Posted by: xmachsom | June 8, 2007

Bnei Baruch World Center for Kabbalah Studies

About Bnei Baruch: Free Kabbalah Paper, Television, Lectures, Books and Lessons

Kabtoday2 Bnei Baruch is an Israel based group of Kabbalists, sharing the wisdom of Kabbalah with the entire world. Study materials are offered in over 20 languages, based on authentic Kabbalah texts that were passed down from generation to generation.

History and Origin

Rav Michael Laitman, professor of Ontology and the theory of knowledge, PhD in Philosophy, and MS in medical cybernetics, established Bnei Baruch in 1991, following the passing of his teacher, Rabbi Baruch Shalom HaLevi Ashlag (The Rabash). Rav Laitman named his group Bnei Baruch (sons of Baruch) to commemorate the memory of his mentor, whose side he never left in the final 12 years of Ashlag’s life, from 1979 to 1991. Rav Laitman was Ashlag’s prime student, personal assistant, and is recognized as the successor of Ashlag’s teaching method. 

The Rabash is the firstborn son and successor of the greatest Kabbalist of the 20th century, Rabbi Yehuda Leib HaLevi Ashlag. Rabbi Yehuda Ashlag is author of the most authoritative and comprehensive commentary on The Book of Zohar—The Sulam (Ladder) Commentary The Zohar. Rabbi Ashlag was the first to reveal the complete method for spiritual ascent. This is also the reason for Ashlag’s epithet, Baal HaSulam (Owner of the Ladder).

Bnei Baruch bases its entire study method on the path paved by these great spiritual leaders.

Click on the links below to read more about the Study Method, and all Bnei Baruch activities such as The Kabbalah Paper, Kabbalah Television, Kabbalah Lectures, Kabbalah Books, Kabbalah Lessons and find out how Bnei Baruch is funded.

Posted by: xmachsom | June 7, 2007

Who Are You, People of Israel?

The wisdom of Kabbalah offers a new perspective on what is probably the most significant change in the life of the people of Israel—the moment of their nation’s birth.

Beginnings

In Babylon some 5,000 years ago, a subtle but profound change took place. At that time, Mesopotamia was the melting pot that eventually created modern civilization.

In the years preceding that period, people simply satisfied their basic needs. They led simple lives and settled for a roof over their heads and the necessities of nutrition. They did not aspire to things such as career or high social status.

But 5,000 years ago, humanity gradually began to sense that life was no longer satisfying. This awareness marked the start of a fundamental change in global evolution.

When the change began, Mesopotamia began to evolve rapidly in several directions. The foundations of modern agriculture were laid, along with commerce, currency trade, and taxation. Gaps between classes increased, and people were divided into those who possessed more, and those who possessed less.

According to the wisdom of Kabbalah, human nature is run by the ego and its desire for enjoyment. This explains the radical changes and rapid cultural and technological progress that humanity experienced at that time.

The Tower of Babylon

The outbreak of the ego produced a series of critical changes. It seemed as if Babylonians had been given “egoism shots,” prompting them to perform uncontrollable actions.

Until that moment, Babylonians were accustomed to simple relationships and lived peacefully and quietly. They were as one nation, speaking the same language. In fact, they were almost like kin, as it is written (Genesis, 11:1), “And the whole earth was of one language and of one speech.”

Therefore, the people of Babylon were unprepared for the process that suddenly began to affect them without forewarning, and they could not understand it. It seemed as though an unseen hand was moving them like marionettes, and they could not control it.

Before this change, Babylonians had been praying to idols and to Nature’s forces. To some extent, they were controlled by the fear and the awe they had developed for those idols. But now they decided to change the rules of the game. Much like a child rebelling against its parents, the Babylonians were impelled by the ego to confront the Upper Force. They attempted to give the ego a higher position than that of the Creator.

The confrontation manifested in the building of the Tower of Babel that was to reach the sky, and even beyond (Genesis 11:4): “And they said: ‘Come, let us build us a city, and a tower, with its top in heaven, and let us make us a name.’”

The tower, which was a building of colossal magnitude, symbolized their egos’ drive to dominate Nature. The sky that the Babylonians tried to conquer symbolized the Upper Force.

The eruption of the ego induced several other phenomena, which created a chain reaction that no one could stop. Soon after the outbreak, the Babylonians ceased to understand each other. From the common language they had been speaking evolved a multitude of languages, and people grew distant from one another and dispersed in all directions. The growing egoism was separating them like a knife, and each person became more and more self-centered, ignoring the others’ needs. In time, actual exploitation began to appear.

Incidentally, the origin of the name, “Babel” is the word Balal (Hebrew: confused, mixed), named after the confusion of the tongues (Genesis 11:9): “Therefore was the name of it called Babel; because the Lord did there confound the language of all the earth; and from thence did the Lord scatter them abroad upon the face of all the earth.”

Abraham’s Way

Abram, son of Terah, was no different from any other Babylonian. He, too, was an idol worshiper. Moreover, Abram’s family was known and respected in the idol-manufacturing industry and made a good living selling them.

Abram’s desires, too, began to grow. However, Abram coped with the new situation differently. The prevalent faith in the power of idols didn’t satisfy him; instead, he wanted more.

Thus, Abram discovered what no one else had previously discovered: he understood that people were naturally surrendering to their egos, which were now running their lives. Moreover, he discovered that people could use that same ego to create a positive change. He watched the Babylonians, who until recently were like kin, grow farther and farther apart, and tried to teach them how to bond with each other, despite the outbreak of egoism.

Abram tried to explain to the Babylonians that if they put brotherly love above their erupting egos, they would be rewarded with a deeper bonding with the Upper Force. The essence of Abram’s teaching was that the ego’s role was not to drive them apart, but to strengthen their love for one another. He taught them that it is because of the effort to maintain the bonding, that the Upper Force is revealed within them.

As a sign of the Godliness he had attained, Abram added the Hebrew letter Hey to his name (Hey is the letter that symbolizes God), and was called “Abraham.” He began to disseminate his method to anyone who was interested. Alas, only a handful of the Babylonians chose to listen to the teachings of the first Kabbalist in history.

Those who did follow the spiritual revolutionary were the first to put together the group of Kabbalists that later became the nation of Israel. Its members studied the method that Abraham discovered in lessons he would give at a famous tent he had set up along with his wife, Sarah.

It was written about them (Bereshit Raba, va Yeshev): “Abraham the Patriarch would bring them into his house; he would give them food and drink, and he would bring them closer, and he would bring them in under the wings of divinity.”

For those who were not yet ready for his method, Abraham developed alternative methods that would suit the roots of their souls. The following verse describes how Abraham sent his messengers eastward, which is today’s Far East, where today’s Eastern teachings evolved: “But unto the sons of the concubines that Abraham had, Abraham gave gifts; and he sent them away from Isaac his son, while he yet lived, eastward, unto the east country” (Genesis 25:6). Today’s religions are an outgrowth from Abraham’s dynasty.

Abraham, the Father of the Nation

Abraham is considered “the father of the nation” because he founded the Israeli nation. The same Babylonians that followed Abraham on his path became a group of Kabbalists. This group grew and grew until it finally became “the people of Israel.”

The one thing that unites this people is the historic goal for which it was created—implementing Abraham’s spiritual method. And that group received the name “Israel” because of the direction of its spiritual growth: Yashar (straight) El (God), meaning “straight to God, the Upper Force.”

The Tower of Babel—the Last (and Highest) Floor

In the last 150 years, our lives have become quite similar to those of the ancient Babylonians. Since the end of the first wave of the industrial revolution, the evolution of the world began to accelerate in every imaginable realm: electricity, communication and media, economy, gourmet food, luxury products, computers and high-tech, and democracy.

The ego that first erupted in ancient Babylon reached the final stages of its evolution in the beginning of the 20th century. Today, the evolution of the ego is far more rapid than its growth in the past, and it is still growing faster.

As was the case in Babylon, more and more people today are seeking something beyond even the most intense pleasures our world can offer. As did Abraham, many of us understand that blind obedience to the ego is bound to fail. Attempts at progress in this manner have brought many to feel that there must be another, better way to live life. This dissatisfaction is the prime reason for the epidemic of depression that has been spreading worldwide in recent years.

And, on top of the inner crises that modern man has experienced in the last one hundred years or so, the external reality has become less than welcoming. The past century has seen world wars, terrorism, nuclear catastrophes, expanding poverty, ecological disasters, and crises in virtually every realm of life. All this supports the growing sense that the solution to the situation should be found at a deeper and more inclusive level. Today, humanity is starting to acknowledge the negativity of its situation, as did Abraham in his time.

The sense that a global crisis is already present positions the world in the same place where ancient Babylon stood 5,000 years ago. But the essential difference between those times and ours is that humanity has grown into a population of billions of souls that are ready to comprehend and to implement the method that Abraham developed.

An Ancient Method for Modern Times

In ancient Mesopotamia, few adopted the method of unity over ego, which Abraham had then developed, and which we now call “the wisdom of Kabbalah.” Hence, since that time, humanity’s evolution has been split into two essential paths: Israel, and the rest of humanity.

The goal of the group of Kabbalists that Abraham founded was to cultivate the method of the Kabbalah, to nurture it and wait for a time when humanity was ready to acknowledge its growing ego as the reason for all that has gone wrong.

Abraham knew that in the last phase of the egoistic evolution, humanity would find itself in despair and hopelessness. He understood that only then would it be ready to listen and employ the method he had designed.

The duty of Abraham’s group is to apply his method to its members, set an example for the rest of humanity, and disseminate his method throughout the world. This is the unique task (and purpose) of this group. This is also the origin of the titles Israel has received such as “a light of the nations,” “a chosen people,” and others.

The two greatest Kabbalists in the last generation—Rabbi Avraham Kook and Rabbi Yehuda Ashlag—declared that at the end of the 20th century, the realization of this mission would begin.

Baal HaSulam says in The Last Generation, p 341: “Judaism should present the nations with something new, and this is what they are anticipating from the return of Israel to the land. It is not about any other wisdoms.”

Rav Kook adds to Baal HaSulam’s words in Letters of the Raaiah, Part III, p 194: “The real movement of the Israeli soul at its greatest glory is expressed only in its eternal, sacred power, which runs in its essential inner spirit. And this is what has made it, and will make it still, a nation that stands as a light of the nations and for redemption and salvation for the whole world.”

Only by changing the relationships within today’s people of Israel from unfounded hatred to “Love thy friend as thyself” can we be elevated to the apex of humanity and provide answers to all our hardships.

Like the Babylonians then, we, the people of Israel must overcome our egos and bond in brotherly love. By so doing, we will set an example to all of humanity, and we will demonstrate how this action will help us attain peaceful, whole, and eternal lives.

This mission lies on the shoulders of the descendants of Abraham’s group—today’s Israel—us.

http://www.kabtoday.com/epaper_eng/content/view/epaper/3490

Posted by: xmachsom | June 5, 2007

What does the Torah mean by Love?

Camp Mt. Sinai

“…they came to the wilderness of Sinai and camped in the wilderness; and there Israel camped before the mount” (Exodus 19:2). RASHI (the great 11th century commentator) explains, “As one man in one heart.”

As we stated in the feature article, “Love, Love, Love,” the Creator is love. This is why He can sustain and provide for the whole of creation, keep its pieces in harmony, and provide life for the bodies and the souls.

When Kabbalists speak about Mt. Sinai, they are talking about the means to achieve the Creator, the quality of love. In a letter to a student, Kabbalist Rabbi Yehuda Ashlag (Baal HaSulam) explains that according to the Talmud (Shabbat, p. 89a), the word Sinai means Sina’a (hatred). To achieve the force of love (the Creator) one must transcend one’s natural hatred toward others and become detached from the ego.

The Torah (Pentateuch) tells us that Moses climbed above the Mount (his ego) and discovered the Creator. Subsequently, he came down and told the children of Israel about his revelation. He said that if all of them united as one man in one heart, with a common wish to be in a state of mutual love for one another, they would also unite with the Creator. Once they had done so, the Creator would be within them, revealed, and they would be awarded eternal and complete life, in unity with the Creator.

As Above, So Below

“For I, the Lord, do not change” (Malachi 3:6).

Nature’s spiritual law does not change, just as nature’s physical laws do not change. Bonding with mutual love is still a prerequisite to revealing the Creator, as it was at the foot of Mt. Sinai.

In his article, “The Arvut” (The Bond), Baal HaSulam describes the practical side of this mutual love. The article is dedicated not so much to Moses, but to what the people had to do to be worthy of receiving the Torah (law) from Moses. He explains that the love and bonding that the people of Israel created—for which they received the Torah—had a very practical side: they became responsible for one another.

They were not able to secure each other’s physical well being because at the time, the people of Israel were slaves on the run, with no certainty of a future. But the one thing they could promise each other was their love, and that was enough for them to receive the Torah and discover the Creator.

Today, too, love is the call of the hour. While there is enough food to provide for the whole planet, people are still starving. And where there is no physical shortage, the most rapidly spreading illness is depression. Our time is the time Prophet Amos predicted: “Behold, the days come, saith the Lord God, that I will send a famine in the land, not a famine of bread, nor a thirst for water, but of hearing the words of the Lord. And they shall wander from sea to sea, and from the north even to the east; they shall run to and fro to seek the word of the Lord, and shall not find it” (8:11-12).

We are in the midst of those days, and the words of the Lord are the love that already exists in the whole of nature, in the Creator. But it has yet to live among us. If we bond with love, we will feel this love and reveal the Creator. Like Him, our lives will be perfect and eternal. This is the state to which He wants to bring His creatures, the purpose for which He has created us.

Video:
 Evolution of Desires
Article:
 The Arvut (The Bond) – by Rabbi Yehuda Ashlag (Baal HaSulam)
Lecture: The Arvut (The Bond) – Article of Baal HaSulam with commentary by Rav Michael Laitman, PhD (17 November, 2005)
 Video ( Download ) | ( View ) 
Audio 
Transcript (MS Word)

Posted by: xmachsom | June 5, 2007

A Glimpse of Radiance

The Book of Zohar is the most mysterious, and at the same time most significant book of Kabbalah. In recent years, it has become increasingly clear that The Book of Zohar, written 18 centuries ago, was made for our time. Rabbi Yehuda Ashlag (Baal HaSulam) opened it to us and rekindled what has long been forgotten from our hearts.

The depth of the wisdom in The Book of Zohar is locked behind a thousand doors.

–Rabbi Yehuda Ashlag (Baal HaSulam), “Preface to the Book of Zohar”

Since the dawn of humanity, unique individuals climbed the spiritual ladder and achieved the highest level of bonding with the Upper Force, the Creator. We call those people “Kabbalists.”

Through this bonding, they came to understand that the whole of reality, from the highest spiritual worlds down to our world, is founded on love and bestowal. They realized that there is nothing in the world except for this Force, and that everything that happens in reality was made only to bring humanity to permanent existence with this sensation.

The science of Kabbalah states that there is no perceptible reality at all outside us.

read more | digg story

Posted by: xmachsom | June 4, 2007

The Sixth Sense

Remember when we thought the 6th sense was some kind of ESP? We thought we’d be able to bend spoons like Uri Geller or  read the thoughts of our friends and enemies. It seemed like a useful thing to have that was reserved by the especially sensitive few in the world.

Turns out, according to the Wisdom of Kabbalah, that there is a 6th sense that can be developed by everyone. It takes time and patience and help from above, however the rewards are nothing less than equivalence with the Creator of everything in our universe.

The following article can be found in it’s entirety at http://www.kabbalah.info/engkab/6sense.htm

Science and philosophy advance along with the advancement of mankind. And today, all of the scientists and philosophers agree that man’s investigation of the world around him is limited. It is possible to say that man is like a “black box” which feels and understands and receives only that which comes from outside . In all of our investigations, we are limited by our five senses. And all of the instruments which we build, and which are to be built in the future, do not escape the limitations of our five senses. They merely widen the boundaries of our senses.

This is because we are never able to imagine what our senses lack. Namely, what other additional sense we need in order to recognize the true reality around us. We feel no lack for this, as we feel no lack of a sixth finger on our hands. That for which we feel no lack, can never be something to which we would come to request. Therefore, all of the investigations of our world are only according to our five senses, and we can never begin to see and feel and understand what is beyond our senses. These are the limitations of our conceptions.

Posted by: xmachsom | June 2, 2007

Kabbalah – the Phenomenon, Fallacies and Facts

  

May 31, 2007 at 1:49 pm ·

Filed under What is Kabbalah?, Competitions, Books

Kabbalah - the Phenomenon, Fallacies and Facts

Part 1 of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Kabbalah explains the general phenomenon and its popularity, and gives an overview of what exists today in the world regarding the word Kabbalah. It also discusses what Kabbalah is and what it isn’t, and gives some background on how it got started.

We have been receiving many responses to the competition showing the many misconceptions we all have about Kabbalah prior to encountering the authentic study through Bnei Baruch. We will post some of these coupled with explanations about these misconceptions from Part 1 of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Kabbalah in coming newsletters and blog posts.

Next Thursday we will publish the winning entry. You still have until Monday, June 3, 2007 to enter! Send all entries to english@kabbalah.info

Click here to pre-order your copy today!

Posted by: xmachsom | May 31, 2007

Kabbalah Video Shorts

VIDEO: Why Do I Give Of Myself So Freely But Things Don’t Work Out?

Why Do I Give Of Myself So Freely But Things Don’t Work Out? 04:56
Kabbalah tells us that there are 4 possible modes of interaction with the single force in the universe that works in the form of either bestowal or reception.

Click here to view the video at Kabbalah TV

Posted by: xmachsom | May 31, 2007

Meditation and Kabbalah

Meditation and Kabbalah

The Meditation Misconception

 

COMPETITION ENTRY FROM BB STUDENT PAULA BARUCH: Prior to coming to Bnei Baruch to learn what the wisdom of Kabbalah really is, I spent 12 years intensely studying Judaism and so-called “Kabbalah.”

My biggest stumbling block was meditation and so-called “Kabbalistic meditation.” I fully expected to attain the upper worlds by sitting in stillness with my eyes closed and chanting various permutations of names of G-d. All my closest “divine” connections came from my meditation practice and that was my ultimate pleasure, that sweet “divine connection.”

Imagine my surprise and shock to learn that meditation was actually reducing me to the level of a stone! Sure I could feel the divine, but in the same way a stone does :-) It was like settling for the teeny-tiniest fragment of the upper light. Now I wrestle to become a fully speaking human in this world, thanks to Bnei Baruch.

 

Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. The Complete Idiot's Guide to KabbalahFROM THE BOOK: Meditation is considered by many as part of the spiritual work or practices of a Kabbalist. But not all Kabbalists have practiced meditation, and even those who did meditate did not practice it in the sense we do today.

 

Today meditation is associated with Eastern teachings, something that Kabbalists in the past did not know. Generally, Eastern meditation is used for relaxation and for uniting with higher levels of existence by “removing” the ego. In Kabbalah, the ego is not removed, but elevated to a higher level of practice. It connects with the divine instead of canceling itself. This embrace of ego and Creator is called Yihud (unification).

pp. 10/11 of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Kabbalah, by Rav Michael Laitman, PhD and Collin Canright.

 

Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet.Click here to view a related video: “Can a Kabbalist also be a Buddhist?”

Posted by: xmachsom | May 30, 2007

What Kabbalah Isn’t

Posted by Markos Zografos

Kabbalah has been clouded in confusion, legend, myth & misrepresentation because authentic Kabbalah has been hidden for thousands of years.

VIDEO: What is the Essence of Kabbalah? (04:31)
This video aims to, in as quick a summary as possible, state outright what Kabbalah is not. As stated in the video, “Kabbalah is not and has nothing to do with:

religion,
magic,
mysticism,
witchcraft,
divination,
cults,
healings,
meditation,
self-help,
philosophy,
theory,
parapsychology,
ESP,
telepathy,
clairvoyance,
new age,
psychokinesis,
superstition,
dream interpretation,
phrenology,
tarot cards,
mantra’s,
yoga,
red strings,
holy water,
blessings,
Judaism,
Islam,
Christianity,
Buddhism,
Hinduism,
Sufism, or any ‘ism’,

past life regressions,
holistic medicine,
numerology,
faith healing,
aromatherapy,
secret societies,
reiki,
hypnosis,
channeling,
transmutation,
phrenology,
astrology,
astral travel or projection,
lucid dreaming,
spiritualism,
communicating with the dead,
out of body experiences,
magnetism,
voodoo,
freemasonry,
theosophy,
reflexology,
UFOs,
creationism,
fanaticism,
or any other belief…”

Although at some point within this dictionary of what-Kabbalah-is-not-isms someone might be ready to point their finger with a “But I heard that!..”, if one approaches the definition that is introduced straight afterwards, as if they had never experienced anything called “Kabbalah” before, then one can save a lot of confusion and time:

This wisdom is no more and no less than a sequence of roots, which hang down by way of cause and effect, in fixed, determined rules, weaving into a single, exalted goal described as “the revelation of His Godliness to His creatures in this world.” (Kabbalist Yehuda Ashlag, in his article “The Essence of the Wisdom of Kabbalah“)

The rest of the video explains and attempts to simplify this definition of Kabbalah.

“Godliness” is explained as being “the laws of nature”; laws that humans haven’t yet succeeded to reveal through any of our religious or scientific methods to date.

After going through what Kabbalah is not, it is most correct to define “what Kabbalah is” as a science. This is because it concerns the research of the cause-and-effect chain of nature, of how our world and everything was created, and through this research aims to reveal the complete picture of nature and its laws to the researcher.

If a word like “religion,” “mysticism” or “meditation” is still floating around your mind near the word “Kabbalah” (or any of the above-mentioned words), then you should watch the video.

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