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The Sabbath in the Classical Kabbalah

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This now-classic study is concerned with the richly imagined world of kabbalistic myth concerning the sabbath as it developed from the late twelfth century to the early sixteenth century and with its activation in religious life via ritual.òThe book opens with a historical overview of classical kabbalah, an outline of its symbolic universe. Special attention is given to the key mythic motifs that underlie sabbath the sabbath as source of cosmic blessing; the sabbath as perfected time; the drama of divine restoration and sacred marriage; and the drama of human transformation by the sabbath as reflected in the motif of the sabbath-soul). This is followed by a theoretical discussion of the function andòmeaning of kabbalistic ritual and the problems of its interpretation. Theory gives way to practice with the close study of dramatic rituals located on the margins of the the ritual of preparation how one enters the sabbath and the ritual of separation how one leaves the sabbath and yet takes it into the week. Brief appendices deal with the special issues of Torah study and sexuality related to sabbath-observance. This now-classic study combines the close textual readings of traditional scholarly enquiry with more innovative approaches drawing on symbolic anthropology and the like. The presentation is coherent, cohesive, and accessible. It makes a contribution to the history of Jewish spirituality and, more broadly, to the understanding of myth and ritual. (PRINT ON DEMAND)

384 pages, Paperback

First published July 1, 1989

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Elliot K. Ginsburg

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67 reviews11 followers
January 3, 2023
The rare excellent secondary source on Kabbalah—by an Oberlin professor, no less. Entry level(ish) without being condescending.
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