Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 256
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7425-4564-9 • Paperback • November 2005 • $19.95 • (£14.99)
David Ariel is President of the Laura and Alvin Siegal College of Judaic Studies in Cleveland. He is the author of the best selling book What Do Jews Believe? The Spiritual Foundations of Judaism, and Spiritual Judaism: Restoring Heart and Soul to Jewish Life. Ariel lives in the Cleveland, Ohio area.
Chapter 1 Seekers of Unity: The Nature of Mysticism
Chapter 2 Visionaries, Mystics, and Kabbalists: The History of Jewish Mysticism
Chapter 3 The Hidden and the Revealed: The Infinite God of Jewish Mysticism
Chapter 4 The Calculus of the Divine World: The Teaching of the Sefirot
Chapter 5 The Shekhinah: The Feminine Aspect of God
Chapter 6 Entering the Garden: The Meaning of Torah
Chapter 7 The Oneness of Being: The Destiny of the Soul
Chapter 8 The Mystic Drama: The Religious Life of the Jewish Mystic
Chapter 9 Raising the Sparks: Modern Jewish Mysticism
Chapter 10 Mysticism and Meditation: The Mystic Quest
Ariel (Laura and Alvin Siegal College of Judaic Studies) offers a helpful, readable introduction to the complex, arcane world of kabbalah. Most importantly, the book is an accurate description of its subject (not always true for books on Jewish mysticism). Following a useful review of scholarly views on the nature of mysticism, Ariel presents a brief history of Jewish mysticism from the 6th century BCE and the prophecy of Ezekiel following the destruction of the First Temple in Jerusalem, to the composition and publication of the most famous work of kabbalah, the Zohar, at the end of the 13th century. Two chapters review the esoteric doctrines of the Zohar, especially the Sefiroth, God's emanated attributes; included is a discussion of the Shekinah, the feminine aspect of the divine. Four additional chapters take up other central topics, such as the meaning of Torah according to the kabbalists, the destiny of one's soul, the mystical meaning of Jewish ritual obligations (mitzvot), the practice of meditation, and the influence of kabbalah in Hasidism. Overall, this is a wide-ranging, thoughtfully constructed, user-friendly introduction to kabbalah. Libraries serving Judaica and religion programs will want to purchase it. . . . Recommended. Lower-level undergraduates through graduate students.
— M. F. Nefsky, emerita, University of Lethbridge; Choice Reviews, October 2006
This is the first book in the post Kabbalah is chic era that does not sacrifice personal meaning for intellectual depth. David Ariel has found that very special place from which to teach Kabbalah. He is analyst and participant, objective scholar and passionate believer and thus speaks to our minds and hearts.
— Rabbi Irwin Kula, President, National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership (CLAL)
Kabbalah: The Mystic Quest In Judaism by David Ariel is the first book to provide an intellectual focus on Kabbalah, providing a scholarly study of Jewish mysticism suitable for the nonspecialist as well as the Jewish thinker. People outside the Jewish faith are exploring concepts of Kabbalah and applying them to life situations, so this revised edition represents the perfect study for all faiths to provide a focus on academic scholarship and understanding Jewish mysticism. From basic concepts of the divine world in the Kabbalah to the influences of Greek and other philosophies, Kabbalah: The Mystic Quest In Judaism is packed with memorable insights.
— Midwest Book Review
David Ariel has produced a wonderful description and explication of Kabbalah in his work Kabbalah: the Mystic Quest in Judaism.
— Jewish Book World