The Unity

From The SpiritWiki

The Unity (also The Oneness) is a term used variously to refer to either a high state of pure and persistent Connection[1] or as the actual experience of Undifferentiated Consciousness.[2]

List of Connection Outcomes

Connection Outcomes > Connection Pathology, Déjà vu, Emotional Cleansing, Emotional Satisfaction, Enlightenment, Existential Terrors, Healing, Liberation, Perfect Connection, Perfected Connection, Perfection, Physical Sensations, Psychotic Mysticism, Realization of Self, Ritambharapragya, Spontaneous Alignment, The Unity, Transformation, Union

Terms

Oscar Ichazo > Arica School, Clarification of Consciousness, Meta Society, Seedless State, The Unity

Evelyn Underhill > The Unity

Syncretic Terms

Undifferentiated Consciousness > Differentiated Consciousness, Differentiation of Consciousness, God with a big "G"

Notes

Ichazo sees "The Unity" as responsible for all great cultural advances, from Persian through Greek and into the modern world. [3] "The Greeks did not have a culture until the eighth century B.C. But suddenly, all at once, Greece is born with the legend of Orpheus, the discovery of the Oneness and the Unity.[4]

In the supreme Vision of the Trinity which was vouchsafed to St. Teresa in the Seventh Habitation of the soul, these three aspects became fused in One. In the deepest recesses of her spirit, in that abyss where selfhood ceases to have meaning, and the individual soul touches the life of the All, distinction vanished and she “saw God in a point.” Such an experience, such an intuition of simple and undifferentiated Godhead—the Unity...[5]

Footnotes

  1. Ichazo, Oscar. The Human Process of Enlightenment and Freedom. New York: Arica Institute, 1976.
  2. Underhill, Evelyn. Mysticism: A Study in the Nature and Development of Spiritual Consciousness. Kindle. New York: Dover Publications, 2002.
  3. Ichazo, Oscar. The Human Process of Enlightenment and Freedom. New York: Arica Institute, 1976.p. 13-16.
  4. Ichazo, Oscar. The Human Process of Enlightenment and Freedom. New York: Arica Institute, 1976.p. 15.
  5. Underhill, Evelyn. Mysticism: A Study in the Nature and Development of Spiritual Consciousness. Kindle. New York: Dover Publications, 2002.



Evelyn Underhill