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Cosmic body of ancient Alchemy2

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El Transparente, the cathedral of Toledo, Spain(Left), Medicine Buddha, Deungmyeongnakgasa, Korea(Right)

The Eucharist, the symbol of Christ, and the Buddha image in Buddhism are the color of gold. You may simply justify the reason because gold is precious and expensive. In ancient theory of alchemy, what gold symbolizes is the crystallization of purity and purification. Not Jesus and the Buddha as beings to be worshiped but to be an example of the achiever of purification that human beings should step forward. The achievement of purification is the complete cessation of defilement. As for Christian terminology, it is salvation from original sin through their practice.

Gold, in Buddhism, symbolizes sun or fire. Hence, mixing gold with other elements is considered inauspicious as it dilutes the natural brilliance of the gold. Therefore, the gold used in the Buddhist fine art is always pure. Gold in Buddhism
 
Citrinitas, sometimes referred to as xanthosis, is a term given by alchemists to “yellowness.” It is one of the four major stages of the alchemical magnum opus, and literally referred to “transmutation of silver into gold” or “yellowing of the lunar consciousness.”[citation needed] In alchemical philosophy, citrinitas stood for the dawning of the “solar light” inherent in one’s being, and that the reflective “lunar or soul light” was no longer necessary. Stages of Magnum Opus(Philosopher’s Stone)

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