Your two sourcesDon Danko wrote: ↑Tue Apr 20, 2021 3:22 am From the information that Sunrise posted:
https://www.myjewishlearning.com/articl ... l-journey/The Jews reverse their own letters and chant them in their Kabbalah exercises and it gives them more power.In Abulafia’s approach, the individual “begins to combine letters, a few or many, reversing and rolling them around rapidly, until [one’s] heart feels warm.” Those who adhere diligently to this technique, Abulafia declared, will eventually experience “a plenitude of saintly spirit … wisdom, understanding, good counsel and knowledge…. The spirit of the Lord will rest upon [them].”
1st off you didn't make sure the link always worked on the first one so here it is https://www.chabad.org/library/article_ ... /Aleph.htm
I took the time to read this. It does not in any place mention anything about reversing the letters. It simply mentions that peleh refers to the time of the messiah. A state of pelah.
It is a not even commonly used separate Hebrew word. If you don't believe it's not commonly used try to search these two words Peleh and Judaism in google you will find like one or two sites at the top then nothing. It is not related to the hebrew letter other than the letter represents that state to the Jews. The fact the reversal of this letter is that word too is a coincidence. You didn't mention this for any other letter so go ahead do so if all the reverse letters are separate Hebrew words. It still doesn't matter much as it's separate. Not related.
1st off Your on a Judaism 101 type site reading this stuff. The adept rabbis are not going to release what they do in a place like that. These also may be lower level Jews writing this. Just cause its a rothschild funded site doesn't mean it's the be all and end all of Judaism.
2ndly
I read your second source. Combining letters reversing and rolling them around. This isn't talking about doing it in the way the rtr does it's a kabbalistic exercise. It's talking about making different combinations of Hebrew letters. Unrelated totally to what we are doing. In the context of the entire page it simply is a small quote. It isn't what that page is about or saying.
You looked hard for this stuff didn't you. Searching for hours just to find something that could be taken out of context.
Also again this is a Judaism 101 type site even more so than the first the adept rabbis would not write deep truths on there.
So your arguments are moot.