07-16-2021, 12:40 AM
Here I found something Madame Blavatsky wrote about resurrection:
So it's about resurrecting our spirit from our fallen state. Hey! It could be that the death and resurrection of Jesus is symbology for the alchemical process of turning the body of flesh into a glorified body.
Quote:"Two things become evident to all in the above passages, now that their false rendering is corrected in the revision text: (a) "the coming of Christ," means the presence of CHRISTOS in a regenerated world, and not at all the actual coming in body of "Christ" Jesus; (b) this Christ is to be sought neither in the wilderness nor "in the inner chambers," nor in the sanctuary of any temple or church built by man; for Christ — the true esoteric SAVIOR — is no man, but the DIVINE PRINCIPLE [/url]in every human being. He who strives to resurrect the Spirit crucified in him by his own terrestrial passions, and buried deep in the "sepulcher" of his sinful flesh; he who has the strength to roll back the stone [url=https://www.blogger.com/null]of matter from the door of his own inner sanctuary, he has the risen Christ in him.(3) The "Son of Man" is no child of the bond-woman — flesh, but verily of the free-woman — Spirit (4), the child of man's own deeds, and the fruit of his own spiritual labor. " - Helena Blavatsky
So it's about resurrecting our spirit from our fallen state. Hey! It could be that the death and resurrection of Jesus is symbology for the alchemical process of turning the body of flesh into a glorified body.
Quote:"" - John White, Quest magazine
- In the Christian tradition it is called "the resurrection body" or "the glorified body." St. Paul called it "the celestial body" or "spiritual body."
- In Sufism it is called "the most sacred body" (wujud al-aqdas).
- In Taoism it is called "the diamond body," and those who have attained it are called "the immortals" and "the cloudwalkers."
- In Tibetan Buddhism it is called "the light body."
- In some mystery schools it is called "the solar body."
- In Rosicrucianism it is called "the diamond body of the temple of God."
- In Tantrism and yoga it is called the "the vajra body," "the adamantine body" and "the divine body."
- In Vedanta it is called "the superconductive body."
- In Kriya yoga it is called "the body of bliss."
- In Gnosticism and Neoplatonism it is called "the radiant body."
- In the alchemical tradition, it is called "the glory of the whole universe" or the "golden body."
- In the Hermetic Corpus it is called "the immortal body" (soma athanaton).
- In ancient Egypt it was called the akh.
- In Old Persia it was called "the indwelling divine potential" (fravashi or fravarti).
- In the Mithraic liturgy it was called "the perfect body" (soma teleion).
- In the philosophy of Sri Aurobindo it is called "the Divine Body," composed of supramental substance.