Sex and Relationships: Tantra, The Gospel of Philip and What Is Going On

Sex and relationships: Tantra, The Gospel of Philip and What is Going On?!

Goddess News’ axiom: ‘If you want to be spiritual, ask uncomfortable questions,’

Goddess News, Spiritual Blog, Divine Feminine,

Dr Joanna Kujawa, Spiritual Detective :).

Many years ago, when I still lived in Toronto, Canada and I was just entering the life of relationships, someone told me a story of a friend he knew. The friend, a young man, was told by his father to get married but was not sure if it was the right thing to do. So he locked himself in a room, drank whiskey and smoked dope for three days before emerging and saying, ‘Okay, I will do this because it is the right thing to do.’

I was very young then and knew nothing about anything and even less about relationships and their purpose but the young man’s answer did not ring true. It felt to me then that he had somehow settled with what we were conditioned to do, with what his father (society) wanted him to do a little too quickly. Although I was not particularly interested in spirituality at the time, I was also not so sure about his decision-making methods and the validity of his final decision.

Which ‘right’ did he choose? Society’s? His own? Or was it simply that he could not come up with a better option?

Today, many years, relationships and countries later, I will give him a bit more credit. At least he gave it some thought – which is more than most of us do. Who can blame him for this quick method when what we are told about relationships oscillates between more-or-less self-contradictory lines of thinking about relationships:

  1. Marry for procreation, be a good family person and, ideally, get a big bank loan as soon as possible so you have to be a slave to jobs you hate to pay the mortgage and send the kids to private schools (the sources of this thinking are religion, society)
  2. Look for a soulmate (New Age philosophy)
  3. Indulge in sexy, and occasionally dark, love games of unexplored sexuality to keep the eternal excitement (good luck here because after a while, even you if you dress your boyfriend up as a nurse and yourself as a French missionary, your excitement will eventually wane – you will get bored!)
  4. Sex is the measure of a great relationship or, alternatively, sex is not important – it is the family that counts (various deranged ‘experts’ often published in popular magazines)
  5. Look for romantic love, which will be the source of unending sunsets, gifts of red roses and diamond rings, and which will always give you a lovely uplifting feeling when you are together and a terrible longing when you are apart (pop culture)

There is nothing unusual about the unnamed and never-met man in question needing to lock himself away in a room. But if he had stayed in that room a bit longer, or even better, travelled a little, experimented and searched he might have found other possible options.

The young man did not do this but I decided to do it instead.

I decided to look into mystical and so-called apocryphal (meaning ‘secret’, ‘hidden’ or ‘heretical’) teachings that might shed some light on the meaning of relationships and sexuality. Personally, I do not know of any better sources to look at than Tantra and the Gnostic Gospel of Philip.

Depending on the sources you read, Tantra is either an ancient Indian tradition difficult to date or a secret tradition which became formulated scholarly around the 10th century by an Indian philosopher, Abhinavagupta. In Tantra, Shakti, which is often presented as the female aspect of the Divine in the form of one goddess or another, is the underlying life-force of All that there is in the Universe and beyond. I have described Her in my other blogs as what French philosopher Henri Bergson also called the Elan Vital, the sweet underlying source of all life, both spiritual and physical, where – and read my lips – the division between what is spiritual and what is physical does not exist. In Tantra, indeed, this kind of division (or dualism) is an artificial simplification of our limited ego-minds that will always be understood by a person in an expanded state of consciousness. (To read more, please check my blogs http://www.joannakujawa.com/tantra-and-the-worship-of-the-goddess/ or http://www.joannakujawa.com/two-secret-traditions-gnosis-and-tantra/.)

The problem  is, of course, that most of us, most of the time at least, do not know how to get to this expanded state of consciousness so, as a result, we are caught in the seeming division between what is physical (limited) and spiritual (unlimited). But, Tantra teaches, this is only a limitation of the three-dimensional mind, and not the truth.

The Tantrics understood that in the regular divided state of consciousness one (but not the only) way of achieving an expanded state of consciousness (awakening Shakti) is through the conscious sexual union of the masculine and feminine.

What is ‘conscious sexual union’?

We find an explanation to this question in a surprising place – an early Christian Gnostic text of The Gospel of Philip. The Gospel of Philip was written most likely between 150 to 250 CE and found in 1945 in Nag Hammadi, Egypt with nearly 50 other repressed early Christian writings.  Amazingly, it explains the concept of conscious union in a very similar way to that of the Tantrics of India except that it calls this the ‘Bridal Chamber’. It is in the Bridal Chamber where the feminine and masculine meet to honour each other and unite with the Spirit through sexual union.

A conscious union or the Bridal Chamber is not for the sake of our own gratification, says Jean Yves Leloup – the translator of and the commentator on The Gospel of Philip, but an opportunity for a ‘revelation’ of the divine force existing between two people. This divine force is also known in the Celtic spiritual tradition, where it is called Anam cara – a third entity created by a profound connection. However, in The Gospel of Philip, this third entity or the divine force between two people is explored through a sexual union as it is in Tantra and not just by a platonic connection.

According to Leloup, this divine force between two people comes from Pleroma (the original Fullness) and not penia, which stands for lack. In other words, you choose to be with someone because you overflow with love and NOT because you need someone to complete you. And the connection between the two people happens by means of the lovers’ breath during love-making which is the Shekinah or Sophia, Divine Wisdom or Grace (also Shakti).

The Gospel of Philip also distinguishes between regular ‘birth’ (by physical means) and ‘conception’, which is the outcome of a meaningful ‘encounter’ between two people. Also interesting is that, just as in Tantra, The Gospel of Philip does not judge. One of its famous passages says, ‘A woman’s children resemble the man she loves. When it is her husband, they resemble her husband. When it is her lover, they resemble her lover.’

There is no moral judgment here but rather a focus on spiritual inclination and emotion. Another passage says, ‘The Truth is one and many so as to teach us the innumerable One of Love.’

In some beautiful passages, The Gospel of Philip says, ‘… human nature is desirous of procreation – which must be done in beauty and not in deformity; and this procreation is … the divine thing’ and ‘The mystery which unites two beings is great – without it the world would not exist.’

What can ‘beauty’ here mean as opposed to ‘deformity’ if not the cherishing of each other’s sensuality with a profound respect for each other’s beings or souls?

This does not mean that a relationship cannot be ‘lustful’ but it does mean that we have a profound sense of caring for one another as people and that this union helps us to discover the depths of our own connection, not only with one another but also with our own soul.

‘Deformity’ in the Bridal Chamber, I believe, stands for the treating of another as an object of self-centred desire. It is in de-forming or dis-respecting something potentially beautiful and sublime that we limit ourselves and the other person to being mere objects.

In Tantra, sexuality can become the conduit to reaching an expanded state of consciousness by activating our Kundalini Energy and moving it to the top Energy Centre (the top chakra). In Gnostic teachings, there are no chakras but Gnosticism also has its own anatomy of the soul, with Nous at the top. It is Nous that connects us to the Divine Silence.

Since it is also in The Gospel of Philip that Mary Magdalene is called a ‘special companion’ of Jesus and it states there that he kissed her often making other disciples jealous, it is not unreasonable to assume, Leloup says, that Mary Magdalene and Jesus modelled this kind of relationship for us.

So what advice would I give to that not-so-young-now friend from Toronto today?

Don’t believe most things you hear about love and relationships – they are recycled stories that most likely will not help your evolution. (For some reason, no one tells us what we need to know most.)

Honour the great pull towards the other with love – it will help you to explore who you are at the deepest level.

Sexual desire fluctuates even in the best of relationships.

And most of all:

Whatever you choose, choose it consciously. And Delight in It – This is the Stuff that Universes are made of.

Is it easy to achieve?  Certainly not, especially if hormones are flying around.  But let me tell you – it certainly is worth trying.

As always, I would love to dialogue with you through comments. 

Sending Love,

Dr Joanna Kujawa

Goddess News

Spiritual Blog

Dr Joanna Kujawa

 

©Joanna Kujawa

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8 Responses to Sex and Relationships: Tantra, The Gospel of Philip and What Is Going On

  1. Ian Robinson says:

    What an enlightened (and enlightening!) revelation Sundari. Thanks for delving so deeply into the repressed Gospels – and for sharing your findings with us (less informed) others! (Love to Shamir – and Humphry too I guess!!)

    • sundari says:

      Thank you Ian. I am so glad you have enjoyed the piece :). As you already know, I am fascinated by the Gnostic teachings and love to explore them in the Goddess news and share :)> Love from three of us to you x

  2. Karthyeni Sridaran says:

    Wow Joanna, makes me wanna walk that burnt bridge once again in case I’m missing out on learning something deeply meaningful about myself (through another!!)…more CONSCIOUSLY I hear your voice loud and clear!!… but when you fall (madly in love) …doesn’t consciousness fly out the window at the same time?!!? seems a bit tricky to maintain sanity or rise to true divine love… if such a thing exist in the first place. …or am I the proverbial cynic on this matter!! Sex is for creation (yes, thanks to flying hormones!), if fortunately love is felt, it simply makes the experience of it more pleasant(mushy emotional sensations)…but nothing divine(spiritual) about it!! I’m inclined to think it’s a hoax to get gullible women to bed in the name of tantric ecstasy or what have you in every tradition on earth!!?

    • sundari says:

      Haha! Thank you Kathy. That is why it is not an easy thing especially when one is very young and hormones are coming out of our ears. But, it is a bit easier when you are only reasonably young (like us ?) and one has already had some experience. The main thing, I believe, is to enter a relationship for the sake of deeper love and learning about ourselves without any agendas how this should be. And another thing, is to, at all times, treat each other as a person (divine and human, beautiful and terrible at times) and embrace that person. And, for me, the most beautiful thing of all is to watch that third person (that force between two people) grow. And, it requires some level of awareness already so it is essential to work on oneself first and then to attract someone who also has some awareness. Perhaps, this is another blog sometime in the future? I do believe that this is worth crossing ‘that bridge’ again ?. Much love, Joanna

  3. Krystal Lujan says:

    THANK YOU BEAUTIFUL!! This is wonderful ❤️❤️

  4. thunkandwrit says:

    Thanks for an interesting blog Joanna.
    Describing the complexity and power of transforming sexual energy appears to feature as analogy in many belief systems. The difficulty persists in the ability of human consciousness to overcome the ego’s desire for physical gratification rather than spiritual growth (if this is your individual perception of events). Strength and wisdom to those who believe they are on a journey to higher realms; enjoy it whilst you can if you are not.

    • sundari says:

      Thank you for your thoughtful comment. Clearly you are on the journey so welcome to the Goddess realm ?. It is true that many traditions speak f transformation through sexual energy but, often, they are on the fringes of the dominant and institutional religion which are bent on control and moral judgment instead. In some ways, I understand that they might feel that control is necessary because s you said the majority of people are either not ready to raise the Consciousness or are not interested – which fills e with great sadness. Another explanation might be that there are some societal forces that do not want us grow but rather stay enslaved on the low level of consciousness…While some of us dream of (and work on) ascension. I really appreciate your comment,
      Much love, Joanna

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