
eBook - ePub
Jewish Wisdom
The Wisdom of the Kabbalah, The Wisdom of the Talmud, and The Wisdom of the Torah
- 960 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Jewish Wisdom
The Wisdom of the Kabbalah, The Wisdom of the Talmud, and The Wisdom of the Torah
About this book
From the sacred texts of Judaism: ancient and lyrical reflections on the meaning of life, faith, and humanity.
The Wisdom of the Kabbalah: Handed down in the oral tradition for thousands of years and transcribed in fourteenth-century Spain, the Kabbalah is the classical expression of Jewish mysticism. This collection draws from the main work of Kabbalahā Sepher ha-Zohar,Ā orĀ The Book of Splendor.
Ā
The Wisdom of the Talmud: Developed in the Jewish academies of Palestine and Babylonia, the Talmud is the rabbinical commentary on the Torah. From man's purpose and miracles, to marriage and wellness, to consciousness and community, the Talmud considers the practice of faith on a daily basis through a changing world. This approachable guide explores how interpretation of the Torah has informed Jewish life for thousands of years.
Ā
The Wisdom of the Torah: In Hebrew, the wordĀ TorahĀ means instruction, and for thousands of years, the Torah has provided instruction in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The inspirational selections in this collection include some of its most powerful and poetic passages, such as "The Poems of King David," "The Parables of King Solomon," and "The Love Songs of King Solomon."
Ā
The Wisdom of the Kabbalah: Handed down in the oral tradition for thousands of years and transcribed in fourteenth-century Spain, the Kabbalah is the classical expression of Jewish mysticism. This collection draws from the main work of Kabbalahā Sepher ha-Zohar,Ā orĀ The Book of Splendor.
Ā
The Wisdom of the Talmud: Developed in the Jewish academies of Palestine and Babylonia, the Talmud is the rabbinical commentary on the Torah. From man's purpose and miracles, to marriage and wellness, to consciousness and community, the Talmud considers the practice of faith on a daily basis through a changing world. This approachable guide explores how interpretation of the Torah has informed Jewish life for thousands of years.
Ā
The Wisdom of the Torah: In Hebrew, the wordĀ TorahĀ means instruction, and for thousands of years, the Torah has provided instruction in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The inspirational selections in this collection include some of its most powerful and poetic passages, such as "The Poems of King David," "The Parables of King Solomon," and "The Love Songs of King Solomon."
Ā
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Yes, you can access Jewish Wisdom by Philosophical Library in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Theology & Religion & Jewish Theology. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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Topic
Theology & ReligionSubtopic
Jewish Theology
Foreword
The present selection is taken from Sepher ha-Zohar, The Book of Splendor, written about 1300 in Spain. It is the only piece of post-talmudic literature that was to be used by many as a text, almost equal to the Torah and Talmud. The Zohar was and still is the classical expression of Jewish mysticism.
Like the Midrash, it is written in a homiletical manner, following the Platonic style of attributing dominance in the dialogues to the Socratic Rabbi Simeon Ben Yochai.
Kabbalah is that great body of Hebrew literature that sprang up and grew parallel to the traditional writings of rabbinical literature, for a period of over a thousand years. Its origins are clouded in uncertainty, its authors doubtful or anonymous, and its forms of expression varied as they are unusual.
Kabbalah signifies āreceiving.ā However, only few were given the inner light by which they could behold the visions of eternity. The secret doctrines concerning God are revealed to the spiritually prepared only.
In a sense, the Kabbalah was a silent protest movement of the mystic element against formalism; a role which it played not only in Judaism but also in Christian Protestantism (Reuchlin a.o.).
The great theme of the Kabbalah is God before creation, and the soul of man after it.
God is ain soph, the endless, ever creating; or, in the words of the great philosopher of Mysticism, Baruch Spinoza, āNatura naturansā (infinite creative substance).
God manifests Himself in ten emanations, or Sephiroth. His divine attributes are: Wisdom, Reason, Knowledge, Greatness, Strength, Beauty, Eternity, Majesty, Principle, and Sovereignty (Chokmah, Binah, Daath, Gedulah, Geburah, Tiphereth, Netzach, Hod, Yesod, Malkuth).
Man is part of this created world, but man is also given to glory in the emanations of the heavens. Man can lift the curtain of the great Unknown and raise himself into the abode of the blessed spirit by dedicating his life to Chabad (Wisdom, Reason, Knowledge), the first three of the Divine Emanations.
This sublime love of the Divine transcends physical being and transforms mere man into the Zaddik, the Righteous One, who, seeing the inner stream of creation, lives in the bliss of fundamental faith and equanimity. His body is earthly but his soul is of the heavens. He is united with God in a mystical union which can be comprehended by the initiated only (Yihud).
Again we are reminded of Spinoza and his theorem, āThe love of man to God and the love of man to man are one and the same.ā
The Kabbalah, although offering no moral regulative or system of precepts, is inherently a philosophy of ethics. Its writings may point to examination of the symbolic meaning of the Hebrew alphabet; they may encourage a semanticism based on initials and numbers; they may become involved with incarnation and magic, with amulets and spiritism, demonology, exorcism, or Messianism; the essence of the Kabbalah has ever been man's mystical union with God in thoughts of wisdom and deeds of kindness.
The literature of the Kabbalah has its beginning in Palestine and Babylon in the post-talmudic era. Of the systematic books of the early epoch are Shiur Komah, dealing with the measures of God, and Sepher Yetzirah, Book of Creation.
In the early middle ages the center of Kabbalist study moved from the Middle East to the Mediterranean countries and Germany. The major works of that era are Masechet Azilut, a treatise on emanations; Sepher ha-Bahir, the Book of Enlightenment; Sepher ha-Temunah, the Book of the Image; and last and foremost, the Zohar, or Splendor.
The Zohar is generally and rightly regarded as the main work of the Kabbalah. It was written in Aramaic in the manner of a commentary to the Torah. It was composed and published toward the end of the thirteenth century by Moses ben Shemtov de Leon, of Castile (d. 1305).
In the sixteenth century the center of Kabbalah veered back to Palestine, especially the city of Safed. Its great representatives were Moses Cordovero, the profound theoretician of Kabbalism; Isaac Luria, the Saint; and his disciple Hayim Vital, who put his master's teachings on paper.
The Safed school of Kabbalah became a source of great inspiration to the fervent religious movements of Eastern Europe of the later centuries, culminating in the tremendously powerful revival movement of Jewish mysticism in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, known as Chassidism.
Founded by Rabbi Israel ben Eliezer (1700-1760), called Baal Shem Tov, Master of the Good Name, Chassidism (Pietism) is based on the application o...
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Contents
- The Wisdom of the Kabbalah
- Copyright