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Dream Dictionary revelations

A Wisdom Archive on Dream Dictionary revelations

Dream Dictionary revelations

A selection of articles related to Dream Dictionary revelations

We recommend this article: Dream Dictionary revelations - 1, and also this: Dream Dictionary revelations - 2.
Dream Dictionary revelations

ARTICLES RELATED TO Dream Dictionary revelations

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Thought

Thought In The Secret Doctrine, used in senses quite different from the ordinary: abstract absolute thought, of which mind is a concrete manifestation, or of which voice or the Logos is a manifestation. Pymander is quoted as saying that passive or unconscious mind generates active idea -- and active idea here is the same as the activity of the Logos. Thought, impressed on the astral light, exists in eternity, whether active or passive.

 

Kriyasakti, one of the innate human powers, is the power which thought has of expressing itself analogically in action. Thoughts are imbodied elemental energies. The human brain does not create them, it only transmits them, because the human brain is but the vehicle transmitting intellectual, mental, and emotional energy from the monadic center within, and this monadic center itself originates thought.

 

(See also: Thought , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body mind and Soul)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Crucifix

Crucifix (BCW).

 

See also CROSS

 

(See also: Crucifix , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Theosophy Dictionary on Adisesha

Adisesha (Sanskrit) (from adi first + sesha from the verbal root sish to leave remainders)

 

Primeval residue; the mythological thousand-headed serpent (naga) upon which Vishnu "sleeps" during the pralayas (intervals between manifestations); also represented as supporting the seven patalas (hells) with the seven regions above them and therefore the entire world (VP 2:5). More often called simply Sesha; or Ananta, infinite; or Ananta-sesha.

 

As sesha means "remainder," "what is left over," the main significance is that during the pralayas Vishnu, representing the cosmic divinity, is conceived as sleeping upon the substance of a spiritual character remaining over after the dissolution of the worlds. Thus Adisesha (primeval substance or remainder) is the cosmic spatial ocean of consciousness-substance left over from the previous cosmic manvantara which acts as the mother-substance or chaos from and in which the future worlds of manifestation will be born when pralaya ends.

 

See also ANANTA; ANANTA-SESHA

 

(See also: Adisesha , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Goat

Goat The animal and its horns were symbols of generation, regeneragtion, reproductive power, strength, and might. The Hebrew scapegoat, Azazel, was originally a Promethean figure, head of the six men-spirits (ishim) who came to instruct mankind. Its horns are seen on Pan, the Greek nature god; and on Capricorn, the goat-dolphin; etc. When the original meaning of the symbol was misunderstood, the goat was associated with evil -- the devil, witches' sabbath, and the scapegoat.

 

See also AMELTHEIA; AZEZEL; BAPHOMET; HORNS (SD)

 

(See also: Goat , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Dawn

Dawn Frequently denotes the beginning of a new cycle, of greater or less extent. Venus-Lucifer is called the luminous son of morning or of manvantaric dawn; and the builders are the luminous sons of manvantaric dawn.

 

In Greek mythology Apollo (the sun) has two daughters, Hilaira and Phoebe (evening twilight and dawn); Eos is the dawn, as is Aurora in Latin. In Hindu mythology, the wife of Surya (the sun) is Ushas (dawn), and she is also his mother. In the Vishnu-Purana, Brahma, for purposes of world formation, assumes four bodies -- dawn, night, day, and evening twilight.

 

Man is said to come from the body of dawn, for dawn signifies light, the intelligence of the intellect of the universe often called mahat, the ultimate progenitor, and indeed the final cosmic goal, of the Hierarchy of Light of which the human hierarchy is a small portion.

 

See also SANDHI

 

(See also: Dawn , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Halo

Halo The radiance streaming from the head of a holy person.

 

See also AUREOLE.

 

(See also: Halo , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Tortoise

Tortoise In China, a favorite symbol, and Confucius regarded it as sacred; in India the same veneration is given to it, for in one of the preceding manvantaras Vishnu is said in the Puranas to have taken the form of a tortoise to uphold the earth and its beings; his second avatara is called the Tortoise or Kurma avatara.

 

The Satapatha-Brahmana tells of the collective creator, Prajapati, taking the form of a tortoise to create offspring, and it states that the name of one of the celebrated rishis, Kasyapa, means a tortoise. Also in Hindu astronomy the tortoise is prominent, for the host of stars and constellations are regarded as being placed on a rotating belt in the figure of a sisumara or tortoise.

 

(See also: Tortoise , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body mind and Soul)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Mana

Mana (Sanskrit) [from the verbal root man to think]

 

Opinion, conception, idea; also self-conceit, arrogance, pride (especially in the compound aham-mana). In Buddhism, one of the six evil feelings or one of the ten fetters to be discarded. As a neuter noun, consideration, respect, honor. In astrology the name of the tenth mansion or house.

 

Mana [from the verbal root ma to measure] as a masculine noun means dwelling, building, house; as a neuter noun, measuring, dimension, computation as of time; in philosophy, proof, demonstration.

 

See also PRAMANA

 

(See also: Mana , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Trividya

Trividya (Sanskrit) [from tri three + vidya knowledge, science]

 

The three knowledges or sciences; the three fundamental axioms in mysticism: "(a) the impermanency of all existence, or Anityata; (b) suffering and misery of all that lives and is, or Dukha [duhkhata]; and (c) all physical, objective existence as evanescent and unreal as a water-bubble in a dream, or Anatmata" (TG 344).

 

(See also: Trividya , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body mind and Soul)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Neptune

Neptune. For Latin god,

 

See POSEIDON. For planet,

 

See CAPTURES {SD, BCW, GdeP}

 

(See also: Neptune , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Salvation

Salvation [from Latin salvatio from salvare to save]

 

In Christianity, the saving of individual souls from supposed damnation, usually by faith in the Atonement. In theosophy, as concerns the individual, salvation is achieved by victory of his divine self over the illusions created by the contact of the intermediate nature with the lower planes. In this sense the serpent of Eden, Satan even, is man's savior, as are Prometheus, Lucifer, etc.

 

Mankind as a whole is saved by those manasaputras who descended into intellectually senseless mankind of the third root-race and who, by thus enlightening the minds of early humanity, became the elect custodians of the mysteries revealed to mankind by its divine teachers. Again, the Silent Watchers in their various grades, who refuse to pass on into a greater light and maintain their post for the protection and guidance of humanity, are saviors also.

 

Yet no one can be saved by the vicarious merit of another; his salvation is achieved by means of that very free will and enlightened intelligence of his own through which he at first risks falling. But the great ones maintain the ideal which the multitude elect to follow, and thus light the path mankind will ultimately tread.

 

(See also: Salvation , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Eagle

Eagle One of the four sacred animals of the Christian Qabbalists, the other three being the bull, the lion, and the man-angel. The eagle is a very ancient symbol, generally regarded as solar.

 

"With the Greeks and Persians it was sacred to the Sun; with the Egyptians, under the name of Ah, to Horus, and the Kopts worshipped the eagle under the name of Ahom. It was regarded as the sacred emblem of Zeus by the Greeks, and as that of the highest god by the Druids. The symbol has passed down to our day, when following the example of the pagan Marius, who, in the second century B.C. used the double-headed eagle as the ensign of Rome, the Christian crowned heads of Europe made the double-headed sovereign of the air sacred to themselves . . ." (TG 108).

 

(See also: Eagle , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Eros

Eros (Greek) Love, desire; represented in the Hesiodic theogony as one of four self-existent deities, the others being Chaos, Gaia, and Erebos; otherwise as the son of Aphrodite by either Ares, Zeus, or Hermes.

 

Eros is the cosmic force which causes the unmanifest to seek self-manifestation: it is divine love, will, desire; the desire to manifest in creative activity, and thus to give life and existence to all beings. This desire, which "arises first in It" (SD 2:578), is in the gods and in all nature. After the worlds have been manifested, Eros then becomes, under the form of fohat, the ever-active force which brings together and combines the elemental atoms.

 

"Fohat, in his capacity of Divine Love (Eros), the electric Power of affinity and sympathy, is shown allegorically as trying to bring the pure Spirit, the Ray inseparable from the one absolute, into union with the Soul" (SD 1:119). Eros, like his synonyms kama, amor, and cupido, acts on many planes.

 

(See also: Eros , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Seed

Seed The essence or germ of an entity, imbodying its svabhava (essential nature) and determining the forms produced from it, partly by the accretion of various elements but mainly by the emanating stream working from within outwards or above downwards.

 

The seed of a plant is a globule of physical matter, but the actual seed is ultra-physical. All seeds strictly speaking are the vital life-forces working in and through the physical germs, and hence these true seeds are ethereal organisms, structures composed of a higher order of matter (SD 1:201). Thus there is a succession of vital seeds pertaining to one individual entity, each such seed being the ultimate unit of that organism on a particular plane.

 

There is the physical seed of a plant, containing the astral seed -- a unit on its own plane containing a still subtler seed belonging to a higher plane, and so forth. Ultimately a seed is a life-atom, in itself the expression on a particular plane of a monad which is a thought in divine ideation.

 

(See also: Seed , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Anointed

Anointed (from Latin translation of Greek christos anointed)

 

Smeared with sacred unguent, having oil or unguent poured on the head; a ceremony originally symbolically denoting a high degree of initiation, but later borrowed for minor purposes by the Christian churches in consecrations and coronations. A true anointed or christos is one who has achieved the great victory over self in initiation and therefore in life, and thus has become a full or complete adept or mahatma.

 

(See also: Anointed , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: The roots of the New Age Movement Ð Part I

The New Age movement is hardly novel! Its philosophy is rooted in ancient traditions, often based on mystical experiences, each within a different context.

 

Part I of II, written by Michael Rogge

 

Read more here: » New Age Spirituality: The roots of the New Age Movement Ð Part I

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Desire

Desire A word whose shades of meaning range from mere animal desire to that of cosmic kama or eros which "first arose in It," bringing spirit into union with matter and giving rise to the creation or emanation of various classes of beings.

 

It can also be lofty spiritual aspiration, the yearning upwards with the undying desire for the divine, or impersonal love, or again, the urge to become united or one with others. Many words overlap it in meaning, such as will, attraction, love, and cupidity, and it is generally used as a translation of the Sanskrit kama.

 

Philosophically, it is often synonymous with abstract will, as when kama is called sometimes desire and sometimes will, so that will and desire seem to blend into one on the higher ranges. In the saying, behind will stands desire, will is a colorless force set in motion by desire, much as a current is set up by an electromotive force. From another viewpoint, will, as an abstract motor in the human constitution, arises from the higher or spiritual-intellectual ranges of the kama principle itself, for "Will and Desire are the higher and lower aspects of one and the same thing" (BCW 12:702).

 

See also KAMA; EROS

 

(See also: Desire , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Encyclopedia II - Babylon New Testament - Book of Revelation

In the Book of Revelation the destruction of Babylon, a city which seems to be a symbol of every kind of evil, is foretold. The connection with the actual historical city of Babylon is purely metaphorical, as the connection of "Jerusalem" in the poetry of William Blake can bear no relation to the actual history or geography of the city of Jerusalem. Virtually all New Testament scholars believe that "Babylon" is here used as a metaphor or euphemism for the power of the Roman Empire, which was oppressing the nascent church as the Babylonian em ...

See also:

Babylon New Testament, Babylon New Testament - New Testament era, Babylon New Testament - Book of Revelation, Babylon New Testament - Rastafarians

Read more here: » Babylon New Testament: Encyclopedia II - Babylon New Testament - Book of Revelation

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Darkness

Darkness In theosophical philosophy light is not regarded as self-existent, but as primordially the spiritual effect of a spiritual cause, the emanation from something grander and more radical beyond it.

 

This unknown divine substratum, the original superspiritual intelligence-substance of the universe, is sometimes called darkness; likewise, it is spoken of as absolute light. Thus absolute light and absolute darkness are the same, so that manifested light sprang from unmanifested light or darkness.

 

Philosophically, non-ego -- which is freedom from the limitations of egoity and manifested particularities -- voidness, and darkness are a three-in-one, darkness being Father-Mother and light, their Son. Night or darkness preceded day and light in cosmogony, as is recognized in Genesis, where darkness broods over the face of the deep. The creation of light, or the emanation of light from darkness, is the first step in cosmic manifestation. Light thus is truly called original substance or spiritual matter; darkness, purest spirit. Synonymous with this darkness are 'eyn soph, the Boundless, the bridgeless abyss, the unmanifest, the ever-invisible robes of the eternal parent.

 

Light and darkness on manifested planes constitute a duality, correlative and interdependent, neither conceivable without the other. But what is darkness to our physical senses may be light to our inner senses.

 

Darkness is also used to denote the shadow side of things, and hence in popular speech evil as opposed to good, ignorance to knowledge.

 

See also DAWN; LIGHT; USHAS

 

(See also: Darkness , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Perfection, Perfectibility

Perfection, Perfectibility Absolute perfection is applicable, not to infinity, but to the Absolute of a universe, and theosophy teaches that all existences are tending through ever-growing evolutionary stages towards the relative perfection which all reach at the close of a manvantara; a state called paranishpanna in Sanskrit and yong-grub in Tibetan.

 

Paranirvana is described as a state of perfect rest insofar as activity in the lower manifested realms of a universe is concerned, but not perfect spiritual inactivity -- entirely to the contrary. In a larger view comprehending a galaxy of universes, or a super-galaxy of galaxies, any notion that human intelligence can entertain of perfection is relative, for we cannot assign ends to evolutionary progress, growth, or expansion.

 

(See also: Perfection, Perfectibility , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Frog

Frog One of the oldest symbols in Egypt, for although associated particularly with the frog goddess Heqet, the four primeval gods of Egypt -- Heh, Kek, Nau, and Amen -- were each depicted with a frog's head, the reference here being to the cosmic waters of space, out of which all things arose in the beginnings. Frog gods and goddesses were associated with the beginning or formation of the world, the symbol of the frog itself being that of resurrection and hence of renewed birth.

 

"There must have been some very profound and sacred meaning attached to this symbol, since, notwithstanding the risk of being charged with a disgusting form of zoolatry, the early Egyptian Christians adopted it in their Churches. A frog or toad enshrined in a lotus flower, or simply without the latter emblem, was the form chosen for the Church lamps, on which were engraved the words 'I am the resurrection" . . . These frog goddesses are also found on all the mummies" (SD 1:386).

 

(See also: Frog , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Dream Dictionary revelations: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Temple

Temple [from Latin templum, tempulum a small division from Greek, Latin tem to cut off, mark out]

 

Templum was a spot marked off for sacred purposes by the augur with his staff, and might be on the ground or in the sky, where it was a region designated for the observation of omens. This connects the idea with that of the celestial mansions or zodiacal signs. From being a mere marked-off spot, it gradually evolved into elaborate edifices, and it has also a figurative use, as when the body is called the temple of God or the earth is described as a temple. When a temple in ancient days was constructed by adepts for specific purposes, it became a center or receptacle of spiritual energies attracted and focused there; and from this arose the merely exoteric ideas, true in their origin but absurdly untrue today, that a consecrated portion of a temple or church was the Holy of Holies or the Seat of God, etc.

 

The temple then is the shrine of the divine presence, and as such plays a predominant role in all cults, appearing as a Holy of Holies, a tabernacle, etc., and with many elaborations and accessories, such as special chambers, images, sacred vessels, and the like. The word becomes equivalent to all those signifying the receptive side of universal nature, such as moon, ark, and womb. The object of making inner understanding and inner vision seem more real to the mere man, by constructing edifices consecrated to divine worship and designed to draw down divine presences, is one that can readily be understood, and which may be either an assistance or a drawback according to whether the spirit of the worshiper is less or more materialistic.

 

There is a suggestive connection with temple and tempus (Latin "time," from the same root), divided time as opposed to duration or undivided time.

 

(See also: Temple , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Body mind and Soul)

 

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