Archives: VOD

What Will Be the Future of Humanity?

Are you worried about the future of humanity? Do you think that we will develop from bad to worse as we head into the future, or that we will undergo a shift to a good future? What can we and can’t we know about humanity’s future? In this Kabbalah Explained Simply—”What Will Be the Future of Humanity?”—we will examine Kabbalah’s prism that views everything in existence as a result of interaction between two forces—giving and receiving. When these two forces work harmoniously, life flows peacefully in its course. When they clash, we need to deal with several problems and crises. These forces have been around ever since the universe’s beginnings, and we can see them at work in the creation of our planet, as well as in every aspect of our lives: family, economy, politics, ecology, and health. When we understand this prism, we can identify the underlying forces that have been at work throughout every event in history. Also, with this knowledge, we gain access to start mastering these forces on personal, social, national, and global scales and harnessing them to our and humanity’s benefit.

Does God Exist?

Subconsciously, we want God to exist. It is a natural instinctive response to uncertainty. But outside of our desire for God to exist, how can we find out if God really exists or not? The wisdom of Kabbalah is a methodology for discovering a perception and sensation of God, which is also called “the Creator,” “Nature,” and various other names. When we embark on the journey to discover the Creator, we start understanding how the myriad ways of believing in God without attaining revelation are no more than psychology. Therefore, does God exist if we do not clearly perceive or sense Him? According to the wisdom of Kabbalah, the Creator is hidden from us and is attainable, but we cannot attain the Creator through our corporeal senses, intellect, and emotion. Therefore, any beliefs in the Creator without attainment are no more than inferences and guesses. The Kabbalistic approach to the Creator is written in the sources as follows: “A judge has only what his eyes see.” By developing our perception of reality according to the method of Kabbalah, we come to attain a new sense through which we can perceive a new reality, one in which we clearly see and feel the presence of the Creator. Until we reach such attainment, however, we cannot say that the Creator exists, because we have not attained that existence.