Customer Reviews
Review of 'Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism' - By: , 07 Apr 1999 
Gershom Scholem was President of the Israel Academy of Sciences & Humanities & a Professor of Jewish mysticism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem until his deathin 1982. He wrote the standard collage textbook on Jewish mysticism ('Major Trends...'). He is also the author of 'Origins of the Kabbalah', 'Kabbalah', 'On the Kabbalah & Its Symbolism', 'On the Mystical Shape of the Godhead', 'The Messianic Ideain Judaism', & 'Sabbatai Sevi: The Mystical Messiah'. Every book is a treasurein & of itself. Mr. Scholem put the Kabbalah back on the 20th century map. His studies on the 'Sefer Yetzirah (Book of Creation)', The Bahir (Bright)', & 'The Zohar (Splendor)' show the brillance of this unique individual.
'Major Trends...' is broken down into nine lectures. He covers everything from the beginings of Jewish mysticism up to modern times. He traces its origen from the Second Temple era, through the apocalyptic/pseudepigrapha period, & right into Jewish gnosticism with the Thrown (merkabah) mysticism. The 'Hekhaloth Books' (hekhaloth: the heavenly halls or palaces the visionary passes through on his way to the seventh heaven where there rises the thrown of divine glory) are well known for the their similarity to standerd gnostic works. The caves around Khirbet Qumran are another (Dead Sea Scrolls). He covers all aspects of this; the 'Song of Songs' & its mystical meaning (it was banned until a man reached 40 years old), the Shi'ur Komah (Measure of the Body of God), & all the magical elements that encompassed this, also theurgy, & so on.
All of this, of course, was several hundred years before the epoch 'Sefer Yezirah' was conceived of. The Jewish nation had to suffer through the loss of their Second Temple, the messianic revival of the infamous Bar Kokhba (the Star of Jacob) & Rebbe Akiva's endorsment of him, the loss of their country to the Romans, the loss of their 'restablished' country under Mar Zutra (in their 'new' capital of Mahoza, near Bagdad)in 502, & so on.
He covers the mystic Abraham Abulafia & his prophetic Kabbalism (and how it broke Kabbalismin two), the Zohar & Moses de Leon, En-Sof (the hidden God), the ten Sefiroth (numbers) & Sefirotic development through the years (from Sefer Yetzirah to the Zohar), also the Shekhinah (the female side of God), Isaac Luria (the Lion) & his students (his Cubs), & the stunning impact the exile from Spain had on the Kabbalahin general.
The last two lectures cover Sabbatai Sevi & the disaster he brought on the Jewish people. He very nearly destroyed Judaism itself for 250 years afterwards. The impact is still felt to this day. He also shows the modern Hasid's (the Ultra-Orthadox Jews) & how the Kabbalah & the Zohar influance their teachings & beliefs. He also shows why regular Orthadox Jews avoid the Kabbalah (calling it Jewish witchcraft) & why they considear the Hasid's to be cultists of a sort (even though the Kabbalah WAS Orthadox Judaism for 300 years before the advent of Sabbatai Sevi - which Mr. Scholem painfully points out).
I have only scrached the surface of the things this book contains. If you can buy one book on Jewish mysticism, this is it. It is well worth the purchase.
Sincerly, Shawn W. Ooten
Narrow and compilative overview of Judaic mysticism - By: , 04 Jan 1999 
The book is written by the former President of the Israeli Academy of Sciences. It reflects traditional Orthodox view on the greatest pagesin the Jewish history - Qabbalah, Shabtay Zvi & Hasidism, with a slight covering of scientific speculations. Qabbalah is described without any connection or association with the Egyptian or Chaldean mysticism. No word is said about the great Jewish gnostics. The only question is if the author consciously lies or subconsciously avoids problems, which still remain out of the Israeli national concensus.
The seminal work in Kabbalah scholarship - By: , 27 Jul 1997 
This text is simply indispensible for anyone interestedin Kabbalah's history & development. It covers Jewish mysticism from its early beginnings to recent times. Scholem's scholarship is excellent, & his writing is lucid, informed, & interesting--a welcome cry from the tranquilizer effect much scholarly writing can induce. A bias against Kabbalah's developmentin non-Jewish directions does influence sections of the text, but does not detract from the overall quality.