In the book "In Search of the Divine" by Yulia Nikolaevna Danzas (1879 - 1942), signed by the pseudonym Yuri Nikolaev, the almost inseparable is combined — scientific knowledge and a vision of the mystical dimension of life, passionate dedication to the subject of study and personal engagement in the realm of lofty ideas. Against the general backdrop of the Russian intelligentsia's interest in mystical teachings at the end of the 19th — beginning of the 20th centuries, the work stands out as a unique manifesto of audacious spiritual and philosophical search. Yulia Danzas raises the question of whether Gnosticism is a historical coincidence or an accusatory shadow cast upon early Christianity, or whether it is, in fact, an eternal archetype pulsating in the depths of the human spirit. The book "In Search of the Divine" firmly and steadily leads us to the mystery of good and evil, doing so delicately and subtly, through the heat of Russian mystical intuition, where Light and Darkness intertwine in an inseparable unity and open the gates to another dimension of thought, where gnosis becomes wisdom and destiny. The author approaches the living experience of Gnosticism that can be experienced "here and now," transforming the historical study of Gnostic sects of the 1st - 2nd centuries into a spiritual journey. The problem of Gnosticism is too complex to reduce it to a primitive political-ideological polemic or to simply dismiss it as a long-ago and irreversibly rejected heresy, which will not bring us any closer to genuine understanding. And here the book "In Search of the Divine" presents extraordinarily valuable research, in which detailed exposition of the subject is accompanied by profound and carefully balanced commentary, insightful intuitions, and a sincere desire to understand Gnosticism — this extreme, extravagant, paradoxical, and painful yet undoubtedly remarkable and captivating manifestation of humanity's spiritual culture. The book is addressed to philosophers, religious scholars, theologians, philologists, and represents an enlightening read for interested, erudite readers.