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  • Philip Iyov Ecks
    Participant

    For the Kabbalist, the Torah is not a history of a people and their religion, but rather it is written in code, in symbology to express what is going on in the spiritual realms using words, terms and ideas derived from the goings on in this world. If you should decide to study Kabbalah you will in a very short time see what I mean and the Torah will take on a much deeper understanding for you. Love, Peace. Shalom

    Philip Iyov Ecks
    Participant

    Hello, I’m Phil and I live in the Yukon. I have always had a desire for supernal knowledge and wisdom, since I was a boy. I found and began to study and learn Kabbalah, Torah, Zohar some 3 years ago and I honestly believe that this is the only real wisdom humankind posses. I have the soncino edition of Zohar, and it is wonderful. Looking forward to the study.

    Shalom

     

    Philip Iyov Ecks
    Participant

    I don’t know if I can answer this question with any real confidence as I am at the beginning of Kabbalah studies, though I have been searching for it a lifetime. I have come to realise that every single event both good and bad that has occured in my life has been the product of my own ego. Even in those moments that I felt I was doing something good, it was just my ego expressing itself for my own benefit, and I have found it very difficult to break away from this behavior. I was taken by the words of Rabbi Luzzato, The RaM’HaL, when he stated that the G-d made ‘ALL’ things in existence for our benefit, to teach us how to overcome our egoisms and cleave unto the G-d. I have learned that I have been lost and the forces of the world has held me in subjugation since the day of my birth. My deepest hope is that through Kabbalah I may come to have a deeper understanding of these forces and thier impact upon my life and how to make the corrections neccesary to rise above this and achieve and equivalence of form with the G-d. To become totally ultruistic. Shalom.

     

    Philip Iyov Ecks
    Participant

    As I understand it, this is exactly the way of Kabbalah. Thank you.

    Philip Iyov Ecks
    Participant

    We have no desire for it. We cannot give be
    cause
    we are made of a will to receive; recep
    tion
    is our substance, our Matter.
    Now, this latter reason is more complex than it may
    seem at first. When Kabbalists write that all we want is
    to receive, they don’t mean that all we do is receive, but
    that this is the underlying motivation behind everything
    we do. They phrase it very plainly: If it doesn’t give us
    pleasure, we can’t do it. It’s not only that we don’t want
    to; we literally can’t. This is because the Creator (Nature)
    created us with only a will to receive, because all He wants
    is to give. Therefore, we need not change our actions, but
    only the underlying motivation behind them.

     

    So what is the correct motivation to have in order to correctly ‘receive’ bestowel from the creator. If our matter, our substance, our will to receive is set as is the creators matter, the will to bestow, why would we need to change our underlying motivation? Is there some unique quality in the change of our motivation to receive bestowel?

    Philip Iyov Ecks
    Participant

    yes thank you  I think I understand…a bit 🙂

     

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