Immanence A term, in modern philosophy and theology, meaning a presence of a being or a power in other entities which is an essential element in the composition of such entities.
The Immanence of God; the duty of the strong to serve and to protect; the linking together of power and responsibility; the realisation that the higher and stronger should put forward no rights - that rights belong to the weaker and the more helpless; ...
Despite the claims of nondualism it is a path with a heavy bias towards pure transcendence, and a disregard for immanence. This critique is also related to what I consider to be my own maturation. I was certainly dissociated (i.e.
In other words, there is an emphasise on the immanence of the divine and the close connection between the Jew and God.
10 (Kingdom) or Shekhinah (Divine Immanence) In viewing the Tree as comprised of the three pillars of severity, equilibrium (or mildness) and mercy, each sefira can be classed as either negative (restrictive, passive and destructive), balancing, ...
Throught the intuition, progressive understanding of the ways of God in the world and on behalf of humanity, are revealed; through the intuition, the transcendence and the immanence of God is sequentially grasped, ...
Therefore, "invocation" (Avahana) and "dismissal" (Visarjana) in the Ritual by which the Deity is invoked "to be present" and bid "to depart" mean this -- that the immanence of Deity in the object of worship is recognized, kept present before, ...
A statement of divine immanence common among Neopagans, originally from Robert Heinlein's book, Stranger in a Strange Land. Godling A young or minor deity.
Names Malkuth (Kingdom) or Shekhinah (Divine Immanence) Keywords Materiality, fruition, physical body, senses ...
They are devised to have definite forms which reflect in outer physical symbol, etheric and astral substance, a spiritual principle which has a core or essence we can describe as having an immanence of 'being'.
For these have no part in that which is lowest, but dwell in fullest power, immovably and perfectly established in the Most High, and receive the Divine Immanence above all passion and matter, and manifest God, ...
See also: World, Spirit, Spiritual, Ritual, Mater
 
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