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The Tikkunei Zohar, a core text of Kabbalah, suggests that those feelings might be more profound than we realize. It connects our personal actions to the cosmic balance, specifical...
Jewish mysticism, especially the Zohar, often grapples with this feeling when discussing the Shekhinah. What exactly is the Shekhinah? It's the divine feminine presence, the immane...
The Tikkunei Zohar, a central text of Kabbalah, the Jewish mystical tradition, invites us to do just that. To look beyond the obvious, especially when things seem dark. It starts w...
Specifically, Tikkunei Zohar 120 delves into the idea of God's "garments," these veils that sometimes seem to obscure the Divine presence. The text paints a picture of God becoming...
It describes a time when God, so to speak, is "in the darkness," enclothed in tohu and bohu – "chaos and void," and ḥoshekh and tehom – "darkness and abyss." Imagine the universe b...
The answer, according to the Tikkunei Zohar, might surprise you. The Tikkunei Zohar, a central text of Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism), unveils a profound vision of the divine. It spea...
The Torah tells us (Exodus 22:30) that if an offering is treifah, basically unfit, then "you shall throw it to the dog." Okay, makes sense. But the Tikkunei Zohar, a central text o...
The mystics understood that feeling deeply. They saw it as a reflection of something profound happening in the spiritual realms, a cosmic ebb and flow of souls and divine presence....
to a fascinating passage from the Tikkunei Zohar, specifically Tikkun 289, where the human eye becomes a microcosm of the divine. The Tikkunei Zohar, a later expansion on the core ...