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Translated by George W. MacRae
[...] in heaven [...] within him [...] anyone appears [...] the hidden heavens [...] appear,
and before the invisible, ineffable worlds appeared. From these the invisible soul of
righteousness came, being a fellow member, and a fellow body, and a fellow spirit. Whether
she is in the descent or is in the Pleroma, she is not separated from them, but they see
her and she looks at them in the invisible world.
Secretly her bridegroom fetched it. He presented it to her mouth to make her eat it like food,
and he applied the word to her eyes as a medicine to make her see with her mind and perceive
her kinsmen and learn about her root, in order that she might cling to her branch from which
she had first come forth, in order that she might receive what is hers and renounce matter.
[...] he [dwelt...] having [...] sons. The sons [...] truly, those who have come from
his seed, call the sons of the woman "our brothers". In this very way, when the spiritual
soul was cast into the body, it became a brother to *** and hatred and envy, and a material
soul. So therefore the body came from ***, and *** came from material substance. For
this reason the soul became a brother to them.
And yet they are outsiders, without power to inherit from the male, but they will inherit
from their mother only. Whenever, therefore, the soul wishes to inherit along with the
outsiders - for the possessions of the outsiders are proud passions, the pleasures of life,
hateful envies, vainglorious things, nonsensical things, accusations [...] for her [...] prostitution,
he excludes her and puts her into the brothel. For [...] debauchery for her. She left modesty
behind. For death and life are set before everyone. Whichever of these two they wish,
then, they will choose for themselves.
That one then will fall into drinking much wine in debauchery. For wine is the debaucher.
Therefore she does not remember her brothers and her father, for pleasure and sweet profits
deceive her.
Having left knowledge behind, she fell into ***. For a senseless person exists
in ***, not knowing what is proper to say and what it is proper not to say. But,
on the other hand, the gentle son inherits from his father with pleasure, while his father
rejoices over him because he receives honor on account of him from everyone, as he looks
again for the way to double the things that he has received. For the outsiders [...].
[...] to mix with the [...]. For if a thought of *** enters into a *** man, he has already
become contaminated. And their gluttony cannot mix with moderation. For if the chaff is mixed
with the wheat, it is not the chaff that is contaminated, but the wheat. For since they
are mixed with each other, no one will buy her wheat, because it is contaminated. But
they will coax him, "Give us this chaff!", seeing the wheat mixed with it, until they
get it and throw it with all other chaff, and that chaff mixes with all other materials.
But a pure seed is kept in storehouses that are secure. All these things,then, we have
spoken.
And before anything came into being, it was the Father alone who existed, before the worlds
that are in the heavens appeared, or the world that is on the earth, or principality, or
authority, or the powers. [...] appear [...] and [...] And nothing came into being without
his wish.
He, then, the Father, wishing to reveal his wealth and his glory, brought about this great
contest in this world, wishing to make the contestants appear, and make all those who
contend leave behind the things that had come into being, and despise them with a lofty,
incomprehensible knowledge, and flee to the one who exists.
And (as for) those who contend with us, being adversaries who contend against us, we are
to be victorious over their ignorance through our knowledge, since we have already known
the Inscrutable One from whom we have come forth. We have nothing in this world, lest
the authority of the world that has come into being should detain us in the worlds that
are in the heavens, those in which universal death exists, surrounded by the individual
[...] worldly. We have also become ashamed of the worlds, though we take no interest
in them when they malign us. And we ignore them when they curse us. When they cast shame
in our face, we look at them and do not speak.
For they work at their business, but we go about in hunger (and) in thirst, looking toward
our dwelling-place, the place which our conduct and our conscience look toward, not clinging
to the things which have come into being, but withdrawing from them. Our hearts are
set on the things that exist, though we are ill (and) feeble (and) in pain. But there
is a great strength hidden within us.
Our soul indeed is ill because she dwells in a house of poverty, while matter strikes
blows at her eyes, wishing to make her blind. For this reason she pursues the word and applies
it to her eyes as a medicine them, casting away [...] thought of a [...] blindness
in [...] afterwards, when that one is again in ignorance, he is completely darkened and
is material. Thus the soul [...] a word every hour, to apply it to her eyes as a medicine
in order that she may see, and her light may conceal the hostile forces that fight with
her, and she may make them blind with her light, and enclose them in her presence, and
make them fall down in sleeplessness, and she may act boldly with her strength and with
her scepter.
While her enemies look at her in shame, she runs upward into her treasure-house - the
one in which her mind is - and (into) her storehouse which is secure, since nothing
among the things that have come into being has seized her, nor has she received a stranger
into her house. For many are her homeborn ones who fight against her by day and by night,
having no rest by day or by night, for their *** oppresses them.
For this reason, then, we do not sleep, nor do we forget the nets that are spread out
in hiding, lying in wait for us to catch us. For if we are caught in a single net, it will
suck us down into its mouth, while the water flows over us, striking our face. And we will
be taken down into the dragnet, and we will not be able to come up from it, because the
waters are high over us, flowing from above downward, submerging our heart down in the
filthy mud. And we will not be able to escape from them. For man-eaters will seize us and
swallow us, rejoicing like a fisherman casting a hook into the water. For he casts many kinds
of food into the water because each one of the fish has his own food. He smells it and
pursues its odor. But when he eats it, the hook hidden within the food seizes him and
brings him up by force out of the deep waters. No man is able, then, to catch that fish down
in the deep waters, except for the trap that the fisherman sets. By the ruse of food he
brought the fish up on the hook.
In this very way we exist in this world, like fish. The adversary spies on us, lying in
wait for us like a fisherman, wishing to seize us, rejoicing that he might swallow us. For
he places many foods before our eyes (things) which belong to this world. He wishes to make
us desire one of them and to taste only a little, so that he may seize us with his hidden
poison and bring us out of freedom and take us into slavery. For whenever he catches us
with a single food, it is indeed necessary for us to desire the rest. Finally, then,
such things become the food of death.
Now these are the foods with which the devil lies in wait for us. First he injects a pain
into your heart until you have heartache on account of a small thing of this life, and
he seizes (you) with his poisons. And afterward (he injects) the desire of a tunic, so that
you will pride yourself in it, and love of money, pride, vanity, envy that rivals another
envy, beauty of body, fraudulence. The greatest of all these are ignorance and ease.
Now all such things the adversary prepares beautifully and spreads out before the body,
wishing to make the mind of the soul incline her toward one of them and overwhelm her,
like a hook, drawing her by force in ignorance, deceiving her until she conceives evil, and
bears fruit of matter, and conducts herself in uncleanness, pursuing many desires, covetousnesses,
while fleshly pleasure draws her in ignorance.
But the soul - she who has tasted these things - realized that sweet passions are transitory.
She had learned about evil; she went away from them and she entered into a new conduct.
Afterwards she despises this life, because it is transitory. And she looks for those
foods that will take her into life, and leaves behind her those deceitful foods. And she
learns about her light, as she goes about stripping off this world, while her true garment
clothes her within, (and) her bridal clothing is placed upon her in beauty of mind, not
in pride of flesh. And she learns about her depth and runs into her fold, while her shepherd
stands at the door. In return for all the shame and scorn, then, that she received in
this world, she receives ten thousand times the grace and glory.
She gave the body to those who had given it to her, and they were ashamed, while the dealers
in bodies sat down and wept because they were not able to do any business with that body,
nor did they find any (other) merchandise except it. They endured great labors until
they had shaped the body of this soul, wishing to strike down the invisible soul. They were
therefore ashamed of their work; they suffered the loss of the one for whom they had endured
labors. They did not realize that she has an invisible spiritual body, thinking, "We
are her shepherd who feeds her." But they did not realize that she knows another way,
which is hidden from them. This her true shepherd taught her in knowledge.
But these - the ones who are ignorant - do not seek after God. Nor do they inquire about
their dwelling-place, which exists in rest, but they go about in ***. They are
more wicked than the pagans, because first of all they do not inquire about God, for
their hardness of heart draws them down to make them their cruelty. Furthermore, if they
find someone else who asks about his salvation, their hardness of heart sets to work upon
that man. And if he does not stop asking, they kill him by their cruelty, thinking that
they have done a good thing for themselves.
Indeed they are sons of the devil! For even pagans give charity, and they know that God
who is in the heavens exists, the Father of the universe, exalted over their idols, which
they worship. But they have not heard the word, that they should inquire about his ways.
Thus the senseless man hears the call, but he is ignorant of the place to which he has
been called. And he did not ask during the preaching, "Where is the temple into which
I should go and worship my hope?"
On account of his senselessness, then, he is worse than a pagan, for the pagans know
the way to go to their stone temple, which will perish, and they worship their idol,
while their hearts are set on it because it is their hope. But to this senseless man the
word has been preached, teaching him, "Seek and inquire about the ways you should go,
since there is nothing else that is as good as this thing." The result is that the substance
of hardness of heart strikes a blow upon his mind, along with the force of ignorance and
the demon of error. They do not allow his mind to rise up, because he was wearying himself
in seeking that he might learn about his hope.
But the rational soul who (also) wearied herself in seeking - she learned about God. She labored
with inquiring, enduring distress in the body, wearing out her feet after the evangelists,
learning about the Inscrutable One. She found her rising. She came to rest in him who is
at rest. She reclined in the bride-chamber. She ate of the banquet for which she had hungered.
She partook of the immortal food. She found what she had sought after. She received rest
from her labors, while the light that shines forth upon her does not sink. To it belongs
the glory and the power and the revelation for ever and ever. Amen.