The Twelve Sefirot
The 10 Words are known in English as the Ten Commandments. Jesus didn’t come to end the Law but to fulfill it. He did so not only on the Cross but also in his life’s work and his teachings.
The 10 Words are known in English as the Ten Commandments. Jesus didn’t come to end the Law but to fulfill it. He did so not only on the Cross but also in his life’s work and his teachings.
Hod is connected to prayer and and submission. Rather than conqueror, Hod teaches us to subdue our passions.
When one enters the ministry they are ordained to the priesthood. We are then, being clean, given the Garments of the Priesthood. In the Book of Remembrance, the Lord God sends Raphael to teach us the deeper symbolism of the Garments
Netzach is one of the “tactical" Sefirot. Its purpose is not directed towards itself, but rather to assist in another work.
Tif’eret is the bosum where we feel the Holy Spirit and where the Light of Christ overflows from our kli to fill the world.
Gevurah is Din, the essence of judgment. If we are saved, the Holy Spirit cleanses us with Fire. However, if we are wicked we are burned as those same flames become Hellfire.
Chesed is the first Sefirot in the attribute of action in the Kabbalistic Tree of life.
Da’at is the uppermost of the Sefirot of the Left line or kav smol (Hebrew for “left line”), the line severity in the Tree of Life.
Keter is the uppermost of the Sefirot of the middle line or kav emtsaee (Hebrew for “middle line”), the line of mildness or balance in the Tree of Life.
God’s divine energy comes down and finds its expression in this realm. God grants us the priesthood, God’s power, is to bring that energy back around In a circle and back up the Tree of Life.
Yesod is the foundation God has built the world upon. Because of this, it serves as a transmitter between worlds; the sephirot above, and the mundane reality below.
Resting between but below Da'at and Chokhma, and between but above Chesed and Gevurah is Binah, the hidden Sefirot, understanding.