The Gospel of Thomas: Mysteries Unveiled Through Shamanic Insights

What fascinated me most is how the sayings mirrored my own awakening journey and how I could interpret them.

Over the past decade, scripture has become a living presence in my life—not as dogma, but as doorway. While I’ve explored both the Bible and the Nag Hammadi texts, The Gospel of Thomas has been the standout—a raw, poetic, and piercing collection of 114 sayings attributed to Jesus. Not parables. Not stories. Just words. Delivered like lightning bolts.

What struck me most wasn’t how these sayings preach from a pulpit—but how they echoed the precise terrain of my own awakening. When I stumbled across them, I realised: these weren’t just teachings. These were mirrors.

Had I tried to understand them back in 2012 or even 2014, I’d have come up empty. I wouldn’t have had the eyes to see or the heart to feel what they were pointing to. It’s only through a brutal and beautiful journey—a shamanic initiation into my True Divine Self—that the hidden meaning of these words revealed themselves to me. These are not surface teachings. These are soul activators.

Each podcast below is my raw and unscripted interpretation of these sayings—filtered through lived experience, spiritual grit, and the fire of personal transformation. You won’t find textbook theology here. You’ll find truth as I’ve lived it.

Start wherever you feel drawn. There’s no linear path. The kingdom is within.

🔥 The Gospel of Thomas Interpretations

Bonus Reflection: The Gospel of Thomas vs. The New Testament

While the New Testament presents Jesus as a storyteller and miracle-worker framed through narrative, the Gospel of Thomas strips it all back. No miracles. No crucifixion. No resurrection story. Just sayings—enigmatic, electric, and fiercely direct.

Where the New Testament often points to salvation through belief, Thomas points inward—to gnosis. Inner knowing. The mystery revealed in the marrow of your being.

There are differences, yes. But don’t be fooled into dualistic thinking. The teachings in Thomas and the New Testament also echo the same eternal truths:

That transformation is possible.

  • That love, forgiveness, and courage are required.

  • That the Kingdom isn’t coming “one day”… it’s already here—if you have eyes to see.

One is a roadmap. The other is a riddle. Both, in their own way, point home.

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