Monday, August 7, 2017

Proven Step-By-Step Guide for Setting & Achieving Your Goals

Proven Step-By-Step Guide for Setting & Achieving Your Goals: Did you know there are 7 steps to achieving ANY goal?  If you are ready for a powerful mindset shift that can upgrade your life and want t...

Saturday, June 18, 2016

Kabbalah celebrates a quality of consciousness that enables one to experience magic in the ordinary, miracles in the natural course of events, and spirituality in the physical. Its roots are as old and rich as most aboriginal shamanic traditions, sharing in common with many of them the belief that all of creation is alive, from animals and plants to the sun and the moon. Learn more... 

Saturday, May 28, 2016

Kabbalah for Spiritual Transformation and Fulfi...

Unlock the Secrets of the Spheres! - Get Connected, Inspired, Grounded, and Insightful. Step into a vast world of rich and ancient knowledge -  You’ll explore the basics of kabbalistic esoteric traditions, and the wisdom of many cultures: The tree of life and 12 Signs of the Zodiac - The 12  tribe of Jewish tradition wisdom - and wisdom of Zohar- The 7 Chakras and the tarots - and much more! -  it could change your life! . These powerful elements make up the essence of your life – you can find success by understanding their interpretations and implications. To find out what destiny has in store for you, learn the mystical meanings of the stars and planets in Astrology with wisdom of Kabbala: Don’t wait another minute to know your future, find your soul mate, and discover your true path in life.  Kabbalah for Spiritual Transformation and Fulfi...

Sunday, May 22, 2016

Tarort

Tarot is an ancient, sacred method of acquiring information for spiritual insight. Kabbalah is the science of numbers, and reveals the structures of everything that exists. By knowing Kabbalah, one also knows the way out of suffering. Together, Tarot and Kabbalah empower, energize, and clarify your spiritual life. Instead of wandering in guesses, beliefs, and assumptions, one can know for oneself, with certainty. Packed with practical exercises, including meditation, astral projection, numerology, and divination Includes detailed explanations of all 78 Tarot cards and how they relate to Kabbalah Utilizes examples from all of the world’s great religions. Get The Essential Tarot Kit: Book and Card Set



Thousands of years ago, the angel Metatron gave to humanity the Tarot and the Hebrew letters, which were preserved among the highest secrets of the mystical traditions, and were completely unknown to the public. Unfortunately, some cunning people stole and modified a portion of the protected teachings, and over the centuries that stolen knowledge passed through Egypt, Arabia, and finally into Europe, eventually becoming what we popularly refer to as the Tarot: a deck of cards marked by seemingly obscure images and symbols. Over the centuries, it degenerated. It was re-arranged, misinterpreted, misused... In spite of our troubled history, the real Tarot continues to exist, and has never changed, since the real Tarot was not made by humanity, but has always existed in the superior worlds.


Now, you can learn about the eternal Tarot. Metatron gave the Tarot and the Hebrew letters to humanity so that we, who are so confused and blinded by our psychological state, could have some way of acquiring reliable information from The Rider Tarot Deck

Saturday, July 26, 2014

Christian Kabbalah

The word, 'Qabalah' means, 'to receive.' It is a system of studying 10 different names and attributes of God, and the 22 Tarot Cards associated with the connecting paths serves as a graphical aid to assist the student in understanding the mysteries of God.  The Qabalah A.D: The Christian Kabbalah is intended to assist the reader in understanding the nature of God, the mysteries of the Bible, and the path to salvation and spiritual growth. It builds on the efforts of Jewish Mystics and the Hermetic Orders in order to produce a completed version of the Qabalah - based solely on scripture taken from the Torah, Septuagint, and the New Testament of the Bible.

 Christian Kabbalah is the interpretation of Jewish Kabbalistic themes in the context of the Christian faith, or an interpretation of Christian doctrines utilizing Kabbalistic methods and concepts. The Renaissance saw the birth of Christian Kabbalah/Cabala (From the Hebrew קַבָּלָה "reception", often transliterated with a 'C' to distinguish it from Jewish Kabbalah and Hermetic Qabalah), also spelled Cabbala. Interest grew among some Christian scholars in what they saw to be the mystical aspects of Judaic Kabbalah, which were compatible with Christian theology. Although somewhat obscure, the tradition of Christian Cabala or Catholic Cabala still persists today. Kabbalah is well known as the foundation of the Jewish mystical tradition, but few are aware that Kabbalah’s spiritual applications extend beyond Jewish life. You will find that the teachings of Kabbalah are not only for Jewish scholars—anyone can incorporate this enduring wisdom into everyday life if they have an open mind and a willing heart. 

Kabbalah: A Brief Introduction for Christians Unlike the faddish books that discuss Kabbalah as simply a “magical system,” this book discusses the evolution of Kabbalah from its origins in Judaism and gives Christian readers the vocabulary and tools to begin to understand this long-standing mystical tradition. It also explores the similarities and differences between Jewish and Christian mysticism, placing both in a larger and more comprehensive framework. Explore the kabbalistic Tree of Life to discover how God is expressed in the world around us.


 According to Benz, Christian Kabbalah is the interpretation of Kabbalistic themes in the context of the Christian faith, or an interpretation of Christian doctrines utilizing Kabbalistic methods and concepts." He says its beginnings are generally traced back to Count Pico della Mirandola in the 15th century who, in 1486 at the young age of 23, became prominent with his "900 conclusions or theses on a Christian syncretism of all religions and sciences" which included the basic and controversial idea that esoteric Judaism is basically identical with Christianity.Read more ›

Benz's book as a good general introduction to  the ORIGINS of Christian Kabbalah with a special informative emphasis on the Kabbalistic influences and adaptations of Christian theosopher Friedrich Christoph Oetinger (1702 - 1782) who also encountered, studied and wrote a book about Christian Kabbalism in what is called "The Kabbalistic Master Tablet of Princess Antonia of Wurtemberg". One gets info. related to Christian uses of Jewish Kabbalah prior to Eliphas Levi, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, and other 19th century adaptations that contributed to contemporary hermetic qabalah. If one has read, like I have, Robert Wang's imbalanced book, The Rape of Jewish Mysticism by Christian Theologians: How the Modern Occult Movement Grew out of Renaissance Attempts to Convert the Jews (2001), Benz's book will help bring historical balance.

  Christian Gnosis: From Saint Paul to Meister Eckhart -Wolfgang Smith formulates what he terms an "unexpurgated" account of gnosis, and demonstrates its central place in the perfection of the Christ-centered life. He observes, moreover, that the very conception of a "supreme knowing," as implied by the aforesaid sources, has a decisive bearing upon cosmology, which moreover constitutes the underlying principle upon which his earlier scientific and philosophical work-beginning with his ground-breaking treatise on the interpretation of quantum mechanics-has been based. The "fact of gnosis," however, has a decisive bearing on the theological notion of creatio ex nihilo as well, and it is this imperative that Smith proposes to explore in the present work.

 What is thus demanded, he contends, is the inherently Kabbalistic notion of a creatio ex Deo et in Deo, not to replace, but to complement the creatio ex nihilo. This leads to an engagement with Christian Kabbalah  (Pico de la Mirandola, Johann Reuchlin, and Cardinal Egidio di Viterbo especially) and with Jacob Boehme, culminating in an exegesis of Meister Eckhart's doctrine. The author argues, first of all, that Eckhart does not (as many have thought) advocate a "God beyond God" theology: does not, in other words, hold an inherently Sabellian view of the Trinity. Smith maintains that Eckhart has not in fact transgressed a single Trinitarian or Christological dogma; what he does deny implicitly, he shows, is none other than the creatio ex nihilo, which in effect Eckhart replaces with the Kabbalistic creatio ex Deo. In this shift, moreover, Smith perceives the transition from "exoteric" to "esoteric" within the integral domain of Christian doctrine. Wolfgang Smith brings to his writing a rare combination of qualities and experiences, not the least his ability to move freely between the somewhat arcane worlds of science and traditional metaphysics. Alongside Dr. Smith's imposing qualifications in mathematics, physics, and philosophy, we find his hard-earned expertise in Platonism, Christian theology, traditional cosmologies, and Oriental metaphysics. His outlook has been enriched both by his diverse professional experiences in the high-tech world of the aerospace industry and in academia, and by his own researches in the course of his far-reaching intellectual and spiritual journeying. Here is that rare person who is equally at home with Eckhart and Einstein, Heraclitus and Heisenberg! 

Christian Kabbalah or Cabala "reinterpreted Kabbalistic doctrine from a distinctly Christian perspective, linking Jesus Christ, His atonement, and His resurrection to the TenSefirot", linking the upper three Sephirot to the hypostases of the Trinity and the last seven "to the lower or earthly world",[2] or "would make Kether the Creator (or the Spirit), Hokhmah the Father, and Binah—the supernal mother—Mary", which "places Mary on a divine level with God, something the orthodox churches have always refused to do".[3] Christian Cabalists sought to transform Kabbalah into "a dogmatic weapon to turn back against the Jews to compel their conversion—starting with Ramon Llull", whom Harvey J. Hames called "the first Christian to acknowledge and appreciate kabbalah as a tool of conversion", though Llull was not a Kabbalist himself nor versed in Kabbalah.[4] Later Christian Cabala is mostly based on Pico della Mirandola, Johann Reuchlin and Paolo Riccio.

The movement was influenced by a desire to interpret aspects of Christianity even more mystically than current Christian Mystics. Greek Neoplatonic documents came into Europe from Constantinople in the reign of Mehmet IINeoplatonism had been prevalent in Christian Europe and had entered into Scholasticism since the translation of Greek and Hebrew texts in Spain in the 13th century. The Renaissance trend was a relatively short-lived phenomenon, ending by 1750. After the 18th century, Kabbalah became blended with European occultism, some of which had a religious basis; but the main thrust of Christian Kabbalah was by then dead. A few attempts have been made to revive it in recent decades, particularly in relation to the Neoplatonism of the first two chapters of the Gospel of John, but it has not entered into mainstream Christianity.