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ARTICLES RELATED TO Divine Dictionary | |
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New Age
Spirituality Dictionary on First Presleyterian Church of Elvis the Divine
First Presleyterian Church of Elvis the Divine Begun in 1988 in Bethelehem, PA: as a marketing ploy/parody by Farndu and Karl Edwards, the church spoofs traditional religions and cults by ÒworshippingÓ Elvis Presley in weekly services held on the Internet and the campus chapel of Lehigh University in Bethlehem, PA. The parody was taken seriously by many.
(See
also: First Presleyterian Church of Elvis the Divine ,
New Age Spirituality, Body Mind and Soul)
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Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Divine incarnation
divine incarnation: The concept of avatara. The Supreme Being's (or other Mahadeva's) taking of human birth, generally to reestablish dharma. This doctrine is important to several Hindu sects, notably Vaishnavism, but not held by most Saivites. See: avatara, avatar, Vaishnavism.
(See
also: Divine incarnation ,
Hinduism,
Body Mind and Soul)
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See
also these related archives:
Cross-Over exercise, Crude herb moxibustion, Cruise Ship Spa, Cryotherapy, Crystal Healing, Crystal healing, Crystal Therapeutics, Crystal Therapy, Crystledyne Therapy, Cupping, Curanderismo, Curative eurhythmy, Cuy ritual, Cybex, Cymatic therapy, Cymatics, Dance & Movement Therapy, Dancercise, Daniel's Diet, Daoyin, Day Spa, Dayan Qigong, De la Warr system, Dead Sea Mud Treatment, Deep Emotional Breathwork, Deep Emotional Release Bodywork, Deep Memory Process, Deep Muscle Massage, Deep Muscle Massage / Primmer Deep Muscle Therapy, Deep Tissue Bodywork, Deep Tissue Massage, Degriefing, DeHypnotherapy, Depossession, Descending Sun, Destination Spa, Detoxification, Detoxification Therapy, Developmental Manual Therapy, Dhatus, Diagnosis, Diagnosis Process, Diagnostic acupressure, Diamond Approach, Diamond method, Dian xue, Dianetics, Diathermy, Didgeridoo vibrational healing, Diet #7, Diet Planning, Dietics, Dimensional clearing, Dinacharya, Direct Bi-Digital O-Ring Test Method, Direct Command, Direct healing, Direct image substitution, Direct moxabustion, Directed Esoteric Toning, Distant Healing, Distant pranic healing, Distant pulse diagnosis, Divine Healing from Japan, Divine therapy, Divine will healing, Dna Activation And Healing, Dna Repatterning, Do-in, Do-In, Dolphin Therapy, Dolphin-assisted therapy, Dong gong, Doshas, Doshic Imbalances, Double Circle, Double Dosha Body Types, Dowsing, Dph, Dr Lynch's Holistic Self-Health Program, Dragon Style, Drama, Dream Changing, Dream counseling, Dream Learning, Dreamwork, Drisana, Drown radio therapy, Dulse Scrub, Dynamic Self Inquiry, Dynamic Spinal Therapy
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Theosophy
Occultism Mysticism Dictionary on Ego
A
Theosophical definition of Ego :
Ego (Latin) A word meaning "I." In theosophical writings the ego is that which says "I am I" - indirect or reflected consciousness, consciousness reflected back upon itself as it were, and thus recognizing its own mayavi existence as a "separate" entity. On this fact is based the one genuine "heresy" that occultism recognizes: the heresy of separateness. The seat of the human ego is the intermediate duad - manas-kama: part aspiring upwards, which is the reincarnating ego; and part attracted below, which is the ordinary or astral human ego. The consciousness is immortal in the reincarnating ego, and temporary or mortal in the lower or astral human ego. Consider the hierarchy of the human being's constitution to grow from the immanent Self: this last is the seed of egoity on the seven (or perhaps better, six) planes of matter or manifestation. On each one of these seven planes (or six), the immanent Self or paramatman develops or evolves a sheath or garment, the upper ones spun of spirit, and the lower ones spun of "shadow" or matter. Now each such sheath or garment is a "soul"; and between the self and such a soul - any soul - is the ego. Thus atman is the divine monad, giving birth to the divine ego, which latter evolves forth the monadic envelope or divine soul; jivatman, the spiritual monad, has its child which is the spiritual ego, which in turn evolves forth the spiritual soul or individual; and the combination of these three considered as a unit is buddhi; bhutatman, the human ego - the higher human soul, including the lower buddhi and higher manas; pranatman, the personal ego - the lower human soul, or man. It includes manas, kama, and prana; and finally the beast ego - the vital-astral soul: kama and prana.
See
also: Ego ,
Mysticism,
Body Mind and Soul
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Theosophy
Occultism Mysticism Dictionary on Brahma
A
Theosophical definition of Brahma :
Brahma (Sanskrit) A word of which the root, brih, means "expansion." It stands for the spiritual energy-consciousness side of our solar universe, i.e., our solar system, and the Egg of Brahma is that solar system. A Day of Brahma or a maha-manvantara is composed of seven rounds, a period of 4,320,000,000 terrestrial years; this period is also called a kalpa. A Night of Brahma, the planetary rest period, which is also called the parinirvanic period, is of equal length. Seven Days of Brahma make one solar kalpa; or, in other words, seven planetary cycles, each cycle consisting of seven rounds (or seven planetary manvantaras), form one solar manvantara. One Year of Brahma consists of 360 Divine Days, each day being the duration of a planet's life, i.e., of a planetary chain of seven globes. The Life of Brahma (or the life of the universal system) consists of one hundred Divine Years, i.e., 4,320,000,000 years times 36,000 x 2. The Life of Brahma is half ended: that is, fifty of his years are gone - a period of 155,520,000,000,000 of our years have passed away since our solar system, with its sun, first began its manvantaric course. There remain, therefore, fifty more such Years of Brahma before the system sinks into rest or pralaya. As only half of the evolutionary journey is accomplished, we are, therefore, at the bottom of the kosmic cycle, i.e., on the lowest plane.
See
also: Brahma ,
Mysticism,
Body Mind and Soul
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Kundalini DictionaryKundalini Dictionary
Dictionary over terms related
to kundalini and kundalini awakening. Please note that words in grey like
" Kundalini " are links to archives with related articles.
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Theosophy
Occultism Mysticism Dictionary on Divine Soul
A
Theosophical definition of Divine Soul :
Divine Soul In occultism the divine soul is the garment of the divine ego, as the divine ego is the garment or child of the divine monad. The divine monad we may call the inner god, and this would mean that the divine ego, its offspring, is the inner Buddha, or the inner Christ; and hence the divine soul is the expression of the inner Buddha or of the inner Christ in manifestation on earth as the manushya-buddha or christ-man. It should be stated here that of the several monads which in their combination form the entire septenary constitution of man each such monad has its own ego-child, and this latter has its own soul. It is this combination, mystic, wonderful, mysterious, which makes of man the complex entity he is, and which entitles him to the term which the occultism of the archaic ages has always given to him: the microcosm, a reflection or copy in the small of the macrocosm or kosmic entity.
See
also: Divine Soul ,
Mysticism,
Body Mind and Soul
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New Age
Spiritual Dictionary on Divine Light
Divine Light Celestial radiance perceived by the Third Eye; eternal effulgence within all beings brighter than the Sun, realized by turning away from the physical senses and looking within and whose mystical union confers truth, consciousness, and bliss
(See
also: Divine Light ,
Body
Mind and Soul)
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Spiritual Theosophical
Dictionary on
Rabbis
Rabbis (Hebrew, Jewish). Originally teachers of the Secret Mysteries, the Qabbalah; later, every Levite of the priestly caste became a teacher and a Rabbin. (See the series of Kabbalistic Rabbis by w.w.w.) 1 Rabbi Abulafia of Saragossa born in 1240, formed a school of Kabbalah named after him; his chief works were The Seven Paths of the Law and The Epistle to Rabbi Solomon. 2 Rabbi Akiba. Author of a famous Kabbalistic work, the "Alphabet of R.A.", which treats every letter as a symbol of an idea and an emblem of some sentiment; the Book of Enoch was originally a portion of this work, which appeared at the close of the eighth century. It was not purely a Kabbalistic treatise. 3 Rabbi Azariel ben Menachem (A.D. 1160). The author of the Commentary on the Ten Sephiroth, which is the oldest purely Kabbalistic work extant, setting aside the Sepher Yetzirah, which although older, is not concerned with the Kabbalistic Sephiroth. He was the pupil of Isaac the Blind, who is the reputed father of the European Kabbalah, and he was the teacher of the equally famous R. Moses Nachmanides. 4 Rabbi Moses Botarel (1480). Author of a famous commentary on the Sepher Yetzirah; he taught that by ascetic life and the use of invocations, a man’s dreams might be made prophetic. 5 Rabbi Chajim Vital (1600) ( The great exponent of the Kabbalah as taught R. Isaac Loria: author of one of the most famous works, Otz Chiim, or Tree of Life; from this Knorr von Rosenroth has taken the Book on the Rashith ha Gilgalim, revolutions of souls, or scheme of reincarnations. 6 Rabbi Ibn Gebirol. A famous Hebrew Rabbi, author of the hymn Kether Malchuth, or Royal Diadem, which appeared about 1050; it is a beautiful poem, embodying the cosmic doctrines of Aristotle, and it even now forms part of the Jewish special service for the evening preceding the great annual Day of Atonement (See Ginsburg and Sachs on the Religious Poetry of the Spanish Jews). This author is also known as Avicebron. 7 Rabbi Gikatilla. A distinguished Kabbalist who flourished about 1300: he wrote the famous books, The Garden of Nuts, The Gate to the Vowel Points, The mystery of the shining Metal, and The Gates of Righteousness. He laid especial stress on the use of Gematria, Notaricon and Temura. 8 Rabbi Isaac the Blind of Posquiero. The first who publicly taught in Europe, about A.D. 1200, the Theosophic doctrines of the Kabbalah. 9 Rabbi Loria (also written Luria, and also named Ari from his initials). Founded a school of the Kabbalah circa 1560. He did not write any works, but his disciples treasured up his teachings, and R. Chajim Vital published them. 10 Rabbi Moses Cordovero (A.D.1550). The author of several Kabbalistic works of a wide reputation, viz., A Sweet Light, The Book of Retirement, and The Garden of Pomegranates; this latter can be read in Latin in Knorr von Rosenroth’s Kabbalah Denudata, entitled Tractatus de Animo, ex libro Pardes Rimmonim. Cordovero is notable for an adherence to the strictly metaphysical part, ignoring the wonder-working branch which Rabbi Sabbatai Zevi practised, and almost perished in the pursuit of. 11 Rabbi Moses de Leon (circa 1290 A,D.). The editor and first publisher of the Zohar, or "Splendour", the most famous of all the Kabbalistic volumes, and almost the only one of which any large part has been translated into English. This Zohar is asserted to be in the main the production of the still more famous Rabbi Simon ben Jochai, who lived in the reign of the Emperor Titus. 12 Rabbi Moses Maimonides (died 1304). A famous Hebrew Rabbi and author, who condemned the use of charms and amulets, and objected to the Kabbalistic use of the divine names. 13 Rabbi Sabbatai Zevi (born 1641). A very famous Kabbalist, who passing beyond the dogma became of great reputation as a thaumaturgist, working wonders by the divine names. Later in life he claimed Messiahship and fell into the hands of the Sultan Mohammed IV. of Turkey, and would have been murdered, but saved his life by adopting the Mohammedan religion. (See Jost on Judaism and its Sects.) 14 Rabbi Simon ben Jochai (circa A.D. 70-80). It is round this name that cluster the mystery and poetry of the origin of the Kabbalah as a gift of the deity to mankind. Tradition has it that the Kabbalah was a divine theosophy first taught by God to a company of angels, and that some glimpses of its perfection were conferred upon Adam; that the wisdom passed from him unto Noah; thence to Abraham, from whom the Egyptians of his era learned a portion of the doctrine. Moses derived a partial initiation from the land of his birth, and this was perfected by direct communications with the deity. From Moses it passed to the seventy elders of the Jewish nation, and from them the theosophic scheme was handed from generation to generation; David and Solomon especially became masters of this concealed doctrine. No attempt, the legends tell us, was made to commit the sacred knowledge to writing until the time of the destruction of the second Temple by Titus, when Rabbi Simon ben Jochai, escaping from the besieged Jerusalem, concealed himself in a cave, where he remained for twelve years. Here he, a Kabbalist already, was further instructed by the prophet Elias. Here Simon taught his disciples, and his chief pupils, Rabbi Eliezer and Rabbi Abba, committed to writing those teachings which in later ages became known as the Zohar, and were certainly published afresh in Spain by Rabbi Moses de Leon, about 1280. A fierce contest has raged for centuries between the learned Rabbis of Europe around the origin of the legend, and it seems quite hopeless to expect ever to arrive at an accurate decision as to what portion of the Zohar, if any, is as old as Simon ben Jochai. (See "Zohar".)
(See also: Rabbis , Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul,
Spiritual Dictionary,)
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Alternative
Health Dictionary on Divine Healing from Japan
Divine Healing from Japan (Sazuke Healing): Specialty of Tenrikyo. Sazuke Healing is a form of hands on healing practiced by Prof. Tadamasa Fukaya (a Tenrikyo reverend) and promoted by the Tenri Cultural Institute, in New York City. In his lecture on the Joyous Life, Fukaya stated that human bodies are loans from God the Parent and that, therefore, we should treat them according to the will of God the Parent (e.g., by not becoming infatuated and not indulging carnal desires).
(See
also: Divine Healing from Japan ,
Body
Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
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Wiccan Pagan Dictionary on DIVINE LIGHT
DIVINE LIGHT - celestial radiance perceived by the third eye, eternal effulgence within all beings brighter than the Sun, realized by turning away from the physical senses and looking within and whose mystical union confers truth, consciousness and bliss.
(See also:
DIVINE LIGHT , Wiccan
Pagan, Paganism,
Pagan Dictionary)
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Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Divine Rulers
Divine Rulers The nations of antiquity, such as the Egyptians, Chaldeans, and Greeks, had traditions of early racial divine rulers and spiritual dynasties which preceded their human kings. In the later races, these rulers stood for the dynasties of the gods, rishis, pitris, manus, etc., who are said in theosophy to have incarnated themselves in the third root-race on this globe during our present round, and to be born again and again as spiritual teachers in succeeding cycles for the instruction of nations, among whom they appear from time to time.
(See also: Divine Rulers , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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Alternative
Health Dictionary on Divine will healing
divine will healing: Derivative of the teachings of Paramahansa Yogananda (see Kriya Yoga). Its principle is that, by aligning one's will with divine will, one can transmit or project divine healing light.
(See
also: Divine will healing ,
Body
Mind and Soul, Alternative Health, Alternative Health Dictionary)
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Hindu -
Hinduism Dictionary on Chakra
chakra: (Sanskrit) "Wheel." Any of the nerve plexes or centers of force and consciousness located within the inner bodies of man. In the physical body there are corresponding nerve plexuses, ganglia and glands. The seven principal chakras can be seen psychically as colorful, multi-petaled wheels or lotuses. They are situated along the spinal cord from the base to the cranial chamber. Additionally, seven chakras, barely visible, exist below the spine. They are seats of instinctive consciousness, the origin of jealousy, hatred, envy, guilt, sorrow, etc. They constitute the lower or hellish world, called Naraka or patala. Thus, there are 14 major chakras in all. The seven upper chakras, from lowest to highest, are: 1) muladhara chakra (base of spine): memory, time and space; 2) svadhishthana chakra (below navel): reason; 3) manipura chakra (solar plexus): willpower; 4) anahata chakra (heart center): direct cognition; 5) vishuddha chakra (throat): divine love; 6) ajna chakra (third eye): divine sight; 7) sahasrara chakra (crown of head): illumination, Godliness. The seven lower chakras, from highest to lowest, are 1) atala chakra (hips): fear and lust; 2) vitala chakra (thighs): raging anger; 3) sutala chakra (knees): retaliatory jealousy; 4) talatala chakra (calves): prolonged mental confusion; 5) rasatala chakra (ankles): selfishness; 6) mahatala chakra (feet): absence of conscience; 7) patala chakra (located in the soles of the feet): murder and malice. See: pradakshina, Naraka, chakra, chakras
(See
also: Chakra ,
Hinduism,
Body Mind and Soul)
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