Gnosticism | |
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Syrian-Egyptic Gnosticism | |
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Proto-Gnostics | |
Philo | |
Simon Magus | |
Cerinthus | |
Valentinus | |
Basilides | |
Gnostic texts | |
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Nag Hammadi library | |
Codex Tchacos | |
Askew Codex | |
Bruce Codex | |
Gnosticism and the New Testament | |
Related articles | |
Gnosis | |
Neoplatonism and Gnosticism | |
Mandaeism | |
Manichaeism | |
Bosnian Church | |
Esoteric Christianity | |
Jnana | |
Gnosticism Portal |
Marsanes is a Sethian Gnostic text from the New Testament apocrypha. The main surviving copies come from the Nag Hammadi library, albeit with four pages missing, and several lines damaged beyond recovery, including the first ten of the fifth page.
Like Zostrianos, and Allogenes, the text describes a very elaborate esoteric cosmogony of successive emanations from an original God, as revealed by Marsanes. Within the text there are indications that the Sethians had developed ideas of monism, an idea comparable to Heracleon's notion of universal perfection and permanence as expressed through the constancy of the total mass of things within it (that is, all matter in the universe may only change form, and may not be created or destroyed), and the later Stoic insistence of nothing existing beyond the material.