Esta obra es la primera en presentar los evangelios gnósticos de la cábala de una manera práctica y profundamente esotérica. Este libro enseña desde las ideas primordiales de la cábala hacia las exploraciones en detalle del Árbol de la Vida. Las leyendas gnósticas y los mitos de la Madre Santa, Santa María Magdalena y Jesús son mezclados en el estudio del sagrado Sefirot.
I'm still reading this book, but wanted to write down this thought now:
The author presents the Gospel of Thomas, verse by verse, and provides commentary on each verse. Malachi seems to have his own brand Gnostic Christian church and theology, and the commentary reflects this. It is mostly agreeable to me, but sometimes not. These interpretations of the Gospel of Thomas sometimes feel like they miss the mark. Take, for instance, Saying 60:
Jesus said, "Two will rest on a bed, the one will die, and the other will live."
Malachi treats this as an exposition on the person who is saved by Christ, versus the person who is not. It seems to me that the intended meaning is that the two are the false self and the true self, and through meditative practices, the false self falls away.