Abstract
Research on Sebastian Franck (1499 – 1543) has so far mainly focused on the topics “Sebastian
Franck as a historian” or “Sebastian Franck as a critic of theology,” while Gnosticism in the
philosophy of the radical reformer has received less attention. Since the beginning of the new
millennium, the interest in a certain movement of Gnosticism, namely Hermeticism, has
increased however. This paper examines the question of the parallels in content between Gnostic
representatives such as the Carpocratians, the Ebionites, and Sebastian Franck. Irenaeus of Lyon
is used as a source for the Carpocratians and the Ebionites. Substantial similarities can be found
in the fragmentary reports of Irenaeus on the Carpocratians and Ebionites and the teachings of
Franck. The parallels between the Carpocratians and Franck can be identified in the concept of
the Divine, the tripartite nature of the soul, and the doctrine of salvation. Unlike orthodox
Christianity, both Franck and the Carpocratians believed in the self-salvation of people from
their sins. Through the discovery of their spirit, all people can access the abilities that Yeshua
had in his incarnation. The rejection of both the doctrine of original sin and the doctrine of grace
is what Franck has in common with the Ebionites. However, the doctrine of grace would not
make any sense for the Carpocratians either, as, according to their conviction, the soul is
redeemed by the enlightenment of the spirit.