Divine plane
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The divine, or more exactly, deity-spiritual (since holy-spiritual is also divine) or (to Greek Theosophists) Logoic plane (or dimension or n-space, separately, or enclosing and interpenetrating grosser planes, respectively) in Theosophy is the plane in which Brahman & Om or Aum, i.e. Logos[1] or Agathon, i.e. (according to Theosophy) spirit of deity (as Brahman, Logos i.e. Agathon, etc.,) i.e. the creative Word (as the Pranava Om or Aum, Logos, Hashem, etc.) and ideal, exists.
A reason some people define the divine plane to involve deity-spirit is to denote it emanating holy-spirit and plain spirit--the triple manifestation (trinity, Logos--Word; deity-spirit) reflected in humans, etc. in the spiritual triad atma-buddhi-manas.
See also: Mahaparanirvana.
[edit] References
- ^ Helena Petrona Blavatsky (1893 - 1897), The Secret Doctrine, London Theosophical Pub. House, 1893-97, ISBN 0-900-588-74-8
Sources:
- Charles Leadbeater (1912 - 1937), A Textbook of Theosophy, Madras, India: Theosophical Publishing House, 1912 - 1937,