User:Rhi Brannon/sandbox/Beatific Ruh’un Yaşamism

Beatific Ruh’un Yaşamism

Beatific Ruh’un Yaşamism derives from Turkish meaning “My Life in the Spirit,”[1] and is a form of Panentheism[1][2] formulated by essayist, poet and cultural critic, Jonathan Noble.

Yaşam Ruhuna, the Spirit of Life, is thought to be the Progenitor of all Life. In this system of thought, the essence of Life has existed from the ‘beginning.’ Metaphysically, the Yaşamist claims that Yaşam Ruhuna was the ‘Big Bang’ – the prevalent theory of the origins of the universe – exploding everything along particular cosmic lines and patterns that would allow for life upon at least one planet, namely our own, Gaia.

Yaşam Ruhuna is said to permeate, vivify, order and maintain the cosmos autem omnino silentio (wholly but silently) and in its individual components and parts, yet the Spirit of Life is also thought to be distinct from and, in transcendens mysterium, ‘above’ the Cosmos (Panentheism).

Yaşam Ruhuna is equated with and called Light, Life, Love, Peace, and Truth; therefore, there is, in this panentheistic thought-system, also Darkness, Death, Hatred, Conflict, and Falsehood. And as Yaşam Ruhuna personifies goodness, so too, there is some cosmic force(s) that personifies evil — the Devil, devils, dæmons, Satan, Mara, Ahriman, Iblis, etc.

[1] https://translate.google.com/#auto/en/Ruh%E2%80%99un%20Ya%C5%9Famism

[2] http://www.theopedia.com/panentheism

[3] https://ignoblereligiousramblings.wordpress.com/2015/11/30/an-ignoble-religion/

  1. ^ "Panentheism". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)