Israel hat geschrieben: ↑Mi 4. Sep 2019, 13:07Die Kabbalah spricht von einer mehrteiligen Seele.
Oh, Du studierst also die Kabbalah
ich wollte dich schon deswegen fragen, weil
die Seelenwanderungslehre ein Bestandteil der Kabbalah ist. „Gilgul Neschamot“ (hebr. גִלְגּוּל נְשָמוֹת, von גַּלְגַּל galgal „Rad“ und נְשָׁמָה neschama „Atem, Hauch“, wörtl. „das Rollen der Seelen“) erinnert an das Rad der Wiedergeburten im Buddhismus. Falls Du auf Facebook bist, dann kann ich Dir diese Gruppe empfehlen:
The Lights Of Kabbalah
Kennst Du möglicherweise Michael Laitman persönlich?
Various religions depict the Creator as something outside of us. But Kabbalah explains that it is forbidden to imagine the Creator as an image of any kind, that the Creator is a quality that exists within each of us. The Creator is the quality of love and bestowal. The meaning of the word “Creator” (Borre in Hebrew) is “Come and See” (Bo u Re’e), meaning come and discover this quality within you. There is no external, foreign element for whom we work! We work on correcting ourselves, on attaining the qualities of love and giving, the Creator. Around two thousand years ago, we lost the feeling of the Creator—we were exiled and lost the true picture of the world. We began to think that the Creator was someone who existed separately from us, rather than a quality that appeared within us. Instead of depicting the Creator as the primary and foremost quality of Creation, which clothes within us, we began to think of Him as a separate and foreign entity.
~ Rav Michael Laitman