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Passages similar to: Secret Teachings of All Ages — The Tabernacle in the Wilderness
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
The Tabernacle in the Wilderness (26)
that a candidate, when first entering the precincts of sanctuary, must offer upon the brazen altar not a poor unoffending bull or ram but its correspondence within his own nature. The bull, being symbolic of earthiness, represented his own gross constitution which must be burned up by the fire of his Divinity. (The sacrificing of beasts, and in some cases human beings, upon the altars of the pagans was the result of their ignorance concerning the fundamental principle underlying sacrifice. They did not realize that their offerings must come from within their own natures in order to be acceptable.)
Christian Mysticism
Chapter VI: Prayers and Praise From A Pure Mind, Ceaselessly Offered, Far Better Than Sacrifices. (21)
Wherefore we ought to offer to God sacrifices not costly, but such as He loves. And that compounded incense which is mentioned in the Law, is that...
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Christian Mysticism
The Works of Dionysius the Areopagite
The Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, Caput V (9)
The conducting then to the Divine Altar, and kneeling, suggests to all those who are being sacerdotally ordained, that their own life is entirely...
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Christian Mysticism
The Three Principles of the Divine Essence
Chapter 18: Of the promised Seed of the Woman, and Treader upon the Serpent. And of Adam 's and Eve 's going forth out of Paradise, or the Garden in Eden. Also of the Curse of God, how he cursed the Earth for the Sin of Man. (31)
And there was no other Cause of their Employment about offering Sacrifice, than because Man was earthly; and so the Word standing near the Soul in the...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter VI: Prayers and Praise From A Pure Mind, Ceaselessly Offered, Far Better Than Sacrifices. (12)
Now breathing together (sumpnoia) is properly said of the Church. For the sacrifice of the Church is the word breathing as incense from holy souls,...
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Neoplatonic
V, Chapter XXIII (1)
The various mode, therefore, of sanctity in sacred operations partly purifies and partly perfects some one of the things that are in us or about us....
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Neoplatonic
V, Chapter XI (1)
It appears to me, also, that the present question errs in another respect. For it is ignorant that the offering of sacrifices through fire has the...
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Jewish Apocrypha
Chapter XLIX (20)
Exod. xxx. ; Num. i. 32. the name of the Lord.
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Neoplatonic
V, Chapter XX (1)
Being impelled, therefore, from another principle, viz. from the world and the mundane Gods, from the arrangement of the four elements in the world,...
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Neoplatonic
V, Chapter IX (1)
It is better, therefore, to assign as the cause of the efficacy of sacrifices friendship and familiarity, and a habitude which binds fabricators to...
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Hindu
Prapathaka V, Khanda 4 (1)
'The altar (on which the sacrifice is supposed to be offered) is that world (heaven), O Gautama; its fuel is the sun itself, the smoke his rays, the...
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Neoplatonic
V, Chapter XIV (2)
He, therefore, who wishes to worship these theurgically, in a manner adapted to them, and to the dominion which they are allotted, should, as they...
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Neoplatonic
V, Chapter X (2)
And if some one should admit that there is this influx, yet since the world and the air contained in it have a never failing abundance of exhalations ...
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Neoplatonic
V, Chapter XV (2)
Hence, to cities and people not yet liberated from genesiurgic fate and the impeding communion of bodies, if such a mode of sacrifice as this latter...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter VI: Prayers and Praise From A Pure Mind, Ceaselessly Offered, Far Better Than Sacrifices. (13)
But if any one of the righteous does not burden his soul by the eating of flesh, he has the advantage of a rational reason, not as Pythagoras and his ...
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Neoplatonic
V, Chapter XXV (1)
If, therefore, these things were human customs alone, and derived their authority through our legal institutions, it might be said that the worship...
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Jewish Apocrypha
Chapter XV (2)
And he offered new offerings on the altar, the first-fruits of the produce, unto the Lord, an heifer and a goat and a sheep on the altar as a burnt sa...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter III: The Gnostic Aims At the Nearest Likeness Possible to God and His Son. (3)
It was this, consequently, which the Law intimated, by ordering the sinner to be cut off, and translated from death to life, to the impossibility...
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Neoplatonic
V, Chapter XV (1)
Let us then, in the next place, direct our attention to that which accords with what has been before said, and with our twofold condition of being....
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Neoplatonic
V, Chapter XII (1)
What perfect supply of food, therefore, can there be from one essence to another [specifically different]? Or what enjoyment can accede from foreign t...
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Jewish Apocrypha
Chapter VI (3)
And he placed the fat thereof on the aitar, and he took an ox, and a goat, and a sheep and kids, and salt, and a turtle-dove, and the young of a dove,...
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