Kabbalah$504290$ - tradução para Inglês
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Kabbalah$504290$ - tradução para Inglês

SCHOOL OF KABBALAH NAMED AFTER ISAAC LURIA (1534–1572)
Lurianism; Lurianic kabbalah; Lurian Kabbalah
  • meditations]] on specific Divine letter permutations related to each prayer
  • Scheme of the [[Five Worlds]] forming within the ''Khalal'' Vacuum (Outer Circle) through the illumination of the ''Kav'' Ray (Vertical Line). Concepts are non-spatial. [[Sephirot]] shown in the scheme of ''Iggulim'' ("Circles")
  • [[Joseph Karo]] synagogue in Safed. The 1538 Safed attempt by [[Jacob Berab]] to restore traditional [[Semikhah]] (Rabbinic organisation), reelected the community's Messianic focus. Karo, author of the normative [[Shulkhan Arukh]] (Code of Law) was one appointed
  • [[Mikveh]] of Isaac Luria on the hillside below [[Safed]] in the [[Galilee]], fed by a cold spring
  • The soul of [[Adam]] included all future human souls, while the [[613 Mitzvot]] relate to 613 spiritual "limbs" in the configuration of the soul
  • Messianic]] responsibility, mirrored in Lurianic scheme
  • The [[sephirot]] in the scheme of ''Yosher'' ("Upright"), from which the [[partzufim]] develop

Kabbalah      
n. Kabbalah, jüdische mystische Doktrine, Sammlung jüdischer Lehren (beinhaltet Zohar, Sepher Yetzira und das Sepher HaBahir)

Definição

cabbalistic
[?kab?'l?st?k]
¦ adjective relating to or associated with mystical interpretation or esoteric doctrine. See also Kabbalah.
Derivatives
cabbalism noun
cabbalist noun
Origin
var. of Kabbalistic: see Kabbalah.

Wikipédia

Lurianic Kabbalah

Lurianic Kabbalah is a school of kabbalah named after Isaac Luria (1534–1572), the Jewish rabbi who developed it. Lurianic Kabbalah gave a seminal new account of Kabbalistic thought that its followers synthesised with, and read into, the earlier Kabbalah of the Zohar that had disseminated in Medieval circles.

Lurianic Kabbalah describes new doctrines of the origins of Creation, and the concepts of Olam HaTohu (Hebrew: עולם התהו "The World of Tohu-Chaos") and Olam HaTikun (Hebrew: עולם התיקון "The World of Tikun-Rectification"), which represent two archetypal spiritual states of being and consciousness. These concepts derive from Isaac Luria's interpretation of and mythical speculations on references in the Zohar. The main popularizer of Luria's ideas was Rabbi Hayyim ben Joseph Vital of Calabria, who claimed to be the official interpreter of the Lurianic system, though some disputed this claim. Together, the compiled teachings written by Luria's school after his death are metaphorically called "Kitvei HaARI" (Writings of the ARI), though they differed on some core interpretations in the early generations.

Previous interpretations of the Zohar had culminated in the rationally influenced scheme of Moses ben Jacob Cordovero in Safed, immediately before Luria's arrival. Both Cordovero's and Luria's systems gave Kabbalah a theological systemisation to rival the earlier eminence of Medieval Jewish philosophy. Under the influence of the mystical renaissance in 16th-century Safed, Lurianism became the near-universal mainstream Jewish theology in the early-modern era, both in scholarly circles and in the popular imagination. The Lurianic scheme, read by its followers as harmonious with, and successively more advanced than the Cordoverian, mostly displaced it, becoming the foundation of subsequent developments in Jewish mysticism. After the Ari, the Zohar was interpreted in Lurianic terms, and later esoteric Kabbalists expanded mystical theory within the Lurianic system. The later Hasidic and Mitnagdic movements diverged over implications of Lurianic Kabbalah, and its social role in popular mysticism. The Sabbatean mystical tradition would also derive its source from Lurianic messianism, but had a different understanding of the Kabbalistic interdependence of mysticism with Halakha Jewish observance.