El Evangelio Segun Luzbel | Direct
Where Christianity glorifies faith and submission (the kenosis of Christ), this gospel glorifies individuation and defiance. The unforgivable sin in Luzbel is not pride, but servility. The angels who refused to bow to Adam are heroes; the ones who remained silent are the damned. A famous verse from one of its fragments states: “Do not love the chain, even if the chain is gilded with paradise. Love the hand that breaks it.”
Influenced heavily by Gnosticism—particularly the Sethian belief that the God of the Old Testament (Yaldabaoth) is a jealous, flawed, and ignorant creator—the gospel re-casts Lucifer not as a tempter, but as a liberator. The Serpent in Eden is praised for offering knowledge ( gnosis ), not condemned for causing the Fall. The gospel’s opening might read: “Blessed is the one who bit the fruit of discernment, for he became a god, knowing light from shadow.” El Evangelio segun Luzbel
Ultimately, El Evangelio según Luzbel functions best as a —a way for the Western imagination, saturated in two millennia of Christian ethics, to give voice to the repressed question: What if the serpent was right? A famous verse from one of its fragments
What makes the text compelling—and unsettling—is its refusal to play by the rules of traditional dissent. Most atheists and skeptics simply deny the divine. This gospel, by contrast, accepts the reality of the biblical narrative and then . It is not an argument against religion; it is a counter-liturgy. The gospel’s opening might read: “Blessed is the