Gospel of Thomas: Jesus’s Sayings 4, 5 and 6 and how they Relate across World Traditions  

As we continue this journey, we look  beyond titles and theology to uncover the living essence of Jesus message — reflected not only in the Gospel of Thomas but also across world religions, spiritual traditions, and cultures: love, forgiveness, faith, gratitude, service, and unity — the very principles that open the heart and awaken the divine within us all.  This is the 4,5 and 6 of  114 sayings of Jesus in the Gospel of Thomas with parallel saying across traditions.

Saying 4 — “The man old in days will not hesitate to ask a small child seven days old about the place of life, and he will live. For many who are first will become last, and they will become one and the same.”

This saying portrays the paradox of wisdom and innocence. In Gnostic symbolism, the “child seven days old” represents a consciousness newly born from the waters of creation, still radiant with the memory of the divine. The “old man” symbolizes the soul heavy with experience but still seeking renewal. Jesus overturns the hierarchy of age and authority: true wisdom belongs to the heart restored to innocence.

Across the Traditions

New Testament Parallels:
Matthew 18:3 — “Unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.”
Luke 10:21 — “I thank you, Father… that you have hidden these things from the wise and revealed them to little children.”
Luke 13:30 — “Behold, some are last who will be first, and some are first who will be last.”
The paradox of reversal and rebirth runs throughout the synoptic gospels: the humble perceive what the proud overlook.

Hebrew Scripture: Isaiah 11:6 — “A little child shall lead them.” Innocence becomes the vessel of divine guidance.

Gnostic Insight: Gospel of Philip — “The child of the Spirit is hidden until he becomes the fullness of the Father.” Book of Thomas the Contender — “He who has known himself has already reached the knowledge of the depth.” The newborn soul knows because it remembers.

Hindu Wisdom: Bhagavad Gita 2.69 — “What is night to all beings, the self-controlled one is awake in.” The enlightened perceive with childlike clarity while the world sleeps in habit.

Buddhist Reflection: Udāna 8.3 — “The one who is awakened is like a newborn: undefiled, unattached, seeing freshly.”

Islamic / Sufi Wisdom: Prophet Muhammad — “Heaven lies beneath the feet of your mother.” Rumi — “Become a child again; let the wind of the Spirit carry you.” Birth and humility open paradise.

Jewish Mysticism: Zohar I:11b — “When the soul enters the world, it is crowned with light.” The mystic seeks to recover that first radiance.

Taoist Teaching: Tao Te Ching 55 — “He who is filled with virtue is like a newborn child.” Softness is strength; simplicity is power.

Hermetic / Egyptian Wisdom: Corpus Hermeticum XIII — “To be reborn in Spirit is to become a god among men.” Rebirth is awakening, not chronology.

The Law of One: (Session 36.2) “Spiritual maturity is the return to the simplicity of heart which was before learning.” The wise become children once more.

Christian Mystics: St. Francis of Assisi called this holy simplicity; Meister Eckhart wrote, “The soul must become as a child that knows nothing, wills nothing, owns nothing.”

Universal Reflection

This saying articulates a mystical anthropology: salvation is the restoration of primordial consciousness. The “child” symbolizes the unconditioned mind—what in Hinduism is sat-cit-ānanda, pure being-consciousness-bliss; in Buddhism, tathāgatagarbha, the Buddha-nature; in the Law of One, the undistorted energy of the red and green rays balanced in love. The “old man” represents the self hardened by identification with form, language, and hierarchy.

The phrase “seven days old” evokes the cosmogonic week—a full cycle of creation. The newborn has completed the cosmic round and stands again at day one, the octave of renewal. This is the same symbolism as the eighth day baptism in early Christianity and the phoenix rebirth in Hermetic texts: completion becomes beginning.

Philosophically, Jesus contrasts epistemic accumulation with ontological remembrance. Knowledge acquired through the senses ages; awareness born of Spirit is ever-new. Hence the paradox: the culmination of wisdom is childlike wonder. In Platonic and Kabbalistic frameworks alike, the telos of intellect is not mastery but receptivity—the intellect becomes the mirror of divine spontaneity.

Ethically, the saying redefines greatness as transparency to grace. To “ask the child” is to seek counsel from purity rather than status. This inversion of value—first becoming last—is echoed in mystical paradoxes worldwide: Lao Tzu’s “the soft overcomes the hard,” the Buddha’s “emptiness is form,” and Paul’s “power is made perfect in weakness” (2 Cor 12:9).

In spiritual psychology, the practice implied is regression to essence: shedding roles until the original awareness shines through. Faith returns the soul to trust; forgiveness restores innocence; service expresses the generosity of a child’s heart; love and gratitude keep perception fresh; truth speaks plainly; humility dethrones pride; wisdom becomes play; oneness recognizes all beings as siblings in the divine family; and peace is the quiet joy of beginning again. The end of seeking is renewal—becoming the child who was never apart from the Father.

Meditation

Sit quietly,  Breathe as though you are new to breathing. Let the heart remember its first light. Ask nothing—simply wonder. In that innocence,
the old self is reborn, and life begins again.


Saying 5 — “Recognize what is in your sight, and that which is hidden from you will become plain to you. For there is nothing hidden which will not become manifest.”

This saying reveals a central axiom of the Gospel of Thomas: the divine is not concealed in another world but veiled within this one. Jesus invites the seeker to see truly—to perceive through awakened consciousness rather than conditioned eyes. The statement parallels the Gospel of Philip: “Truth did not come into the world naked, but it came in types and images.” Revelation, therefore, is not an event in time but an unveiling of perception. The light is ever-present; only the eye must be healed.

Across the Traditions

New Testament Parallels:
Luke 8:17 — “For nothing is hidden that will not be disclosed, nor anything secret that will not become known and come to light.”

Matthew 10:26 — “Nothing is concealed that will not be revealed.”

Mark 4:22 — “For there is nothing hidden except to be disclosed.”

The Synoptics echo Thomas’s theme: revelation is inherent to creation. Truth awaits recognition, not invention.

Hebrew Scripture: Isaiah 40:5 — “The glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together.” Prophetic vision perceives the hidden radiance within history.

Gnostic Insight: Gospel of Philip — “What is hidden from you is that which is shown.” Pistis Sophia teaches that ignorance blinds humanity to the luminous reality already surrounding it.

Hindu Wisdom: Bhagavad Gita 11:7 — “Behold My forms in hundreds and thousands, various and divine.” Arjuna’s unveiled sight mirrors the moment of gnosis—when perception becomes revelation.

Buddhist Reflection: Samyutta Nikāya 56.11 — “Just as the sun and moon cannot remain hidden long, so truth cannot remain hidden.” Illumination is the natural destiny of awareness.

Islamic / Sufi Wisdom: Qur’an 57:3 — “He is the First and the Last, the Manifest and the Hidden.” Ibn ʿArabī: “The Real hides Himself in His manifestations and manifests Himself by His hiddenness.”

Jewish Mysticism: Zohar I:11a — “The light that is concealed will one day shine from every corner.” Concealment itself is a mode of divine pedagogy.

Taoist Teaching: Tao Te Ching 16 — “Returning to the root is called stillness; this is the revelation of the eternal.”

Hermetic / Egyptian Wisdom: Emerald Tablet — “All obscurity shall be clear, all division reconciled.” Book of the Dead, Spell 125 portrays the soul’s confession as unveiling: the heart is weighed, and truth is shown.

The Law of One: (Session 4.20) “See the Creator in all things; to the purified eye, nothing is hidden.” Perception evolves with polarity; illumination is simply clearer seeing.

Christian Mystics: St. John of the Cross: “Where there is no love, put love, and you will find light.” Julian of Norwich: “All shall be well, and all shall be revealed in love.”

Universal Reflection

This saying articulates a theology of perception—a doctrine that revelation is not the transmission of new data but the transformation of consciousness. In phenomenological terms, it describes the transition from dualistic to unitive awareness. To “recognize what is in your sight” is to transcend the interpretive filters imposed by fear, ego, and habit, perceiving creation as a transparent medium of the divine.

Within the Gnostic framework, ignorance (agnoia) is the original fall; salvation (sōtēria) is the restoration of sight. The Gospel of Truth describes error as a fog obscuring the Father’s face. When one “recognizes,” the veil of differentiation dissolves, and the knower, the known, and the knowing become one. In the Law of One, this corresponds to the balancing of wisdom and love, the opening of the indigo ray in which the Creator perceives Itself through the seeker.

The same principle appears in the Hebrew prophetic tradition, where glory (kavod) signifies the perceptible presence of God in creation. Isaiah’s vision—“all flesh shall see it together”—suggests that divine revelation is collective, woven into the fabric of being. In Kabbalah, concealment (tzimtzum) is the very act by which God makes revelation possible: the Infinite contracts that the finite may behold.

Eastern traditions interpret the unveiling as a psychological and ontological process. In the Upanishads, ignorance (avidyā) veils the Self; enlightenment (moksha) is the realization that the perceiver and the perceived are Brahman. Buddhism reframes this as the cessation of projection—the end of conceptual overlay through direct seeing (vipassanā). Taoism expresses the same insight in the language of return: clarity arises when the mind mirrors the Tao without distortion.

Ethically, Jesus’ injunction implies that moral vision and metaphysical vision are inseparable. Faith opens the eyes; forgiveness removes the cataract of resentment; service directs perception toward compassion; love illumines relationship; gratitude perceives abundance in what is; truth refines discernment; humility admits mystery; wisdom integrates insight; oneness reveals that subject and object are a single radiance; peace follows as perception’s natural resting state.

Ultimately, this saying discloses that the cosmos itself is a sacrament: a visible sign of an invisible grace. When we “recognize what is in sight,” we are not discovering a hidden world but awakening to the divine transparency of this one. Nothing is ever truly hidden; the veil is woven only of our forgetting.

Meditation

Close your eyes, then open them as if for the first time.

See light not only around things but through them.

Every form is a face of the Infinite.

Nothing is hidden from love’s gaze.


Saying 6 — “His disciples questioned him and said, ‘Do you want us to fast? How shall we pray? Shall we give alms? What diet shall we observe?’ Jesus said, ‘Do not tell lies, and do not do what you hate, for all things are plain in the sight of heaven. For nothing hidden will not become manifest, and nothing covered will remain without being uncovered.’”**

This saying redefines religious practice as a matter of authenticity rather than external form. The disciples inquire about ritual—fasting, prayer, almsgiving, dietary rules—but Jesus points them to truthfulness of being. The sacred does not depend on what one performs outwardly, but on the transparency of inner intention. The Gospel of Thomas thus recasts purity codes into spiritual ethics: the true fast is abstention from falsehood; the true offering is integrity.

Across the Traditions

New Testament Parallels:

Matthew 6:5–6 — “When you pray, do not be like the hypocrites… but go into your room and shut the door.”

Mark 7:6–8 — “This people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me.”

John 4:24 — “God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.”

These canonical echoes affirm that sincerity—truth in the inward being—is the heart of all devotion.

Hebrew Scripture: Psalm 51:6 — “Behold, You desire truth in the inward parts; and in the hidden part You shall make me to know wisdom.” Inner honesty is the ground of wisdom.

Gnostic Insight: Gospel of Philip — “It is not the form of fasting that pleases, but the truth.” Pistis Sophia likewise teaches that hypocrisy darkens the light-body of the soul.

Hindu Wisdom: Mundaka Upanishad 3.1.5 — “Truth alone triumphs, not falsehood.” The Upanishadic seeker finds liberation through alignment of speech, thought, and deed.

Buddhist Reflection: Dhammapada 9–10 — “Better than a thousand hollow words is one word that brings peace.” Right speech is silence filled with sincerity.

Islamic / Sufi Wisdom: Qur’an 2:177 — “Righteousness is not turning your face east or west, but faith, charity, and keeping promises.” Al-Ghazālī: “The tongue of truth is the heart’s light.”

Jewish Mysticism: Zohar III:15b — “The tongue of truth endures; the lying tongue is dust.” Cosmic order depends on truthful alignment.

Taoist Teaching: Tao Te Ching 23 — “He who follows the Tao is trustworthy.” Simplicity of speech mirrors harmony with the Way.

Hermetic / Egyptian Wisdom: Book of the Dead, Spell 125 — The deceased declares, “I have not told lies, I have not acted deceitfully.” Truth (Maat) is both moral virtue and cosmic principle.

The Law of One: (Session 5.2) “Integrity of thought, word, and action is the key to crystallization.” Spiritual light coheres when distortion ends.

Christian Mystics: The Cloud of Unknowing counsels: “God cannot be grasped by cunning, only by simplicity.” St. Teresa of Ávila writes, “The most humble prayer is to be what we say.”

Universal Reflection

This saying expresses a spiritual phenomenology of truth—truth not as propositional accuracy but as ontological transparency. In mystical theology, this transparency is the medium of divine presence: God shines through the soul proportionate to its purity of intention.

From a Gnostic perspective, the central obstacle to salvation is duplication: the inner and outer are divided. To “lie” or “do what you hate” is to create dissonance between the essential self (the divine spark) and the persona that acts in the world. Redemption is the restoration of unity between being and doing. This principle anticipates what modern psychology calls congruence: the alignment of inner experience, expression, and action.

Within the Hebrew and Christian traditions, this inner alignment is emunah—faith as fidelity, not belief. Psalm 51:6 and John 4:24 locate divine encounter in inward sincerity rather than external observance. Fasting, prayer, and charity are valid only when animated by love. The Sermon on the Mount parallels this Thomasine ethic: “When you fast, anoint your head… that your Father who sees in secret may reward you.” Secrecy here means interiority.

In the Eastern philosophies, this same structure is called satya (truth) and ahimsa (non-violence): integrity of thought and word creates harmony between self and cosmos. In Taoism, truthfulness flows naturally from non-contrivance; in Buddhism, Right Speech arises spontaneously when delusion ceases. In the Law of One, this state is crystallization—when the self’s light no longer fractures under contradiction.

Theologically, the saying also affirms cosmic transparency: “All things are plain in the sight of heaven.” The moral life is not merely observed by God; it is a mode of divine self-disclosure. To live truthfully is to participate in divine clarity; to lie is to obscure the divine image within. Hence “nothing hidden will remain without being uncovered”—truth unveils itself inevitably because truth is reality’s structure.

This vision converges ethical and mystical practice: faith trusts reality enough to be honest; forgiveness restores integrity after distortion; service expresses love in action; love and gratitude keep the heart transparent; truth becomes the soul’s native speech; humility protects sincerity from pride; wisdom knows that falseness fragments consciousness; oneness integrates all parts of the self; and peace follows when there is nothing left to conceal. Authenticity thus becomes the liturgy of the awakened soul—the prayer without words.

Meditation

Speak simply.

Do only what rings true.

Let your inner word and outer act

be one clear tone.

In such harmony,

Heaven hears itself in you.

Next week, we will explore the next three sayings, continuing this journey through the inner Kingdom — a map of universal awakening.


Comments

3 responses to “Gospel of Thomas: Jesus’s Sayings 4, 5 and 6 and how they Relate across World Traditions  ”

  1. HAROLD BIRKENHEAD Avatar
    HAROLD BIRKENHEAD

    From my upcoming latest book and the section on the Gospel of Thomas Saying 4
    Jesus said: “The person old in days will not hesitate to ask a little child seven days old about the place of life, and he will live. For many who are first will become last, and they will become one and the same.” — Gospel of Thomas
    Canonical Parallels
    This echoes Jesus’ words in Matthew 18:3 — “Unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven,” and also his teaching in Mark 10:31 — “But many who are first will be last, and the last first.” The Thomas version weaves these ideas together, suggesting that wisdom and newness of being are not the privilege of age, but of innocence and openness.

    Mystical Interpretation
    The “child seven days old” symbolizes the soul in its purest state — untouched by conditioning, still close to the divine Source from which it came. Seven days signify completion — the fullness of creation — and yet the infant remains new, whole, and unspoiled. To “ask the child” is to turn inward and listen to that place within which still remembers eternity.

    The “old person” represents the mind burdened by experience, dogma, or worldly knowledge. Yet if this elder — the rational self — can humble itself before the unknowing innocence of the inner child, true life is found. In that surrender, one becomes whole, healed of separation between wisdom and wonder.

    The reversal — “the first will become last” — speaks to the dissolving of worldly hierarchies in the Kingdom. When the self’s pride and learned superiority fall away, what remains is unity: “they will become one and the same.” It is the merging of opposites — old and young, learned and innocent, mind and spirit — into a single awareness.

    The Invitation
    Jesus invites us to rediscover that childlike awareness within — the quiet purity that sees without judgment and receives without fear. Let the intellect bow to innocence; let the learned self become a student again. In doing so, you return to the “place of life,” the still center of the soul. The Kingdom is not reached by accumulation, but by unlearning — by remembering what was once known in simplicity and love.

    Saying 5
    Jesus said:

    “Know what is before your face, and what is hidden from you will be revealed to you. For there is nothing hidden that will not be made manifest.” — Gospel of Thomas
    Canonical Parallels
    This saying parallels Luke 8:17 and Mark 4:22: “For nothing is hidden that will not be disclosed, nor is anything secret that will not become known and come to light.” In those passages, Jesus speaks of divine truth as something that inevitably emerges — light cannot be concealed. In Thomas, however, the focus is more inward: revelation arises through awareness, not time.

    Mystical Interpretation
    To “know what is before your face” means to awaken to the present moment — to see reality as it is, unfiltered by fear, habit, or expectation. The sacred is always here, “before your face,” but we fail to perceive it because our minds dwell in past and future. Jesus teaches that when we truly see what is, the hidden — the eternal dimension beneath appearances — is unveiled.

    The “hidden” is not far away; it is the divine consciousness veiled by distraction. When the mind becomes clear, the veil lifts, and what once seemed ordinary is revealed as radiant with Presence. This is not a promise of future revelation but an immediate possibility — enlightenment born of attention.

    Everything concealed — in yourself and in the world — will eventually be brought into light. The spiritual journey is the uncovering of what has always been true: that the Kingdom, the Christ within, was never absent, only unseen.

    The Invitation
    Jesus calls you to awareness — to open your eyes to what is before you, now. The divine is not found in distant heavens but in the texture of each moment, in the breath, in the gaze of another, in silence itself. Begin by simply noticing. When you see clearly, all that was hidden — peace, love, the eternal light within — reveals itself naturally.

    Saying 6
    Jesus said:
    “His disciples questioned him and said to him, ‘Do you want us to fast? And how should we pray? Should we give alms? And what diet should we observe?’
    Jesus said: ‘Do not lie, and do not do what you hate, for all things are plain in the sight of heaven. For nothing hidden will not be revealed, and nothing covered will remain without being uncovered.’”
    — Gospel of Thomas

    Canonical Parallels
    This saying echoes Matthew 6, where Jesus teaches about fasting, prayer, and almsgiving in secret — emphasizing sincerity over ritual display. The final words also reflect Luke 12:2, “There is nothing covered that will not be revealed, nor hidden that will not be known.”

    Mystical Interpretation
    The disciples ask for external rules — fasting, prayer, charity — the visible marks of devotion. But Jesus redirects them inward. Spiritual life is not founded on outward observance but on inner truth. “Do not lie” and “do not do what you hate” call for alignment between the inner and outer self. Hypocrisy divides the soul; truthfulness unites it.

    “All things are plain in the sight of heaven” reminds us that nothing can be hidden from divine awareness. There is no private corner of consciousness — every thought and motive is already seen. The work of the soul, then, is not to impress God but to live transparently before the divine gaze — to let inner and outer life harmonize.

    Mystically, this saying teaches that revelation begins with integrity. When we cease pretending, when we live in truth — even uncomfortable truth — the veils fall away. Heaven’s clarity shines through, and what is hidden in us becomes light.

    The Invitation
    Let your spiritual practice begin not with ritual but with honesty. Ask yourself: Where am I pretending? What do I continue to do that I secretly resent or fear? The path of Christ is the path of authenticity — not performance. Live so that your inner being and outer actions speak with one voice. Then nothing will need to be uncovered, for your life itself will be the revelation.

    1. Very insightful and we are on the same path. When do think you will be publishing your book?

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