Ella S.
Well-Known Member
I was raised Roman Catholic, but I have since turned towards Gnostic Christianity.
Welcome!
Will be interested.in how you define Gnostic Christianity and what you feel falls under that umbrella.
Start a thread?The only major belief that I see as necessary to really be a Gnostic is the belief that one can liberate the divine spark from the kenoma through gnosis. I guess that could be considered two beliefs: spirit-matter dualism and salvific gnosis.
Generally, though, if anyone wants to call themselves a Gnostic then I'm not going to argue with them, whether they're a reconstructionist of a particular sect, sort of eclectic, or more occult or New Age. We might disagree, but that doesn't mean that their identification as a Gnostic Christian is invalid.
I, myself, agree with a lot of Marcionism and Catharism, which are two borderline cases that some scholars consider a part of Gnostic Christianity and other scholars don't.