The Gnostic Bible: Gnostic Texts of Mystical Wisdom form the Ancient and Medieval Worlds

(Elliott) #1

43


The Great Song


to Mani


F i 1



  • he Great Song to Mani is a late piece of Manichaean poetry, prob-

  • ably composed in the thirteenth or fourteenth century. It was
    JL. written in Turkish and is included in the same manuscript as an-
    other song to Mani, this one copied in two different languages (Tocharian B
    and Turkish). This second song, not given here, is much shorter. It rehearses
    much of the same material about Mani, but adds references to the god
    Ohrmazd and the god Zurvan, figures equated with aspects of the divine in
    Persian Manichaeism (for example, the first man) and derived from the
    Zoroastrian good god Ohrmazd (Ahura Mazda) and the divine principle of
    infinite time Zurvan. Both songs praise Mani in terms that are distinctly Bud-
    dhist, reflecting the years of exile that Mani was said to have spent in India,
    where he was exposed to the word and worship of the Buddha.
    In the Great Song, Mani is described as teacher of what Jesus taught and au-
    thor of a gospel book (probably the Living Gospel), but he is also addressed as
    Buddha Mani. The song alludes to aspects of the three jewels of Buddhism, the
    Buddha (who is Mani), the dharma (or law), and the sangha (or religious
    community). The four Buddhas of the song are most likely four prophets or
    messengers, Seth, Zoroaster, Buddha, and Jesus. After the four comes Mani,
    who attains his own incomparable buddhahood. He (and others) will escape
    the cycle of suffering (samsara) and attain nirvana.

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