The term appropriated by Gnostic heresiarchs to designate the series of
spiritual powers evolved by progressive emanation from the eternal Being, and constituting the
Pleroma or
invisible spiritual world, as distinct from the Kenoma
?, or
visible material world.
The word
aeon (aion) signifying "age", "the ever-existing", "eternity", came to be applied to the
divine eternal power, and to the personified attributes of that power, whence it was extended to designate the successive emanations from the divinity which the Gnostics conceived as necessary intermediaries between the
spiritual and the
material worlds. The Gnostic concept of the
aeon may be traced to the influence of a
philosophy which postulated a divinity incapable of any contact with the material world or with
evil, and the
desire to reconcile this philosophy with the Christian notion of a direct interference of
God in the affairs of the material world, and particularly in the Creation and Redemption
? of man.
Jewish angelology, which represented Jehovah
? ministered to by a court of
celestial beings, and Hellenic
religious systems, which imagined a number of intermediaries between the finite and the infinite, suggested the emanation from the divinity of a series of subordinate heavenly powers, each less perfect, the further removed it was from the
supreme deity, until at length increasing imperfection would serve as the
connecting link between the
spiritual world and the material world of
evil.
In different Gnostic systems the hierarchy of
Aeons was diversely elaborated. But in all are recognizable a mixture of Platonic
?, mythological, and Christian elements. There is always the primitive all-perfect Æon, the fountain-head of divinity, and a co-eternal companion Æon. From these emanate a second pair who, in turn, engender others, generally in pairs, or in groups of pairs, in keeping with the Egyptian idea of divine couples. One of these inferior Æons, desiring to know the unknowable, to penetrate the secrets of the primal Æon, brings disorder into the Æon-world, is exiled, and brings forth a very imperfect Æon, who, being unworthy of a place in the
Pleroma, brings the divine spark to the nether world. Then follows the creation of the material universe.
Finally, there is evolved the Æon
Christ, who is to restore
harmony in the Æon-world, and heal the disorder in the material world consequent upon the catastrophe in the ideal order, by giving to man the
knowledge which will rescue him from the dominion of
matter and
evil. The number of
Æons varies with different systems, being determined in some by Pythagorean
? and Platonic
? ideas on the mystic efficacy of numbers; in others by epochs in, or the duration of, the
life of
Christ. The
Æons were given names, each Gnostic system having its own catalogue, suggested by Christian terminology, and by Oriental, or philosophical and mythological nomenclature. There were nearly as many aeonic hierarchies as there were Gnostic systems, but the most elaborate of these, as far as is known, was that of Valentinus, whose fusion of
Christianity and Platonism
? is so completely described in the refutation of this system by St. Irenæus and Tertullian.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01173c.htm
See Also
Akashic
Apocryphon of John
Epinoia
Etheric Elements
Harmony
Heaven
Law of Cycles
Mind
Overtone Series
Pleroma
Pronoia
Void