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.

Viewing 6 posts - 481 through 486 (of 507 total)
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    • #54697
      paul domingo
      Participant

      <p style=”text-align: left;”>Is the name Baal a common name during ancient times? Because the perception of first time I encountered this name was in a video game as Baal the brother of diablo.</p>

      • #54791

        Hi Paul,

        I don’t think there is a connection there.  Baal is Hebrew for “owner”. Rav Yehuda Ashlag was called Baal HaSulam (which translates from Hebrew as: the owner of the ladder), for his “ladder” commentary on the book of Zohar.

        Albert @ KabU

    • #54583
      Bonnie A. Bus
      Participant

      Some people around me feel like if they already have a sort of spiritual wisdom, as if they are developed and altruistic already. They don’t know about kabbala. It could also be a young person. Could you say that development of these people is because they revealed laws of nature by them selves?

      • #54628

        Hi Bonnie, good question!

        But I cannot comment directly on your personal experience, since this has to do with your personal perception of reality. And our perception of reality is not something constant, rather every time we change, every time our desires evolve, our perception of reality will change as well. We’ll learn more about this in the upcoming lessons.

        So we can talk about these things only in general. Why are there some people in life that already seem altruistic? Baal HaSulam writes in the writings of the last generation that there is up to 10% of the world that has a natural drive towards bestowal and altruism. Just like we’re built to enjoy reception, they’re built to enjoy bestowal. Why is there a need for such a thing, for altruistic egoists? It’s because pure egoism on its own would just destroy the world, so nature implanted a few altruists to balance out the system.

        Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: http://laitman.com/2012/07/altruism-no-more-than-10-or-all-100/

        Albert @ KabU

    • #54525
      Asher.Vizzer
      Participant

      Shalom. Can it be said that selfishness and desire for a life without Kedusha is a kind of modern idolatry? Has a Kabbalist actually broken selfish idols by turning his desires into kesusha?

      • #54531

        Hi Asher,

        Yes, you can say that serving our egoism is a form of idolatry. See my reply 53942 to Rune below for more details (if the link does not work for you, then you can find it manually on the 2nd page of this forum).

        As for Kabbalists, a Kabbalist is not simply a student of Kabbalah, but rather one that has already succeeded in correcting his egoistic nature, at least to some extent, at least 1 out of 125 degrees, and as a result has revealed the Creator.

        Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: https://laitman.com/2014/12/practicing-kabbalist/

        Albert @ KabU

    • #54479
      Rachel
      Participant

      Why do we always say creator? Is there a name to  “God”? or this supreme being?

      • #54508

        Hi Rachel, great questions!

        The Creator has many names. But they are not naming the Creator Himself, which we don’t attain, but rather how WE experience this thing called the Creator.  In other words, we are naming OUR perceptions of Him, we’re not naming Him Himself.

        For example, why do we call Him Creator? Because we come to feel that this is the force that created us.

        For more details, see my reply 54291 to Chris below, as well as this blog post from Rav Laitman: https://laitman.com/2017/11/the-concept-of-god-in-kabbalah/

        Albert @ KabU

        • #54953
          Sharon
          Participant

          Dear Albert,

          Since the Creator doesn’t have a name, and the Tree of Life has both male and female parts to it, would it be reasonable to ask you to refer to the Creator using a blended third person pronoun such as “s/he”? Or is there some incontrovertible evidence that the Creator is a He? I am asking because for me personally I find it adds a 126th step to get over the idea of the Creator as being exclusively male, when “It”  is likely either a reflection of both or beyond gender entirely. I say this as someone who has barely dipped my toe into the readings so far, so please take it with a grain of salt, but I am a secular/spiritual female with a Haredi brother. So this is my perspective.
          Thanks

          Sharon

        • #54956

          Hi Sharon,

          It’s a valid concern. Let’s put it into perspective so we can understand it. In spirituality, the force of bestowal is a male force while the force of receiving is a female force. This is why we call the Creator Him. But these are just technical terms, similar to how in electronics we call the plug the male part while the socket is the female part.

          Interestingly enough, because our nature is the desire to receive, all of humanity is considered a female in relation to the Creator who is the bestower.

          Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: https://laitman.com/2018/06/man-and-woman-in-kabbalistic-terms/

          Albert @ KabU

        • #54965
          Sharon
          Participant

          Got it. I can see how the technical analogy definitely offers a logical convenience. I think simply the pronoun  “It” could work for me too, but maybe that would throw others off because it might suggest something inanimate. Anyway, thanks for clarifying!

    • #54441
      David
      Participant

      I am interested in practical use of the wisdom from Kabbalah. I think its not enough only to intellectualize it, but to feel the fruits as well. How i can understand that my desires are good or bad? If i understand that certain desire in me is egoistic, how can i work on that to correct it? Can you describe Kabbalistic approach on example with addiction. Lets say a person is alcoholic (addiction and egoistic will to receive). Can you in a few steps describe how Kabbalah is dealing with egoistic desires or addictions? With examples if possible (like that one with a host on a dinner when we change intention)

      • #54503

        Hi David,

        You are correct that it’s not enough to intellectualize it, it needs to be felt.

        Regarding our egoistic desires, first of all, what are egoistic desires? The fact that I like to eat and drink, this is not considered egoism. In Kabbalah, egoism is a spiritual quality which stands in the way of our connection with the Creator.  By default, no one has such a quality. It’s only after we start to do some serious spiritual work, do we reveal this quality within us called egoism.

        Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: https://laitman.com/2010/10/true-evil/

        As for correcting egoism, we don’t do this with our own strength, but only through the force of the light. Essentially, our entire work boils down to extracting more and more of this force, especially during the Kabbalistic studies, and it performs all of the corrections upon us.

        Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: http://laitman.com/2013/02/sunbathing-in-the-rays-of-the-reforming-light/

        Albert @ KabU

    • #54422
      Craig
      Participant

      OK so last night I had a very strange dream about my son I don’t want to really put it out there a lot but it was so real that when I woke up I could not stop thinking about it and when I tried to go to sleep the dream keeped going until the end it was like a warning. Now with you saying that we are all like shattered souls and we are all one would that be the creator trying to worn me about something? Like could the sixth sense be communicating with the creator in my sleep?

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