Marcion was a Church leader from Sinope (present-day Turkey), who preached 
in Rome around 150 CE,[158] but was expelled and started his own 
congregation, which spread throughout the Mediterranean. He rejected the 
Old Testament, and followed a limited Christian canon, which included only 
a redacted version of Luke, and ten edited letters of Paul.[159] Some 
scholars do not consider him to be a gnostic,[160][note 27] but his 
teachings clearly resemble some Gnostic teachings.[158] He preached a 
radical difference between the God of the Old Testament, the Demiurge, the 
"evil creator of the material universe", and the highest God, the "loving, 
spiritual God who is the father of Jesus", who had sent Jesus to the earth 
to free mankind from the tyranny of the Jewish Law.[158][10] Like the 
Gnostics, Marcion argued that Jesus was essentially a divine spirit 
appearing to men in the shape of a human form, and not someone in a true 
physical body.[161] Marcion held that the heavenly Father (the father of 
Jesus Christ) was an utterly alien god; he had no part in making the world, 
nor any connection with it.[161]

Islam also integrated traces of an entity given authority over the lower 
world in some early writings: Iblis is regarded by some Sufis as the owner 
of this world, and humans must avoid the treasures of this world, since 
they would belong to him.[173] In the Isma'ili Shia work *Umm al Kitab*, 
Azazil's role resembles whose of the Gnostic demiurge.[174] Like the 
demiurge, he is endowed with the ability to create his own world and seeks 
to imprison humans in the material world, but here, his power is limited 
and depends on the higher God.[175] Such Gnostic anthropogenic[*clarification 
needed*] can be found frequently among Isma'ili traditions.[176] In fact, 
Ismailism has been often criticised as non-Islamic.[*citation needed*] 
Ghazali characterized them as a group who are outwardly Shias but were 
actually adherence of a dualistic and philosophical religion. Further 
traces of Gnostic ideas can be found in Sufi anthropogenic[*clarification 
needed*].[177] Like the gnostic conception of human beings imprisoned in 
matter, Sufi traditions acknowledge that the human soul is an accomplice of 
the material world and subject to bodily desires similar to the way 
archontic spheres envelop the pneuma.[178] The pneuma (spirit) must 
therefore gain victory over the lower and material-bound psyche (soul or 
anima), to overcome its animal nature. A human being captured by its animal 
desires, mistakenly claims autonomy and independence from the "higher God", 
thus resembling the lower deity in classical gnostic traditions. However, 
since the goal is not to abandon the created world, but just to free 
oneself from ones own lower desires, it can be disputed whether this can 
still be Gnostic, but rather a completion of the message of Muhammad.[171] 
It seems that Gnostic ideas were an influential part of early Islamic 
development but later lost its influence. However the Gnostic light 
metaphorics and the idea of unity of existence still prevailed in later 
Islamic thought.[169]
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