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Passages similar to: Teachings of Silvanus — Teachings of Silvanus
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Teachings of Silvanus
Teachings of Silvanus (60)
But he who makes himself like God is one who does nothing unworthy of God, according to the statement of Paul, who has become like Christ.
Sentences of Sextus
Sentences of Sextus (381)
He who makes his mind like unto God as far as he is able, he is the one who honors God greatly.
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XIV: Degrees of Glory in Heaven. (16)
"Thou hast supposed iniquity,' He says, " [in imagining] that I will be like to thee." But "it is enough for the disciple to become as the Master,"...
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XIX: The True Gnostic Is An Imitator of God, Especially in Beneficence. (1)
He is the Gnostic, who is after the image and likeness of God, who imitates God as far as possible, deficient in none of the things which contribute...
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter IX: The Gnostic Free of All Perturbations of the Soul. (4)
For the Word of God is intellectual, according as the image of mind is seen 'in man alone. Thus also the good man is godlike in form and semblance as ...
Life of Pythagoras
SELECT SENTENCES OF SEXTUS THE PYTHAGOREAN. (41)
He does not know God who does not worship him. The man who is worthy of God is also a God among men.
Sentences of Sextus
Sentences of Sextus (376a)
A man who is worthy of God, he is God among men, and he is the son of God.
Meister Eckhart - Sermons
Sermon IV: True Hearing (5)
I wish further to elucidate this saying of St Paul that he was willing to be cut off from God. The highest act of renunciation for man is for God's...
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XIV: Greek Plagiarism From the Hebrews. (11)
And if you wish to apprehend the likeness by another name, you will find it named in Moses, a divine correspondence. For he says, "Walk after the Lord...
Life of Pythagoras
SELECT SENTENCES OF SEXTUS THE PYTHAGOREAN. (43)
He honors God in the best manner who renders his intellect as much as possible similar to God. If you injure no one, you will fear no one.
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XVI: Scripture the Criterion By Which Truth and Heresy Are Distinguished. (7)
As, then, if a man should, similarly to those drugged by Circe, become a beast; so he, who has spurned the ecclesiastical tradition, and darted off...
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XIII: Description of the Gnostic Continued. (11)
Whence he never prefers pleasure and profit to the divine arrangement, since he trains himself by the commands, that in all things he may be well...
The Works of Dionysius the Areopagite
On Divine Names, Caput IX (7)
For the Word of God Itself extols the fact that He is dissimilar, and of the same rank with none; as "different" even from everything, and, what is mo...
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XXII: The True Gnostic Does Good, Not From Fear of Punishment or Hope of Reward, But Only for the Sake of Good Itself. (3)
Such an one is no longer continent, but has reached a state of passionlessness, waiting to put on the divine image. "If thou doest alms," it is said,...
Theologia Germanica
Chapter XXXV (35.1)
And this humility springeth up in the man, because in the true Light he seeth (as it also really is) that Substance, Life, Perceiving, Knowledge, Powe...
Meister Eckhart - Sermons
Sermon VI: Sanctification (20)
Thou shouldest also know that the more a man sets himself to be receptive of divine influence, the happier he is: who most sets himself so, is the...
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XIV: Greek Plagiarism From the Hebrews. (33)
And the Socratic Antisthenes, paraphrasing that prophetic utterance, "To whom have ye likened me? saith the Lord," says that "God is like no one; wher...
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XXVI: How the Perfect Man Treats the Body and the Things of the World. (7)
And the poets call the elect in their pages godlike and gods, and equal to the gods, and equal in sagacity to Zeus, and having counsels like the gods,...
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XXV: True Perfection Consists in the Knowledge and Love of God. (1)
"Happy he who possesses the culture of knowledge, and is not moved to the injury of the citizens or to wrong actions, but contemplates the undecaying...
Life of Pythagoras
SELECT SENTENCES OF SEXTUS THE PYTHAGOREAN. (5)
The greatest honor which can be paid to God, is to know and imitate him. There is not any thing, indeed, which wholly resembles God; nevertheless the...
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XXII: The True Gnostic Does Good, Not From Fear of Punishment or Hope of Reward, But Only for the Sake of Good Itself. (2)
And if, in doing good, he be met with anything adverse, he will let the recompense pass without resentment as if it were good, he being just and good ...
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