“These are the hidden words that the living Jesus spoke and Didymos Judas Thomas recorded…”
✨Theme:
A sacred gospel not of belief, but of inner knowing — where Jesus speaks in riddles, poetry, and paradoxes that stir the soul into remembrance.
🌀Sacred Thread:
There is a light buried within you that can only be revealed through direct experience. The Gospel of Thomas isn’t about worshipping Jesus — it’s about becoming what he saw in you.
📜Scripture & Symbolism:
“These are the hidden words that the living Jesus spoke and Didymos Judas Thomas recorded…”
Found buried in the sands of Nag Hammadi in 1945, the Gospel of Thomas offers 114 sayings of Jesus — many of which echo familiar phrases from the New Testament, but with a mystical twist. There is no birth story, no crucifixion, no resurrection. Just the voice of the “Living Jesus,” whispering timeless truths to the soul brave enough to hear them.
Some of the most well-known sayings include:
“The kingdom is inside you, and it is outside you.”
“When you know yourselves, then you will be known.”
“If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you…”
Unlike traditional gospels, Thomas invites the reader into a direct and personal encounter with the Divine. It speaks not in doctrine, but in doorways.
🔍Invitation to the Seeker:
Read slowly. Not to analyze, but to listen. Which of the sayings speaks directly to you?
Let them open something ancient within — a memory not of history, but of truth.
You are not just reading this scripture — it is reading you.
💎Whisper from the Soul:
The sacred words are already etched in your being.
The Gospel is not outside of you —
It is the echo of your own becoming.
Unlike the canonical gospels, the Gospel of Thomas doesn’t offer a biography of Jesus. It is a collection of sayings — 114 utterances, to be exact — many of which are deeply mystical, paradoxical, and meant to be experienced more than explained.
There is no crucifixion here. No resurrection. No narrative arc. Instead, it presents Jesus as a bringer of direct gnosis — spiritual knowing — and invites the reader into inner revelation:
“If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you.
If you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you.”
This is scripture that reads you while you read it.
Some scholars argue the Gospel of Thomas may preserve older oral traditions than the New Testament gospels. Others dismiss it entirely. But for seekers who feel the Divine speaks most clearly in mystery, these words feel like ancient echoes of something deeply remembered.
It’s a gospel not of belief, but of becoming.
Not of worship, but of awakening.
What do these sayings stir within you?
What might Jesus have meant by becoming a living one?
You are invited to sit with the text, not as a riddle to solve but as a portal. The answers it offers may not come in words at all — but in light, in resonance, in the sacred stirring of your own soul.