Book Description
Embraced by celebrities from Madonna to Jeff Goldblum to Elizabeth Taylor, covered extensively in the pages of Time and Entertainment Weekly, Kabbalah--a Jewish mystical tradition dating back centuries--has taken its place alongside Buddhism as a spiritual practice for modern Western seekers. This book--written by the rabbi who authored the bestselling audiotape series The Mystical Kabbalah--is the first to bring Kabbalah to a wide audience. Earning great praise from critics, God Is a Verb promises to do for Judaism what The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying did for Buddhism, infusing an ancient tradition with new life and popularizing its ideas among an entirely new generation.
God Is a Verb: Kabbalah and the Practice of Mystical Judaism FROM THE PUBLISHER
Rabbi David Cooper writes in God is a Verb that there is no simple answer to the question, What is kabbalah? It is a collection of ancient texts, teachings, methods, and stories, but more than that, Cooper says, it is an outlook. It is a way of looking at the world that is "founded upon mystical conceptions regarding life, death, creation and creator. It answers our questions about the meaning of life." Through an overview and explanation of cabalistic theory and practice, exercises, guided meditation, and the recounting of traditional Hasidic tales, Cooper opens up this ancient and intriguing mystical wisdom to a broad audience of seekers of spiritual truth. He shows readers how incorporating a cabalistic outlook into daily life can increase awareness, deepen connections to the divine source of existence, and help us reach lasting inner peace.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
Rabbi Cooper, who directs the Heart of Stillness Hermitage in Boulder, Colo., offers insight into the everyday practice of mystical Judaism. Using tales of the Hasidic masters as well as stories from the Torah, Talmud and Mishnah, Cooper delves into the mysteries of life and death. One of the great quests of modern religious people, says Cooper, is to find greater wisdom and higher spiritual awareness. Through these stories, he aims to show that seekers must actively pursue wisdom and awareness through meditation and study rather than await such wisdom to be revealed to them. What is the soul? What is the purpose of creation? What is holiness? These, he argues, are the questions that must form the foundation of the search. At the heart of Kabbalah, says Cooper, is the revelation of the unity of all things, a unity he cleverly illustrates by comparing DNA (science's "tree of life") to the tree of life from the Kabbalah. Exercises for meditation accompany each of these reflections. Cooper's lively prose and his syncretist attitude toward religion make this a rewarding book. (Aug.)