Sacred Science
The esoteric understanding of universal laws and principles, often revealed through initiation, which governs existence. It posits that true knowledge of the cosmos is not empirical but intuitive and spiritual, accessible to those who undergo rigorous inner development.
Where the word comes from
The term "Sacred Science" itself is a modern synthesis, combining "sacred" from the Old English "sacred" meaning holy or divine, and "science" from the Latin "scientia" meaning knowledge. Blavatsky's use implies a system of knowledge distinct from empirical science, rooted in spiritual tradition and initiation.
In depth
The name given to the inner esoteric philosophy, the secrets taught in days of old to the initiated candidates, and divulged during tlie last and supreme Initiation by the Hierophants. Sadaikariipa (".S'A.J. The essence of the immutable nature.
How different paths see it
What it means today
Helena Blavatsky's formulation of "Sacred Science" resonates with the perennial quest for a wisdom that transcends the limitations of purely material inquiry. It speaks to a profound intuition that the universe is not merely a mechanism but a living, breathing entity governed by intelligences and laws far subtler than those apprehended by the senses alone. This is the wisdom that Mircea Eliade observed as being transmitted through initiation, a process by which the profane is transformed into the sacred, and the initiate gains access to a cosmic order.
The term suggests a methodology, albeit an esoteric one, for understanding reality. It implies that just as empirical science progresses through observation, experimentation, and theory, Sacred Science employs introspection, meditation, and the guidance of tradition. Carl Jung, in his exploration of the collective unconscious and archetypes, hinted at such a framework, suggesting that certain universal patterns of knowledge are imprinted within the human psyche, waiting to be awakened. This is not a science of the laboratory but of the soul, where the laboratory is the inner self and the experiment is the transformation of consciousness.
The "Sadaikariipa" mentioned in Blavatsky's definition, translating to "the essence of the immutable nature," points towards a focus on fundamental, unchanging principles. This contrasts sharply with the ever-evolving, provisional nature of scientific hypotheses. Sacred Science seeks the eternal verities, the bedrock of existence. It is the understanding that, as Rumi suggested, the universe is a mirror reflecting the divine, and true knowledge comes from recognizing this reflection within oneself. It is the esoteric philosophy, the secret tradition, the hierophantic teaching that offers a glimpse into the architect's blueprint, a knowledge not merely acquired but embodied.
The promise of Sacred Science is the restoration of a holistic worldview, one where the spiritual and the material are not in opposition but are two facets of a single, unified reality. It invites us to consider that the deepest truths may lie not in dissecting the world, but in understanding our inherent connection to its sacred pulse.
RELATED_TERMS: Gnosis, Esotericism, Initiation, Mysticism, Theosophy, Wisdom Tradition, Sophia, Logos
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