In 1 Corinthians 1–3, Paul presents a hierarchical religious framework that distinguishes between believers he considers “immature” and those he regards as “mature.” The immature are described as receiving elementary instruction—what Paul calls “milk”—while the mature are associated with a deeper, hidden wisdom disclosed through the Spirit. This wisdom is not publicly accessible, but is spiritually discerned, a feature that closely resembles what later traditions would describe as gnosis, even if Paul does not yet formalize the term.
Within Paul’s own logic, the gap between these two groups is not merely pedagogical but epistemological. Those lacking spiritual discernment are said to perceive higher teaching as foolishness, implying that the mature would be misunderstood or rejected by the very communities Paul addresses. The foundational message given to immature believers—“Jesus Christ and him crucified”—is explicitly characterized as introductory instruction rather than the fullness of Paul’s teaching.
Contemporary Christianity, however, is largely structured around the assumption that “Christ and him crucified” constitutes the entirety of Christian doctrine. Many churches, consciously echoing Paul’s words, present this message as the complete substance of the faith rather than as its starting point. In doing so, the category of spiritual maturity that Paul describes—along with the hidden wisdom associated with it—has been marginalized or reinterpreted. Interpretive traditions that emphasize spiritual knowledge, revelation, or gnosis in the sense outlined in 1 Corinthians 2 have historically been labeled heretical, while the exoteric message Paul himself called “milk” has come to define Christianity as a whole.
That early Christianity understood itself as possessing both exoteric and esoteric teachings is not merely a modern scholarly inference, but an explicit admission made by orthodox Christian authorities themselves. In Contra Celsum 1.7, Origen responds to the charge that Christianity is a secretive system by acknowledging that, while its basic doctrines are publicly proclaimed, there nevertheless exist “certain doctrines, not made known to the multitude,” which are revealed only after the introductory teachings have been received. Origen compares this structure to philosophical schools such as Pythagoreanism, where some teachings were offered openly while others were reserved for those deemed sufficiently prepared.
This admission closely mirrors the framework outlined by Paul in 1 Corinthians 1–3. Paul distinguishes between believers who are “infants in Christ,” capable only of receiving “milk,” and those who are “mature,” among whom he speaks a hidden wisdom revealed through the Spirit. Far from rejecting such a hierarchy, Origen systematizes it, presenting Christianity as a pedagogical tradition in which deeper truths are intentionally withheld until the appropriate stage of instruction.
It is within this context that Valentinian Christianity becomes intelligible. Valentinians understood themselves as the pneumatikoi—the spiritually mature believers to whom Paul’s hidden wisdom was addressed. Drawing heavily on Pauline language, they interpreted the public proclamation of Christ crucified as an introductory teaching, while claiming access to a deeper, spiritual understanding reserved for the mature. The proto-orthodox rejection of Valentinianism, therefore, did not arise from a denial that Christianity possessed deeper teachings, but from a dispute over who was authorized to claim them.
Over time, the church resolved this tension not by embracing Paul’s hierarchical epistemology, but by flattening it. The exoteric message Paul identified as “milk” came to define Christianity in its entirety, while traditions that emphasized spiritual knowledge or gnosis were excluded as heretical. In doing so, Christianity preserved Paul’s language while quietly abandoning the tiered structure that gave it meaning.
The figure of Valentinus further complicates the modern assumption that “Gnosticism” existed entirely outside the boundaries of early Christian orthodoxy. Valentinus taught openly in Rome in the mid-second century and was regarded as a respected Christian intellectual within the Roman church. Patristic sources such as Tertullian report that he was considered a serious candidate for ecclesiastical leadership, an indication that his theology was not initially perceived as heretical. Only later, as doctrinal boundaries hardened, was Valentinian Christianity decisively excluded.
Valentinian theology is also notable for the way it treats religious myth not as a literal account of supernatural events, but as a symbolic and transformative narrative describing the human condition. The complex mythological language found in Valentinian texts functions as a psychological and spiritual map, depicting ignorance, fragmentation, and alienation from the divine source, and the process by which knowledge (gnosis) restores wholeness. Salvation, in this framework, is not achieved through legal obedience or belief in historical propositions, but through recognition—an awakening to one’s true identity.
This symbolic and experiential dimension of Valentinian thought attracted the attention of Carl Jung, who famously described the Gnostics as the first psychologists. Jung argued that Gnostic myths externalize inner psychological realities, anticipating modern depth psychology by treating religious symbols as expressions of the inner life rather than literal cosmological claims. In this light, Valentinian Christianity appears less as a speculative aberration and more as an early attempt to articulate the inner transformation implied by Paul’s distinction between spiritual maturity and immaturity.
When viewed alongside Paul’s language in 1 Corinthians, the Valentinian claim to be among the pneumatikoi—the spiritually mature—becomes historically intelligible. The later condemnation of Valentinianism was not the rejection of psychological or symbolic religion per se, but the rejection of an interpretation of Christianity that took Paul’s hierarchical and experiential epistemology to its logical conclusion.
The presence of symbolic and allegorical interpretation within early Christianity did not arise in a vacuum. Jewish precedents for non-literal engagement with sacred texts were already well established prior to and during the first century. In Ecclesiastical History (2.17), Eusebius quotes extensively from Philo of Alexandria regarding a Jewish group known as the Therapeutae, often associated with the Essene movement. Philo describes them as ascetics devoted to prayer, communal life, and the allegorical interpretation of scripture, explicitly stating that they treated the literal text as symbolic of deeper spiritual realities.
This Essene tradition of allegorical exegesis provides an important backdrop for understanding early Christian approaches to scripture. While definitive proof is lacking, many scholars have speculated that Jesus may have had contact with Essene circles, given overlapping concerns such as asceticism, critique of temple authority, communal ethics, and emphasis on inner purity. Whether or not Jesus himself belonged to the Essenes, the intellectual and spiritual atmosphere in which Christianity emerged clearly included symbolic and non-literal modes of interpretation.
This continuity becomes more visible in later Jewish-Christian groups such as the Ebionites. In the Panarion, Epiphanius describes the Ebionites as following a way of life strikingly similar to that of the Essenes, including practices such as vegetarianism and communal discipline. He also reports that while the Ebionites claimed fidelity to the Law of Moses, they simultaneously rejected or violated significant portions of its legislation. This apparent contradiction is difficult to explain if the Law were understood strictly literally, but becomes intelligible if it was interpreted symbolically or selectively, as pointing beyond itself.
Epiphanius further notes that the Ebionites claimed revelation through Christ as the basis for their interpretations, suggesting that their authority did not rest solely on textual literalism but on perceived spiritual insight. While culturally and theologically distinct from later Gnostic groups, the Ebionites nevertheless shared important methodological features with them: an emphasis on being led by the Spirit, a willingness to reinterpret inherited texts, and the conviction that true understanding required more than surface-level observance.
When viewed alongside Paul’s distinction between natural and spiritual understanding in 1 Corinthians, these diverse movements—Essenes, Ebionites, Pauline communities, and Valentinians—can be seen not as isolated anomalies, but as participants in a broader ancient religious pattern. Across these groups, sacred texts were treated as symbolic, spiritual discernment was privileged over literalism, and revelation was understood as transformative insight rather than mere assent to propositions. The differences between them are real and significant, but they operate within a shared framework in which spiritual maturity entails access to deeper meaning.
A careful reading of Paul’s letters—particularly 1 Corinthians and Galatians—reveals a form of Christianity that is more internally stratified, epistemologically complex, and spiritually demanding than later doctrinal summaries often suggest. Paul distinguishes between immature and mature believers, between exoteric proclamation and hidden wisdom, and between surface-level understanding and Spirit-mediated discernment. His insistence that “Christ and him crucified” constituted introductory instruction rather than the fullness of his teaching was not rhetorical flourish, but a structural feature of his theology.
That this hierarchy was neither accidental nor uniquely Pauline is confirmed by later orthodox voices. Origen openly acknowledged that Christianity, like philosophical schools and mystery traditions, possessed teachings not disclosed to the multitude, but reserved for those sufficiently prepared. Far from denying Paul’s framework, Origen normalized it, reframing spiritual maturity as a matter of pedagogical progression rather than charismatic exclusivity. In doing so, he preserved the language of depth while curtailing its destabilizing potential.
Valentinian Christianity represents one historical attempt to inhabit the role of the spiritually mature believers Paul described. Valentinians did not see themselves as innovators or rebels, but as heirs to an apostolic tradition of spiritual insight, interpreting Christian myth symbolically and psychologically rather than literally. Their emphasis on inner transformation, recognition, and integration—later recognized by Carl Jung as a proto-psychological understanding of religion—demonstrates that early Christianity could be experiential and symbolic without abandoning its core narrative.
The broader Jewish context further supports this reading. Allegorical interpretation among Essene-associated groups, as described by Philo and preserved by Eusebius, shows that symbolic engagement with scripture was already established prior to Christianity. The Ebionites, as portrayed by Epiphanius, likewise occupied a liminal space: affirming the Law while reinterpreting it, claiming fidelity while violating its literal prescriptions, and grounding authority in revelatory insight. Though culturally distinct from Gnostic groups, they shared a common orientation toward Spirit-led interpretation and non-literal meaning.
The later triumph of proto-orthodox Christianity did not eliminate Paul’s categories; it redefined them. The exoteric proclamation Paul called “milk” became the entirety of the faith, while the language of spiritual maturity and hidden wisdom was either moralized, deferred, or excluded. Traditions that pursued gnosis—understood as transformative insight rather than speculative cosmology—were increasingly labeled heretical, not because they lacked apostolic roots, but because they threatened unity, control, and doctrinal stability.
Modern Christianity, in many of its forms, continues to proclaim “Christ and him crucified” as the whole meal rather than the beginning of it. Whether this represents a necessary safeguard against fragmentation or a loss of spiritual depth is a matter of judgment. What cannot be denied is that the earliest Christian texts themselves preserve a more layered vision—one in which faith begins with proclamation, but maturity leads beyond it, into a form of understanding that is discerned rather than taught, experienced rather than asserted, and known rather than merely believed.
a) Instruction implies talmud in Hebrew... https://www.etymonline.com/word/Talmud
b) Elementary implies ones mind (ment) within all (el) before consenting to suggested instruction by another.
Aka suggested information (in form of action) or perceivable inspiration (in spirit of action) depending on ones free will of choice.
Because suggestion dilutes perception. For example...if one ignores perceivable sound for suggested words, then ones mind receives a lot of white noise aka equal intensity (sound) at different frequencies (words).
Because self discernment implies the separation of all perceivable into each ones perception, while accessing suggested public information shapes a consensus.
Public (suggested information by synthesis) or private (perceivable inspiration by analysis).
Absolutely none of the etymological games you practice apply to real life at all.
How does one apply "none" aka "no one" to real life?
Applying implies "joining together"...being implies set apart from one another. How could application be real if nature shows the separation of mother and off-spring at birth?
Absolute implies "free from limitations", yet free will of choice can only work within limitations, hence ones struggle to choose.
Etymo (straight) logic (circular thinking) al (all)...it's when one chooses to ignore straight for circular that the game begins.
The conflict between real vs false only exist within a circle...not within the straight line. Why? Because a circle TURNS on itself.
Practical implies matters (perception) of action (perceivable)...matter consenting to the suggestion of other matter implies speculative.
To practice requires one to resist speculation, which only then grows self discernment. Others exploit speculation with mediation (media) and contemplation (entertainment).
I didn't say anything about "applying none" to real life. What I did say is that your etymology games don't apply to real life.
Even if it did, the implication is a non-factor. Thanks for admitting I'm right. Inb4 "Oh, being right implies destruction" or whatever. No it doesn't.
Nature shows no such thing. You're being daft.
Irrelevant. Tangential. "Why is the fountain broken?" "OH LOOK A TWIG FELL AND A SQUIRREL CAUGHT IT" "That's not why the fountain is broken."
Only in certain contexts.
Limitations such as...? I doubt you can name any, since you just spout recited gibberish as if it is factual info.
Thus proving my claim. Who is going to know this? Who actually believes this? What buuldings are going to be constructed by this? NONE. NONE.
You made that up. That's false.
Oh? Is that true or are you hust voniting words for the laughs?
That's false, but if true then that's a good thing. Now turn on yourself.
Try again. And stop confusing matter as in physical matter with matter as in relevancy.
What's being speculated about? How competent you are?
DIDN'T aka DID NOTHING...once again a fiction applied to real life.
a) https://www.etymonline.com/word/apply
b) Joining together put things AT ODDS with one another, while ignoring even.
a) Everything implies each thing...nothing denies everything and thereby implication (if/then).
b) Notice that factor has ACT (action) in it, which implies reaction in reality. Putting an F before ACT implies fictitious action aka a fiction shaped by reaction within action as distraction for one another.
A suggested fact tempts one to hold onto, thereby contradicting action, which cannot be held onto.
c) The use of "is" implies a circular conflict (is vs isn't), which implication (if/then) doesn't have.
a) Right/reg - "to move in a straight line"... https://www.etymonline.com/word/right
b) Right forwards (inception towards death), which admits being (life)... I AM implies a being taking possession over self while ignoring the righteous process.
If right; then being. If being; then within the righteous way.
Aka "nothing it does nothing"...that's you being tricked by a theorem of propositional logic called "double negation".
a) So there's no difference between a beings perception and what nature offers it? If I fart over here, then can you smell it over there or could there be a natural separation of position among being?
b) If you say "thing", then that implies a separation of each thing from one another within everything.
c) Isn't there a separation between show and audience?
d) Aren't yes and no separated from one another?
e) Such implies "alike" one another...so doesn't one have to be separated from one another to judge such and such likeness of one another?
Relevance implies relieve, hence the relief a mother feels after the separation of each off-spring. Nature giving each being free will of choice implies a relief of burden; it's choosing to hold onto which reestablishes burden....branding anything "irrelevant" implies the sharing attempt of a self imposed burden aka a sin-tax (syntax).
Tangent implies "meeting at a point without intersecting"...being implies life sentence moved towards point of death by separation from one another, which allows intersection aka internal sex. Therefore...to be implies divergence. Few suggest tangent to entangle many together.
a) Only implies one and only...not only and "certain contexts".
b) Certain implies the use of ones free will of choice to ascertain aka to suggest an assurance to one another to tempt consent into a binding contract.
In short...certainty tempts free will of choice into bondage.
c) Context implies "to weave together" aka the aforementioned bondage of free will of choice into a binding contract with one another called "consensus".
d) Free implies from balance....balance implies the action limiting reacting choice. Only within balance can there be choice.
Balance. Choice implies in-between balance. Imbalance implies choice within balance choosing to hold onto one side, which establishes the circular conflict against the other side aka imbalance for choice.
Aka suggested information tempting one to ignore perceivable inspiration.
a) Proof/prove is in the pudding/putting...nature puts (inception) and pulls (death) being (life) in (living) and out (dying) of existence.
Prove aka pro-bhwo implies "forwarded being"... https://www.etymonline.com/word/prove
b) Claiming implies making a demand, which contradicts the given mandate of heaven from genesis (inception towards death) to revelation (life).
Each one who discerns self within knowledge..which cannot be shared without contradicting SELF discernment.
Knowledge moves through one; beliefs tempt one to hold onto. Believing contradicts knowing.
Knowledge doesn't con (together) struct (structure)...it allows ones self dis (to divide) cern (to perceive) ment (mind).
Building implies division, hence the fruit of ones labors aka each off-spring. Few suggest construction by utilizing free-masonry and mosaic law to tempt many into building artificial constructs/creations/fashions/manufactures/compositions/produce/engineering/developments etc. Holding onto a construct implies idolatry...hence constructing the tower of babel until it collapses upon its foundation yet again.
a) Free-will-of-choice sets apart what a jew made up, and what gentiles hold together. Why? Because resisting the temptation to hold together what another made up...sustains free will of choice.
b) Versus/verto - "to turn"... https://www.etymonline.com/word/versus Turning implies circular rotation; being (life) implies linear progression (inception towards death).
c) Drawing a circle implies putting the beginning and end of a line together, which inverts nature setting beginning (inception) and end (death) of line apart (life), hence establishing ones life-line.
d) Up and down aren't in a circular conflict against one another, but represent balance (up/down) for ones choice in-between, and only within linear motion can there be balance (momentum) for choice (matter).
How to draw a circle without beginning turning onto end?
a) Only within motion (inception towards death) can there be matter (life)...other suggest the cessation of motion (stop) to tempt one to deny being moved.
b) Only within ALL can there be physic-AL and ment-AL relevancy aka separation from one another, which con (together) fuse (to melt) contradicts.
Being implies special aka specific (partial) within all (whole)...speculation (conjecture of thinking) with one another tempts one to ignore that, which permits each jew to establish "investment of money upon risk for the sake of profit" among speculative gentiles aka investment banking within the vestige of gentile minds.
What's a vestige? A mark, trace, sign aka an idol of speculation.
Competence tempts one to compete against one another, while ignoring that all (perceivable) is given to each one (perception) for free will of choice.