Sabbatean

Gershom Scholem: Kabbalah and Counter-History. by David Biale.

The reconciliation of Jacob and Esau

Studies:

Also see http://historyreligionandtruth.com/?q=node/949

 

Jacob & Esau: Jewish European History Between Nation and Empire Malachi Haim Hacohen Cambridge University Press, Jan 10, 2019

        

Frankism

Israel Shamir

Studies:

PARDES An etude in Cabbala By Israel Shamir The Road To Suez

Redemption Through Sin By Gershom Scholem

Studies:

Redemption Through Sin 

By Gershom Scholem 


I 

•NO CHAPTER IN the history of the Jewish people during the last several hundred years has been as 
shrouded in mystery as that of the Sabbatian movement. On one point, at least, there is no longer any 
disagreement: the dramatic events and widespread religious revival that preceded the apostasy of 
Sabbatai Zevi in 1666 form an important and integral part of Jewish history and deserve to be studied 
objectively, to the exclusion of moralistic condemnations of the historical figures involved. It has 

Unknown By Gershom Scholem

Studies:

Gershom Scholem (1897-1982)

Grand-Grimoire-Red-Dragon

Pawel Maciejko

Studies:

Associate Professor, Leonard and Helen R. Stulman Chair in Classical Jewish Religion, Thought, and Culture

http://history.jhu.edu/directory/pawel-maciejko/

 

Sabbatai Zevi at Prayer David J. Halperin

Studies:

For the next sixteen months, the Messianic movement headed by Sabbatai and his “prophet” Nathan swept the Jewish Diaspora like a brushfire. From London to Poland, from Hamburg to Yemen, Jews believed in perfect faith that Sabbatai Zevi was the promised Redeemer, about to lead them back to the Holy Land and rebuild the Temple.

Why I Study Sabbateanism Jay Michaelson

Studies:

This is why I study Sabbateanism: not because of the specific doctrines of the movement, or because of the personality of Sabbatai Zevi, but because these were sects of Jews who remained attached to some kind of Judaism, but who created a form of Judaism well beyond the pale of normative religious figures. Yes, there are some aspects of Sabbatean ideology that are fascinating, even titillating. The Dönmeh and the Frankists each had sexual-religious rituals, ranging from wife-swapping to kissing the naked breasts of a girl as the embodiment of the Torah/Shechinah. I'm intrigued by Frank's innovation, in exact parallel to the Baal Shem Tov's, that the miracle of pantheism is precisely that God is present in the illusory, material world. But above all, I'm captivated by that vertiginous moment in which there are suddenly no rules, no guides - and yet there is also a pull to faith. True nihilism bores me; I can't think of anything less interesting than the same hipster angst that has caused people to be cool, ironic and unhappy for two hundred years. But religious anarchy - where things matter, but they're not how the authorities say - that is the world which I actually inhabit.
Jacob Frank, who lived from 1726-1790, was the polar opposite: a manipulative, vulgar cult leader who converted both to Islam and Catholicism, may have had a long-term incestuous relationship with his daughter, and was regarded by thousands of 18th-century Jews as a messianic figure. 

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Sabbatean