Archive for the ‘Judaism’ Category
Kabbalah: Ein Sof and the Ten Sefirot
The information below is an excerpt from http://www.jewfaq.org/kabbalah.htm
To give you an idea of the nature of Kabbalah, I will briefly discuss one of the better known, fundamental concepts of kabbalistic thought: the concept of G-d as Ein Sof, the Ten Sefirot, and the kabbalistic tree of life. This explanation is, at best, a gross oversimplification. I do not pretend to fully understand these ideas.
According to Kabbalah, the true essence of G-d is so transcendent that it cannot be described, except with reference to what it is not. This true essence of G-d is known as Ein Sof, which literally means “without end,” which encompasses the idea of His lack of boundaries in both time and space. In this truest form, the Ein Sof is so transcendent that It cannot have any direct interaction with the universe. The Ein Sof interacts with the universe through ten emanations from this essence, known as the Ten Sefirot.
These Sefirot correspond to qualities of G-d. They consist of, in descending order, Keter (the crown), Chokhmah (wisdom), Binah (intuition, understanding), Chesed (mercy) or Gedulah (greatness), Gevurah (strength), Tiferet (glory), Netzach (victory), Hod (majesty), Yesod (foundation) and Malkut (sovereignty). The middle five qualities are mentioned explicitly and in order at I Chronicles 29:11: Yours, O L-rd, is the greatness (gedulah), the strength (gevurah), the glory (tiferet), the power (netzach), and the splendor (hod). I have seen this passage translated in widely varying ways, but the Hebrew corresponds to the names of the Sefirot in order.
The Ten Sefirot include both masculine and feminine qualities. Kabbalah pays a great deal of attention to the feminine aspects of G-d. Read the rest of this entry »
Some Hebrew phrases – just because it’s Pesach
|
Hebrew |
English |
| Al Tid’ag | Don’t worry |
| Am Yisrael Chai | The people of Israel live! |
| Be’ahava | With love |
| Be’ahavat Yisrael | With a love for Israel and its people |
| Baruch dayan emet | Blessed is the Judge of truth |
| Be’hatzlacha | Good luck! |
| Be’koach | With strength |
| Be’shalom | With peace |
| Boker Tov | Good Morning |
| Chag Kasher V’Same’ach | Wishing you a happy and Kosher Holiday (Passover greeting) |
| Chag Sameach | Wishing you a Happy Holiday |
| Chag Succot sameach | Wishing you a Happy Succot |
| Chodesh tov | Have a good month! |
| Erev Tov | Good Evening |
| G’mar Chatima Tova | May you be sealed for goodness in the book of life |
| Hakarat ha’emet | Acknowledging the truth |
| Hakarat ha’tov | Acknowledge [a person] |
| Hazak Ve’ematz | Be strong and brave |
| Ken yehi ratzon | May it be God’s will |
| Klal Yisrael | The entirety of Israel |
| Kol Hakavod | Congratulations! |
| Kol Tuv | Best wishes |
| Lamah Lo? | Why not? |
| L’shalom | May there be peace |
| L’Shana Tovah | Happy New Year |
| L’shana Tovah Tikatavu | May you be inscribed for a good year |
| Layla tov | Good Night |
| Lehit | Later dude! |
| Lehitra’ot | See you later |
| Mazal Tov | Congratulations |
| Nesi’ah tovah | Have a good trip! |
| Shalom | Hello/Peace/Goodbye |
| Shalom uvracha | Peace and blessing |
| Shalom v’Emet | Peace and Truth |
| Shana Tovah U’metuka | Wishing you a good, sweet New Year |
| Shavuah Tov | Have a Good Week (Shabbat greeting) |
| Tizke l’mitzvot | May you have the privilege of fulfilling the commandments |
| Toda | Thank you |
| Toda raba | Thank you very much |
| Yihiyeh Tov | Things will be okay |
| Yishar Koach | Well done! Keep it up! |
March 2010
| 1 | Annual | National Day of Wales. Feast day of St David. |
| 1 | 1887 | The western occult society, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, was founded. Members include the poet WB Yeats and occultist AE Waite, creator of the Rider-Waite tarot deck. |
| 1 | Annual | Matronalia, the Roman Festival of Motherhood |
| 3 | Annual | The third day of the third month is considered a good time for witches to perform spells of self-empowerment. Invoke the Triple Goddess of the Full/Waxing/Waning Moon and charge up your energies. |
| 4 | Annual | Sacred to Rhiannon, Celtic Mother Goddess. Listen to the song Rhiannon by Fleetwood Max |
| 4 | 1968 | The Church of All Worlds in America, was formerly chartered becoming the first federally recognised church of Neo-Paganism |
| 5 | 1936 | The British fighter plane Spitfire made its first test flight from Eastleigh, Southampton. Powered by a Rolls-Royce Merlin engine the aircraft will enter service with the Royal Air Force in the next two years |
| 7 | 1876 | The Scottish-born inventor, Alexander Graham Bell, patented the telephone. |
| 7 | 2009 | NASA’s Kepler Mission, a space photometer which will search for extrasolar planets in the Milky Way galaxy, is launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, USA. |
| 8 | Annual | International Women’s Day United Nations Day for Women’s Rights and International Peace |
| 8 | Annual | Cranberra Day is a public holiday in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) on the second Monday of March each year. It commemorates Canberra’s official founding in 1913 and highlights a major festival in the territory. |
| 11- 13 | Annual | Festival of Holi, Central Asia. The Festival of Holi begins on March’s Full Moon and is the first major festival in the Hindu calendar. While the first day of Holi is signified through the lighting of fires, the second day is celebrated by people all over Northern India, Nepal and Mauritius who spend the day throwing colored water around. |
| 13 | Annual | This is said to be a lucky day for witches due to significant numerological vibrations. This is a time to do things that you have been putting off as results are guaranteed |
| 15 | 44BC | “Beware the Ides of March” – Julius Caesar is stabbed by Marcus Brutus. |
| 15 | Annual | Tagata Shrine Hohen Festival, Nagoya, Japan. The village of Komati (just north of Nagoya City) hosts a truly bizarre harvest festival. Komati celebrates the harvest (and continuing fertility). In order to offer a symbol of fertility to a designated deity, the residents of the small town carry a hulking great phallus through the streets, before setting it down in front of a shrine. Meanwhile, onlookers cling to smaller incarnations, while snacking cheerfully on penis-shaped foods. |
| 15 | Monthly | New Moon |
| 16 | Annual | Rosh Chodesh Nissan |
| 17 | Annual | Green, green, and more green. St. Patrick’s Day. The first St. Patrick’s Day parade took place not in Ireland, but in the United States. Irish soldiers serving in the English military marched through New York City on March 17, 176. http://www.history.com/content/stpatricksday/history-of-the-holiday |
| 18 | Annual | Sacred to Sheila-na-gig, Pagan Fertility Goddess |
| 19 | Annual | Las Fallas celebrated in Valencia, Spain. Over a five day period leading up to St. Joseph’s Day, satirical statues made of paper-mache are displayed throughout the city of Valencia. Then, come the 19th, they’re set on fire! |
| 20 | Annual | Mabon (Southern Hemisphere) |
| 20 – 21 | Spring Equinox (Northern Hemisphere) when the length of daytime is exactly equal to the length of night time, thousands gather round the ancient Mayan ruin at Chichen Itza and gaze as the temple’s steps cast the shadow of a snake creeping down towards the ground. | |
| 20 – 23 | Annual | Ostara, one of the lesser Sabbats. It is a time of initiation into male mysteries and celebration as Spring is under way and the land is waking up (Northern Hemisphere) |
| 21 | Annual | International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination |
| 21 – 28 | Annual | Week of Solidarity with the Peoples Struggling against Racism and Racial Discrimination |
| 22 | Annual | World Water Day |
| 23 | Annual | World Meteorological Day |
| 24 | 1603 | The crowns of England and Scotland were united when King James VI of Scotland succeeded to the English throne. |
| 26 | 1902 | British imperialist Cecil John Rhodes died in Cape Town aged 48. Rhodes who controlled 90% of the world’s diamond production, was influential in establishing the British crown in South Africa and Rhodesia. |
| 27 | 1871 | England and Scotland played their first rugby international, in Edinburgh; first blood to Scotland. |
| 27 | Annual | Lazarus Saturday is the day before Palm Sunday and is part of the Easter celebration of Eastern Orthodox Church and observes the time when Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead depicting Jesus’ power over life and death. Christians have celebrated the day before Palm Sunday as “The Saturday Of Lazarus”. |
| 30 | Monthly | Full Moon |
| 30 – 6/4 | Annual | Pesach/Passover. Passover begins at sundown on 29 March and ends at sunset on 6 April. |
Amazon Store at Gaea’s
I have linked some of my favourite books and other items that I think you may like in My Amazon Bookstore. I’ll keep updating the store and posting links for books as required in posts, so check back regularly.
You can view my choice of products using the tab above, the link in this post, the carousel on my blog’s homepage for my current favourites or browse the “My Amazon Bookstore” category.
If you order via my my Amazon Bookstore, you will receive the same excellent level of quality and care that you usually receive from Amazon.
Kabbalah: The Misunderstood Doctrine
The information below is an excerpt from http://www.jewfaq.org/kabbalah.htm
Kabbalah is one of the most grossly misunderstood parts of Judaism. I have received several messages from non-Jews describing Kabbalah as “the dark side of Judaism,” describing it as evil or black magic. On the other end of the spectrum, I receive many messages wanting to learn more about the trendy doctrine popularized by various Jewish and non-Jewish celebrities.
These misunderstandings stem largely from the fact that the teachings of Kabbalah have been so badly distorted by mystics and occultists. Kabbalah was popular among Christian intellectuals during the Renaissance and Enlightenment periods, who reinterpreted its doctrines to fit into their Christian dogma. In more recent times, many have wrenched kabbalistic symbolism out of context for use in tarot card readings and other forms of divination and magic that were never a part of the original Jewish teachings. Today, many well-known celebrities have popularized a new age pop-psychology distortion of kabbalah (I have heard it derisively referred to as “crap-balah”). It borrows the language of kabbalah and the forms of Jewish folk superstitions, but at its heart it has more in common with the writings of Deepak Chopra than with any authentic Jewish source. Read the rest of this entry »
Kabbalah and Jewish Mysticism
The information below is an excerpt from http://www.jewfaq.org/kabbalah.htm
When non-Jews ask about Judaism, they commonly ask questions like: Do you believe in heaven and hell? In angels or the devil? What happens to the soul after death? What is the nature of G-d and the universe? The answers to questions like these define most religions; in fact, I have heard some people say that the purpose of religion is to answer these kinds of questions. Yet in Judaism, most of these cosmological issues are wide open to personal opinion. The areas of Jewish thought that most extensively discuss these issues, Kabbalah and Jewish mysticism, were traditionally not even taught to people until the age of 40, when they had completed their education in Torah and Talmud. Read the rest of this entry »
Other Jewish Writings
The information below is an excerpt from http://www.jewfaq.org/torah.htm
In addition to the Torah and Talmud, we have midrashim, which are basically stories expanding on incidents in the Bible to derive principles or Jewish law or to teach moral lessons. For example, there is a midrash about why Moses wasn’t a good speaker (he put coals in his mouth as a child basically as a way of proving that he wasn’t greedy), and another one about Abram discovering monotheism and rejecting his father’s idolatry (that’s a nifty one: basically, he smashes up all his father’s idols except the big one, then blames the mess on the big one, as a way of showing his father that the idols don’t really have any power). Some of them fill in gaps in the narrative. For example, in Gen. 22:2, why does G-d say, “thy son, thine only son, whom thou lovest, even Isaac.” Wouldn’t the name alone be enough? One story says that the narrative is skipping out Abraham’s responses. “Take thy son.” “Which one?” “Thine only son.” “But I have two!” “Whom thou lovest.” “I love them both!” “Even Isaac.” (I’m not sure this is a traditional one — I got it from a questionable source — but I like it). Read the rest of this entry »
Oral Torah: The Talmud
The information below is an excerpt from http://www.jewfaq.org/torah.htm
In addition to the written scriptures we have an “Oral Torah,” a tradition explaining what the above scriptures mean and how to interpret them and apply the Laws. Orthodox Jews believe G-d taught the Oral Torah to Moses, and he taught it to others, down to the present day. This tradition was maintained only in oral form until about the 2d century C.E., when the oral law was compiled and written down in a document called the Mishnah.
Over the next few centuries, additional commentaries elaborating on the Mishnah were written down in Jerusalem and Babylon. These additional commentaries are known as the Gemara. The Gemara and the Mishnah together are known as the Talmud. This was completed in the 5th century C.E. Read the rest of this entry »
Torah Scrolls
The information below is an excerpt from http://www.jewfaq.org/torah.htm
The scriptures that are used in services are written on parchment scrolls. They are always hand-written, in attractive Hebrew calligraphy with “crowns” (crows-foot-like marks coming up from the upper points) on many of the letters. This style of writing is known as STA”M (an abbreviation for “Sifrei Torah, Tefillin and Mezuzot,” which is where you will see that style of writing). For more information about the STA”M alphabet, including illustrations and relevant rules, see Hebrew Alphabet used in writing STA”M.
You are not supposed to touch the parchment on these scrolls; some say because they are too holy; some say because the parchment, made from animal skins, is a source of ritual defilement; others say because your fingers’ sweat has acids that will damage the parchment over time. Instead, you follow the text with a pointer, called a Yad. “Yad” means “hand” in Hebrew, and the pointer usually is in the shape of a hand with a pointing index finger (I always find this incredibly amusing). The scrolls are kept covered with fabric, and often ornamented with silver crowns on the handles of the scrolls and a silver breastplate on the front. Read the rest of this entry »
The Torah
The information below is an excerpt from http://www.jewfaq.org/torah.htm
The word “Torah” is a tricky one, because it can mean different things in different contexts. In its most limited sense, “Torah” refers to the Five Books of Moses: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy. But the word “torah” can also be used to refer to the entire Jewish bible (the body of scripture known to non-Jews as the Old Testament and to Jews as the Tanakh or Written Torah), or in its broadest sense, to the whole body of Jewish law and teachings. Read the rest of this entry »