oḿ pūrṇam adaḥ pūrṇam idaḿ pūrṇāt pūrṇam udacyate
pūrṇasya pūrṇam ādāya pūrṇam evāvaśiṣyate
ॐ पूर्णमदः पूर्णमिदं पूर्णात्पुर्णमुदच्यते
पूर्णश्य पूर्णमादाय पूर्णमेवावशिष्यते ॥
ॐ शान्तिः शान्तिः शान्तिः ॥
That which is perfect and complete arises from perfection and completeness
The perfect and complete yields the perfect and complete
What remains is only perfect and complete
Every atom proves the Godhead, as indeed, no atom could exist without it.
God is transcendent, and this has received due emphasis for thousands of years.
Now, the Immanence of God, which St. Paul called `Christ within us, the Hope of Glory' ... shall be made manifest. This is what the Vaishnavas affirm as Angustha_purusha, presented in the
Katha Upanishad thus:
"The purusha, who is of the size of a thumb, resides in the body.
The purusha who is the size of a thumb is a light (jyoti) without smoke."
Also from Wiki:
"This "being" dwelling inside the heart has been equated with the ‘jiva’ or the ‘self’ which carries the consciousness and a meta-physical body (prakriti), also termed as the karana sharira. The karana sharira has most transcendental existence and accumulates the experiences of the physical, earthly life. This 'jiva' is a spark of divinity, and its place in the body is the heart region."
and:
"The visualizations regarding the size of the 'self' has been of great significance in the Upansihads. The
Brhadaranyaka Upanishad in V. 5.6.1 and the
Chandogya Upanishad in V.3.14.3 maintain the size of the self to be equalt to a seed. The Shatapata Brahmana, V.10.6.3, mentions that the self:
...in the interior of my heart, is as tiny like a rice or barley or millet seed and golden like a smokeless light (or flame)."
Some will recall that Christ Jesus specifically made reference to
"Faith the size of a mustard grain" as being all that is required in order to move mountains. This is telling, as I cannot remember the last time I saw ANY PERSON move a mountain.
At any rate ...
From
jiva we arrive at
jivanmukti, which is one who has attained Moksha, or Nirvana. Nirvana is certainly no
place, as it exists within no fewer than
seven dimensions, and is thus not only transcendent of ordinary space and time, but also conceptuality and even
the realm of Buddhi, or Bodhichitta. It is the plane of ATMA, which is the highest spiritual Principle in Mankind ...
Man, whose name we derive from Manas, the principle of Mind in the individual, in contrast with MAHAT [Egyptian Ma'at], which refers to Divine Ideation itself.
The following page (aside from imperfect translation into English) may be helpful in understanding Indian philosophy ...
Samkhya
Moksha and Nirvana mean, respectively,
release, freedom, liberation ... and ... that
sphere of Divine, conscious activity into which the Spiritual Triad [Atma-Buddhi-Manas] is freed at the end of its long cycle of human peregrinations. It is only accurate to refer to Nirvana as
a Void or
emptiness if we are contrasting it with all earthly experience [
samsara, sangsara], and even with the `Heaven-world' of
Devachan which the Soul visits in-between incarnations. Relative to those - even the
Devachanic experience - it is true that Nirvanic existence is utterly transcendent. We find the Christ making a reference to
Nirvana in the following, familiar words
: "There is a Peace which passeth understanding ... "
Here, even the PERFECT Understanding of Buddhi is yielded for the Atman, for Nirvana. Buddhi is
that faculty altogether transcendent of Mind as we know it, as the philosopher knows it, and as the theologian knows it. Only the Mystic, and the Occultist [
esotericist] ... of whatever tradition, can be said to understand the Bliss of Buddhi, the
true Joy and Compassion of Bodhichitta or `Buddha-Mind,' correlate with the Christian
Agape.
Tremendous misunderstanding has resulted from early attempts to present the idea of Nirvana to a Western audience
unfamiliar with either the experience, or the terminology of Hinduism and Buddhism. It is no small wonder that religionists and savants have utterly failed, even in modern times, to grasp the significance and implications of Nirvana. It doesn't hurt if one has actually
experienced the
Samadhi/Satori of Nirvana, rather than simply read
book after book and article after article ABOUT Nirvana ...
Simply put, a
Mukta, or
Liberated Jiva, is one who has
attained to Nirvana. And keep in mind,
every Theosophical Mahatma [Adept] is one who has not only
attained, by merit, to the liberation of the Soul, s/he has also pledged to remain
in Service to Humanity until freed from that obligation by the Planetary Lord [Himself],
acting or expressing via Sanat Kumara [`Siva']. Thus, not all
Nirvanees actually enter Nirvana, and by definition a
`Nirmanakaya' is "
one who ... save men from themselves by being with them, and by continuously instilling thoughts of self-sacrifice, of self-forgetfulness, of spiritual and moral beauty, of mutual help, of compassion, and of pity" (G. de Purucker).
Jesus and Buddha, also Sri Krishna, are all good examples of someone who was essentially born a Nirvanee, or Jivanmukta, having attained to this status in prior incarnations. Technically, Jesus was born a high initiate, as was St. Paul, and both were required to undergo the Renunciation [Crucifixion] experience as part of their development. In one case, death of the physical body resulted (sort of), while in the other, this was not the case (St. Paul makes the statement: "I die daily").
Once the individual undergoes this Renunciation experience, s/he becomes an Arhat, or Paramahamsa [`Great Swan'] as it is known in the East, and the Spiritual Triad incarnates directly... expressing the Divinity of the Monadic Unit [Will, Love-Wisdom, Active Intellect]. At this point, the Agnishvatta or Manasaputra, the `Son of Mind' which esotericists know of as the Soul, has fulfilled its obligation - undertaken from the very first human incarnation, many long lifetimes ago ... for all of us. The `Soul' is thus, freed, and Divinity is then literally, directly manifest for each of us ... for the Monad-in-expression. This is `the Divine Design,' majestic as it is.
In esoteric Buddhism, the Spiritual Triad [Atma-Buddhi-Manas] is the reincarnating Ego, or Soul, which appears in each new birth with the skandhas, or `bundle of attributes' that make up the personality. A way to see this is suggested by Shakespeare's well-known lines: "All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players.
They have their exits and their entrances,
And one man in his time plays many parts ..." [As You Like It]
The Soul is the player, and we are but the character playing this particular part. We do indeed have our entrances, and also - as sure as the S*N - we will have our exit. This is the Universal LAW, and even Deity incarnate observes it, for without such willing submission, there would be no Cosmos. The Law of Sacrifice applies, as Above, so Below. Every esotericist learns this, as s/he also learns to perfect the other Aspects of the Soul, leading - eventually and inevitably, for us ALL, to Jivanmukti, or Moksha.
It is vital to understand that neither Nirvana, nor various of the other exalted spiritual states, actually requires that the person die, or enter into a permanent Nirvana, from which no further incarnation is possible. There is much confusion over such subjects, yet it is always wisest to learn directly from sources who have themselves undergone these experiences, rather than from speculations of those who have not ... or who cannot really grasp the Principles and concepts involved.
If one wishes to emphasize the transcendent God Whom and which remains altogether beyond God's Creation, it is useful to quote Sri Krishna, saying thus in the Bhagavad Gita: "Having pervaded this whole universe with a fragment of Myself,
I remain." (emphasis added)
In short, this means that God does not cease to be transcendent, or the Godhead, simply because God is also incarnate in, and even AS, the world (whatever world, whichever plane, arupa and rupa, all Seven systemic planes, or even all Seven of the Cosmic Planes). This idea was emphasized, or rather, its misunderstanding lampooned, by Kevin Smith in his movie Dogma, wherein God gets in trouble in the beginning by getting beat up by some hockey players (demons, in disguise) ... and thus, put in the hospital, jeopardizing all of existence. pshaw!