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Jewish tradition has wrestled with this feeling for millennia. The Tikkunei Zohar, a foundational text of Kabbalah, dives deep into this very question. Specifically, Tikkunei Zohar...
You're not alone. The Tikkunei Zohar, a central text of Kabbalah, speaks to just this feeling. It paints a stark picture of a world where the people of Israel are, as it puts it, "...
The Tikkunei Zohar, a central text of Kabbalah, delves into the deepest mysteries of the Torah. And in section 104, it gives us a interpretation of the shofar blasts we hear during...
It all hinges on the image of a dove and an eagle. The "dove," the Tikkunei Zohar tells us, is prayer itself. More specifically, it represents the Lower Shekhinah – the Divine Pres...
Jewish mysticism uses that very image to describe what happens when we lose our connection to something deeper. The Tikkunei Zohar, a central text of Kabbalah, uses the metaphor of...
Jewish mysticism has a powerful image for that feeling. It’s about the Shekhinah, the Divine Presence, and a moment of heartbreaking fragility. The passage we're looking at comes f...
The Tikkunei Zohar, a mystical extension of the Zohar, speaks to this very feeling in its 105th section. It paints a vivid, and frankly, unsettling picture. The passage describes a...
Jewish tradition has a powerful, ancient way of looking at those moments. It's a story tucked away in the Tikkunei Zohar, specifically Tikkunei Zohar 105, and it all starts with Jo...
The Tikkunei Zohar, a core text of Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism), offers a powerful image of divine protection. It speaks of the Shekhinah – the feminine aspect of God, the divine pr...