If we don’t perceive spiritually, we can choose to develop it by our desire to know the Giver, Who we begin to feel by being given everything. There must be a Giver since I am receiving all the time; I want to know Him, and to learn why does He give, and to behave like Him myself.
If I expect that everything that surrounds me give me satisfaction, I won’t find contentment and I will suffer because of the belief that is the base of my perspective: that I am defective and lacking. Giving springs from the opposite belief regarding who I am and what do I have. Relationships are a good field for sharing and giving, but a bad business for getting what I expect.
Dear friends and instructor,Thank you for all these clarifying questions and replies stated in this forum, I found answers to my own questions too.
I have read the novel-parable of Semion Vinokur The battle of Abraham”, and it helped me a lot to get an approach to the purpose and the method of Kabbalah, and the problem of our egoistical mind-set and its social and historical consequences, which can not be arranged by ourselves.
Is there any other book written by the senior instructors of KabU or by Rav. M. Laitman to go further in the next episodes of the life and writings of Abraham?
I have also started reading “The secrets of the Eternal Book” (right now I’m reading about Noah and the Ark).
Thank you very much!
Best Regards
I have ordered all my life according to the quest for self gratification.
Now as I started studying the science of Kabbalah in KabU, I found that the goal was connection.
So I would like to rearrange my purpose in life, from self satisfaction to learn how to connect, for us to emerge.
Thank you!