Certainty in the Face of Pain
Menu principal

Événements & Classes


Devenir membre

Trouvez plus de sagesse et d'outils pour vous élever vous-même et pour améliorer votre vie et celle de vos proches. Des articles/vidéos hebdomadaires aux cours, en passant par les événements diffusés en direct et ceux en présentiel dans les Centres, il existe un plan d'adhésion pour tout le monde. Gérez votre adhésion ici.

Voir les différents plans d'adhésion
Adhésion recommandée:

Onehouse Community Premium

  • Les avantages incluent:
  • Participez à des webinaires interactifs chaque semaine
  • Visionner des cours complets à la demande
  • Profitez de réductions sur les événements, les services de guidance et les produits*
  • Et bien plus encore…
  • Rejoignez-nous dès aujourd'hui
  • *Aux endroits participants. Des restrictions s'appliquent.
Menu principal

Être guidé


Explorez davantage la sagesse de la Kabbale avec des conseils personnalisés et des lectures de cartes.

Consultation gratuite

Notre équipe dévouée est là pour vous aider dans votre cheminement spirituel.

Demandez le vôtre

Lecture du thème astral kabbaliste

Apprendre à connaître notre âme au travers de la carte astrologique qui nous correspond nous aide à donner plus de sens à notre vie et une meilleure compréhension des expériences auxquelles nous sommes confrontées, des personnes qui nous entourent, du travail que nous faisons au quotidien et de tous les détours auxquels nous sommes confrontés sur notre route.

Sollicitez une lecture de votre thème astral

Guidance personnelle_ Les services du Centre de la Kabbale

Séances individuelles avec un professeur pour approfondir un domaine qui vous intéresse ou pour vous soutenir là où vous en avez le plus besoin. Les réunions se concentrent sur votre Tikkun personnel et sur une étude approfondie des textes du Zohar.

Réserver une session

Certainty in the Face of Pain

Elisheva Balas
avril 2, 2013
Aimer 6 Commentaires Partager

Vayidom Aharon” (from the Biblical chapter of Shmini)

These two words have a powerful significance, not only this week, but for every day of our lives. Literally the words mean “And Aaron was silent”. In Hebrew, “vayidom” can also mean that he stood at attention, in the military sense. But the kabbalists ask, why was Aaron silent? What was he doing during this pause?

And they answer: His silence indicates his reflection – he was quietly taking responsibility for perhaps contributing somehow, somewhere, to the necessity of this seemingly negative situation. He knew that years before, at the foot of Mount Sinai, there was something he could have done or could have refrained from doing, to prevent the Israelites from falling when they created the Golden Calf. In that moment, he was gathering his strength and making himself accountable. The laws of cause and effect dictate that we are the cause for everything in our lives. Therefore, Aaron knew that his sons’ untimely passing could have somehow been prevented by his own action or inaction.

In his silence, Aaron fought the urge to feel sorry for himself, to cry out in pain – to engage in any form of self-pity. He knew that those states of mind cause a person to disconnect from the Light. None of us would blame him for going there; what could be more painful than a parent losing their children? Yet he knew he had to fight that doubt – doubt in the universe, doubt in the Creator, doubt in his process – at all costs. He knew he had to maintain certainty that this too was for the best. He remembered that when Jacob heard that his beloved Joseph was lost, Jacob’s sadness caused him to lose his gift of divine inspiration. Aaron quietly battled his compulsion to be sad, and in his silence, in his fighting of the opponent, in his acceptance of responsibility, he merited something far beyond peace of mind and calm.

At the moment that Aaron truly took full responsibility for the difficult situation in his life, he was given the ability to see the endless process of his two sons’ souls. Aaron could see that in a future generation, the souls of Nadav and Avinu would come into the body of Pinchas, and would become Elijah the Prophet. And because of whom Aaron was, and what he dedicated his life to, that brought him the greatest peace of all.

Now, no one is saying that we should not be human; that we should not allow ourselves to feel pain, to mourn, or even to admit when something is hard. However, the kabbalists are very clear: if our sadness, pain, or difficulty causes us to doubt the Lightforce of the Creator – it is also causing us a patch of darkness somewhere down the line. That’s the ultimate lesson and gift of this week’s portion – to maintain certainty in the face of pain. If we can hold on to that certainty, we merit a connection to immortality, which means an end to finality of any kind.


Commentaires