T
Torah
שער רוח הקודשSha'ar Ruach HaKodesh
Rabbi Chaim Vital, a prominent Safed kabbalist in the 16th through 17th centuries, is best known for recording and editing the teachings of Rabbi Isaac Luria, better known as the Arizal, a founder of modern Kabbalah. Chaim Vital’s youngest son, Rabbi Samuel Vital, organized a collection of his father’s writings into eight “gates,” each of which “opens” up a particular topic. The seventh of these is Sha’ar Ruach HaKodesh (Gate of Divine Inspiration), which delves into practical application of Lurianic Kabbalah as a meditative discipline. Rabbi Chaim Vital, a prominent Safed kabbalist in the 16th through 17th centuries, is best known for recording and editing the teachings of Rabbi Isaac Luria, better known as the Arizal, a founder of modern Kabbalah. Chaim Vital’s youngest son, Rabbi Samuel Vital, organized a collection of his father’s writings into eight “gates,” each of which “opens” up a particular topic. The seventh of these is Sha’ar Ruach HaKodesh (Gate of Divine Inspiration), which delves into practical application of Lurianic Kabbalah as a meditative discipline.