THEOSOPHY in the modern world key concepts

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Buddhism… The middle way of wisdom and compassion A 2500 year old tradition that began in India and spread and diversified throughout the Far East A philosophy,
Advertisements

An Introduction to Buddhist Practice
Buddhism: Seeking Detachment and Nirvana
Religion in Ancient India. Buddhism Founder Siddhartha Gautama –a prince around 540 BC –member of Kshatriya caste –was originally a Hindu.
7.8 Culture and Religion Agenda: Do Now & HW Check/Review Hinduism and Buddhism Notes Karma Video Compare and Contrast.
Confucianism 3 T AM Alexander Sun Kenneth Wong Johnny Ho.
The Life Divine Chapter XVII The Progress to Knowledge God, Man and Nature Garry Jacobs 28 th June 2015.
What is the dominant pattern of Indian cultural history?
Hinduism & Buddhism Key Vocabulary.
BUDDHISM BASIC BELIEFS DHARMA SIDDHARTHA GAUTAMA THE FOUR NOBLE TRUTHS
WORLD RELIGIONS. WHY RELIGION?? MORAL GUIDELINES FAITH.
GRAB A BOOK, JOIN ME ON PAGE 76
Hinduism  a mix of Aryan and Indus Valley beliefs – no single founder  encourages truth, respect for all life, and detachment from the material world.
World Belief Systems Regents Review Spring Characteristics A set of beliefs about the universe, the existence of one God or several gods, the meaning.
BUDDHISM.
Chapter 6 Section 2.
Buddhism… A 2500 year old tradition that began in India and spread throughout the Far East A way of living or seeing the world followed by more than 300.
Perspectives on Religious Belief: Evidentialism-1  Definition: belief in God must be supported by objective evidence  Natural theology: attempt to prove.
Ancient History 10. Your Thoughts… Where did we come from? What is the difference between a theory and a fact?
Buddhism. Buddhism… The “middle way of wisdom and compassion” A 2500 year old tradition that began in India and spread and diversified throughout the.
Christianity Muslim Judaism Hinduism Buddhist Taoism Website Work Sheet Work Sheet.
31a Describe how geographic features and cultural diffusion affected the development of Ancient Chinese River Valley Civilizations. 31d Describe the development.
Buddhism The Middle Way of Wisdom & Compassion Objectives: To be able to identify the historical roots of Buddhism To be able to explain the key components.
Ch. 6, Sec. 2 Hinduism & Buddhism Vocabulary HinduismBrahmanreincarnation DharmakarmaBuddhism Nirvanatheocracy.
Bellringer Complete the word search on your desk. You have either a word search with key terms from Hinduism or Buddhism.
TheosophyTheosophy. HPBlavatskyHPBlavatsky 1.Video: Madame Blavatsky, “Mother of the New Age”
Buddhism. What is the Purpose of a Religion? PPurposes of Religion: Help people understand their world Explain things people can’t explain otherwise.
Buddhism.
Buddhism is one of the five largest religions in the world (along with Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, and traditional Chinese religions)
Hinduism and Buddhism A Brief Introduction Visit For 100’s of free powerpoints.
Place of Bliss A Mythic Journey with Joseph Campbell.
Siddhartha as a baby, displayed features of a great man
SSWH2 The student will identify the major achievements of Chinese and Indian societies from 1100 BCE to 500 CE.
Hinduism Buddhism. Hinduism Om or Aum Represents the beginning of the earth and humanity.
Hinduism and Buddhism. Hinduism religions Hinduism is one of the oldest religions Aryan India Hinduism’s roots are in the Aryan religion, which changed.
3 Major types of Religion
Brahminism, Hinduism, Jainism, & Buddhism. Brahminism The Aryan religion was called Brahminism because their priests were called Brahmins. The Vedas were.
Buddhism.
Buddhism… The “middle way of wisdom and compassion” A 2500 year old tradition that began in India and spread and diversified throughout the Far East A.
Place of Origin/ Holy Text
Buddhism, Hinduism, Legalism, Confucianism, and Daoism The Philosophies of China.
RELIGIONS OF ANCIENT INDIA HINDUISM BUDDHISM. Hinduism One of the world’s oldest religions – Has no founder, evolved over thousands of years and was influenced.
Desmond Boyle Jeffrey Chin
River Valley Civilizations Review Trivia. ROUND ONE ANCIENT EGYPT.
Buddhism Christian Ethics 30 Religion of
Hinduism and Buddhism. Hinduism - No single God -There is a supreme essence, a universal “being” -This “power” or “force” is called “Brahman” “Brahman.
Hinduism The symbol Om, or Aum, is the principal symbol of Hinduism. It is both a visual and an oral representation of Brahmin, or God. This mark has another.
Aim: How are major religions similar and different? Theme: Belief Systems.
The Nature of Life How to live a holy life. How the religions see it  Sanctification (Judaism)  Sin & Salvation (Christianity)  Submission (Islam)
Before 4/3 Page 201 Reading Comp. Questions and answers.
NUMEROLOGY You Are Your Numbers.... What is Numerology?  Numerology is the study of the symbolism of Numbers.  It has been with us many thousands of.
HAFSITE.ORG. Karma, Moksha & Samsara Promoting Human Dignity, Mutual Respect & Pluralism.
Hinduism. Origins of Hinduism Hinduism, unlike most major religions, does not have a central figure upon whom it is founded. Rather, it is a complex faith.
Buddhism The “middle way of wisdom and compassion”
Buddhism… 2,500 year old tradition
Buddhism.
Far East Religions.
THEOSOPHY in the modern world key concepts
How is reincarnation similar to evolution theory?
Buddhism Mr. Knoblauch Social Studies Council Rock South.
LAD: Reincarnation Mr. DeZilva.
World Religions Hinduism & Buddhism.
Buddhism.
Exploring the power of the circle archetype.
The Beginning of Hinduism
Hinduism.
India - Indo-Aryans, Hinduism and Buddhism
Buddhism Grade 6 Social Studies.
How are they Similar And How are they Different
RELIGIONS OF ANCIENT INDIA
Presentation transcript:

THEOSOPHY in the modern world key concepts

Key Concepts of Theosophy Origins ........Everything in the universe originates from one boundless, eternal, unknowable source. After a period of manifested existence the universe returns to that source. The Big Bang was the start of many long periods of evolution; it was neither the first nor will be the last. Using suitable timescales, periodicity can be seen to be universal.

Key Concepts of Theosophy An harmonious whole ......The universe itself is an organic whole - alive, intelligent, conscious and divine.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Laws ........The laws of nature are the result of intelligent forces. Nature is fundamentally one, the same structural, geometric and evolutionary principles apply throughout.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Karma ........The law of karma holds throughout the universe. It operates at all levels, ensuring justice, harmony and balance.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Reincarnation ........We reincarnate into successive lives. Once we have reached the human level we do not regress back into animal forms. Reincarnation is an ancient belief, common to many traditions such as Buddhism, Hinduism, Zoroastrianism, Taoism… It was in Christianity (until 5th c. AD) & is still part of mystic Gnosticism.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Karma & justice ........The law of karma acts over our successive lives to ensure justice. (We don't get away with it.) We are the cause of every joy and pain. - the same just law apples to all - a knowledge of Karma helps to moderate our acts

Key Concepts of Theosophy Cycles ........A law of cycles provides a fundamental structure. - night & day, winter & summer, birth & death - Shakespeare’s seven ages of man, youth to old age - the pattern of reincarnation between lives is analogous to the continuing "lives" of the universe as it appears, is & returns to its source. - postulates that the ‘Big Bang’ is not a singular event

Key Concepts of Theosophy The Evolutionary Pilgrimage ........Soul gets involved in this world of matter. It experiences and learns, then works its way back in a long pilgrimage to its source, following a cyclic pattern. - Involution  is followed by evolution  - Thought (universal mind) runs into matter, then works its way back to return to meta-spirit.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Increasing perfection ........This evolution achieves experience, self-awareness - and ever increasing perfection. Evolution occurs on three planes - physical, mental and spiritual.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Conscious evolution ........"Survival of the fittest" along with gradual accumulation of small beneficial changes does not explain the "origin of the species". The origin of the species requires intelligent design... - Darwinism is the mechanism for secondary changes, by ‘local adaptation to conditions’ - primary changes (the formulation of root types) requires intelligence, but NOT a personal God!

Key Concepts of Theosophy Sevenfold Man ........There is a seven fold constitution of man, ranging from the physical plane to the purely spiritual (meta-spiritual) plane. - The more developed these vehicles of an entity, the greater their ability to express the powers locked up in the higher levels of its constitution.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Thoughts ........Thoughts are tangible objects on higher planes. Every thought & action has its effect on us, on our surroundings and has a karmic consequence. - “thoughts are things” (Buddhist axiom) - the higher planes are subjective to many, but become objective to those who have surpassed that plane.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Duality ........Three higher planes : "higher Self" (what reincarnates, accumulating experience, lessons and virtue). Four lower planes : the vehicle used by the higher Self while it is living in this active testing ground of incarnate life... - many implications … the illusion of the personal self … the emptiness of outer forms

Key Concepts of Theosophy At the time of death .....…The moment of death… we have a review of our life, as the physical frame is cast off. After a short period (at 2nd death) we remaining lower aspects are left behind and the real Self begins a long period of earned rest before the next birth. - ‘Tunnel of light’ reviews are increasingly common as medical resuscitation techniques have improved.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Spirituality ........Often during this life, our spiritual nature is obscured in our self-centred daily lives as we cater to our immediate needs and desires. But the spiritual Self is always there to guide us if we seek it with strong earnest desire.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Towards the Self of All ........We can strive to reach our Higher Self - ATMA - by: ...Listening to the still small voice of conscience ...Noting the dreams from the Higher Self ...Developing our intuition ...Meditating

Key Concepts of Theosophy …Studying the principles of the Wisdom Religion …Aligning ourselves with nature …Engaging in action for the greater good of all beings …Carefully reading the events of our daily life

Key Concepts of Theosophy Brotherhood ........Brotherhood is a fact in nature. We are ONE at the highest spiritual component of our nature. We are sparks from one flame. We are the fingers on one hand.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Non-separateness : we should - Understand we are not separate from anyone - Emphasise brotherhood, altruism and compassion in our daily lives - Strive to know our higher self - As a guiding rule, act for & as the Self of All

Key Concepts of Theosophy One source .......The religions of the world are branches on the tree, whose trunk is the ancient - once universal - wisdom religion. Like branches, they stem from one source but the actual forms are different and complex.

Key Concepts of Theosophy Instructors of mankind ........Periodically, great teachers come amongst us to help us in this evolutionary path. They may create another branch on the tree suited to that time. - Three of the greatest reformers came in a short period of time: Buddha, Christ and Confucius (the Indian, Jewish and the Chinese religions).

Key Concepts of Theosophy Myth ........Mythology often transmits some of this knowledge in (veiled) symbolic form. - A metaphysical ‘Trinity’ is common to many religions - ‘Giants’ & ‘Titans’ are found in many cultures - A ‘biblical flood’ is present in most traditions - Virgin births of great teachers are quite universal

Key Concepts of Theosophy UNITY ........Humanity's potential is infinite and every being has a contribution to make toward a grander world. We are all in it together. We are one.