Posted by: xmachsom | May 29, 2007

Desires

A person is born only with the will to receive pleasure for self. All our “personal” desires originate from the system of impure forces.In other words, we are infinitely remote from the Creator, we cannot feel Him, and are therefore considered “spiritually dead.”

However, if, while struggling with oneself, a person acquires the desire to live, think, and act only for the sake of others and the Creator, such soul purification allows one to gradually approach the Creator until completely merging with Him. And as one comes closer to the Creator, one feels increasing delight.

Rav Michael Laitman

pg 52 Basic Concepts of Kabbalah

 

 

Posted by: xmachsom | May 28, 2007

Envy, lust and honor

This article explains how our desires are transformed by an Upper Force into bestowal from receiving.

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Posted by: xmachsom | May 25, 2007

VIDEO: What is Prayer in Kabbalah?

Prayer — a person’s request to a higher power — is discussed by highlighting fundamental differences between prayer in religion to prayer in Kabbalah.

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Posted by: xmachsom | May 25, 2007

Why am I looking for something spiritual?

Why am I looking for something spiritual?

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Posted by: xmachsom | May 24, 2007

How Can We Save the World?

Kabbalah teaches about how to change ones inner qualities in order to make the world a better place.

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Posted by: xmachsom | May 22, 2007

Shavuot according to Kabbalah

Why does He not show Himself right now? If He wants to bestow, let Him bestow!

Well the truth is that he is revealed already, only we can’t see Him. Our own nature prevents us from seeing Him. It is opposite to His. All He wants is to give and all we want is to receive. In such a case we cannot bond with Him. In order to connect with Him we need to acquire His attributes. If we could make some act, even the smallest, for someone else’s good, without any personal gain, we’d feel a little of what He feels, and we’d be able to understand the motive behind His conduct towards us.

Shavuot according to Kabbalah

Posted by: xmachsom | May 17, 2007

Self-transformation ~ Can people really ever change?

The entire difficulty lies in changing our nature – from a desire to receive for ourselves, to a desire to bestow upon others, because those two things deny one another. At first glance, the plan seems imaginary, as something that is above human nature. But when we delve deeply into it we will find that the contradiction from reception for oneself to bestowal upon others, is nothing but a psychological matter, because in fact we do bestow upon others without benefiting ourselves. Because self-reception, though it manifests itself in us in various ways, such as property, and possessions for pleasure of the heart, the eye, the pallet, etc., all those are defined by one name – pleasure. Thus, the very essence of reception for oneself that a person desires for is nothing but the desire for pleasure.

Baal HaSulam, “Peace in the World,” section “Pleasure vs. Pain in Self-Reception.”

Posted by: xmachsom | May 17, 2007

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.

Based on the article The Arvut by Baal HaSulam:

http://www.kabbalah.info/engkab/matan_torah/the_bond.htm

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Posted by: xmachsom | May 17, 2007

How Can I Control My Thoughts?

Thoughts are not the self of the person; desire is. In this video, Perceiving Reality dissolves the question “How Can I Control My Thoughts?” into “How Can I Change What I Desire?”

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Posted by: xmachsom | May 16, 2007

The Zohar – A Brief Introduction

Short article introducing The Zohar in terms of who it’s written for, who wrote it, what it speaks about and how it is relevant today.

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