Kabbalah is an ancient Jewish doctrine of esoteric knowledge. According
to this doctrine the nature of God and the universe were was revealed
to elect saints in the remote past, and have been preserved through
the centuries by a chain of initiates. Kabbalah is part of the Jewish
Oral Law - a mystical interpretation of the Torah. Kabbalah stresses
an understanding of the divine commandments, the events described
in the Torah, and the rules by which God governs the universe.
Early forms of esoteric mysticism existed before the time of Jesus.
Ben Sira warns against esoteric teachings in his saying: "Thou shalt
have no business with secret things" (Sirach iii. 22). Apocalyptic
literature from the second and first centuries BC contained elements
of Kabbalah. According to Josephus, such literature was jealously
guarded by the Essenes, who claimed that they already dated from
distant antiquity. Many books containing secret lore were kept hidden
by the Enlightened (IV Esdras xiv. 45-46). One of the most
sustained criticisms of Kabbalah is that it leads away from monotheism,
and towards dualism, the belief that there are two gods. The dualistic
system of good and of evil powers, traceable back to Zoroastrianism,
was popular among Gnostics and certainly influenced the Kabbalah.
Curiously, we know little of Kabbalism through the dark and middle
ages until it reappears in the twelfth century in the Languedoc.
One particular book of Kabbalah, the Bahir ("illumination"),
or The Midrash of Rabbi Nehuniah ben haKana was first published
in Provence in 1176. Many Orthodox Jews believe that the author
was a Talmudic teacher of the first century. Most historians believe
that the book was written soon before it was published in the Langue
d'Oc.
That Kabbalistic writings should surface in the Languedoc, precisely
at the time and in the place that dualist Gnostic Cathars
and mystical Troubadours
flourished, has excited justifiable interest. With the power of
the repressive Roman
Catholic Church temporarily checked, it looks as though poets,
theologians and philosophers enjoyed a temporary freedom to work
together until the papal inquisition exterminated the Cathars and
expelled the Jews, and the Troubadours disappeared into the mists
of history.
Most forms of Kabbalah teach that every letter, word, number, and
accent of scripture contains a hidden sense; and it teaches the
methods of interpretation for ascertaining these occult meanings
- one of the aspects that have attracted some of the more vacuous
celebrities to Kabbalah.
If you want to learn more about these questions, on location in
the Languedoc, you might be interested in Templar
Quest Tours.
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