Pleroma
Pronunciation
- US IPA: /pləˈɹoʊmə/
Alternative forms
Origin
From Late Latin pleroma, from Ancient Greek πλήÏωμα (plÄ“rÅma, "a filling up, fullness").
Full definition of pleroma
Noun
pleroma
(uncountable)- (chiefly theology) A state of perfect fullness, especially of God's being.
- (gnosticism) The spiritual universe seen in terms of the full totality of the powers and essence of God.
- 1974, Lawrence Durrell, Monsieur, Faber & Faber 1992, p. 141:There is a way to comprehend the gnostic's giant onion of a world, the concentric circles, with the Pleroma beckoning there, the white heart of light, the source of that primal vision which for a second or two can recapture paradise.