Lesson 3: The Human Person As An Embodied Spirit: Transcendence
Lesson 3: The Human Person As An Embodied Spirit: Transcendence
Lesson 3: The Human Person As An Embodied Spirit: Transcendence
Spirit
Transcendence
(n) conveys the basic ground concept from the world's literal meaning
(from Latin), of climbing or going beyond, with varying connotations in
its different historical and cultural stages.
Hinduism
Hinduism is one of the oldest Eastern traditions practiced by hundreds of millions of people
for about 5,000 years
Karma (कर्म)
It refers to intentional actions that affect one's fortunes in this life and the next.
Humanity's basic goal in life is the liberation (moksha) of spirit (jiva).
Transmigration/Metempsychosis
Hindus believe the atman repeatedly takes on a body until moksha.
If a person has led a good life, the soul goes upward the scale. The soul of an evil person,
on the other hand, may pass into the body of an animal.
Moksha
It is the transcendent state attained as a result of being released from the cycle of rebirth.
Brahman
Places a lot of emphasis on the attainment of self-knowledge.
Brahma
Most Hindus believe that Brahman is present in every person as the eternal spirit or soul,
called the atman.
Brahman contains everything: creation and destruction, male and female, good and evil,
movement and stillness.
Vishnu
Vishnu is considered as the most important god in Hinduism.Vishnu has come to earth as
Rama and Krishna to save the world. Vishnu is married to Lakshmi. Vishnu has four arms,
which together hold a conch, a lotus flower, a discus and a club. Vishnu has come down
to earth many times, sometimes as an animal, sometimes as human beings.
Dharma
Dharma is an important term in Indian religions. In Hinduism it means 'duty', 'virtue',
'morality', even 'religion' and it refers to the power which upholds the universe and society.
The Upanishads are a collection of texts that contain some of the central philosophical
concepts of Hinduism; and is also considered by Hindus to contain utterances concerning
the nature of ultimate reality and describing the character of and path to human salvation
Buddhism
Like stars fading and vanishing at dawn,
Like bubbles on a fast moving stream,
Like morning dewdrops evaporating on blades of grass,
like a candle flickering in a stormy wind,
echoes, mirages, and phantoms hallucinations and like a dream.
Eightfold Path
1. Right belief in and acceptance of the "Fourfold Truth";
2. Right aspiration for one's self and for others;
3. Right speech that harms no one;
4. Right conduct, motivated by goodwill toward all human beings;
5. Right means of livelihood, or earning one's living by honorable means;
6. Right endeavor, or effort to direct one's energies toward wise ends;
7. Right mindfulness in choosing topics for thought; and
8. Right meditation, or concentration to the point of complete absorption in mystic
ecstacy.
Sangha
the Buddhist community of monks, nuns, novices, and laity.
Dharma
the teaching or religion of the Buddha.
Dharma
the principle of cosmic order.
Axioms
Cease to do evil
Learn to do good
Purify your own mind
Nirvana
The highest state that someone can attain, a state of enlightenment, meaning a person's
individual desires and suffering go away.
Samsara
It is the beginning-less cycle of repeated birth, mundane existence and dying again that
all beings pass through. Samsara is considered to be dukkha, unsatisfactory and painful,
perpetuated by desire and avidya (ignorance), and the resulting karma.
Christianity
Proving the existence of God is as pointless as probing the existence of air.
The problem addressed in the Old Testament isn't atheism, but polytheism: not the denial
of God but the worship of more than one God.
The reality of God is unquestioned in the New Testament due to the conviction that in Jesus
of Nazareth the eternal God became flesh and dwelt among human beings.
Philosophie
J'ai tout lu. I have everything.
J'ai tout vu. I have seen all.
J'ai tout connu. I knew all.
J'ai tout entendu. I have heard all.
J'ai tout eu. I had it all.
Et je suis... un peu perdu. I had lost... I am a bit lost.
John 15:5
"I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain
in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart
from me, you can do nothing."
C. Vulnerability
The experience that we are contingent, that we are dependent for our existence on
another is frightening.
D. Failure
Our failures force us to confront our weaknesses and limitations.
Such acceptance of our failures make us hope and trust that all can be brought into
good. Even if we have sinned, as Augustine had, there is hope and forgiveness.
E. Loneliness
Our loneliness can be rooted from our sense of vulnerability and fear of death. This
experience is common. However, it is our choice to live in an impossible world where we
are always "happy" or to accept a life where solitude and companionship have a part.
With our loneliness, we can realize that our dependence on other people or gadgets is a
possessiveness that we can be free from.
F. Love
To love is to experience richness, positivity, and transcendence. Whether in times of
ecstatic moments or struggles, the love for a friend, between family members or a
significant person, can open in us something in the other which takes us beyond
ourselves. Life is full of risks, fears and commitment, pain and sacrificing and giving up
things we want for the sake of the one we love. In Buddhist view, the more we love, the
more risks and fears there are in life.
B. Buddhism: Nirvana
Nirvana means the state in which one is absolutely free from all forms of bondage and
attachment. It means to overcome and remove the cause of suffering. It is also the state
or perfect insight into the nature of existence. The Buddhists see one who has attained
nirvana as one who is unencumbered from all the fetters that bind a human being to
existence.
Through prayer, modesty, fasting, and other sound measures that the Church
recommends, or God provides, can purify heart, mind, and body be maintained and daily
lived.