HISTORICAL FORCES

The Hasidic Movement

Hasidism came to celebrate the holiness of character traits, the holiness of faith, a general awareness of the holiness of Israel and its high rank. It came to increase feelings of holiness, which had been slumbering in the heart of nature, by means of increasing appreciation for prayer.

It was contested by an opposition deeply concerned that the practical foundation might totter as a result of an intensification of a tendency toward feeling; that the details, which support the totality, not grow blurred by a tendency toward holism; and that the power of imagination-which arouses by means of good, holy and true feelings-not overstep its bounds, bringing evil and bitter consequences to the entire nation for coming generations.

These two forces engaged one another, each one intending to foster the goodness that it saw in the other, but according to its own unique character.
Eder Hayakar, p. 25

Romanticism

There is a love that matures refined souls and prepares them to perceive a most refined and elevated ethics. This is a noble feeling that contains holiness, beauty and glory. Although humanity yearns for this, it cannot yet know it in its essential purity, freshness and natural state. This exalted song and holiness can be expressed only when accompanied in a complete and perfected manner by all aspects of life: physical, ethical and intellectual. Only then may humanity rise to that complete freedom where its spiritual inclinations will proceed in completion of might and strength, spreading their wings to the full breadth of life-to all its facets-and finding no obstacle, no stumbling block.

This wondrous vision is expressed by the faculty of the general religious spirit that the nature of the human spirit contains. Only when humanity will be filled with power and might, spiritual recognition and knowledge, will it be able to remove from this feeling (which is the most active power in general, and which rules undeterred in each particular) all those stumbling blocks that hold it back and force it onto side roads.

Only then will there appear, in exalted glory, its inner soul: the divine love that quickens us.
As long as this trait remains in its Romantic form, we cannot draw pure water from it. We will be able to do so only when the world-physical, ethical, and intellectual-will be healed of all its illnesses.
Eder Hayakar, p. 28
NEW! Extensive excerpts from  the book, Chadarav--His Chambers: A Collection of Rav Kook's Personal Writings
from Chadarav

From My Wellsprings

A Thirst for God

Revealing the Soul

Without Words

The Singer

The Wellsprings of Holiness

In a Vision

To Know God's Secrets

To Bind the Sheaves

Serving God

Returning to God

The Land of Israel

A Great Love

To My People

The Birthpangs of Redemption
Introduction

Topics:

Animal Kingdom
Character Traits
Clinging to God
Death
Encouragement
Ethics
Faith
Fear of God
Feeling
Good and Evil
Historical Forces
Holidays
Imagination
Intelligence
Intent
Jew and Gentile
Jewish Literature
Joy
Kindness
Land of Israel
Letters of the Alphabet
Love of God
Love of Israel-Part I
Love of Israel-Part II
Philosophy
Poetry and Beauty
Prayer
Rav Kook
Redemption
Science
Sexuality
Silence
Song
Souls
Spiritual Thirst
Spirituality and Physicality
Teshuvah (Repentance)
Torah-Part I
Torah-Part II
Torah and Secular Knowledge
Tzaddik (Holy Person)
Universalism
Visualization
Young People


The Translator

About the Translator

Absence of Stone--Poetry
Experiencing the Divine--An Extraordinary Hasidic Classic
Jewish Lights
Rav Kook blog


Rav Kook Resources

Atid (R. Chaim Brovender, R. Yedidya Sinclair and R. Jeffrey Saks)

Between Rationalism and Mysticism: On-Line Book (Benjamin Ish-Shalom)

Orot (R. Bezalel Naor)

OU Radio on Rav Kook (R. Tzvi Weinreb)

Rav Kook Torah (R. Chanan Morrison)

Video About Rav Kook's Life

Video Class on Rav Kook (R. Raz Hartman)

Other Torah Resources

A Simple Jew
Breslov Center
Hirhurim
About the Translator        Contact