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| No | 66% | 204 votes | Total: 311 votes | |
| Yes | 34% | 107 votes |
No
Created on: March 09, 2009 Last Updated: March 22, 2009
Like all questions, this relies on definitions, and makes assumptions. I define "Kabbalah" as the so-called "secrets" or "sod" or Torah - the branch of study and theology that deals with the spiritual "worlds", the process of creating the physical world that we live in, and the purpose of creation. While ostensibly this is a part of the oral Torah that was given to Moshe, the Torah itself pre-dates our physical world, and it is acknowledged that the forefathers, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, kept the Torah and Mitzvot.
Does this mean they had two sets of dishes for meat and dairy? or that they put on Tefillin using black boxes with parchments inside and leather straps in the same way we did? Could they even have done this? After all, the four sections that are placed in the Tefillin were not handed down to us until many years later. The Kabbalistic understanding of the way they kept some mitzvos in the Torah was that they performed certain rituals that had an equivalent spiritual effect to what we do now. To do this, Abraham would certainly have had to studied Kabbalah, in some form. But as Mr Spock would say on Star Trek, "it's life Jim, but not as we know it". His perception and study of Kabbalah may not have from texts, but rather arising from his own personal insights into spirituality, and his intimate connection and communication with G-d. So on this basis, I conclude that Abraham did indeed study Kabbalah.
Now, the question is: was he the first? The assumption embedded in the question is that if he was not the first, it must have been someone after him. After all, he was the first Jew. However, we should also consider someone such as Adam. While he was not technically Jewish, he did, like Abraham, have an intimate spiritual connection with G-d, and a perception of the world that went far beyond ours. He was able to see, "misof ha'olam ad sofo" - "from one end of the world to another". So while he did not share a connection with the Torah that Abraham did - no-one suggests that Adam kept the Mitzvot - he did have spiritual insights that would be of a Kabbalistic nature. He named all the animals by "seeing" their spiritual core, and thus knowing what their Hebrew name, and therefore their spiritual source, was. So I nominate Adam as the first person to have studied Kabbalah, rather than Abraham.
It is interesting to note that the authorship of the classical Kabbalistic text "Sefer Yetzira" - "the book of creation" is subject to debate. Some opinions attribute it to Abraham, and some to Adam.
Learn more about this author, David Werdiger.
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Yes
Created on: April 11, 2008 Last Updated: April 12, 2008
Many people who express interest in Kabbalah ask members of Kabbalah centers: was Abraham the first to study Kabbalah? While this is debatable, it's important to note that Abraham was one of the first, if not the first, to join the group of Kabbalists which became known as "Israel."
Regardless of the question was Abraham the first the study Kabbalah, historians and Kabbalists all over the world revere Abraham as the most important figure in Kabbalistic mysticism. According to many texts, Abraham was the second recorded individual to receive the truth of Kabbalah. You may wonder who the first person was to receive the truth, if not Abraham. According to many texts, Kabbalah was first given to the angels before God created the world.
Why do people ask was Abraham the first to study Kabbalah? Perhaps the importance of Abraham and his devotion to the Kabbalists approximately 3800 years ago, leads many people to question was Abraham the first to study Kabbalah? After all, Abraham is an integral part of Kabbalah, which is interpreted today through modern and traditional forms.
Was Abraham the first to study Kabbalah? It's documented that Abraham was the first to read, question, and understand a book written by a man named Adam, who existed 20 generations prior to Abraham. The basic principles in this book would later become known as Kabbalah after Abraham read, studied, and expressed his own interest in the teachings of Kabbalah in his own book.
As you can see, the question was Abraham the first to study Kabbalah is quite complex. While one person may deny that Abraham was the first to study Kabbalah, another may dispute this claim with the notion that Abraham was the first person reported to study Adam's book-which were the principles of Kabbalah.
Perhaps there's a better question than was Abraham the first to study Kabbalah. For instance, was Abraham the most influential person on the teachings of Kabbalah? The second question, although not as engaging as the first, is less confrontational. The fact that Abraham was a scholar and teacher of Kabbalah is evident.
Nevertheless , whether Abraham was the first Kabbalist to study Kabbalah is a subject that will be debatable for generations to come. Most people find it difficult to believe that Abraham was the first person to read and study Adam's book over a period of 20 generations. Despite this, Abraham was clearly one of the first documented persons to use Kabbalah as a method of study and teaching.
Learn more about this author, Ris.
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