Lurianic Symbols


Jewish Review: Tikkun Haolam-Repair and Restoration of the Soul and World by Dr. Sanford Drob

Lurianic Symbols | The Theosophical Kabbalah

Jewish Review Volume 4 , Issue 1      Sanford L. Drob, Ph.D.  The kabbalistic concept of tikkun haolam, the repair of restoration of the world, has been reignited in the Jewish imagination in recent years. Jewish philosophers have adapted this concept for their own use and a major Jewish periodical, Tikkun, has emerged which explicitly adopts […]

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A Verbal Picture of the Lurianic Theosophy

Lurianic Symbols | The Theosophical Kabbalah

The following is a verbal representation of Lurianic Kabbalah account of God, humanity and the world. The story it tells is circular as the end is also the beginning. The Lurianic theosophy represents an “absolute” (Ein-sof) which evolves with, and who is completed by creation. Left: The Discourse on Light. Aquarelle on paper.  SanfordDrobart.com.   […]

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Tikkun Ha-Olam (The Restoration/Repair of the World)

Lurianic Symbols

The symbol of Tikkun ha-Olam embodies the most distinctively Jewish, as well as the the single most important ethical injunction of the Kabbalah: the command that humanity must restore and redeem a broken and fallen world (see Shevirat ha-Kelim). As articulated by Isaac Luria in 16th century Safed, Tikkun is a symbol with both metaphysical and theological implications. Luria and his disciples understood every event in the created universe, […]

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Partzufim (Divine Visages)

Lurianic Symbols

The Lurianists held that the Sefirot, in all worlds but the World of Points, are organized into Partzufim, “Visages” or personal aspects of Adam Kadmon, the Primordial Adam. According to Moses Luzatto, both the Sefirot and Partzufim are constructed of ten lights (representing each of the ten Sefirot), each of which are themselves constructed of ten more, and so on ad infinitum. However, when […]

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Kellipot (Husks)

Lurianic Symbols

In the Lurianic Kabbalah, the Kellipot (singular: Kellipah) are the “husks” or “shells” imprisoning the sparks of divine light that were exiled from God as a result of the Breaking of the Vessels. The world as we know it is thoroughly comprised of these Kellipot, some of which are completely dark and “unclean” and thus irredeemable by man, other’s […]

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Shevirat ha-Kelim (Breaking of the Vessels)

Lurianic Symbols

According to Isaac Luria, the ten vessels that were originally meant to contain the emanation of God’s light were unable to contain that light and were hence either displaced or shattered. As a result of this cosmic catastrophe, the Sefirot, the archetypal values through which the cosmos was created, are shattered and out of place, […]

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Ha-Olamot (Worlds)

Lurianic Symbols

The Sefirot are thought to provide the structural elements for each of the Kabbalist’s “Worlds.” The Olamot comprise a second stage in God’s creative process. In this stage the Sefirot are organized into a series of four (and in some schemes five) basic “World,s” which are thought to be progressively distinct from God’s primordial essence or light. Each of the Olamot serves to […]

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Otiyot Yesod (Primordial Letters)

Lurianic Symbols

The Otiyot Yesod or “Foundational Letters” are first described in the early proto-Kabbalistic work, Sefer Yetzirah (The Book of Formation). In this work we find, alongside the notion that the world is composed of ten Sefirot, an additional and at times parallel symbolism in which the entire cosmos is said to be created from the 22 consonant/letters of the Hebrew […]

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Adam Kadmon (The Primordial Human)

Lurianic Symbols

The symbol of the Primordial Human, the first being to emerge with the creation of the cosmos is common to a number of religious and philosophical traditions. The Upanishads describe a primal man composed of the very elements which were to become the world. According to the Upanishads this “gigantic divine being” is both infinitely […]

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Tzimtzum (Contraction/Concealment)

Lurianic Symbols

The word Tzimtzum has at least two meanings. The first is an ontological meaning connoting “contraction”, “withdrawal”, or “condensation.” The second is an epistemological meaning, which connotes “concealment” or “occultation”. Both the ontological and epistemological senses of the term are necessary to a full understanding of the Lurianic theory of creation. The doctrine of Tzimtzim gives expression to a […]

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Ein-Sof (The Infinite)

Lurianic Symbols

Ein-Sof, the Infinite God, has no static, definable form. Instead, the Kabbalists conceive God, the world and humanity as evolving together through, and thus embodying, a number of distinct stages and aspects, with later stages opposing, but at the same time encompassing, earlier ones. The Kabbalistıs God is both perfectly simple and infinitely complex, nothing […]

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