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Sacred & Esoteric Texts

The texts the modern world stopped reading.

A free library of the books the bestsellers were quietly built on top of. Public-domain. Hosted properly — readable on a phone, a laptop, an old Kindle, an older brain. Free, the way most of these were always meant to be.

This room is not exhaustive. It is curated. The list grows when a text passes a small test: is it cited often, by people who have never actually read it? If yes, it ends up here, in full, with a note on what to expect.

Take what's useful. Leave what isn't.

I
Collection One

Gnostic Gospels & Nag Hammadi.

In 1945, an Egyptian farmer named Muhammad Ali al-Samman dug up a sealed jar near Nag Hammadi. Inside were thirteen leather-bound codices of fourth-century Coptic gospels — the books Athanasius had ordered destroyed in 367 CE. They survived because someone, somewhere, refused to burn them. This is what they had to say.

Coptic · 2nd c. CE

Gospel of Thomas

114 sayings of Jesus. No miracles, no crucifixion, no resurrection. Just the words. "The kingdom is spread on the earth and people do not see it."

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Coptic · 2nd c. CE

Gospel of Mary

Mary Magdalene as the disciple Jesus loved most. Peter doesn't take it well. The fragments we have are short, sharp, and devastating to a few assumptions.

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Coptic · 3rd c. CE

Gospel of Philip

The bridal-chamber gospel. Sacraments, gender, divine union. The book Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code half-quoted. The actual text is stranger.

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Coptic · 2nd c. CE

Gospel of Judas

What if Judas was the only one who understood? Recovered in 1970, published in 2006. Reframes the betrayal as the assignment.

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Coptic · 2nd c. CE

Gospel of Truth

Possibly written by Valentinus himself. Less a gospel than a sermon. On forgetting, returning, and the mistake of believing the world is the real thing.

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Coptic · 2nd c. CE

Apocryphon of John

The cosmology. Where Sophia falls. Where the Demiurge is born. The map every later Gnostic text assumes you've already read.

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Coptic · 3rd c. CE

Pistis Sophia

Sophia falls. Sophia is rescued. Long, complex, weird. The book that taught half of modern occultism the word aeon.

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Coptic · 2nd c. CE

Thunder, Perfect Mind

"I am the first and the last. I am the honored one and the scorned one." A poem in the voice of the divine feminine. Twelve pages that hit harder than most books.

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Coptic · 3rd c. CE

Sophia of Jesus Christ

A Gnostic Q&A with the risen Christ. Different cosmology than the canon. Same hunger for the source.

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Coptic · 2nd c. CE

Apocalypse of Peter

Not the canonical one. A vision in which Peter watches the crucifixion from above and learns the body on the cross was a stand-in. The laughing Christ.

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Coptic · 3rd c. CE

Gospel of the Egyptians

The "Holy Book of the Great Invisible Spirit." Cosmology, hymns, baptismal liturgy. Strange music.

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Coptic · 3rd c. CE

Tripartite Tractate

The most systematic Gnostic theology we have. Father, Son, and the third — the Logos who falls and is restored. Heavy reading. Worth it.

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II
Collection Two

Apocrypha & Pseudepigrapha.

The Bible you grew up with is a committee decision. These are the books that didn't make the cut — some excluded for theology, some for politics, some for being too weird for the room. They were quoted by the New Testament writers, copied for centuries, and quietly demoted. Here they are anyway.

Pseudepigrapha · 3rd c. BCE

The Book of Enoch (1 Enoch)

Watchers. Fallen angels. Giants. The book Jude quotes by name. Lost to the West for a thousand years until a Scottish explorer dragged a copy out of Ethiopia in 1773.

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Pseudepigrapha · 1st c. CE

2 Enoch (The Secrets of Enoch)

Enoch's tour of the seven heavens. The throne. The naming of every animal. Dictated to him in thirty days.

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Pseudepigrapha · 2nd c. BCE

The Book of Jubilees

Genesis retold, with the calendar fixed and the angels named. The Dead Sea Scroll community treated it as scripture. The mainline tradition didn't.

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Deuterocanon · 2nd c. BCE

Tobit

A blind father, a fish, and the angel Raphael. A short novel about exile, marriage, and the kindness of strangers who turn out to be archangels.

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Deuterocanon · 2nd c. BCE

Judith

A widow, a wine bottle, and a general's head in a sack. The story so good Caravaggio painted it twice.

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Deuterocanon · 1st c. BCE

The Wisdom of Solomon

Not Solomon. But beautiful. The clearest case in the canon for personified Wisdom — the same Sophia the Gnostics will later claim.

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Deuterocanon · 2nd c. BCE

Sirach (Ecclesiasticus)

A grandfather's commonplace book. Practical wisdom on money, friends, women, food, and dying well. Surprisingly funny in places.

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Deuterocanon · 2nd c. BCE

Baruch

Jeremiah's scribe writes from Babylon. Lament, confession, and a strange high song to Wisdom. Short. Heavy.

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Deuterocanon · 2nd c. BCE

1 Maccabees

The history. Mattathias and his sons. The temple cleansed. The eight-day miracle. Hanukkah, in plain prose.

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Deuterocanon · 2nd c. BCE

2 Maccabees

The same story, told mystically. Visions, martyrdoms, prayers for the dead. The one the theologians actually fight over.

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Pseudepigrapha · 2nd c. BCE

Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs

Jacob's sons, on their deathbeds, telling the truth. Reuben confesses. Simeon repents. Levi describes the heavens.

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Pseudepigrapha · 1st c. CE

Apocalypse of Abraham

Abraham, taken up. The throne. The history of the world unrolled like a scroll. One of the strangest visionary texts in any tradition.

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Pseudepigrapha · 2nd c. CE

The Ascension of Isaiah

The prophet, sawed in half. The seven heavens. A vision of Christ before he comes. The book early Christians read alongside the Gospels.

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Pseudepigrapha · 1st c. CE

The Life of Adam and Eve

What happened after the gate closed. Adam's penance in the river. Eve's grief. The serpent's return. A grief story dressed as scripture.

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III
Collection Three

Hermetic & Alchemical.

"That which is below is like that which is above." Hermes Trismegistus — the Thrice-Great — is probably a composite. The Egyptian Thoth, the Greek Hermes, and a dozen unnamed second-century mystics writing in his name. The body of work he left behind is the spine of every Western occultism that followed.

Hermetic · 1908

The Kybalion

Three Initiates. Seven principles — Mentalism, Correspondence, Vibration, Polarity, Rhythm, Cause and Effect, Gender. The book every modern occultist quotes whether they admit it or not. Read in full.

Open the text →
Hermetic · 2nd c. CE

The Corpus Hermeticum

Seventeen tractates. Dialogues between Hermes and his sons, Hermes and his god, Hermes and the soul. The original source The Kybalion is paraphrasing.

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Alchemical · ancient

The Emerald Tablet

"That which is below is like that which is above." Thirteen lines. The single most quoted source in Western esotericism, with translations across centuries.

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Hermetic · 2nd c. CE

Asclepius

The longest surviving Hermetic dialogue. On the divinity of the cosmos, the soul's descent, and what humans are for.

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Hermetic · 17th c.

The Divine Pymander

Hermes wakes. A vast presence asks him what he wants to know. He says: "everything." The Pymander tells him.

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Hermetic · various

The Hermetica fragments

Stobaeus. Cyril. The bits scattered across other writers' books, gathered up. The pieces that didn't survive in any complete codex.

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IV
Collection Four

Eastern & Mystical.

The traditions the West kept rediscovering and forgetting and rediscovering again. Whatever you call it — Tao, Brahman, Buddha-nature, Ein Sof — the same finger pointing at the same moon, in different languages, across different millennia.

Taoist · 6th c. BCE

Tao Te Ching

Lao Tzu. Eighty-one short verses on water, weakness, and how the soft beats the hard. The original case for restraint as power.

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Hindu · 2nd c. BCE

Bhagavad Gita

Arjuna won't fight. Krishna explains the universe. Eighteen chapters of the cleanest theology India ever wrote. Gandhi carried it everywhere.

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Vedanta · 800-200 BCE

The Upanishads (selected)

The end of the Vedas. The forest dialogues. Tat tvam asi — that thou art. The Isha, Katha, Mundaka, Mandukya, Chandogya, Brihadaranyaka.

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Buddhist · 3rd c. BCE

The Dhammapada

423 verses. The Buddha's most quoted sayings, organized by theme. The clearest, kindest book of practical ethics any tradition produced.

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Chinese · 9th c. BCE

The I Ching

Sixty-four hexagrams. A divination system that became a philosophy that became a literature that became Taoism. Use it as oracle. Read it as poetry.

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Tibetan · 8th c. CE

The Tibetan Book of the Dead

Bardo Thödol — "Liberation Through Hearing in the Intermediate State." Read aloud to the dying. Instructions for the soul on its way through.

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Hindu · 4th c. CE

The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali

196 aphorisms. The foundational text of yoga — and yoga is not what the studio down the street is selling. This is the actual technology.

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Kabbalah · 13th c.

The Zohar (selections)

"The Book of Splendor." Mystical commentary on Torah. Ten sefirot. The shape of God. Curated selections — the Zohar entire is a lifetime.

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V
Collection Five

Western Esoteric.

The serious occult tradition before it became a Halloween costume. These are the books that taught the Golden Dawn what they knew. The grimoires, the philosophies, the encyclopedias of magic written by people who were betting their souls on whether it worked.

Esoteric · 1928

The Secret Teachings of All Ages

Manly P. Hall's masterwork, written when he was 25. Qabbalah, alchemy, tarot, ceremonial magic, the Mysteries. The reference book everyone else borrows from.

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Renaissance · 1531

Three Books of Occult Philosophy

Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa. The encyclopedia of Renaissance magic. Natural, celestial, and ceremonial — the three-tier model the West has used ever since.

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Grimoire · 17th c.

The Lesser Key of Solomon

Lemegeton. The seventy-two demons of the Ars Goetia and what to do if you decide to call them. Read it as anthropology. Or don't read it.

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Grimoire · 13th c.

The Sworn Book of Honorius

Liber Iuratus. The oldest grimoire we have. A vision of God obtained through a hundred days of preparation. The serious end of medieval magic.

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Grimoire · 15th c.

The Book of Abramelin

Six months alone, in silence, until the Holy Guardian Angel speaks. The retreat manual. Crowley built his system on top of it.

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Arabic · 11th c.

The Picatrix

Ghayat al-Hakim. The most influential book of astrological magic ever written. Translated into Latin in 1256 and never quite forgotten since.

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VI
Collection Six

Mystical Christian.

Christianity has an apophatic underground — a tradition that says God is best known by what God is not. Eckhart got tried for it. Teresa got read for it. Julian got remembered for it. The parts of Christianity that sound most like Buddhism, written by Christians who had never heard of Buddhism.

Apophatic · 14th c.

The Cloud of Unknowing

An anonymous English monk teaches you contemplative prayer. Not knowing God. Loving the cloud where God is. The shortest path to the deep end.

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German · 14th c.

Meister Eckhart's Sermons

"The eye through which I see God is the same eye through which God sees me." Tried for heresy. Vindicated by history. The cleanest non-dual voice the West produced.

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Spanish · 1577

The Interior Castle

Teresa of Ávila. The soul as a castle of seven mansions. A practical map of contemplative life from someone who walked the whole thing.

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Spanish · 1578

Dark Night of the Soul

John of the Cross. The phrase you've heard misused for everything from breakups to bad weeks. Here is what it actually meant. It is harder than that.

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English · 1395

Revelations of Divine Love

Julian of Norwich. The first book in English by a woman. "All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of thing shall be well." She meant it.

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Why this is here.

Because most of these texts are already free, somewhere ugly, on a domain that loads slowly, with ads about lower-back fat. That is no way to meet The Gospel of Thomas.

The job here is small. Format the text well. Pick a good edition. Make it readable on a phone in a dark room. Put a note at the top saying what the book is and what to expect. That is it. The work is the reverence.

What this is not.

It is not academic. It is not a library science project. It is not annotated to death. If you want a critical edition with footnotes that quibble with each comma, those exist and they are good and they are not this.

This is the kind of edition you read on the couch. With tea. Slowly.