5/20/2006

humility

Phonetic: " Leen blee se'oo'da ve'hash'kem blee chov. "

Translation: Sleep with no meal and wake up with no debt.

Meaning:

The way of humility is our subject matter.
Practicing humility in our daily life regarding our dealings with friends, business associates and family members would lead to life of profoundness and simplicity - no debt attached!
The word 'meal' in this phrase stands for any materialistic benefit - food, money or anything alike - and even having someone else bother for us and go out of his way by work and effort.
In addition, humility can be regarded as a tool towards 'low over head expenses'. The lower our (materialistic) demands from life - the higher our chances for life with no debts!

5/19/2006

And the Living Shall Take to Heart

5:17PM
A Moment of Truth
By Simon Jacobson

When a person knows G-d in general terms he is called a servant -- he obeys his master's command, and does not have the right to search his hidden archives and house secrets; when one knows G-d in detail he is called a son, his beloved, who can search the hidden archives, all the house secrets. And though he is called son. the eldest son of G-d...he still remains a servant, to serve his father in various ways which honor his father. Every person needs to be both a son to his father, to search the hidden and to know the house secrets, and a servant -- this week's portion in Zohar (end of Behar, 111b)

A moment. Forever.

All special things, even eternal ones, happen in a moment. Most moments in our lives are fleeting, easily forgotten or never remembered in the first place. But magical moments – of love or loss, of joy or pain, of a secret revealed – live on.

It may take many moments, many years, even eons, to reach that one special moment. But the moment is still but a moment. And when it happens, you never forget it. The moment becomes a permanent part of you. Hopefully you hold on to it, but even when you don't, it always remain etched in your being, waiting to be retrieved, in moment's notice.

Etched in my mind forever is a single moment, which happened one year ago today, at precisely 5:17PM. Sunday, Iyar 20th (corresponding to May 29th).

I saw a life -- a life that shaped me -- end one leg of its journey, only to begin another leg. My limited perception, one that I share with many, could only see the first stage. One moment I saw my father's soul manifest in his body. The next I did not.

What happened at 5:17Pm? I really don't know. A soul that was just with us was no longer there. I tried hard looking. G-d did I try. But once the curtain closes, as much as we try, our eyes cannot see beyond.

One moment – alive, vibrant, electric; a personality that touched and changed many lives. The next moment – gone.

5:17PM the life force of my father -- otherwise known as the soul -- left us.

Or did it?

Does a soul live on in our lives, in our memories? Does the soul continue to thrive through the inspiration and words it leaves us, especially one who left mountains of writings?

Memories…

One of the first memories I have of my father is holding his hand walking up Nostrand Avenue on Shabbat morning on our way to Shul. I always felt comfortable around him. Always. Now I know why. It was because he always felt comfortable with himself. When you are at peace with yourself, you are at peace with everyone around you (even if you may radically disagree with another) and you comfort them in the process. When my father would speak about his father (my namesake), I now understand where my father derived his personality.

Ahh... healthy people. Complex, but smooth and seamless.

When my children were young, I would clutch their little hands as we walked, as my father did mine. I must confess that today I sometimes try to briefly hold the hand of my 22-year-old son, to his chagrin and embarrassment. Little does he know that I do it not for him but for me. It's recreating my connection to my childhood, to my father.

The door of truth between the two worlds opens twice in our lives. Once in the beginning, once at the end.

Upon birth a channel opens, delivering a gift to this world: A newborn child. Where did the soul originate, where did this new life suddenly appear from? We cannot see. All we witness is the door opening.

Then, upon death (or better put: when the soul separates from the body) the door opens for the second time, returning the gift to its original place? What is that place like? I guess only souls know. And only when we become soulful can we know.

What wise words King Solomon wrote: “The living shall take to heart.” Take to heart not just the grief and sadness over loss – do we need the wise Solomon to tell us that our hearts cry when we lose a loved one? We take to heart and remember even after the door closes. Remember that we have limited perception. Even when we can't see behind the door, never feel or think, even for one brief moment, that nothing is happening on the other side.

Take to heart…

In the second year , on the 20th of the second month , the cloud rose from the Tabernacle of Testimony. The Israelites thus began their travels... (Numbers 10:11)

5:17PM on the 20th of Iyar a cloud rose and returned to Heaven. A brief second became eternal.

* * *

The Samach-Vav Connection

What is truth?

Is it what we see, hear, taste, touch and smell? Is it what we feel, think, sense and intuit? Is it what we love, believe and trust? Or is it all or none of the above?

Truth, explains this week's Samach-Vav, is seeing the true nature of existence, seeing beneath the surface, which conceals what lies within.

Revelation of truth consists of many levels, one deeper than the next:

First it recognizes that our existence is not self-contained; a Divine life force sustains it. This awareness is the first step to all truth. As long as you are consumed with the narcissistic feeling that "I am, and there is nothing beside me," then your only "truth" will be subjective -- driven by own needs and perceptions, no matter how distorted they may be. The light of objective truth enters your life when you realize that there is more to life than you and your myopic vision.

The next level of awareness is when you come to recognize that the concealment of the inner force is in itself a Divine energy. Its purpose being to allow us the opportunity to heal the rift, to reveal the invisible, and expose that which is concealed.

Beyond that is the awareness that Reality is not what we perceive it as: from the outside in. Rather it is “inside out.” We think that this -- our universe, our feelings, our experiences -- is “where it's at,” and the world of spirit is somewhere “out there” (if at all). In truth, it's the other way around: The Divine is “where it's at,” true reality, and we are the novelty “out there.”

Finally, the ultimate state of awareness is when we recognize and reveal that the concealment itself is rooted in the hidden, undefined, Divine essence – infinitely higher than any form of defined revelation.

These are the mysteries of truth – the “hidden archives” and “all the house secrets” – that a son discovers. The hidden elements within the structure of existence and beyond the structure.

I tasted this truth when I closed my father’s eyes on May 29, 2005, Iyar 20 5765 at... 5:17PM.

5/18/2006

Finding G-d* in the Details

Have you ever been excited about an idea, a project, or a goal, so excited that you felt like you could reach out and touch it - only to find that when you try to bring it into actuality the whole thing breaks down?

It's a common experience. In it's pure ungrounded form, in your imagination, the vision can look vastly inspiring and easy to achieve. But when you try to bring it into reality, manifest it in all the myriad and fragmented details of your life, more often than not you find that there are lots of obstacles along the way.

This is the stage that, as the saying goes, separates the men from the boys. The easiest thing to do at this point is to give up, to stay with your old habitual ways of being that may not be ultimately fulfilling but are, at least, comfortably familiar.

But, if you make up your mind to stay the course, to work through the obstacles and manifest your vision no matter what it takes, you will find at the end that you have not only altered your circumstances, but you've grown hugely in the process.

Light-Darkness-Light: A Core Principle of Creation

If you've ever had this experience, you have unwittingly stumbled upon one of the core spiritual secrets of Creation. Life is designed in such a way that our deepest and most powerful growth occurs not as a smooth upward process, but in a three-fold pattern of vision-breakdown- transformation, or light-darkness-light.

At the beginning of the process the light of your vision shines powerfully and clearly - but in an external way, without taking account the myriad details through which that light must be manifested. It's there, inspiring you, but it's not really yours, nor does it do anything to affect the world around you.

Bringing your vision into actuality means that the light has to be contained in "vessels". It must be expressed not only in your mind, but in the physical details of time and space - your relationships, habits, and environment. The problem is that at this stage, these vessels are often too small and immature to contain the light of the new reality you want to create.

When this is the case, things don't work out the way you want them to. In fact, sometimes they actually get worse.

As you attempt to create new ways of being or implement new endeavors, your relationships may get even more difficult, your environment more disorderly, your schedule more stressful or your emotional state more overwhelmed. As often occurs when we attempt something challenging, you might experience fear, resistance, confusion, or disappointment. And inevitably, you will get in touch with things about yourself that you would have probably preferred not to see.

The Choice: To Give Up or to Grow Up

Once this happens, you have a choice. You can give up, leaving all those parts of yourself and your life (the vessels) the way they were when you started, your light unexpressed, and you with yet one more failure under your belt.

Or, you can continue to move forward, taking a good hard look at what's in the way and making the effort, within those myriad details of time and space, to correct, remove or transform it. This stage can be challenging, even intensely so, and it often requires grounded and persistent effort to get through to the end. It means taking a good hard look at yourself and your life, working to expand your abilities, improve your relationships or your character, and build your inner strength and courage.

If you are willing to do this, chances are high that you will succeed over time in making your vision a reality, although this is never certain. What is certain, however, is that you will have grown as a human being - the reason the obstacles were there in the first place.

In fact, this growth, this process of expanding beyond your own boundaries, of interacting with the G-d-given circumstances of your life in such a way that your infinite soul expresses more and more of itself through the "vessel" of your finite physical body, is the purpose behind your very existence here on earth.

Moses and the Shattering

The story of the giving of the Torah - specifically, of how Moses received the two tablets of the Ten Commandments - embodies this principle.

Altogether, Moses spent 120 days and nights on Mount Sinai in intimate discourse with G-d. During the first 40 days he was divested from all of his physical needs, and taught the secrets of Torah by the Creator. At the end of this period he descended from Mount Sinai with the first set of tablets on which were engraved the Ten Commandments. This first set was of heavenly sapphire and the words were engraved in the stone in a miraculous manner by G-d Himself.

When Moses brought these tablets down from the mountain he was confronted by the sight and sound of the Jewish people celebrating over the Golden Calf. In response, he smashed the tablets on the ground, shattering them to pieces.

After punishing the ringleaders, he once again ascended the mountain for another 40 days and prayed for G-d's forgiveness for the people.

Then, during the final 40 days, Moses received the Torah once again. But this time he did so as a human being, in a body, through hard work and struggle. Rather than G-d carving the new tablets, Moses had to carve them himself, on stone that came not from heaven, but from the ground. This time, although G-d once again provided the light, Moses had to create the vessels.

Lights in Vessels

At first glance this episode looks like a tragic disappointment. But oddly, after Moses smashed the first tablets, G-d complimented him.

Why? Because from the inner plane of reality these events were an absolutely necessary part of the Divine template for Creation. The stage of "shattering" is an intrinsic part of the process of the transformation of our world - and us. It is through this process that we create a dira b'tachtonim, a dwelling place for G-d in the myriad physical details of time and space.

In order for the Torah - G-d's infinite Wisdom and Will - to be truly and fully received by the world, the world must be a vessel for that infinity. And in order for that to happen, the Torah had to be given from above, shattered, and ultimately reacquired and contained in vessels from below - in the three-fold process of light-darkness-light.

Although the second tablets were acquired with far more effort, much less fanfare, and were, on the surface, on a much lower level, in actual fact they had to potential to be much higher. With this second set of tablets were included the potential for all of the depth and breadth of Torah that would be uncovered throughout the generations by the study and wisdom of the Jewish people themselves. Divine wisdom would thus flow not only from above to below, but from below to above.

It is not every day that we receive the Ten Commandments. Most often our challenges are much more personal and specific than that. But that doesn't mean that they are not holy. In fact, making the personal details of your personal life a dwelling place for the Divine is the whole point of living in the first place.

So, whether you are aiming to experience more love, connection and generosity, more meaning in your work and life, more balance, peace, harmony and joy, or a deeper connection to your purpose, there is no need to be discouraged by the fact that it can sometimes get hard along the way.

Man and G-d: Partners in Creation

Unlike all other creatures, including the highest of spiritual beings, only man has the potential to be a partner to G-d. Only man is created in G-d's image, complete with free choice. Only man can sin, and only man can repent - meaning, to use his distance from G-d to become even closer, greater and holier than he would have been without it. True repentance has nothing to do with self-hatred, with putting oneself down. On the contrary, it comes from self-love, from a recognition of who you actually are and what your life can actually be.

That's why the word for repentance in Hebrew is teshuva, 'return', because true teshuva puts us in touch with our own essence and brings us closer to G-d.

The power of teshuva is our contribution to Creation. It was acquired through the act of Adam and Eve when they ate from the Tree of Knowledge, bringing exile, struggle, suffering and death to themselves and all of humanity. This cycle will continue until the vessels through which we experience life - our minds, hearts, actions and the world around us - have matured enough to be able to encompass the infinite light of G-d.

At that point we, through our own efforts, we will have found G-d in the details, where He was hiding all along, waiting with infinite patience to be revealed. And in doing so, we will have caused the very darkness to shine.

5/17/2006

Bechukotai

Portion of Bechukotai
Week of: May 14 - 20, 2006

Where to Scan in the Zohar:
Hebrew Zohar: Volume 12, Chapter 5, pp 1-20
English Zohar (1st Edition): Volume 16, pp 375-417
English Zohar (2nd Edition): Volume 16, pp 372-414

Special Reading

7. "And I will give you peace in the land"

Rabbi Yosi says that a man lying in his bed at night should not speak about the demons that roam around seeking judgment. He tells us that when the children of Yisrael are found to be meritorious God gives them peace in the land. Rabbi Aba talks about the fact that when the leader is good the whole world is saved because of his merit, and yet Josiah was killed even though he was a worthy leader who had done honest deeds. Rabbi Shimon says that was a result of Josiah's disbelief of Jeremiah's warnings and his failure to admonish Yisrael to repent. Rabbi Aba says that the Shechinah went into exile with Yisrael and was God's pledge to them. When He will ask for His pledge back He will come to live with Yisrael. Rabbi Yehuda speaks about Moses taking the Tent and pitching it outside the camp, and Rabbi Shimon explains to him that meant that the Tent of Meeting, that was the Shechinah, should be kept in the hands of a trustee until it was known who should keep it, Yisrael having been false to God with the creation of the Golden Calf. God made Joshua the trusted one who was worthy of guarding the pledge. In spite of the fact that Yisrael sinned, God did not remove His pledge from them and they did not forsake His pledge. Rabbi Yitzchak says that God still watches them and sees them in their synagogues and schools.

25. "And I will give you peace in the land, and you shall lie down, and none shall make you afraid" (Vayikra 26:6). Rabbi Yosi opened the discussion with the verse: "Tremble, and sin not..." (Tehilim 4:5). This verse has been explained. It behooves man to have his Good Inclination cause his Evil one to tremble. This is well. But when night falls and man lies in his bed, numerous seekers of Judgment, NAMELY DAMAGING DEMONS, stir up in the world and go and roam about. Thus, men should tremble before the Holy One, blessed be He, and fear Him so that their souls will not be among them, but will be saved from them. It behooves one not to utter one word of them, NAMELY, NOT TO SPEAK OF THEM AT ALL, so as not to rouse them against him, and so that they will not be with him. Hence, it says, "commune with your own heart upon your bed, and be still" (Ibid.), WHICH MEANS that one must not talk about them.

26. Come and behold: when Yisrael are found meritorious before the Holy One, blessed be He, it is written: "And I will give peace in the land." This is up above, as the Holy One, blessed be He, comes to join the Congregation of Yisrael, AS "PEACE" MEANS YESOD, AND "THE LAND" IS MALCHUT. Then, "you shall lie down, and none shall make you afraid." Why? Because "I will remove evil beasts out of the land." This is an evil kind of beast that is down below. Which? Igeret, the daughter of Machalat, AN EVIL KLIPAH, and all her companions. This is by night. By day, THE VERSE, "AND I WILL REMOVE EVIL BEASTS OUT OF THE LAND," ALLUDES TO men from her side WHO CAUSE DAMAGE IN THE WORLD. This is the meaning of, "neither shall the sword go through your land" (Vayikra 26:6).

27. Rabbi Aba said: It has been explained that even a sword of peace SHALL NOT "GO THROUGH YOUR LAND," as in the case of Pharaoh Necho, WHO WANTED TO PASS THROUGH THE LAND OF YISRAEL, BUT THE KING JOSIAH DID NOT PERMIT IT. THE MEANING of, "neither shall the sword go through your land," alludes to her companions, WHO COME FROM THE SIDE OF THE SAID KLIPAH. "I will remove evil beasts out of the land," means that THE KLIPAH ITSELF shall not have dominion over the land, nor shall it even go through - not the sword of the other nations, and not even one armed person shall pass you.

28. This is what king Josiah asked for WHEN HE DID NOT ALLOW THE SOLDIERS OF PHARAOH NECHO TO GO THROUGH THE LAND. It has been explained that he was caught in the sins of Yisrael AND WAS THEREFORE KILLED, as is written, "The breath of our nostrils, the anointed of Hashem, was taken in their pits" (Eichah 4:20). We must examine this, for we learned that if the leader of the people is good, the whole world is saved due to his merit. If the leader of the people is not honest, the whole people are caught for his sin. Yet why was Josiah, who was a worthy leader of honest deeds, caught in Yisrael's sins?

29. AND HE ANSWERS: This happened because he did not believe Jeremiah, and did not admonish Yisrael TO REPENT, for he thought they were all as righteous as he was. Yirmeyah told him of this, but he did not believe him and was therefore caught in their sins. Moreover, the moon, MALCHUT, had then the lowest light, and was about to be completely blocked, SINCE IT WAS NEAR THE DESTRUCTION OF THE TEMPLE.

5/16/2006

BREAD AND BUTTER AND JAM

“Vehikravtem and you shall bring an offering Al HaLehem with the bread” (Lev.23.18)

The expression Al HaLehem occurs twice in Scripture, once as above and once in the Torah text, “For man does not live Al Halehem by bread alone, but man lives from everything that proceeds from the mouth of Hashem” (Deut.8.3). (Baal Haturim)

Man is a spiritual and a physical being. Bread as nourishment for his physicality is not enough, he also requires spiritual food. However, whereas material satisfaction is attained through gain by acquiring, taking in and consuming, spiritual satisfaction is derived from sacrifice, surrender, giving up.

What kind of offering does a person have to make?

He brings a Korban to bring him Karov – close to divinity. So he gives up separateness, being apart; he sacrifices the self; he surrenders the ‘I’.

Spirituality in sanctity is not achieved in a vacuum. It comes with togetherness, with union in communion.

It may be found within the Community of Israel.

Shabbat Shalom!

SPIRAL INSTITUTE
info@spiral.org.za

Basics

<>BASICS IN KABBALAH<>
<><>A Kabbalistic Approach to Spiritual Growth<><>

Part 7
<><>Using Kabbalah to Predict the Future<><>

In every generation there are true tzadikim "righteous ones," that possess ruach hakodesh, "Divine Inspiration." Surely, the devoted study of Kabbalah helps make them worthy to receive this gift. These tzadikim are able to read the minds of others and to intuit future events. They generally attempt to hide what they know by Divine Inspiration or to disguise it in the garb of common intelligence.

To foresee the consequences of one's deeds is a "good way" of life, prescribed by the sages for all. They say, "Who is wise? He who foresees the results of his deeds."

On the other hand, Jewish law strictly forbids using the wisdom of Kabbalah to predict the future, by whatsoever form of esoteric logic or manipulation. It borders on the practice of magic.

Furthermore, many misconceptions exist about the connection between Kabbalah and astrology. The oldest Kabbalah text, Sefer Yetzirah, is the source for charting correspondences between the twelve signs of the zodiac, the twelve months of the year, the twelve tribes of Israel, the twelve permutations of God's Name, and so forth.

The Talmud teaches, however, that "Israel is above the influence and forecasts of the signs of the zodiac." Therefore the study of astrology with the aim of anticipating or predicting the future is totally futile for a Jew. The signs of the zodiac may only be seen to relate to natural inclinations or innate character traits, which may be changed, to the very opposite extremity, by the power of free choice.

It is important to stress that astrology is not a healthy interest for a Jew or a non-Jew. The essential article of faith common to all human beings is the belief in one God and no other. Although the study of astrology does not necessarily constitute a breach of that faith, it can lead to ascribing inordinate power and significance to the heavenly bodies that God set in the firmament--thereby creating fertile ground for consequent inappropriate expressions of worship.

Indeed, the term used in Talmudic sources to denote a pagan is akum, which is actually an abbreviation of the Hebrew words oved kochavim umazalot, meaning "a worshipper of stars and zodiacal signs."

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