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- Five_Trees abstract "\"Five Trees\" in Paradise is a mysterious allegory or concept from famous Coptic Gospel of Thomas NHC 2: (gnostic library from Nag Hammadi in Egypt) 19th saying/logia of Jesus and other sources of religious mythology.Blatz Translation: (19) Jesus said: Blessed is he who was before he came into being. If you become disciples to me (and) listen to my words, these stones will minister to you. For you have five trees in Paradise which do not change, either in summer or in winter, and their leaves do not fall. He who knows them shall not taste of death.\"Blessed is he who was before he came into being,\" is similar to other enigmatic statements commonly found in mysticism across cultures, referring to the benefits of self-awareness (knowledge of one's true nature) before development of ego identity beliefs. \"If you...listen..., these stones will minister to you,\" may refer to both \"listening\" to the true self within - which would allow one to accurately trace internal/cause from observing external/effects (physical reality/stones), or that only through this \"self-awareness\" are we able to understand Jesus' symbolic language and master external reality. The word, tree, is a creative (manifesting) symbol in Jewish and Christian sacred texts, descriptive of both ingesting (taking in) fruits and/or producing fruits (Genesis and Four Gospels). In the Acts of Thomas, Chapter 27, during an anointing ceremony, the apostle implores, \"Come, elder of the five members of mind, communicate with these young men;\" the five words for 'mind' according to Theodore bar Khoni (www.gnosis.org/library/actthom.htm) are the equivalents of hauna (sanity), mad'a (reason), re'yana (mindfulness), mahshebhatha (imagination), tar'itha (intention) - considered the Five Manifestations of the Father of Greatness which may provide the clue to the meaning of the five trees. These five would therefore be the causal factors in the experience of the Real.Marvin Meyer writes: \"The \"five trees in paradise are mentioned frequently in gnostic texts, ordinarily without explanation or elaboration. In Manichaean Psalm Book 161,17-29, it is said that various features of life and faith are put together in groups of five. This section opens with the statement, 'For [five] are the trees that are in paradise [. . .] in summer and winter.' On the trees in paradise according to Genesis, see Genesis 2:9.\" (The Gospel of Thomas: The Hidden Sayings of Jesus, pp. 77–78)".
- Five_Trees wikiPageExternalLink manimyth.htm.
- Five_Trees wikiPageExternalLink splith.htm.
- Five_Trees wikiPageExternalLink Sacred-trees.html.
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- Five_Trees wikiPageRevisionID "680947439".
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Acts_of_Thomas.
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- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Book_of_Genesis.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Category:Gnosticism.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Category:Plants_in_the_Bible.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Category:Trees_in_mythology.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Christianity.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Coptic_language.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Egypt.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Erythrina_stricta.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Four_Worlds.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Gnosticism.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Gospel.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Gospel_of_Thomas.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Jesus.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Kabbalah.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Kalpavriksha.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Logia.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Manichaeism.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Mysticism.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Mythology.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Naassenes.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Nag_Hammadi.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Nag_Hammadi_library.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Nefesh.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Nyctanthes_arbor-tristis.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Paradise.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Samtanaka.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Santalum_album.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Science_of_Kabbalah.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Sephirot.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Spirit.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Tree_of_life.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLink Zeir_Anpin.
- Five_Trees wikiPageWikiLinkText "Five Trees".
- Five_Trees wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refbegin.
- Five_Trees wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refend.
- Five_Trees wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Five_Trees subject Category:Gnosticism.
- Five_Trees subject Category:Plants_in_the_Bible.
- Five_Trees subject Category:Trees_in_mythology.
- Five_Trees hypernym Allegory.
- Five_Trees type Book.
- Five_Trees type Controversy.
- Five_Trees type Patristic.
- Five_Trees type Religion.
- Five_Trees comment "\"Five Trees\" in Paradise is a mysterious allegory or concept from famous Coptic Gospel of Thomas NHC 2: (gnostic library from Nag Hammadi in Egypt) 19th saying/logia of Jesus and other sources of religious mythology.Blatz Translation: (19) Jesus said: Blessed is he who was before he came into being. If you become disciples to me (and) listen to my words, these stones will minister to you.".
- Five_Trees label "Five Trees".
- Five_Trees sameAs Q5456174.
- Five_Trees sameAs m.04n1xk.
- Five_Trees sameAs Q5456174.
- Five_Trees wasDerivedFrom Five_Trees?oldid=680947439.
- Five_Trees isPrimaryTopicOf Five_Trees.