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The Book of the Secret Supper (Cena Secreta), also known as Interrogatio Iohannis (The Questions of John), The Book of John the Evangelist and The Gospel of the Secret Supper was a Bogomil apocryphal text from Bulgaria, possibly based on a now lost Paulician treatise, which also became an important Cathar scripture. [1]
The opening words of the Secret Book of John are, "The teaching of the saviour, and the revelation of the mysteries and the things hidden in silence, even these things which he taught John, his disciple." The author John is immediately specified as "John, the brother of James—who are the sons of Zebedee." The remainder of the book is a vision ...
Book of the Secret Supper, [38] which was wrongly described by inquisitors as similar to the Apocryphon of John [38] Vision of Isaiah (according to Euthymius Zigabenus) [39] [40] Bogomils accepted the four Gospels, fourteen Epistles of Paul, the three Epistles of John, James, Jude, and an Epistle to the Laodiceans, which they professed to have ...
Secret Book of John, a Gnostic text; Book of the Secret Supper, or "Book of John the Evangelist", a Bogomil text This page was last edited on 11 ...
The alleged sacred texts of the Cathars, besides the New Testament, included the Bogomil text The Gospel of the Secret Supper (also called John's Interrogation), a modified version of Ascension of Isaiah, and the Cathar original work The Book of the Two Principles (possibly penned by Italian Cathar John Lugio of Bergamo).
For those who aren’t familiar, Secret Supper organizes once-in-a-lifetime meals across the country. Each gathering is limited to 50-60 ticketed guests. The exact address isn’t revealed until ...
Gnostics read John but interpreted it differently from non-Gnostics. [85] Gnosticism taught that salvation came from gnosis, secret knowledge, and Gnostics saw Jesus as not a savior but a revealer of knowledge. [86] The gospel teaches that salvation can be achieved only through revealed wisdom, specifically belief in (literally belief into ...
In the second chapter, Allen cites John D.'s father, William, as a "bigamist, horse thief and child molester". He allegedly raped a 15-year-old girl, then deserted his wife and children to marry a ...