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In Gnostic tradition, the term Sophia (Greek for "wisdom") has an esoteric meaning.
Many Gnostics (especially the followers of Valentinius) taught that there
was the One, the original, unknowable God (the Monad as it is called by Monoimus, or the first Aeon); and then from the One
emanated other Aeons, pairs of lesser
beings in sequence. (Valentinius listed 30 such pairs.) The Aeons together made up the Pleroma, or fullness, of God. The lowest
of these pairs were Sophia and Christ.
Sophia's fears and anguish of losing her life, just as she lost the light of the One, caused confusion and longing to return
to it. Because of these longings the matter (Greek: hyle) and the soul (Greek: psyke, ψυχή) accidentally came into existence through the
four elements: fire, water, earth and air. The creation of the lion-faced Demiurge is
also a mistake during this exile, according to some Gnostic sources as a result of Sophia trying to emanate on her own, without
her male counterpart. The Demiurge proceeds to create the physical world in which
we live, ignorant of Sophia, who nevertheless manage to infuse some spiritual spark into the creation of the Demiurge; that is
the pneuma.
After this the savior (Christ) returns and lets her see the light again, bringing
her knowledge of the spirit (Greek: pneumia,
πνεῦμα). Christ was then sent to earth on the form of the man Jesus to give men the gnosis needed to rescue themselves from the physical
world and return to spiritual world.
The three sensations experienced by Sophia creates three types of humans: hylics (bond to the matter, the principle
of evil), psychics (bond to the soul and partly saved from evil) and the pneumatics that can return to the
plemora if they achieve gnosis and can behold the world of light. The gnostics regarded
themselves as members of this group.
See also:
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