Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
This Is Real and You Are Completely Unprepared: The Days of Awe as a Journey of Transformation, by Alan Lew- The late Rabbi Lew was known as "the Zen Rabbi," for his infusion of Zen Buddhist practice and method into Judaism. Although I personally find some of his thinking a bit too syncretistic for my taste, he does do an extremely compelling job of presenting the spiritual potential of the HH, and ways to increase one's personal meaning and depth of experience during the HH.
The first book is tentatively titled Reclaiming Rosh Hashanah; The Dance of Tears. This book revolves around a stunning, original re-reading of Rosh Hashanah which reveals that tears, primary symbols of emotional intelligence, are the key themes in all of the ritual, prayer, and biblical readings of the holy day.
The path of tears is the hidden Kabbalistic path of Rosh Hashanah. Each biblical reading, for example, revolves around a particular figure or archetype that cries in a very particular way. All in all, there are twelve major figures, men and women, whose archetypal, mythical tears stories invite us to twelve different realizations of wisdom. This book will change forever the Rosh Hashanah experience for every Jew and non-Jew who has ever attended Rosh Hashanah services.
The second book under preparation will be called Reclaiming Yom Kippur; Shadow Dancing in the Light. This book revolves around a stunning, original re-reading of Yom Kippur that reveals that identifying our unique shadow and transforming it into our unique strength is the great invitation of Yom Kippur. The book shows that the core ritual, prayer, and biblical readings of the day, all hide an esoteric teaching about integrating the shadow as the key to at–one–ment, personal transformation and healing. In this book, we will challenge the classic understanding of shadow suggested by Jung and offer a unique Kabbalistic understanding of shadow work.
I'm not sure how much help this will be, but, recently I came across this site, and in this section, he lists some books on the holidays (I'm not too sure if the books are published yet, or will be sometime in the future, I haven't gone through the whole site yet):
I'm not sure if those sound of interest to you at all.
Hope this helps, I hope you find what you're looking for.
I confess I have not read these books, so perhaps I should not judge.
However I think it is worth pointing out that Marc Gafni is widely considered to be more or less a fringe leader, and both untraditional and rather careless in his neo-Kabbalistic philosophy. He has also been widely shunned in the Conservative and Reform movements for repeated occurrences of troubling sexual improprieties with his followers.
I'm not telling anyone what to read-- I would never do that. I'm just saying....
The Zohar re-reads a well-known biblical text, Greater is the light than the darkness, as Greater is the light that comes from the darkness. The essence of Yom Kippur is the realization that every person has a particular arena in their lives where they consistently fail to be the unique people they want to be, the unique people they ought to be―the unique people they already are. A unique pathology of sorts.
Paradoxically, the Kabbalists taught that it is only by entering the soul print of our darkness that we are able to tap into the light that is ours and ours alone to shine in the world. Greater is the light that comes from the darkness