...This next course is called Time Trekking. It is about the fourth dimension. Science calls it a “new frontier” yet nearly three and a half thousand years ago the Torah revealed a map of time’s landscape and Jews have been charting its mysteries every since. This body of revealed and accumulated wisdom is a primary subject of kabbalistic inquiry. The most powerful secrets of the Jewish tradition illumine the otherwise inscrutable mysteries of time’s cyclic unfolding... ...Time trekking is the art of selecting the most efficient, scenic and joyously unfolding passage through time’s rhythmic terrain. It is a four-stage process...

...Kabbala teaches that the human body has ten different pulses...This means that the universe must also have ten pulses precisely mirroring those in the human body. They are the ten different rhythms that flow through creation, combining and interacting to spin forth the landscape of time. The Jewish calendar moves with each of them and prescribes specific practices to bring our lives in tune with this macrocosmic symphony...

...The service of the rega is to know that all the bounty, blessing, and good that is your prayer and heart’s desire, is but a moment away for the thought that marks its beginning could occur at any instant. HaShem knows and influences the minds of people and stimulates specific insights and reflections as He sees fit. That Divinely inspired flash of thought becomes the “spark” setting in motion the chain of events that makes all things possible...

...The fact of HaShem’s goodness is, perhaps, the most fundamental principle of Judaism. It is the hidden premise upon which the whole theological structure rests. It is a truth that is known, whether consciously or not, by every Jewish soul. Torah asserts that G-d and good are synonymous terms...

Skip to FINAL QUESTIONS

 
 
HomeCurriculumHow the School WorksEnrollment and FeesEndorsementsBookstoreRegister NowMeditation RetreatsHow to Contact UsFounder/Director Sarah (Susan) Schneider
Questions? Call us at 1-866-KABALAH