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Zohar: Annotated & Explained (SkyLight Illuminations)

de Daniel Chanan Matt

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The best-selling author of The Essential Kabbalah now offers readers the best introduction to the Zohar. The splendor and enigmatic appeal of the Zohar, the major text of the Jewish mystical tradition, has never intrigued readers of all faiths more than it does today. But how can we truly understand it? Daniel C. Matt brings together in one place the most important teachings from the Zohar, the cornerstone of Kabbalah--described as a mixture of theology, mystical psychology, anthropology, myth, and poetry--alongside facing-page stories, notes, and historical background that illuminate and explain the text. Ideal for the first-time reader with no prior knowledge of Jewish mysticism. Guides readers step-by-step through the texts that make up the Zohar--midrash, mystical fantasy, commentary, and Hebrew scripture--and explains the inner meanings of this sacred text, recognized by kabbalists as the most important work of mystical teaching, in a way that is both spiritually enlightening and intellectually fascinating.… (més)
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I loved the introduction by Andrew Harvey. ( )
  yamiyoghurt | Jan 29, 2018 |
Good introduction but skimpy ( )
  Flameater | Dec 3, 2013 |
Before this, just about everything I knew about Kabbalah was garnered from the media attention around Madonna and Britney Spears and that center in LA. I knew it was "mystical Judaism" or something to
that effect. The introduction in this book really helped me understand some basics about Kabbalah, like the 10 sefirot, etc. I was reading it out loud to ALi John as we sat on the floor and he drew with my pastels and he commented, "It's like Rumi, but with physics!" I suppose this is a)inaccurate and b)an oversimplification but the two have a similer feeling, I have to admit. Something beautiful and mystical that touches you, stirs you.
When I purchased this book I was under the deeply mistaken impression that it was the entire Zohar or a condensed version. The Zohar, the most important text in Kabbalah, is really long and for many centuries was inaccessible. There's only one complete English translation, published in the 1930's. The editor, Daniel Chanan Matt, is working on a complete annotated edition of the Zohar (translated into English), a projected 12 volumes. There's 3 out so far; he seems to be putting out one a year. I'm awed by this undertaking. I want to read them all, but I feel this is like saying I'm going to read all of Remembrances of Things Past. (yeah right)
(Ahhh! Which totally reminds me of this great quote from Little Miss Sunshine, which is a really good film and you should go see it:
Dwayne: I wish I could just sleep until I was eighteen and skip all this crap-high school and everything-just skip it.
Frank: You know Marcel Proust?
Dwayne: He's the guy you teach.
Frank: Yeah. French writer. Total loser. Never had a real job. Unrequited love affairs. Gay. Spent 20 years writing a book almost no one reads. But he's also probably the greatest writer since Shakespeare. Anyway, he uh... he gets down to the end of his life, and he looks back and decides that all those years he suffered, Those were the best years of his life, 'cause they made him who he was. All those years he was happy? You know, total waste. Didn't learn a thing. So, if you sleep until you're 18... Ah, think of the suffering you're gonna miss. I mean high school? High school-those are your prime suffering years. You don't get better suffering than that. ) ( )
  doloreshaze55 | Oct 11, 2007 |
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The best-selling author of The Essential Kabbalah now offers readers the best introduction to the Zohar. The splendor and enigmatic appeal of the Zohar, the major text of the Jewish mystical tradition, has never intrigued readers of all faiths more than it does today. But how can we truly understand it? Daniel C. Matt brings together in one place the most important teachings from the Zohar, the cornerstone of Kabbalah--described as a mixture of theology, mystical psychology, anthropology, myth, and poetry--alongside facing-page stories, notes, and historical background that illuminate and explain the text. Ideal for the first-time reader with no prior knowledge of Jewish mysticism. Guides readers step-by-step through the texts that make up the Zohar--midrash, mystical fantasy, commentary, and Hebrew scripture--and explains the inner meanings of this sacred text, recognized by kabbalists as the most important work of mystical teaching, in a way that is both spiritually enlightening and intellectually fascinating.

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