The Empty Void
In Torah 64 of Likutei Moharan, Rebbe Nachman elaborates on the creation of the world according to Kabbala and addresses philosophy, atheism, and simple emuna.
Rabbi Avraham Greenbaum
In Torah 64 of Likutei Moharan, Rebbe Nachman elaborates on the creation of the world according to Kabbala and addresses philosophy, atheism, and simple emuna.
Rebbe Nachman teaches us to cast philosophy aside and pay no attention to doubts or questions: all we need is pure faith in God and the true Tzaddikim.
When suffering, if a person would just look at Hashem’s purpose – he wouldn’t experience any suffering at all. By realizing the purpose of this suffering, one is filled with joy…
Even in times of trouble, whatever God sends, He sends in such a way that the trouble itself contains the salvation. Keep your eyes open for God's love and mercy!
Sanctifying the seven "lamps" of the head can bring you to complete spiritual understanding and awareness. Your heart will then burn with passion for God…
Date of Passing: 18-Tishrei. Who was this magnificent tzaddik? He was the great grandson of the Baal Shem Tov who developed a path of hitbodedut, emuna, and spiritual growth.
This is Rebbe Nachman’s classic teaching about courage in the service of Hashem. Don’t be discouraged ever – determination will take you where you want to go…
Rebbe Nachman says that a musician playing aninstrument must gather the good spirit – the spirit of prophecy – and separate it from the sad, depressed spirit…
Rebbe Nachman of Breslev explains that the material world stands before people's eyes, preventing them from seeing the magnificent light of the Torah…
Why connect to a tzaddik? The more one realizes how far-removed he actually is from Hashem, the more he needs the very best doctor for his aching soul…
The spirit enters into the limbs and body parts, sending forth the radiation through the parts of the face that are related to those bodily limbs and organs.
The Divinite lights that emanate from the respective branches of Adam Kadmon, though initially far from one another, steadily come together and reveal a likeness of man.