enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Śarīra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Śarīra

    Śarīra is a generic term referring to Buddhist relics, although in common usage it usually refers to pearl or crystal-like bead-shaped objects that are found among the cremated ashes of Buddhist spiritual masters. Relics of the Buddha after cremation are termed dhātu in the Mahaparinibbana Sutta. [1]

  3. Spiritual death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiritual_death

    The closest he came to it, is in the term Parābhava, meaning 'spiritual ruination.' The various ways to spiritual ruination is expounded in the Parābhava Sutta. [1] For example, the Sutta says: ‘If a man is fond of sleep, fond of society, and does not exert himself, but is idle and ill-tempered, that is the cause of spiritual ruination.’

  4. Spiritual death in Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiritual_death_in...

    Spiritual death is distinct from physical death and the second death. According to the doctrine of original sin, all people have a sinful nature and thus commit sin, and are thereby spiritually dead. Those who have faith in Jesus Christ are thereafter made spiritually alive. The unbeliever's physical death, subsequent resurrection, and final ...

  5. Glossary of spirituality terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_spirituality_terms

    Sacrifice: (from a Middle English verb meaning 'to make sacred', from Old French, from Latin sacrificium : sacer, sacred; sacred + facere, to make) Commonly known as the practice of offering food, or the lives of animals or people to the gods, as an act of propitiation or worship.

  6. Death and culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_and_culture

    Death refers to the permanent termination of life-sustaining processes in an organism, i.e. when all biological systems of a human being cease to operate. Death and its spiritual ramifications are debated in every manner all over the world. Most civilizations dispose of their dead with rituals developed through spiritual traditions.

  7. Spirit world (Spiritualism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spirit_world_(Spiritualism)

    [11] [12] This conception inferred as in the biblical parable Lazarus and Dives that there is considered a greater distance between good and bad spirits than between the dead and the living. [13] Also, the spirit world is "The Home of the Soul" as described by C. W. Leadbeater ( Theosophist ), suggesting that for a living human to experience ...

  8. Excarnation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excarnation

    Excarnation is practiced for a variety of spiritual and practical reasons, including the Tibetian spiritual belief that excarnation is the most generous form of burial [3] and the Comanche practical concern that in the winter the ground is too hard for an underground burial.

  9. Kareth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kareth

    Nachmanides maintains that the soul is not destroyed, but that the soul being cut off after death is a reference to the spiritual world where after death the soul exists in an exalted spiritual state, and that the penalty of Kareth is that he is not eligible to enter into that world.