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« Sephiroth » : différence entre les versions

28 octets ajoutés ,  26 février 2009
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Thus the term of Yhvh alone—now accepted as the name of “One living [male] God”—will yield, if seriously studied, not only the whole mystery of Being (in the Biblical sense), but also that of the Occult Theogony, from the highest divine Being, the third in order, down to man. As shown by the best Hebraists:
Thus the term of Yhvh alone—now accepted as the name of “One living [male] God”—will yield, if seriously studied, not only the whole mystery of Being (in the Biblical sense), but also that of the Occult Theogony, from the highest divine Being, the third in order, down to man. As shown by the best Hebraists:


היה or Hâyâh, or E-y-e, means to be, to exist, while חיה Châyâh, or H-y-e<ref>[[NDE]] : Dans les ''[[Collected Writings]]'' qui ont été numérisés, Châyâh et H-y-e n'apparaissent pas : Hâyâh et E-y-e apparaissent deux fois dans cette phrase. Pourtant, si on regarde l'impression d'origine de l'ouvrage dont est tiré ce texte, "''Occultism of the Secret Doctrine''" (1897), ce sont bien Châyâh et H-y-e qui apparaissent dans le cours du texte. Par ailleurs, les deux caractères hébreux numérisés dans les "''Collected Writings''" sont bien Hé ה et Heith ח, qui peuvent être transcrits par E et H respectivement. Rétablir cette subtilité entre Hâyâh et Châyâh - en prononçant le "''Ch''" comme un "''H''" guttural à la façon allemande - semble redonner ainsi à la phrase son sens originel d'une comparaison des deux termes. </ref> means to live, as motion of existence. <ref>The Source of Measures, p. 8.</ref>
היה or Hâyâh, or E-y-e, means to be, to exist, while חיה Châyâh, or H-y-e<ref>[[NDE]] : Dans les ''[[Collected Writings]]'' qui ont été numérisés, Châyâh et H-y-e n'apparaissent pas : Hâyâh et E-y-e apparaissent deux fois dans cette phrase. Pourtant, si on regarde l'impression d'origine de l'ouvrage dont est tiré ce texte, "''Occultism of the Secret Doctrine''" (1897), ce sont bien Châyâh et H-y-e qui apparaissent dans le cours du texte. Par ailleurs, les deux caractères hébreux numérisés dans les "''Collected Writings''" sont bien Hé ה et Heith ח, qui peuvent être transcrits par E et H respectivement. Rétablir cette subtilité entre Hâyâh et Châyâh - en prononçant le "''Ch''" comme un "''H''" guttural à la façon allemande - semble redonner ainsi à la phrase son sens originel d'une comparaison des deux termes ''Hâyâh'' et ''Châyâh''. </ref> means to live, as motion of existence. <ref>The Source of Measures, p. 8.</ref>


Hence Eve stands as the evolution and the never-ceasing “becoming” of Nature. Now if we take the almost untranslatable Sanskrit word Sat, which means the quintessence of absolute immutable Being, or Be-ness—as it has been rendered by an able Hindu Occultist—we shall find no equivalent for it in any language; but it may be regarded as most closely resembling “Ain,” or “Ain-Soph,” Boundless Being. Then the term Hâyâh, “to be,” as passive, changeless, yet manifested existence may perhaps be rendered by the Sanskrit Jîvâtman, universal life or soul, in its secondary or cosmic meaning; while “Hâyâh,” “to live,” as “motion of existence,” is simply Prana, the ever-changing life in its objective sense. It is at the head of this third category that the Occultist finds Jehovah—the Mother, Binah, and the Father, Arelim. This is made plain in the Zohar, when the emanation and evolution of the Sephirôth are explained: First, Ain-Soph, then Shekhinah, the Garment or Veil of Infinite Light, then Sephîrah or the Kadmon, and, thus making the fourth, the spiritual Substance sent forth from the Infinite Light. This Sephîrah is called the Crown, Kether, and has besides, six other names—in all seven. These names are: 1. Kether; 2. the Aged; 3. the Primordial Point; 4. the White Head; 5. the Long Face; 6. the Inscrutable Height; and 7. Eheyeh (“I am”).<ref>This identifies Sephirah, the third potency, with Jehovah the Lord, who says to Moses out of the burning bush: “(Here) I am” (Exodus iii, 4). At this time the “Lord” had not yet become Jehovah. It was not the one male God who spoke, but the Elohim manifested, or the Sephiroth in their manifested collectivity of seven, contained in the triple Sephirah.</ref> This Septenary Sephîrah is said to contain in itself the nine Sephirôth. But before showing how she brought them forth, let us read an explanation about the Sephirth in the Talmud, which gives it as an archaic tradition, or Kabalah.
Hence Eve stands as the evolution and the never-ceasing “becoming” of Nature. Now if we take the almost untranslatable Sanskrit word Sat, which means the quintessence of absolute immutable Being, or Be-ness—as it has been rendered by an able Hindu Occultist—we shall find no equivalent for it in any language; but it may be regarded as most closely resembling “Ain,” or “Ain-Soph,” Boundless Being. Then the term Hâyâh, “to be,” as passive, changeless, yet manifested existence may perhaps be rendered by the Sanskrit Jîvâtman, universal life or soul, in its secondary or cosmic meaning; while “Hâyâh,” “to live,” as “motion of existence,” is simply Prana, the ever-changing life in its objective sense. It is at the head of this third category that the Occultist finds Jehovah—the Mother, Binah, and the Father, Arelim. This is made plain in the Zohar, when the emanation and evolution of the Sephirôth are explained: First, Ain-Soph, then Shekhinah, the Garment or Veil of Infinite Light, then Sephîrah or the Kadmon, and, thus making the fourth, the spiritual Substance sent forth from the Infinite Light. This Sephîrah is called the Crown, Kether, and has besides, six other names—in all seven. These names are: 1. Kether; 2. the Aged; 3. the Primordial Point; 4. the White Head; 5. the Long Face; 6. the Inscrutable Height; and 7. Eheyeh (“I am”).<ref>This identifies Sephirah, the third potency, with Jehovah the Lord, who says to Moses out of the burning bush: “(Here) I am” (Exodus iii, 4). At this time the “Lord” had not yet become Jehovah. It was not the one male God who spoke, but the Elohim manifested, or the Sephiroth in their manifested collectivity of seven, contained in the triple Sephirah.</ref> This Septenary Sephîrah is said to contain in itself the nine Sephirôth. But before showing how she brought them forth, let us read an explanation about the Sephirth in the Talmud, which gives it as an archaic tradition, or Kabalah.
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