receiving

How do we prepare to receive the Torah?

by Yedidah on June 2, 2022

Receiving the Torah, image from Chabad.org

and what is the Torah?

The Zohar teaches us that  the essence of the Torah, the essence of God, and the essence of the soul are one.

But we cannot attain the essence of God directly —even the essence of ourselves, our soul, is hidden from us. So the one aspect of this godly essence that we are given as a gift to grasp and to attain, is the Torah. When we learn, immerse ourselves, in the Torah, we are connecting directly with the Holy blessed One and with our own soul. And this is the great  gift that we are given every Shavuot, to renew our connection with the Divine essence.

But we’re not just a soul, we are also made up of the body. These two components, while they need each other, also oppose each other. Our body aspect, our egoism, tells us, “Whatever you do to better yourself in the material sense, or whatever actions you take that increase your importance in the world are good.” Whereas the soul, says, “Whatever we can do in giving unconditionally, whether to God or to our fellow human being, is good, because such actions bring us close to God.”

Our body aspect is more familiar to us:  it starts to grow the moment we are born, whereas our soul incarnates later. The voice of the ego is strident, fitting in with the messages we get from the society around us and from the media, whereas the soul whispers and we have to strain to hear its voice.

So how are we going to want to contact the soul? How are we going to decide that the yetzer hara, our evil inclination, is really our worst enemy ? How are we going to want the Torah, our connection with our soul?

 In this podcast, we study a beautiful article of Rabbi Baruch Shalom Ashlag in which he shows us that it is God, who, when He comes down into the mind and heart of a person, as He came down on Mount Sinai, shows us the reality of our own egoism, so we will want to receive the Torah again, here and now, with all our heart.

Podcast luilui nishmat Shalom Lev ben David haLevi Segal z”l

Based on article of Rabbi Baruch Shalom Halevi Ashlag, Sefer Hama’marim Volume 2 תשמז article 18

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Rabbi Ashlag Achieves Enlightenment

by Yedidah on December 5, 2019

Rabbi Yehudah Leib Ashlag

Many of us have dreamed of the moment when we will receive the light of God. When our deepest longings, our emptiness, our feelings of disconnection, will all be assuaged and the greatest joy known to the human being, the revelation of the light of God, will be given to us.

Such a state of enlightenment was given to Rabbi Yehudah Leib Ashlag, who later in his life  became known as “Master of the Ladder.”

From a very young age, the young Yehudah worked on himself, correcting all the traits of his personality. He later told that whenever he read a book of musar, ethical conduct, he never left off reading it until he had completely put its teaching into practice. Furthermore, he received instruction from his teachers, the great sages Rabbi Meir Shalom of Kalozhin, the Sage of Porisov,  and Rabbi Issachar Dov of Belz, who taught him how to serve God truly.

With incredible labor on himself, practicing Torah and mitzvot through giving to God unconditionally, Rabbi Ashlag cleaned up all his vessels of receiving until he achieved a state of dvekut, unity with the Creator. Thus it happened that on a certain occasion he merited to receive a revelation of the light of God, the great light of wisdom, the Or d’ Chochmah, which constitutes the goodness that God wishes to give all created beings according to His purpose of creation.

Rejoicing in his enlightened state and knowing that he was receiving this great light only in the way of receiving it for the sake of giving pleasure to the Creator, Rabbi Ashlag then sets out to visit his teacher, the Rabbi of Belz. But when he arrives at the Beit Midrash Rabbi Ashlag discovers to his dismay that his Rabbi is not at all pleased to see him in this enlightened state. On the contrary, he rebukes him and is sarcastic to him. Hurt and surprised Rabbi Ashlag cannot understand why, on the one hand, God is clearly giving him this great light —a state that cannot happen unless He wished it, but on the other hand the Rabbi of Belz, Rabbi Ashlag’s teacher, clearly disapproves. This leaves Rabbi Ashlag in a dilemma, which he has to resolve for himself.

Distressed, Rabbi young Rabbi Ashlag tosses and turns throughout the night, going over, again and again in his mind, all he has seen and experienced, checking again and again that the vessels he was using were completely fit and that his receiving of this great light was only for the sake of giving. But since that is the case, and he can taste the joy and light as a physical reality, then why does his teacher, who he reveres, not agree, even when God is clearly showing him that he has reached dvekut with him? Why is the Rabbi of Belz not only not happy for him, but on the contrary, he has spent all Shabbat showing Rabbi Ashlag his displeasure? After hours of agonizing questioning, Rabbi Ashlag reaches a decision: if his teacher demonstrates to him that he clearly knows the state and spiritual level that he, Rabbi Ashlag has reached, yet he still says it is inappropriate, he will abide with the instructions from his teacher.

The following day, the great Sage, the Rabbi of Belz, demonstrates to Rabbi Ashlag that he did indeed recognize this great level of light. And then he teaches him that even when a person is receiving this great light of Chochmah only for the sake of giving, nevertheless, the way of the Jew is to let go of this great light and instead to desire to give unconditionally, requesting the lesser light, the Or d’Chassadim, the joy of giving.

This teaching of the Rabbi of Belz, namely, not to chase after enlightenment but to prefer the light of giving unconditionally was one that changed Rabbi Ashlag’s life. It is a theme that in his work with his own students in later years he was to repeat many times in may different ways.

On the brink of emigrating to Israel, when his teacher, the Rabbi of Porisov warned Rabbi Ashlag that he would lose all his spiritual achievements in Israel, he simply answered quietly, “I am not looking for lights, I am looking for work.”

Through focusing on the desire to give unconditionally to his students and to the world Rabbi Ashlag became a channel for the Torah of the holy Ari and for that of the Zohar for the benefit of all humankind.

May his holy memory be for a blessing.

A full description of Rabbi Ashlag’s enlightenment experience told in his own words appears in the new biography, “The Master of the Ladder, the Life and Teachings of Rabbi Yehudah Leib Ashlag” by Rabbi Avraham Mordecai Gottleib, Translated and Edited by Yedidah Cohen

Now available at www.nehorapress.com

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Torah: a Source of Balance

by Yedidah June 22, 2016
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We have two ways of relating to the goodness that the Creator gives us: receiving or giving. But these two functions are very often mutually opposite, each feeling that its own way is the correct way, even though such function is often incomplete. But a greater harmony and balance is achieved by co-operation, thus causing a third, middle way to emerge. The Torah itself comes forth from and guides us to this middle way.

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Independence and Redemption

by Yedidah April 15, 2013
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Israel’s independence is part of the process of redemption but is not yet fully actualized. It is intimately connected with the revelation of the Zohar in this generation : From the writings of Rabbi Ashlag

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