Halcyon
Lord of the Badgers
Well, technically Gnosticism is a school of theological thought that can be applied to any religious mythology you care to think of.spacemonkey said:I was under the assumption "gnostic" refered to a sect of Chrisianity. Gnostic comes from the greek word "gnosis" meaning knowledge (also one of the ship names in the Matrix trilogy along with "Logos" or "word"). I wasn't aware there where other religous sects that refer to themselves as "Gnostics".
There are existing non-Christian Gnostics, they're called the Mandeans. Also a large non-Chrisitian group now extinct were the Sethians. The Manichaens had strong Gnostic themes in their literature, as did several Hermetic documents. There is even an Islamic Gnostic scripture called The Mother of Books.
Gnostic history and culture is very rich and varied, as well as incredibly confusing if you don't look at it in the right way