Gnostic Mythology — The Divine Drama

8 articles in this section ⏱ 1 min read
About This Section

Gnostic mythology is the story of how a perfect divine realm (the Pleroma) accidentally produced an imperfect material world — and why that matters for every human soul trapped in it. The cast: the unknowable Father, Barbelo the divine Mother, Sophia whose fall created the crisis, the Demiurge who made the world from that fall, the Archons who police it, and Christ who came to undo the damage.

New here? Start with: The Gnostic Creation Myth →
The full story from the Pleroma's perfection to the creation of the material world — the myth that connects all the others.
8 Mythology articles in this section
Sophia The Aeon whose fall started everything
Yaldabaoth The Demiurge's Sethian name
30 Aeons in the Valentinian Pleroma

8 Articles in This Section

01 The Gnostic Creation Myth The full narrative from Pleroma to material world. 02 The Demiurge — The False Creator God The ignorant or malevolent being who made this world. 03 Sophia — Wisdom & the Divine Feminine The Aeon whose fall triggered the Gnostic drama. 04 The Archons — Rulers of the Material World The planetary rulers who keep humanity trapped. 05 The Pleroma & the Aeons The divine realm of fullness and its inhabitants. 06 Barbelo — The Divine Mother The first emanation from the Father — womb of the Pleroma. 07 God the Father in Gnosticism The true, unknowable God — not the creator of the world. 08 Jesus Christ in Gnosticism The divine revealer who came to teach gnosis, not die for sin.

Gnostic mythology is not a single unified story — it is a family of related myths that share the same dramatic arc: something went wrong in the divine realm, and the material world is the consequence. Different Gnostic schools (Sethian, Valentinian, Ophite) told the story differently, giving different names to the same figures and emphasising different moments in the drama.

What they all agreed on: the Pleroma is real and perfect; the material world is a mistake; the human soul carries a fragment of the Pleroma within it; and there is a way back. The eight pages in this section map every major figure in that story.