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Home » Categories » Society » Religion and Spirituality » In Kabbalah, You Can Have it All » Reprint Rights » Printer Friendly

In Kabbalah, You Can Have it All

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Submitted Wednesday, July 30, 2008
Bnei Baruch (316)
Bnei Baruch Kabbalah Education &Research Institute
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The wisdom of Kabbalah explains that all around us, there's an entire world that we don't feel-the spiritual world. As soon as we begin feeling it, we discover an entire array of new sensations, desires and delights that were there all along, but we simply didn't notice them.  

In other words, Kabbalah teaches us how to develop our latent sense of spirituality. But does this mean that we should strain to feel nothing but spirituality, and reject everything else? For example, should we eat less and avoid material pleasures as much as we can?

Contrary to many other practices, Kabbalah says just the opposite: in developing the sense of spirituality, we should not try to restrict ourselves in any regard. It explains that everything was created for a reason, and hence we should make use of all the resources available to us, including material pleasures. 

In fact, as one develops his desire for spirituality, one also begins having a greater desire for material pleasures. Why? Because one's general "vessel" for pleasures becomes bigger. Still baffled?

In Hebrew, the wisdom of Kabbalah means "the wisdom of how to receive." It teaches us how to receive all the pleasure that was intended for us in the Thought of Creation: to delight the created beings. Therefore, by studying Kabbalah, one constantly increases his vessel to receive all the pleasure that the Creator wants to give him.

When a person has a "small vessel" for pleasure, he feels satisfied with little. Give him a glass of water and a slice of bread, and this will satisfy him. And here is actually the core difference between Kabbalah and many other methods or religions-since they usually teach a person to restrict his desires, his "vessel," in order to feel happy with what he already has. This is what often makes one a "righteous person" in many religions and practices.

However, a "righteous person" in Kabbalah, or a Kabbalist, has the greatest desires in the world. In fact, his desires expand so much that he wants to swallow up the whole world. And this is exactly what allows him to receive the enormous pleasure that the Creator wishes him to receive. Sounds quite far from a "righteous person," doesn't it? The thing is that a Kabbalist knows how to receive-all he receives is in order to please the Creator.

In other words, if we have no desire for something, we will feel no pleasure from it. Think of that time when your spouse took you to a boring ballet show (or an awful car exhibition, depending on who's reading this). Since you had no desire for this, you couldn't enjoy it.

In Kabbalah, we develop a desire for the delight that's intended for us in the Thought of Creation. That way we will be able to enjoy that enormous pleasure. At the same time, Kabbalah does not tell us to stop "receiving" other things or to limit any of our desires. On the contrary, it says that we should receive and enjoy ourselves as much as we possibly can-we only have to learn to do so.

A person who studies Kabbalah develops his sensation of spirituality, or in other words, his connection to the Creator. Thus, he learns how to receive all the abundance that comes from the Creator, in the right way. This is why in Kabbalah, you can literally have it all!


Bnei Baruch, http://www.kabbalah.info/  is the largest group of Kabbalists in Israel, sharing the wisdom of Kabbalah with the entire world. Study materials in over 25 languages are based on authentic Kabbalah texts that were passed down from generation to generation. http://www.kabbalah.info/course/course.php




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Comments on this article:


» left by Bnei Baruch (316) (122 days 3 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 2.5 out of 5
Interesting view on increasing ones desire vs accepting less in our lives.
I like that thought.

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» left by Anonymous (121 days 20 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
wonderful and very interesting! can we have more of it?

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» left by Anonymous (118 days 10 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
Definitely a new take on "having it all" and on Kabbalah.

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Article added to SearchWarp.com on Wednesday, July 30, 2008
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