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I know, it sounds like a bizarre question, but the Tikkunei Zohar, a central text of Kabbalah, actually uses the metaphor of royal garments to describe something profound about how...
Sometimes, the most profound truths are veiled in the everyday. Take the story of Rebecca at the well, in Genesis 24. She wasn't just offering water; she was embodying something mu...
The Tikkunei Zohar, a companion to the Zohar, that foundational text of Kabbalah, hints at just that. It's a wild, poetic, and deeply symbolic exploration of the mysteries of creat...
Jewish tradition offers a powerful image – the bow and arrow – to understand both the dangers we face and the protection that's available to us. But it’s not just any bow and arrow...
The ancient mystics certainly did. They saw the universe itself as a delicate act of balancing, constantly maintained by unseen forces. to a fascinating passage from the Tikkunei Z...
The mystical text, Tikkunei Zohar, has some pretty powerful words for that feeling. It warns, "Woe to the person, whose soul has descended to beneath his feet." image for a second....
The Tikkunei Zohar, a mystical companion to the Zohar, that foundational text of Kabbalah, offers a fascinating, and somewhat…unconventional… perspective on this very feeling. It s...
I get it. There are passages in Jewish mystical literature that can feel that way. Take this snippet from Tikkunei Zohar (specifically, Zohar Ḥadash 26a, if you want to look it up)...
The Tikkunei Zohar, a foundational text of Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism), reads the story of Jonah – Jonah swallowed by the great fish – as a metaphor for the soul's struggles. That ...