Gnosticism and Religious Pluralism
Gnosticism is a modern label for a range of ancient religious movements emphasizing saving knowledge (gnosis), illustrating the rich and contested religious pluralism of the late-antique Mediterranean world.
Definition
The study of ancient movements centred on saving knowledge and of the broader religious diversity of late antiquity, including the disputed category of 'Gnosticism'.
Scope
This topic surveys the texts and teachings grouped under 'Gnosticism', including the Nag Hammadi writings, related movements such as Manichaeism, and the broader pluralism of late antiquity. It gives particular attention to the scholarly debate over whether 'Gnosticism' is a coherent category at all, presenting the evidence and arguments without endorsing any group's religious claims.
Core questions
- What teachings and texts have been grouped under 'Gnosticism'?
- Is 'Gnosticism' a useful analytic category or a misleading construct?
- What did the Nag Hammadi discovery reveal about ancient religious diversity?
- How do these movements fit within late-antique religious pluralism?
Key theories
- Dismantling 'Gnosticism' as a category
- Michael Williams's argument that the term 'Gnosticism' lumps together disparate movements and should be reconsidered or replaced, since the supposed common features do not hold up under scrutiny.
- Gnosticism as a constructed heresiological label
- Karen King's account of how 'Gnosticism' was shaped by ancient heresiologists and modern scholarship as the negative counterpart to 'orthodoxy', reflecting boundary-making as much as the movements themselves.
History
Movements emphasizing gnosis flourished in the second and third centuries CE alongside emerging orthodox Christianity and were condemned by heresiologists; the 1945 discovery of the Nag Hammadi codices in Egypt transformed scholarship by providing primary texts, prompting reassessment of both these movements and the category 'Gnosticism' itself.
Debates
- Whether 'Gnosticism' should be retained as a term
- Scholars dispute whether the label names a real ancient phenomenon or an artificial category inherited from polemics, with some calling for its abandonment and others for its careful redefinition.
Key figures
- Karen L. King
- Michael A. Williams
- Elaine Pagels
Related topics
Seminal works
- king2003
- williams1996gnostic
- pagels1979
Frequently asked questions
- What is the Nag Hammadi library?
- It is a collection of ancient codices discovered in Egypt in 1945, containing many texts associated with so-called Gnostic and related movements, which greatly expanded scholarly knowledge of late-antique religious diversity.
- Why do scholars question the term 'Gnosticism'?
- Because the movements grouped under it are very diverse, and the label derives partly from ancient opponents; some scholars argue it obscures more than it clarifies.