FREEDOM: OUR INHERENT RIGHT
By Sheldon Stoff (Excerpted from Universal Kabbalah: Dawn of a New Consciousness)
As I begin this, I write with a heavy heart. It is October 12th 2001, not long after the destruction of America’s World Trade Center in New York on September 11th. This horrific deed has been attributed to Osama bin Ladin and his Al Qaeda network. It would be easy and much safer for me to bypass that tragedy and define “freedom” in an abstract way. It would also miss an opportunity to shed light on a very misunderstood concept. One that holds immense opportunities in our daily lives. An understanding of “freedom” is an understanding of who we are and what we are really about.
We could react to such hatred in a typical way, a superficial way, a way that is often used to define freedom in America.
1. Have the desire to accomplish your goals.
2. Have the ability to accomplish your goals.
3. Have the power to accomplish your goals.
Acting in this way, we would be performing an action little different than that of the drug addict or of Osama himself (an individual who has no understanding of the concept of freedom). It would be an act of vengeance, hardly a response of freedom of thought as I know it. It would be an act based on hatred for the individuals and their ideals. You cannot act in both freedom and hatred at the same time. Osama was pleased with the loss of so many human lives even though they were guilty of no actions deserving such a fate. Understanding a more significant level of freedom is what this chapter is now all about. It will also enable us to fully appreciate the depth of insight in Rabbi Abraham Kook’s statement that “…the greater the freedom, the greater will be the level of holiness.” [Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, The Lights of Penitence, Lights of Holiness (Paulist Press, New York) 1978, p. 213]
The concept of freedom entails more than physical movement, more than physical action, even more than the absence of mental compulsion. Freedom is, essentially, spiritual activity motivated by love. Even as I write in the midst of war and great uncertainty we can, by inner effort, rise above revenge. Our thoughts can soar, regardless of these external circumstances, into the pure air of freedom. The many examples of noble thought during and immediately after the destruction of the Twin Towers attest to our ability to transcend physical conditions. For you and I to be free we must overcome inner and outer conditions, whether favorable or adverse. We can become our own person! We can act out of our essence! We can act as we really are! Our spirituality cannot be lost in a time of great need. It is our key to both growth and action.
When are we, as individuals, free to be ourselves? We become masters of ourselves when we have achieved a harmony of thought, action and Being. If we respond automatically to any action, horrible as it may be, we act without control of our own will power. There is then little of the individual in such response. Such action ignores who we are and what our values are all about. In its undue emphasis on externals, it loses sight of our inner quest, our primary need for self-conquest, to never act in hatred, to act out of our core, our spark.
The finest guide in our quest for our higher self, the only self which suits the individual and benefits the world, has always been found in the self-forgetting concepts of sacrifice and active service to humanity. Without our willingness to sacrifice any limited self advantage for the whole which becomes dearer than self, we are doomed to pursue the kinds of self-aggrandizement that has always ended in self-defeat.
Throughout history our great sages have sought to lead communities of people to the light and power of such ideals as that of rebirth through the giving of ourselves. Today, each of us must discover these ideals anew if we are to progress on the path of decency, maturity and spirituality.
For each of us to think in freedom is to overcome stereotype and tradition, religion, regionalism, nationalism, gender and peer pressure. It is for the individual to consider how the pure ideal can be imaginatively, efficiently and lovingly realized in action. It is to overcome our bias of self-importance in order to truly know who we are. With the help of our inner spark we can execute that which is knightly and just for all. We can act in freedom. We can act in love. We can act out of our spiritual core. They are one and the same.
On this level of experience our intuition is awakened. The person using only intellect as a guide is alienated from those about him or her. That individual becomes simply a spectator in life. When we combine intellect with loving intuition, the balance brings about wisdom, freedom, responsibility and creativity—the goal of human achievement.
A society of free individuals, capable of rising at critical moments above inner and outer compulsions, becomes the goal of an enlightened civilization. The individual who searches for meaning in life comes to feel the pain and joy of the hour’s claim on his or her soul. Such a person begins to chart his or her own course and to shoulder social and spiritual responsibility.
Ours is the beginning of an age in which external restraints are crumbling. In such a situation we have the rare possibility of making our own decisions. We can walk on the thin edge of freedom that rises between the abyss of self-immersion on one side and the abyss of self-abandonment on the other. We were born with free will. Whether we use it for good or evil is our responsibility! We are completely responsible for our actions.
An aspect of the growth toward freedom lies in the development of independent thought. Society must not be afraid to help each of us confront the ultimate questions:
Who am I? Why am I here? What is the meaning of life on earth?
It may well be that the most relevant challenge the individual can face is the time-honored one of learning to know who he or she is. The inner spark can be found. We make progress in this encounter as we come to recognize our essence within: a spirit in a physical body!
Out of clear thinking each of us must determine where we ought to go and what we ought to do. The individual can experience himself or herself as both commonplace and sacred. Our consciousness can expand until all about us comes alive and we can experience our oneness with all that there is. We can experience the reality of oneness, of unity. Each of us, and all the world, is symbol and the symbol is to be penetrated. Reality is to be known! When loving intuition joins intellect in the complete act of thought, a realization of the wonder, sacredness and beauty of the earth becomes the joy of the free person. When we resonate with the spark within only then are we acting in freedom! We have always been given free will. When we act from the spark within, our essence, we are acting from our core. We are fulfilling our essence. It is our identity. When we surrender to another, even if it be to a perceived God, we have lost our free will and the reason for incarnating. We have given up our perceived identity to another. We have never identified with our essence. Surrendering our will is the opposite of freedom!
Today, it is vital that the extremists weigh their passions. Action based on hatred or lust is base and unworthy of humankind. It is never free. It can never favor the cause of free men and women. Buddha’s words are as true today as when first spoken:
He abused me, he beat me, he defeated me: In those who harbor such thoughts hatred will never cease.
For never does hatred cease by hatred here below: Hatred ceases by love; this is an eternal law.
Each of us must understand our motives. Our action can result from the balance of intuition and thinking if it is to be a step forward on the path. The conquest of our base self is the painful, laborious task of our time. It is also the gateway to our upward climb.
The concept of freedom means, essentially, acting out of spiritual motive, not religious motive. Freedom is permeated with love. Without a spiritual love for the deed there can be no freedom of action. Mark this truth, we are, each one of us, destined for a life of love, a life immersed in spirituality, a life of freedom. They are one and the same.
To fail in this quest is to miss the meaning of our time. To fail in this quest is also to guarantee individual and social disaster.
Freedom of action and action resonating from the spark within are the same. Our actions are free actions when they are based on our essence. Our essence is our spark within, placed there by the eternal One. It is also called the soul, always connected to the eternal One. It alone is always our center. It brings sanctity to each of us. It tries to help us on the climb to spiritual awareness, awareness of our unity with the eternal One and of all creation. Our physical presence must be removed from our decision making.We must decide for the best of humanity, in love for humanity, in such is freedom!
Since our soul is always connected to the eternal One, as we seek to act out of our essence, out of what we now recognize as our soul, we are also thinking and acting out of our source, the source of our creation, the eternal One. --------SHELDON STOFF - from UNIVERSAL KABBALAH: DAWN OF A NEW CONSCIOUSNESS
By Sheldon Stoff (Excerpted from Universal Kabbalah: Dawn of a New Consciousness)
As I begin this, I write with a heavy heart. It is October 12th 2001, not long after the destruction of America’s World Trade Center in New York on September 11th. This horrific deed has been attributed to Osama bin Ladin and his Al Qaeda network. It would be easy and much safer for me to bypass that tragedy and define “freedom” in an abstract way. It would also miss an opportunity to shed light on a very misunderstood concept. One that holds immense opportunities in our daily lives. An understanding of “freedom” is an understanding of who we are and what we are really about.
We could react to such hatred in a typical way, a superficial way, a way that is often used to define freedom in America.
1. Have the desire to accomplish your goals.
2. Have the ability to accomplish your goals.
3. Have the power to accomplish your goals.
Acting in this way, we would be performing an action little different than that of the drug addict or of Osama himself (an individual who has no understanding of the concept of freedom). It would be an act of vengeance, hardly a response of freedom of thought as I know it. It would be an act based on hatred for the individuals and their ideals. You cannot act in both freedom and hatred at the same time. Osama was pleased with the loss of so many human lives even though they were guilty of no actions deserving such a fate. Understanding a more significant level of freedom is what this chapter is now all about. It will also enable us to fully appreciate the depth of insight in Rabbi Abraham Kook’s statement that “…the greater the freedom, the greater will be the level of holiness.” [Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, The Lights of Penitence, Lights of Holiness (Paulist Press, New York) 1978, p. 213]
The concept of freedom entails more than physical movement, more than physical action, even more than the absence of mental compulsion. Freedom is, essentially, spiritual activity motivated by love. Even as I write in the midst of war and great uncertainty we can, by inner effort, rise above revenge. Our thoughts can soar, regardless of these external circumstances, into the pure air of freedom. The many examples of noble thought during and immediately after the destruction of the Twin Towers attest to our ability to transcend physical conditions. For you and I to be free we must overcome inner and outer conditions, whether favorable or adverse. We can become our own person! We can act out of our essence! We can act as we really are! Our spirituality cannot be lost in a time of great need. It is our key to both growth and action.
When are we, as individuals, free to be ourselves? We become masters of ourselves when we have achieved a harmony of thought, action and Being. If we respond automatically to any action, horrible as it may be, we act without control of our own will power. There is then little of the individual in such response. Such action ignores who we are and what our values are all about. In its undue emphasis on externals, it loses sight of our inner quest, our primary need for self-conquest, to never act in hatred, to act out of our core, our spark.
The finest guide in our quest for our higher self, the only self which suits the individual and benefits the world, has always been found in the self-forgetting concepts of sacrifice and active service to humanity. Without our willingness to sacrifice any limited self advantage for the whole which becomes dearer than self, we are doomed to pursue the kinds of self-aggrandizement that has always ended in self-defeat.
Throughout history our great sages have sought to lead communities of people to the light and power of such ideals as that of rebirth through the giving of ourselves. Today, each of us must discover these ideals anew if we are to progress on the path of decency, maturity and spirituality.
For each of us to think in freedom is to overcome stereotype and tradition, religion, regionalism, nationalism, gender and peer pressure. It is for the individual to consider how the pure ideal can be imaginatively, efficiently and lovingly realized in action. It is to overcome our bias of self-importance in order to truly know who we are. With the help of our inner spark we can execute that which is knightly and just for all. We can act in freedom. We can act in love. We can act out of our spiritual core. They are one and the same.
On this level of experience our intuition is awakened. The person using only intellect as a guide is alienated from those about him or her. That individual becomes simply a spectator in life. When we combine intellect with loving intuition, the balance brings about wisdom, freedom, responsibility and creativity—the goal of human achievement.
A society of free individuals, capable of rising at critical moments above inner and outer compulsions, becomes the goal of an enlightened civilization. The individual who searches for meaning in life comes to feel the pain and joy of the hour’s claim on his or her soul. Such a person begins to chart his or her own course and to shoulder social and spiritual responsibility.
Ours is the beginning of an age in which external restraints are crumbling. In such a situation we have the rare possibility of making our own decisions. We can walk on the thin edge of freedom that rises between the abyss of self-immersion on one side and the abyss of self-abandonment on the other. We were born with free will. Whether we use it for good or evil is our responsibility! We are completely responsible for our actions.
An aspect of the growth toward freedom lies in the development of independent thought. Society must not be afraid to help each of us confront the ultimate questions:
Who am I? Why am I here? What is the meaning of life on earth?
It may well be that the most relevant challenge the individual can face is the time-honored one of learning to know who he or she is. The inner spark can be found. We make progress in this encounter as we come to recognize our essence within: a spirit in a physical body!
Out of clear thinking each of us must determine where we ought to go and what we ought to do. The individual can experience himself or herself as both commonplace and sacred. Our consciousness can expand until all about us comes alive and we can experience our oneness with all that there is. We can experience the reality of oneness, of unity. Each of us, and all the world, is symbol and the symbol is to be penetrated. Reality is to be known! When loving intuition joins intellect in the complete act of thought, a realization of the wonder, sacredness and beauty of the earth becomes the joy of the free person. When we resonate with the spark within only then are we acting in freedom! We have always been given free will. When we act from the spark within, our essence, we are acting from our core. We are fulfilling our essence. It is our identity. When we surrender to another, even if it be to a perceived God, we have lost our free will and the reason for incarnating. We have given up our perceived identity to another. We have never identified with our essence. Surrendering our will is the opposite of freedom!
Today, it is vital that the extremists weigh their passions. Action based on hatred or lust is base and unworthy of humankind. It is never free. It can never favor the cause of free men and women. Buddha’s words are as true today as when first spoken:
He abused me, he beat me, he defeated me: In those who harbor such thoughts hatred will never cease.
For never does hatred cease by hatred here below: Hatred ceases by love; this is an eternal law.
Each of us must understand our motives. Our action can result from the balance of intuition and thinking if it is to be a step forward on the path. The conquest of our base self is the painful, laborious task of our time. It is also the gateway to our upward climb.
The concept of freedom means, essentially, acting out of spiritual motive, not religious motive. Freedom is permeated with love. Without a spiritual love for the deed there can be no freedom of action. Mark this truth, we are, each one of us, destined for a life of love, a life immersed in spirituality, a life of freedom. They are one and the same.
To fail in this quest is to miss the meaning of our time. To fail in this quest is also to guarantee individual and social disaster.
Freedom of action and action resonating from the spark within are the same. Our actions are free actions when they are based on our essence. Our essence is our spark within, placed there by the eternal One. It is also called the soul, always connected to the eternal One. It alone is always our center. It brings sanctity to each of us. It tries to help us on the climb to spiritual awareness, awareness of our unity with the eternal One and of all creation. Our physical presence must be removed from our decision making.We must decide for the best of humanity, in love for humanity, in such is freedom!
Since our soul is always connected to the eternal One, as we seek to act out of our essence, out of what we now recognize as our soul, we are also thinking and acting out of our source, the source of our creation, the eternal One. --------SHELDON STOFF - from UNIVERSAL KABBALAH: DAWN OF A NEW CONSCIOUSNESS