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The ABC of
Kabbalah
by
David Aaron
Many years
ago, when I first began the study of the Kabbalah, the ancient
mystical interpretation of Judaism, I stumbled upon the learning
center of a great Kabbalistic master. The place was crowed, so I
figured there must be some kind of public event going on, and
went in. The great Kabbalist was speaking, but suddenly he
stopped. I heard him utter a sigh. I realized that he had
noticed me come in and was staring in my direction. Trying to be
as unobtrusive as possible, I made my way to a seat on the
sidelines, but his eyes followed me across the room. I got a
very uncomfortable feeling, which only intensified when he
pointed at me and motioned me to come forward.
The entire
room was looking at me now. My heart was pounding. I had heard
that these masters have the ability to look right through you,
to your soul. I didn’t know what to expect as I approached him,
and I was scared. He was quite old and had a long white beard
and bright blue, penetrating eyes. He spoke in a soft voice with
a thick accent, but he only asked me a few innocuous questions
about my family and myself. Then he held out an apple in his
hand and dramatically raised it before me, dangling it by its
stem.
This great man
wanted to give me an apple? I had no idea what this was all
about. I reached to take the apple. But the whole crowd shouted,
“No!” I became flustered and withdrew my hand. He offered the
apple again and again I tried to take it. Again the crowd
yelled, “No!” Then I saw that people were motioning for me to
cup my hand and hold it beneath the apple. I did so. The great
Kabbalist smiled and dropped the apple into my hand. He then
bent over and, in a tone that seemed to admonish me, whispered
in my ear, “What have you been learning?” Before I could answer,
he turned and walked away.
It took years
before I realized what all that meant. “Kabbalah” literally
means “receptivity”—indeed, it is the art of learning to
receive. The master was trying to show me that I had not yet
learned the real meaning of the Kabbalah. The lesson was: when
you are offered a gift, do not take it; instead, make of
yourself a space that can receive it.
Kabbalah is
not only about getting more out of life; it is about receiving
life as a gift. It is about the art of receiving life’s gifts of
love, spiritual growth, awareness, creativity, freedom, inner
peace, happiness, and holiness. Mastering the art of receiving
is not merely a private matter for each of us. The Kabbalah and
the Torah both teach that our individual lives reflect a
universal process. Human psychology is really a particular
manifestation of cosmology. All of reality shares in our
struggles, feels our pain, celebrates our joy, and cheers us on
to live fully. Conversely, all of reality hurts when we inflict
pain upon others and ourselves. We are all connected to one
another—individually and collectively, to the universe, and to
all that is. We are not alone. Knowing this gives us strength,
hope, courage, and energy.
Want a Light?
A story is
told about three men who were imprisoned in a dark dungeon. Two
of them were intelligent but the third was not very smart.
Everyday, when their food was lowered into the dark dungeon, the
third fellow would fumble with the utensils, break the plate and
cut himself with the knife. One of the clever fellows would help
him by practicing a routine with him to handle the darkness, but
because the food was presented in a different way each day, it
always confused him. The other prisoner then said, “Let’s bore a
hole in the wall and let a ray of light in, and then he will be
able to see and eat without help.”
The Kabbalah
is all about light. It’s main message to us is that we have the
power to increase the spiritual light in the world or decrease
it. All our actions, words and thoughts control the dimmer
switch that turns the light up or down. What is the power of
light? When you turn the light on in your room it lets you see
what is there. Otherwise you grope in the dark, knock things
over, bang your knee and walk into walls. This is also true with
spiritual light. Without it, your spiritual world is dark.
Without spiritual light you can’t see love even when it is right
in front of you. You knock over people who love you. You step on
souls. You walk right past meaningful moments. And you have no
sense of direction.
According to
the Kabbalah a person who only has access to physical light
lives in the World of Shells or Peels--called Olam HaKlipot. Such a person only sees physical things, those which are
external and superficial. The shell or the peel is only the
outside of the fruit and is therefore secondary to the fruit. If
you can only see the shell or peel, you confuse the wrapping
with the true contents. You are impressed with the packaging and
miss the true gift inside.
Kabbalah
teaches us the secrets of how to access the spiritual light that
lets us see what’s inside. Given that what you see is what you
get, when you want to receive the eternal spiritual gift wrapped
in this world, you need to increase the spiritual light to see
and get inside. This physical world is only the packaging but
what is the gift inside?
What is the
greatest gift you could ever give or get? Presence. Not presents
but Presence. When I think of my childhood, my most precious
memory is of my mother sitting by my bed and reading to me
Winnie the Pooh. What is so great about that? My parents gave me
lots of gifts. I got a terrific train set and lots of other
toys. But they didn’t last and they mean very little to me
today. What I still treasure and continue to enjoy are those
precious moments when I knew my mother was there for me. She
wasn’t interested in Pooh Bear or Piglet. She never read those
stories at any time for herself. My mother concentrated her
entire being into those moments and was completely there for me.
She gave me the greatest gift you could ask for – her Presence.
What is
Presence? Presence is like chocolate cake. I can’t tell you what
chocolate cake tastes like; you will only know how delicious it
is when you taste it yourself. I could tell you what the
ingredients are, but the cake is greater than the sum of the
ingredients. Presence is like the color green. I can’t tell you
what it looks like, but when you will see it, you will know. I
could tell you that it is a combination of blue and yellow but
even those are colors that you can only know experientially. And
of course even after you see blue and yellow, green is greater
than the sum of the parts. So I can’t tell you what Presence is.
I can tell you that its ingredients are love, care, respect,
honesty, meaning, beauty, kindness, wisdom and much more. To
know Presence you have to experience it.
According to
the Kabbalah, God created you and I and put us into this world
to give us the greatest gift imaginable. Divine Presence.
Kabbalah calls this “Shechina”. Divine Presence or the
“Shechina” fills everything.
But how do we
turn on the light that lets the eyes of our soul see it? How do
we become receptive to the ultimate gift of G-d loving presence?
By giving our loving presence to each other so that we become
receptive to the Divine Presence. And the more you give, the
more you receive.
 
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