The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (306 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
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t
dvaita, ignorance is the absence of knowing that the self (
j
va
) is distinct from, yet also merged into, Brahman, while for the
Dvaita
school of
Madhva
, avidy
is ignorance of the self's eternal distinction from God.
2.  In Buddhism, avijja/avidy
is ignorance of the true nature of reality, the non-emancipated state of mind; it is specifically expressed in Buddhist writings as lack of experiential knowledge of the
Four Noble Truths
. Avijja refers to moral and spiritual ignorance, not ignorance of a factual and scientific kind, and is only finally extinguished with the attainment of nirv
na.
Avinu Malkenu
(Heb., ‘Our Father, our King’). A Hebrew liturgy recited on the Ten Days of
Penitence
, and in some communities on other fast days.
Av kol ha-sodot
(the father of all secrets)
:
Avodah
(Heb., ‘Service’). Description of the complicated sacrificial ritual practised in the Jerusalem
Temple
on the
Day of Atonement
, and now recited as the central part of the
Musaf
service on that day.

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