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In , divine light (also called divine radiance or divine refulgence) is an aspect of perceived as during a or vision, or represented as such in or .

Light has always been associated with a religious and philosophical symbolic meaning, considered a source of not only physical but illumination, as a metaphor for the of a hidden in the shadows.

The value of light often recurs in history of philosophy, especially , in the course of which it is understood both as a structural component of every being, including physical ones, and as a metaphor of spiritual light.


Types and terms
The term "light" has been widely used in spirituality and religion, such as:

  • An Nūr – Islamic term and concept, referenced in and of the .
  • – Christian concept often associated with doctrine.
  • – In various Japanese new religions such as the Church of World Messianity, it is a concept involving the interpersonal transmission of divine light. Mahikari movement religions also practices similar divine light transmission rituals.
  • Jyoti or Jyot – a holy flame that is lit with cotton wicks and or mustard oil. It is the prayer ritual of devotional worship performed by offer to the deities. Jyoti is also a representation of the divine light and a form of the Hindu goddess shakti.
  • Ohr Ein Sof – in and , meaning the "Infinite Light."
  • – An Indic concept found in and which is related to the nature of
  • – the uncreated light revealed to the present during the Transfiguration of Jesus; also experienced as illumination on the path to theosis in Eastern Orthodox theology during , a form of Christian contemplation.


Buddhism
scripture speaks of numerous of light, including a Buddha of Boundless Light, a Buddha of Unimpeded Light, and the Buddhas of Unopposed Light, of Pure Light, of Incomparable Light, and of Unceasing Light.


Christianity
Bible commentators such as John W. Ritenbaugh see the presence of light as a metaphor of , good and evil, , and . In the first Chapter of the Bible, Elohim is described as creating light by fiat and seeing the light to be good. John 1:5 also says that "God is light".


Eastern Orthodoxy
In the tradition, the Divine Light illuminates the intellect'Intellect' in Glossary page 432, The Philokalia, The Complete Text Volume 4, translated by Palmer, Sherrand and Ware, published 1995 Faber and Faber. of man through "" or contemplation. In the Gospel of John, the opening verses describe God as Light: "In Him was life and the life was the light of men. And the light shines in the darkness and the darkness did not comprehend it" (John 1:5).

In John 8:12, Christ proclaims "I am the light of the world", bringing the Divine Light to mankind. The ,Gregory Palamas. Declaration of the Holy Mountain In Defence of Those who Devoutly Practise a Life of Stillness. Text 4 (Philokalia, Volume 4) also called the Uncreated Light, was revealed to the three apostles present at the Transfiguration.


Quakers
, known formally as the Religious Society of Friends, are generally united by a belief in each human's ability to experience or see "that of God in every one". Most Quakers believe in continuing revelation: that God continuously reveals truth directly to individuals. said, "Christ has come to teach His people Himself."George Fox (1694). George Fox: An Autobiography (George Fox's Journal). Archived from the original. Veronika Koller explains liberal Quakers also see light as a revelation: "Quakers need to be open to 'a new light', i.e. continuing revelation". Friends often focus on feeling the presence of God. As Isaac Penington wrote in 1670, "It is not enough to hear of Christ, or read of Christ, but this is the thing – to feel him to be my root, my life, and my foundation...""Isaac Penington to Thomas Walmsley (1670)". Quaker Heritage Press. Quakers reject the idea of , believing in the priesthood of all believers. Some express their concept of God using phrases such as "the inner light", "inward light of Christ", or "Holy Spirit". A core belief of Quakers is, "all can be saved, through the direct relationship established by God in Christ with ‘every person that cometh into the world ...’ ". Quakers first gathered around George Fox in the mid-17th century and belong to a historically Protestant Christian set of denominations.


Mystical Christianity
Several Christian mystics throughout the Middle Ages have also expressed God in terms of light, and no one more famously than San Juan de la Cruz (St. John of the Cross). His poems Noche Oscura and Llama de Amor Viva ( The Dark Night and The Living Flame of Love, respectively), as well as his discourses The Ascent of Mount Carmel and The Dark Night, both heavily employ metaphors of light and darkness in order to express San Juan's mystical theology.


Hinduism
In , —the festival of lights—is a celebration of the victory of light over darkness. A in Bṛhadāraṇyaka Upaniṣad (1.3.28) urges to God: "from darkness, lead us unto light". The includes nearly two dozen hymns to the dawn and its goddess, Ushas.


Sant Mat
In the terminology of , light and are the two main expressions of .Kirpal Singh (1999). Naam or Word. Blaine, WA: Ruhani Satsang Books.


Manichaeism
, the most widespread Western religion prior to Christianity, was based on the belief that God was, literally, light. From about 250-350 CE, devout Manichaeans followed the teachings of self-proclaimed prophet Mani. Mani's faithful, who could be found from Greece to China, believed in warring kingdoms of Light and Darkness, in "beings of light," and in a Father of Light who would conquer the demons of darkness and remake the earth through shards of light found in human souls. Manichaeism also co-opted other religions, including Buddhist teachings in its scripture and worshiping Jesus the Luminous who was crucified on a cross of pure light.

Among the many followers of Manichaeism was the young , who later wrote, "I thought that you, Lord God and Truth, were like a luminous body of immense size, and myself a bit of that body." When he converted to Christianity in 386 CE, Augustine denounced Manichaeism. By then, Manichaeism had been supplanted by ascendant Christianity.

Manichaeism's legacy is the word Manichaean—relating to a dualistic view of the world, dividing things into either good or evil, light or dark, black or white.


Neoplatonism
In On the Mysteries of the Egyptians, Chaldeans, and Assyrians, refers to the divine light as the manifestation of the gods by which , , and other forms of ritual are accomplished.
(2025). 9781589830585, Society of Biblical Literature.


Hermeticism
The almost every of the 16 or so books of the Corpus Hermeticum makes more or less use of the analogy of light in their expressions of the Divine. (Mind of Reason) as related the (Word of God) is often also spoken of in terms conveying a sense of brightness and radiance.

Several aspects of the Corpus' creation stories have set the Divine light as both pre-existing and as the catalyst for the separation of the elements which comprise the physical world: "Out of the light came forth the Holy Word which entered into the watery substance, and pure fire leapt from the watery substance and rose up; the fire was insubstantial, piercing and active. The air, being lightweight, followed the breath, and mounted up til it reached the fire, away from earth and water, so that it seemed to be suspended from the fire" (1.5).

Additionally, this light was crucial to the creation of humankind. " Nous, God, being male and female, beginning as life and light, gave birth by the Word to another Nous, ... Nous, the Father of all, who is life and light, brought forth Man, the same as himself, whom he loved as his own child; for Man was very beautiful, bearing the image of his Father... From life and light, Man became soul and Nous—from life, soul, and from light, Nous..." (1.9, 12, 17).

Of a human's ability to witness this light, it is said to "pray that through grace you will be able to perceive God as so great that even just one ray of Him may shine in your mind" (5.2), and that "it does not, like the rays of the sun, which are fiery, blaze on the eyes and make them close. This is the vision of the Supreme Good; it shines forth in such a way that the man who has the power can as far as possible perceive the flowing light of pure perception" (10.4).

See especially Books I (), V, X, XI, XIII, and XVI.


Zoroastrianism
Light is a core concept in Iranian mysticism. The root of this thought lies in beliefs, which define the supreme God, , as the source of light. This essential attribute is manifested in various schools of thought in Persian mysticism and philosophy. Later, this notion was dispersed across the entire , shaping the paradigms of religions and philosophies emerging in the region. After the Arab invasion, this concept was incorporated into Islamic teachings by Iranian thinkers, the most famous of them being Shahab al-Din Suhrawardi, the founder of the .


See also

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