Ask anything about week 1 lesson and materials and get an answer from a senior Kabbalah instructor.

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    Ask anything about week 1 lesson and materials and get an answer from a senior Kabbalah instructor.

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    • #299985
      Ignacio
      Partícipe

      My heart tells me the Creator is omnipresent, omnipotent and omniscient. Light, Love and Unconditional Bestow to only and always Give to his creatures. Therefore, removing my Ego from the equation, how can I fear him? The only feeling I have toward him is pure love and thankfulness.

      Therefore, I am having an extremely hard time dealing with the section “The counsel of the Lord is with them that fear him” Page 17 of the book “Kabbalah for the Student.” Please help me, and thank you in advance.

      • #300023

        Hi Ignacio,

        Fearing Him does not mean to be afraid of Him, rather fearing Him means that we’re afraid of not being able to bestow like Him.

        But this is a bit advanced for us at the moment, we’ll learn how to practically work with this in the more advanced lessons.

        Albert @ KabU

    • #299973
      Matthew Turner
      Partícipe

      Is the language of branches the same as the language of the birds?

      • #299981

        Hi Matthew,

        Not quite. The language of roots and branches is a spiritual language. It’s a type of code that uses the words of our world to describe spiritual phenomena. The words of our world are called branches because each one of them stems from a certain spiritual root. This is why it’s called the language of roots and branches.

        Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: https://laitman.com/2013/09/from-root-to-branch/

        Albert @ KabU

    • #299972
      Geneva Fillips
      Partícipe

      Just thinking, if oneness with the Creator is the ultimate goal, why did s/he separate us from himself in the first place? Why send us down the 125 steps only to go back up whence we came??

      • #299980

        Hi Geneva,

        We were indeed created in the state of perfection (Baal HaSulam describes this in the article Introduction to the book of Zohar), but this was an unconscious state, like a baby in its mother’s womb. So we necessarily had to come to the complete opposite state, to lose that state of perfection, in order to once again reach it, but this time consciously.

        And the fact that we had to lose this state is not something bad, but it’s a necessary part of our development. It’s just like with kids. We don’t just give them a completed jigsaw puzzle. On the contrary we take it and break it down into many pieces. Then in the process of them putting it together, they grow and develop. Same with us, this process of losing that state is a necessary part of our further growth and development.

        This process also adds to us a certain level of freedom, without which, we would be no different than machines, or robots, that were programmed to act a certain way and they just carry out this inner script. Instead, we were programmed one way, and we rise above this inner programming, become independent of it, and then develop our own desire to advance towards this goal.

        Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: https://laitman.com/2014/01/from-perfection-to-perfection/

        Albert @ KabU

    • #299958
      Geneva Fillips
      Partícipe

      1. Page 32 of “Attaining the Worlds Beyond” states that our souls descend into the world and that the Creator places the soul into the body. Why then do some of the preparatory material hold that we do not have souls “except we develop one?” What powers the human body? If the body is the hardware, then what is the software called?

      2. It has been mentioned that reincarnations are evolutionary processes that the desire (to receive) goes through. and that it has nothing to do with the material world. How does this explain the claim that Abraham is the reincarnated soul of Adam and Moses is a reincarnation of Abraham and so on, down to the 20th century Kabbalists? How do you explain past life regressions that some people have experienced?

      3. It has also been said in some of the preparatory material that nothing happens when we die. How do you explain near death experiences?

      4. Is it just the first five books of the Bible that are Kabbalistic texts? How about the rest of the Old Testament? The book of Kings, Chronicles, The prophets, the Psalms etc.?

      • #299969

        Hi Geneva, great questions!

        1. There is a force that enlivens our bodies, which is called the animate soul. But Kabbalists are not usually talking about that part. They are usually referring to the point in the heart. Every person has something called a point in the heart. The point in the heart, the desire for spirituality, is like a seed. If we nourish that seed, it can grow to the level of something called a soul. A soul is also a desire, but one that has already been corrected to operate in the direction of love and bestowal. But if we don’t fully realize that initial point in the heart, then that same point, continues to reincarnate again and again until it gets realized.

        Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: https://laitman.com/2015/06/what-happens-to-the-soul-after-death/

        As well as this page from the book The Kabbalah Experience: http://www.kabbalah.info/eng/content/view/frame/86133?/eng/content/view/full/86133&main

        2. Also Baal HaSulam as the next incarnation of the soul of the Ari. “The next reincarnation of the soul is like the inheritance of the entire spiritual attainment of the father, which is passed on to the son.”

        Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: https://laitman.com/2020/08/on-the-anniversary-of-the-aris-departure/

        3. I see that you’re really interested in this topic. I recommend you check out this collection of articles and clips revolving around that: https://www.kabbalah.info/bb/what-happens-when-you-die/

        4. Yes, the whole old testament, or Tanakh (Books of Torah, the Nevi’im, and the Ketuvim), as well as Psalms, Gemara, Talmud, Zohar, etc. These are all Kabbalistic texts.

        Albert @ KabU

        • #299971
          Geneva Fillips
          Partícipe

          Thank you for the prompt response Albert. I will study the articles.

    • #299941
      James Reiter
      Partícipe

      In the Eastern Tradition, let’s say India. It is about “Enlightenment”. there are four paths to enlightenment.
      Karma Yoga – Service, Bhakti Yoga – Devotion, Raja Yoga -Mind Control, and Jnana Yoga – Knowledge.
      Is Kabbalah a path of enlightenment? Are there multiple paths in Kabbalah like the Eastern way? If so, can you please elaborate on them. Seems to me Kabbalah is similar to Jnana Yoga, Yes/no?

      Thank you,
      James

      • #299962

        Hi James,

        I’m not an expert in other methods, so I cannot comment on what they do or teach there. As for Kabbalah, Kabbalah is a method by which we can correct our egoistic nature. As a result of this correction, we reveal the Creator, the general force of love and bestowal, in our lives.

        Albert @ KabU

    • #299908

      I had a dream that I was in line to talk to a rabbi and when it was my turn I told him that I was very excited to study and learn he started smiling this is the second time this happened, i dont know who the rabbi is

      does this happen

      • #299912

        Hi Luis,

        Kabbalah does not deal with dream interpretations. In general, Kabbalists don’t attribute much importance to dreams or the state of dreaming. They see it simply as a state where the brain summarizes/organizes the daily experiences. Similar to how some computers go through the process of defragmentation.

        On the other hand, there is a spiritual state called dreaming which is the process by which we transition from one spiritual degree to another. It’s like the neutral gear on a manual transmission, which requires you to switch to the neutral gear before switching to another gear. In other words, in between every spiritual state is a state called “dream”. But it’s not related to the corporeal dreams that we experience in our physical bodies. Kabbalists don’t ascribe any importance to corporeal dreams.

        Check out these blog posts from Rav Laitman for more details:

        https://laitman.com/2016/04/an-ordinary-dream/

        https://laitman.com/2015/02/we-cannot-live-without-sleep/

        Albert @ KabU

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