Kabalah-Myth or Mystery?

1 year ago
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Kabala:

Superstition or spirituality?

Deep research or a publicity cheap trick?

Jewish orthodoxy or cult?

Kabbalah has become increasingly popular among the Hollywood elite and New Age enthusiasts in recent years thanks to its evil eye, crimson strings, specially blessed water, hidden passwords, and celebrity participants.

What does the cabbala essentially mean?

Kabbalah is an esoteric approach, discipline, and school of thought in Jewish mysticism, with the literal translations "receiving," "tradition," or "correspondence."

The Jewish tradition of Kabbalah, which is sometimes referred to as "mysticism" or "occult knowledge," deals with the essence of God.

Kabbalists hold that God works in strange ways, whether it involves a sacred text, an experience, or the way things are.

The quest for a close-by but concealed Deity to be encountered directly, intuitively, and immediately is what the experiential aspect of Kabbalah is all about. Mystics "desire to taste the full wheat of spirit before it is ground by the millstones of reason," as Abraham Joshua Heschel put it in his writing.

Mystics specifically seek the ecstatic encounter with God rather than only learning about him. Jewish mystics lead spiritually disciplined lives in their search for God.

Experiential Kabbalists are typically ascetics, even though Jewish mysticism does not approve of either official or informal monasticism.

However, Judaism maintains its mystics grounded and expects them to wed, have children, and carry out all conventional communal religious duties.

As a result, many people purposefully extend the boundaries of their religious practice beyond what custom dictates, developing hanganot, or private daily devotional routines.

One Kabbalist suggested the following schedule to his sons in his will: periods of morning, afternoon, evening, and midnight prayer; periods of study for two hours each of the Bible, Talmud, ethical and mystical texts, and other Jewish texts; periods for one and a half hours each of daily care and earning a living; and periods for five hours of sleep!

In addition to discussing how the physical universe emerged from the unfathomable, Tree of Life also discusses the role that humans play in the cosmos.

The Kabbalah views awareness as the fruit of the physical world through which the original limitless energy can experience and express itself as a finite creature since man is endowed with Mind.

It is believed that once the energy of creation has condensed into matter, it will reverse its direction back up the Tree until it is reunited with its real nature once more.

The Kabbalist thus attempts to understand both himself and the universe as manifestations of God and undertakes the path of Return according to the stages indicated by the Sephiroth until he has attained the desired insight.

Red string is another Kabbalah sign.

The red string bracelets are a component of a broad category of folk customs involving the evil eye.

These crimson ropes are sometimes tied around the left wrist to fend off bad luck, according to some people. Others contend that a single woman should keep the string on until it naturally comes off because that is when she will meet the man or woman she will wed. Others link the string to boosted fecundity or defence against wartime carnage.

You must decide for yourself what Kabbalah is, whether it is a religion or a cult, and if you are in favour of or opposed to it.

Masonry and Kabbalah

Freemasonry is built on the mysticism of Kabbalah, and the two are intertwined. A few hundred years ago, the secret society was entirely taken over by the Kabbalists, who now use it to rule the world. They revere the same deities. The secret society uses Kabbalah as a method of command and control over its members. Consider Freemasonry as one of the hardware to utilize and provide Kabbalah as the software.

And why do you suppose Freemasonry reveres Solomon and Hiram-Abiff, his master craftsman, and utilises all those perverted and twisted biblical terms? They do, indeed.

Even their own Masonic Bible, which is "open" on the altar, is available to them.

One of the common logos symbols is the "open" Bible on the altar.

It is simple to hide a Bible in the logos of churches and ministries because of its nature.

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