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Jewish mystical tradition recognizes this struggle, particularly when it comes to connecting with the Divine Feminine. The Tikkunei Zohar, a core text of Kabbalah, delves into this...
It might sound strange, but Jewish mystical tradition sees a deep link between the spiritual realm and the natural cycles of our world. The Tikkunei Zohar, a later expansion on the...
The Tikkunei Zohar, a central text of Kabbalah, offers a rather visceral image for this feeling: a “rose” – varda in Aramaic – of the lung, stuck in the wrong place. This isn’t a l...
The passage speaks of the "wings of the Shekhinah" as being the "covering of the blood" of a beast or bird. Now, before you get squeamish, remember that in Jewish thought, blood, o...
It’s a question that's wrestled with in the heart of Jewish mysticism, particularly in the Tikkunei Zohar, a companion volume to the Zohar itself. Here, in Tikkunei Zohar 118, we f...
Jewish mysticism suggests that feeling might be more literal than you think. The Tikkunei Zohar, a central text of Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism), explores the hidden meanings within ...
And it all comes down to this idea of Teshuvah, repentance, but not just in the "I'm sorry" kind of way. We often think of repentance as something personal. Between us and God. But...
The passage we’re going to explore comes from Tikkunei Zohar 119, a section of the Tikkunei Zohar, which itself is a later, expansive companion to the core Zohar, the foundational ...
Jewish tradition has a powerful explanation for that feeling, and it all revolves around a core idea: tikkun olam, repairing the world. But what if the repair starts with something...