Is There a Modern Kabbalah?
Centuries after embracing science and reason, modern Jews
are returning to the rich font of Jewish mystical teachings.
But Jewish
mysticism has historically been tinged by large doses of magic,
superstition, and demonology. Can we capture the spiritual while avoiding
the superstitious? Where does magic leave off and mysticism begin? Can we
build a liberal faith that allows for angels and miracles?
These new questions can not be answered merely
by adding Eastern mystical practices to Jewish ritual. A genuine
thread of mysticism inhabits every Jewish epoch. Renewing and revitalizing
it
requires us to create a Kabbalah that will serve our needs.
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The Magic Is In Our Hands
Magic and mysticism were
once the province of priests and
prophets. In Talmudic times, Jewish mystics sought to ride the
"chariot." In the middle ages, answers were sought in the
prayer book. In the Zohar, mystics turned to the sefirot, even
as they tried to recapture the essence of prophecy. The masters of Tsfat
called us to "repair" the world. Later, messianic speculation endangered our
souls. Early Hasidism was mysticism made romantic.
All told, Jewish mystics have left us
a wealth of texts covering every aspect of Jewish life, ethics, mitzvot,
and rituals. Today, we are free to determine the future of mystic
speculation. The power of the
past is the magic in our hands.
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