afar.

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Simon Magus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.