There is but One Life--a Universal Life--in the world.
But among the Eastern Masters there are other sources of information open, and from these sources come the same report--the Oneness and Unity of Universal Life.
All these names are applied to one Being, whom we designate by the name of Universal Life or Spirit.
Thus the doctrine of Transience supplies us with an inexhaustible source of hope and comfort, leads us into the living universe, and introduces us to the presence of Universal Life or Buddha.
It is Enlightened Consciousness that holds communion with Universal Spirit or Buddha, and realizes that individual lives are inseparably united, and of one and the same nature with Universal Life.
Clearly a universal life is pulsating in the whole; genuine impulses, not mechanical stresses and strains, are the causes of the upward sweep into fuller consciousness and richer complexity of experience.
And thus it is not too much to say that the idea of a universal life in nature is as firmly rooted today as it was in the dawn of man's intellectual development.
Not so the belief in some form of universal life or consciousness--of which belief representative types will be given directly.
Art can train us to delight in the higher harmonies of existence; train us to open our eyes, ears and souls, instead of shutting them, to the wider modes of universal life.
The individual traits that we become aware of are the revelation of a universal life, if they are no longer regarded as limited by the idiosyncrasies of the human.
This contradiction cannot be overcome otherwise than by our recognising and acknowledging in the spiritual life a universal life, which transcends man, is shared by him, and raises him to itself.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "universal life" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.