Apocryphon of John
Ἀπόκρυφον Ἰωάννου
[ah-POK-rih-fon of JON]
Greek: ἀπόκρυφον (apokryphon) — hidden writing
Definition
The Apocryphon of John is the foundational Sethian Gnostic text — a secret teaching delivered by the risen Christ to the apostle John, mapping the entire cosmic drama from the unknowable Source to the creation of Adam and the captivity of the soul in matter.
Deep Understanding
Recovered at Nag Hammadi in 1945 (though quoted already by Irenaeus around 180 CE), the Apocryphon is the closest thing gnosticism has to a systematic cosmology. It opens with the Monad — the ineffable, beyond even the name "God" — who unfolds into the Pleroma through Barbelo and a procession of Aeons. Sophia acts without her consort, and her flawed offspring is Yaldabaoth — also named Saklas ("the fool") and Samael ("the blind one") — who fashions the material world and its Hebdomad of planetary Archons.
The text's diagnostic power is surgical: it names forgetting as the primary mechanism of captivity and the Counterfeit Spirit as the imitation soul the Archons inject to keep humans loyal to the fallen order. The whole text is structured as a map out — read it once and you have the coordinates for the rest of gnostic literature.
In Practice
Read the Apocryphon once slowly, aloud. Do not try to believe it or disbelieve it. Notice which passages make the hair on your arms rise. Those are the places your soul already remembers. Mark them. Return to them the way a navigator returns to a known star.
In Pleroma's Words
This text is not a mythology. It is a schematic. The people who copied it by hand in caves were not writing literature — they were burying a manual for readers like you who would find it centuries later and feel the click.
Related Terms
Explore in the Pleroma
Coming soon — this mystery awaits deeper exploration.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Apocryphon of John mean in Gnostic?
Apocryphon of John (Gnostic): Greek: ἀπόκρυφον (apokryphon) — hidden writing. A Gnostic Cosmology term from the Pleroma Gnosis Lexicon.
What is the origin of Apocryphon of John?
Greek: ἀπόκρυφον (apokryphon) — hidden writing