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  2. Christian Kabbalah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Kabbalah

    The Franciscan friar Ramon Llull (c. 1232–1316) was "the first Christian to acknowledge and appreciate kabbalah as a tool of conversion", although he was "not a Kabbalist, nor was he versed in any particular Kabbalistic approach". [4]

  3. Partzufim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partzufim

    Traditional location of the Idra Assembly. In the Zohar, Shimon bar Yohai convenes his students to expound the partzufim. Later, Isaac Luria, who systemised the partzufim, convened his students there, each one sitting in the location of their former incarnation [2]

  4. Kabbalah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabbalah

    With the decline of Christian Cabala in the Age of Reason, Hermetic Qabalah continued as a central underground tradition in Western esotericism. Through these non-Jewish associations with magic, alchemy and divination, Kabbalah acquired some popular occult connotations forbidden within Judaism, where Jewish theurgic Practical Kabbalah was a ...

  5. Four Worlds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Worlds

    The Four Worlds (Hebrew: עולמות ʿOlāmot, singular: ʿOlām עולם), sometimes counted with a primordial world, Adam Kadmon, and called the Five Worlds, are the comprehensive categories of spiritual realms in Kabbalah in a descending chain of existence.

  6. Zeir Anpin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeir_Anpin

    Zeir Anpin, the emotional sephirot centered on Tiferet (Beauty), is the transcendent revelation of God to Creation ("The Holy One Blessed Be He"), a perceptible manifestation of the essential Divine infinity (the Tetragrammaton name of God).

  7. Atziluth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atziluth

    The word is derived from "atzal" in Ezekiel 42:6. It was taken into Kabbalah via Solomon ibn Gabirol's Meqor Ḥayyim "Fountain of Life", which was much used by Kabbalists. . The theory of emanation, conceived as a free act of the will of God, endeavors to surmount the difficulties that attach to the idea of creation in its relation to G

  8. Comte de Gabalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comte_de_Gabalis

    Comte de Gabalis is a 17th-century French text by Abbé Nicolas-Pierre-Henri de Montfaucon de Villars (1635–1673). The titular "Comte de Gabalis" ("Count of Cabala") is an esotericist who explains the mysteries of the world to the author. It first appeared in Paris in 1670, anonymously, though the identity of the author came to be known.

  9. Tzimtzum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tzimtzum

    The Hebrew word zimzum can mean “contraction,” “retraction,” “demarcation,” “restraint,” and “concentration.” The term zimzum originates in the Kabbalah and refers to God’s contraction of himself before the creation of the world, and for the purpose of creating the world.