Tuesday, March 11, 2008

The Spiritual Greatness That A Person Feels

by Rav Avraham Yitchak Kook



The spiritual greatness that a person feels while he is serving God is arranged in various levels of gradation.

The level that is appropriate for an intermediate service of God is considered to lack exultation when compared to a higher level of serving God.

And contrarily, that greatness that refines the soul and crowns it with glory when it is involved in a supernal worship of God is like foolish pride during a time of a lower service of God. That pride in Hashem, which is unique to those who gaze upon the chariot, which is the true humility, is in the realm of egotism that arouses the pollution of the coarseness of the spirit when it appears in its measure during normal Torah learning.

And so “the heart of the wise person knows a time and a decision,” of how to take hold of the measure of his spirit, in its elevation and descent.

**

A person who must draw sustenance from the supernal source cannot draw sustenance from a lower source. Simple ethical instruction cannot stand by those who are fit for a supernal outlook. Rather, when they are involved with deep contemplation and a way of life that is appropriate for their measure they must bring their bread specifically from afar, for that from a nearby and small place will not give them spiritual nutrition.

Orot Hakodesh III p. 220

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