Judaism.com
Contact Us   |   My Basket
Judaism.com Shopping Basket
SIGN UP Subscribe to the Judaism.com Email newsletter.
Shabbat | Holidays | Lifecycle | Baby Gifts | Bar Mitzvah | Bat Mitzvah | Jewish Wedding | Ketubah | Personalize | Israel | Hebrew
Jewish Books Judaica Giftware Ritual Wear Supplies Jewish Art Jewelry Kids Store CD/DVD Software
SEARCH Search Judaism.com for Jewish gifts, Judaica and Jewish books. | Gift Registry Judaism.com Gift Certificate Gift Certificates | What's New | Clearance

Home

Top 10 Categories
Mezuzahs
Challah Boards
Kiddush Cups
Tzedakah Boxes
Shofars
Tallit
Jewelry
Artwork
Sterling Silver
Candlesticks
For Your Simcha
Imprinted Kippot
Wedding Glasses
Gary Rosenthal Collection
Ketubot
Jewish Holidays
Chanukah Dec 11 - 19
Tu B'Shevat Jan 29 - 30
Purim Feb 27 - 28
The Art of Kavana
New Titles
Email the The Art of Kavana page to someone.Email To Friend
Share:   Share The Art of Kavana on del.icio.us   Share The Art of Kavana on Facebook   Share The Art of Kavana on MySpace   Share The Art of Kavana on Reddit   Share The Art of Kavana on Twitter
The Art of Kavana
Formats & Prices
The Art of Kavana
View Larger Image
The Art of Kavana
by Rabbi Alexander Seinfeld

Contrary to most people's understanding of Judaism, the Torah's philosophy includes physical pleasures: that is, any experience that a person enjoys with one of the five senses. Either you smell it, touch it, taste it, see it, or hear it. Judaism views physical pleasure as central to living a good life. Hashem made a physical world not to frustrate us, but for us to enjoy.

In fact, the tradition considers it a moral obligation to enjoy life's physical pleasures. For instance, consider the very first mitzvah of the Torah. What is the Torah's first mitzvah? It is not "Be fruitful and multiply." Nor is it "Do not eat from the tree of knowledge." Upon a close reading, the text plainly states that the very first mitzvah is "From every tree of the garden you must eat."

However, the foundation of pleasure and the basis of Jewish spirituality is the discipline of mental control, of focusing the mind at will. To develop such a discipline requires a systematic development of mental focus, also known as meditation. It is the Art of Kavanah.

Alexander Seinfeld received semicha from Harav Zalman Nehemia Goldberg, shlita, and two degrees from Stanford University. He founded Jewish Spiritual Literacy, Inc., a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting the ideas in this book. His audio recordings are available at jsli.org and other sites. (192 Pages)

Publisher: Devora Publishing, 2009

JDC #FormatPriceQty
 
19131Hard$21.95Add to 'The Art of Kavana' to your shopping Basket


Related Items

Kabbalat ShabbatKabbalat Shabbat
My People's Prayer Book Volume 8
The Way of FlameThe Way of Flame
A Guide to the Forgotten Mystical Tradition of Jewish Meditation
Jewish MeditationJewish Meditation
A Practical Guide

Related Categories

Jewish Thought:Concepts:Prayer

Return To The Judaism.com Homepage
Post Your Simcha
Online Learning Resources


Home|Jewish Books|Judaica Giftware|Simcha Stores|Holidays & Shabbat|Music|DVDs|Software|Jewish Kids Store|Religious Supplies|Clearance


Copyright © 1995 - 2009 U.S. Judaica, Inc
To find out about Shipping & Handling charges please view our shipping policy.
Questions Or Comments: info@judaism.com
Order By Phone: 1-800-JUDAISM (1-800-583-2476)
Technical Problems: webmaster@judaism.com
More About Judaism.com

Judaism.com is the longest established Jewish book, Judaica and Jewish gift store on the Internet. Our catalog is the single most comprehensive catalog of Judaica, Jewish books, CDs, video, software, religious articles and Jewish gifts available.
The Art of Kavana The Art of Kavana The Art of Kavana Judaism.com is upfrontJudaism.com is UpFront