“All My Thinking Has But One Focus”: Contemplative Seclusion in (Early) Modern Jewish Spirituality

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46586/er.14.2023.10249

Keywords:

Jewish spirituality, (Early) Modern Kabbalah, Jewish morality, contemplative seclusion, hitbodedut, perishut

Abstract

This study investigates the way in which different concepts of contemplation and seclusion are negotiated in Jewish spiritual literature. Focusing on (early) modern examples, it particularly addresses the functions and goals of physical and mental exercises designed to achieve detachment from worldly concerns. It shows how practices denoted by the terms perishut (lit. “separation”) and hitbodedut (lit. “solitude”) serve as preparatory steps that enable individuals to approach the divine, with the ultimate goal of bringing about various experiences of oneness with the deity. Against this background, it elucidates how perishut and hitbodedut were considered by some authors instrumental to gain divine knowledge, and how this idea relates to earlier Jewish conceptions of prophecy. Lastly, it will illustrate how in contemporary sources, contemplative seclusion is presented as a practice that transcends the temporal framework to which humans are bound.

Author Biography

Patrick Benjamin Koch

Patrick Benjamin Koch is the head of the Emmy Noether Junior Research Group “Jewish Moralistic Writings (Musar) of the Early Modern Period” funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and a research associate at the Institute for Jewish Philosophy and Religion, University of Hamburg. His research focuses on early modern moralistic and kabbalistic literatures and the history of early Hebrew book printing.

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Published

2023-07-03

How to Cite

Koch, P. B. (2023). “All My Thinking Has But One Focus”: Contemplative Seclusion in (Early) Modern Jewish Spirituality. Entangled Religions, 14(4). https://doi.org/10.46586/er.14.2023.10249