Red text is the mark of Fire.
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The Carpocratian Church
In the name of The Father, The Mother, and The Child, faith and love lead to salvation.
(based on Irenaeus of Lyon, The Doctrines of Carpocrates Against Heresies 1.25.5, c. 180 CE)
The Carpocratian Church of Commonality and Equality is a US-based religious non-profit organization. Our mission is to reconstruct and reimagine the mid-second century CE church led by Marcellina of Rome—protégé of the notorious Carpocrates of Alexandria—by crossing the streams of once-thought-lost traditions of Orphic, Jewish, and Christian Gnosticism.
We reprophesy living Scripture based on rediscovered ancient Scripture, publish our Scripture for free on our website, and encourage all to read ancient Scripture and use the imagination! Scheduled events are coming soon!
This Church of Commonality and Equality fights for diversity, equity, and inclusion; and accelerates toward gender abolition and the separation of church and state, an idea this Church holds was first proclaimed by Jesus of Nazareth.
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Copyright © 2025. The Carpocratian Church of Commonality and Equality, Inc. Content produced by The Church are openly licensed via CC BY-NC-SA
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
Blue text is the mark of Water.
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The Carpocratian School
A unit is that through which each of the existing things is said to be one. A number, then, is a multitude composed of units.
(based on Euclid, Elements 7.def.1, 7.def.2, c. 300 BCE)
The Carpocratian School is a non-profit organization in the US that seeks to reconstruct and reimagine both the encyclical humanities
and the monadic knowledge
Carpocrates of Alexandria is said to have imparted to his son and only child Epiphanes, on the island of Cephalonia in the early second century CE. Epiphanes would go on to produce treatises and polemics so popular that the early patriarchs of the Catholic Church urgently retorted them. Epiphanes would pass away at age 17.
(quoted and paraphrased descriptions of Carpocrates and Epiphanes attributed to Clement of Alexandria, The Stromata 3.2.5.3, c. 200 CE)
Read our free and libre books on the liberal arts of grammar, logic, and rhetoric. Our books on the world sciences of arithmetic, music, geometry, and astronomy are coming soon!