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Passages similar to: Stromata (Miscellanies) — Chapter XXV: True Perfection Consists in the Knowledge and Love of God.
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Christian Mysticism
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XXV: True Perfection Consists in the Knowledge and Love of God. (1)
"Happy he who possesses the culture of knowledge, and is not moved to the injury of the citizens or to wrong actions, but contemplates the undecaying order of immortal nature, how and in what way and manner it subsists. To such the practice of base deeds attaches not," Rightly, then, Plato says, "that the man who devotes himself to the contemplation of ideas will live as a god among men; now the mind is the place of ideas, and God is mind." He says that be who contemplates the unseen God lives as a god among men. And in the Sophist, Socrates calls the stranger of Elea, who was a dialectician, "god:" "Such are the gods who, like stranger guests, frequent cities. For when the soul, rising above the sphere of generation, is by itself apart, and dwells amidst ideas," like the Coryphaeus in Theaetetus, now become as an angel, it will be with Christ, being rapt in contemplation, ever keeping in view the will of God; in reality "Alone wise, while these flit like shadows."
Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
Introduction (6)
An ancient philosopher once said: "He who has not even a knowledge of common things is a brute among men. He who has an accurate knowledge of human...
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Neoplatonic
On True Happiness (16)
Those that refuse to place the Sage aloft in the Intellectual Realm but drag him down to the accidental, dreading accident for him, have substituted...
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Neoplatonic
Nature Contemplation and the One (6)
Action, thus, is set towards contemplation and an object of contemplation, so that even those whose life is in doing have seeing as their object;...
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Neoplatonic
On the Intellectual Beauty (4)
To "live at ease" is There; and, to these divine beings, verity is mother and nurse, existence and sustenance; all that is not of process but of...
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Neoplatonic
The Three Initial Hypostases (4)
That archetypal world is the true Golden Age, age of Kronos, who is the Intellectual-Principle as being the offspring or exuberance of God. For here i...
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Hermetic
10. The Key (22)
Wherefore, my son, thou shouldst give praise to God and pray that thou mayst have thy mind Good Mind. It is, then, to a better state the soul doth...
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Neoplatonic
I, Chapter III (3)
The connascent perception, therefore, of the perpetual attendance of the Gods, will be assimilated to them. Hence, as they have an existence which is...
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Greek
Book VI (500)
Can a man help imitating that with which he holds reverential converse? Impossible. And the philosopher holding converse with the divine order, become...
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Christian Mysticism
The Works of Dionysius the Areopagite
On Divine Names, Caput V (3)
Things with life no doubt are above things that merely exist--things sensible above those which merely live,--and things rational above these,--and th...
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Greek
Book VII (517)
I agree, he said, as far as I am able to understand you. Moreover, I said, you must not wonder that those who attain to this beatific vision are unwil...
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Greek
Physiology and Human Nature (90c)
Timaeus: must necessarily and inevitably think thoughts that are immortal and divine, if so be that he lays hold on truth, and in so far as it is...
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Neoplatonic
On the Intellectual Beauty (10)
This is why Zeus, although the oldest of the gods and their sovereign, advances first towards that vision, followed by gods and demigods and such...
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Neoplatonic
FROM POLUS, IN HIS TREATISE ON JUSTICE. (7)
5. “Whoever, therefore, is able to analyze all the genera which are contained under one and the same principle, and again to compose and con-numerate...
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Neoplatonic
FROM HIPPODAMUS, THE THURIAN, IN HIS TREATISE ON FELICITY. (2)
For some of them are naturally perfect; but others are perfect according to life. And those indeed alone that are good, are naturally perfect. But the...
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Neoplatonic
Problems of the Soul (1) (11)
I think, therefore, that those ancient sages, who sought to secure the presence of divine beings by the erection of shrines and statues, showed...
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
The Bembine Table of Isis (47)
This doctrine was first expounded by Plato. His disciple, Aristotle, set it forth in these words: "We say that this Sensible World is an image of...
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Christian Mysticism
The Works of Dionysius the Areopagite
The Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, Caput II (12)
Now he, who has well looked upon his own proper condition with unbiassed eyes, will depart from the gloomy recesses of ignorance, but being imperfect ...
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