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 - 175 through 180 (of 686 total)
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    • #414371
      Andriana Georgieva
      Participant

      HI, just a short question, please. Why does the spiritual body of the Soul have exactly 620 parts/organs, and what do they represent indeed? Thank you

      • #414930

        Hi Andriana,

        The numbers all have their own significance. When a person attains spirituality, he begins to research it, and discovers all these numbers from his research. But what exactly is he researching, what is spirituality?

        Essentially we’re always talking about a desire. Our current reality is based on our current nature, the desire to receive. Spirituality on the other hand operates according to a different desire, that of pure bestowal. The different numbers are just a different way to divide up that spiritual desire. This desire can be divided into 613 parts, or 620 parts, or 600,000 pieces, or 125 degrees, or even 10 sefirot.

        It’s just like how we can study a person based on his behavior, or based on his anatomy, or based on his external appearance, or his internal chemistry. Ultimately we’re studying the same person, but from different angles. Same with these different divisions, they are all talking about the same spiritual desire but from different angles or a different scale.

        So if we are describing the desire as 620 parts, then we’re talking about the number of corrections that need to be placed over the desire. This number is further divided into 248 desires of bestowing in order to bestow, 365 desires that operate on receiving in order to bestow, and 7 additional desires that are corrected only in the final correction. We’ll learn about this in detail in the more advanced lessons on KabU that deal with the structure of the upper worlds.

        Albert @ KabU

    • #413539
      Marc
      Participant

      I am totally new at this topic.
      As it was said at the video that M.Laitmann is the teacher of the speaker T. Kosinec and that they are a part of a lineage of Kabbalists. How many lineages of Kabbalists exist and are there differences?

      • #414314

        Hi Marc,

        Throughout the generations, there were many different Kabbalistic groups and there were differences between them. There are Kabbalists whose role is to openly spread the wisdom of Kabbalah and others whose role is to make internal corrections in the general system. Also within the same lineage there are great differences from Kabbalist to Kabbalist, especially in the style in which they are able to express themselves.

        Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: https://laitman.com/2015/11/the-great-kabbalists-and-their-works/

        Albert @ KabU

        • #414635
          Marc
          Participant

          Thanks a lot for your fast answer. Somehow it opened to my directly when
          I was going to ask the new question.

          I get in touch with the interest to Kabbala(h) by a course at Udemy and started the Global Course and the Kabbala Revealed. At first I assumed that I am going to read just one book – the book of zohar.
          Now after I week of lots of lectures like the reveleation of the book of Zohar and others. It´s like a puzzle unfolding in front of me and not knowing how big it really is.
          I take it with a smile.
          In one of the  offered sources it was written that we have to study the book of Zohar in order to get the meaning we need a group.

          My question:
          Is there a group I can personally meet witth in Germany/Berlin?
          Which books should I read before reading the Zohar?

          Thank you!

        • #414929

          Hi Marc,

          1. Yes, there are Kabbalah groups in Germany. In the advanced semesters of KabU, we will learn about practical spiritual work in a group. At that time, there will be an option to get in contact with a local group near you.

          2. If you’re interested in the Zohar, check out this mini course. It’ll give you basics needed for reading the Zohar: https://kabuconnect.com/courses/enter-the-zohar/

          Albert @ KabU

    • #413173
      jul
      Participant

      Thanks for your previous answer.

      I am curious, in the lecture the instructor said that Abraham when he was sitting outside of his tent, he was teaching the Kabbalah to the travelers. I read in Genesis 18 as per the Torah and Bible that Abraham sits at his tent’s entrance, sees 3 visitors (angels), and offers them hospitality. One announces that Sarah will have a son, can you clarify on that please?

    • #413124
      jul
      Participant

      Can you please clarify? you mentioned that Kabbalah is not a religion, and even Christian can practice or study Kabbalah. Isn’t there going to be any contradiction later on? how will Christian belief fit into Kabbalah as I want to learn more and keep my belief in the teachings of Christ?

      • #413158

        Hi Jul,

        Kabbalah is a science, it’s not a religion. Even while studying Kabbalah a person can continue to believe and practice their religion.

        Furthermore, both Kabbalah and many religions talk about the importance of loving others as yourself. Kabbalah goes even further and gives us a method to actualize loving others to such an extent that as a result we can reveal in our lives the Creator, the general force of love and bestowal.

        Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: https://laitman.com/2015/12/the-wisdom-of-kabbalah-and-the-other-religions/

        Albert @ KabU

    • #412919
      Charles
      Participant

      Is Kabbalah derived from the Zohar? If not, how is their relation?

      I am aware also of a book called Sefer Yetzirah, which also delves in the understanding of Hebrew letters, how important is it to learning Kabbalah in learning the origin of the Hebrew letters?

    • #411507
      Gates Samaniego
      Participant

      If Kabbalah started with Abraham, how is it not Jewish? Additionally, do the books of Kabbalahinclude the Torah and Zohar?

      • #411515

        Hi Gates,

        Yes, the Torah and Zohar are indeed Kabbalistic books. But Kabbalah and Judaism are two separate things. Let’s put a few things into perspective to understand this:

        Kabbalah is the method of correcting our egoistic nature and thereby revealing the Creator, the general force of love and bestowal. The first one to actualize this was Adam. His name gives us a hint at this since Adam comes from the Hebrew word “Dome”, meaning “similar to”. He was not the first one alive, but rather the first one to reveal the Creator by becoming similar to this quality of bestowal.

        This wisdom gets passed onward from Adam until Abraham who adapted it to the people of his generation and made the wisdom more practical. Abraham put together a large group of Babylonians who were interested in actualizing this method. These people later on became the Israeli nation. The word Israel comes from the Hebrew words “Yashar” “El” meaning straight to God. These are the people who had an active point in the heart in those days and were interested in revealing the Creator.

        These people greatly succeeded in this method. The peak of their success was symbolized in the building of the first and second temple, which reflected the level of unity and bestowal they were able to reach. At a certain point, they lost the spiritual connection between them (the destruction of the 2nd temple) and what remained was just these external symbols of their connection.

        At this point the wisdom of Kabbalah became concealed. People still had the holy books, Torah and etc, but they did not know how to use them. Since the Torah is written in the language of roots and branches. Meaning it uses words of our world to describe spiritual phenomena. But if a person does not have this spiritual connection through which he can see this, then he thinks this book is talking about this world, history, morals, commandments, etc. From this emerges the Jewish religion.

        From all the above we see that Kabbalah itself is not connected to any religion and that the modern religions came out due to the concealment of Kabbalah. At the same time, Kabbalah is not against religions. In fact we have millions of students worldwide, from many different backgrounds and religions. Many of them do choose to maintain their religion or to perform certain religious customs while studying Kabbalah and there is nothing wrong with that. Just like with any other science, a person can be religious and also be a chemist or physicist. Likewise a person can be religious and also study the science of Kabbalah. Baal HaSulam writes that even after the full spiritual correction people can still keep their religions.

        Check out this blog post from Rav Laitman for more details: https://laitman.com/2015/12/the-wisdom-of-kabbalah-and-the-other-religions/

        Albert @ KabU

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