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Wednesday, October 27, 2010, 8:53 PM

Here are some insightful excerpts from, “Secret Cinema: A Gnostic Vision in Film,”  a book by Wake Forest University English Professor, Eric Wilson:

http://www.voegelinview.com/secret-cinema-gnostic-film-pt1.html

Professor Peters, a clever writer and provocateur at The Front Porch Republic defines a ‘gnostic’ as an individual not very happy with reality. And, I like that definition very much, though it’s lacking in depth.

What has me pouring over my Stein is Voegelin’s comment in “The New Science of Politics” that:

“Gnostic movements were not satisfied with filling the vacuum of civil theology; they tended to abolish Christianity. In the earlier phases of the movement the attack was still disguised as Christian “spiritualization” or “reform”; in the later phases, with the more radical immanentization of the eschaton, it became openly anti-Christian. As a consequence, wherever gnostic movements spread they destroyed the truth of the open soul; a whole area of differentiated reality that had been gained by philosophy, and Christianity was ruined.”

The above strikes me as an explication or the denouement of (tensional movement?) evil in a derailed world-immanent reality, where that truth that addresses the question of the order of the soul is ‘repressed,’ and the spiritual effort as Voegelin says, is to destroy that order (soul). Perhaps, it is best understood as that pneumopathology, that infection of the spirit, that inhibits and interrupts and acts on the transition of the modes of being from potentiality to actuality revealed in the mode of ‘time and temporal existence.’ (See Edith Stein’s “Finite and Infinite Being 38-9). 

I’m going to take Martha and go see M. Night’s latest, “Devil.”

“All creatures,” St. Edith writes,”have a triune structure as substances that stand upon themselves and that are filled with meaning and power. And all self-dependent structures pertain to a triune (body-soul-spirit) unfolding of their being.”

2 Comments

    Howard Roark
    October 29th, 2010 | 8:18 am

    Between string theory and the Holographic Universe hypothesis, we all may be Gnostics very soon.

    Besides, Voegelin was wrong. Gnostics believed in the soul, it is the orthodox who believe the end times being with a bodily resurrection, ie materialism. If the world is unreal, to the Gnostic, and controlled entirely by the Lord of the World and his Archons, Gnostics aren’t going to lift a finger to change anything.

    The proposed idea that a person can be a world hater AND a utopian makes no sense, unless the religious are materialists. Vogelin and his followers need to go back to school and come up with a better excuse for mixing religion with social darwinism.

    Robert Cheeks
    October 29th, 2010 | 9:34 pm

    Howard, apocalypticism and gnosticism are two different things. Also, I would think that a “world hater AND a utopian” is a gnostic, at least in the modern Marxist sense.
    Voegelin always admitted his errors. His life was about the act of seeking, questing, and searching for the truth of existence.


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