The mystical doctrine that human intentions and ethical actions repair cosmic brokenness and elevate divine sparks, uniting personal and universal redemption.
Tikkun olam, repairing the world, evolved from Lurianic mysticism's teaching that creation itself is fractured—divine sparks trapped within shells of impurity—and human action can elevate and restore them. Every deed performed with proper intention releases sparks, rectifying cosmic imbalance and advancing universal redemption. This doctrine transforms spiritual practice from individualistic ascent into cosmic service; one's personal prayer and ethical action participate in God's own redemptive work. Rumi's devotion to love mirrors this principle: love is tikkun, the highest form of repair that restores the universe to its original wholeness and beauty. In Hasidic teaching, tikkun became democratized—not only scholars but every Jew, through ordinary acts infused with spiritual intention, could participate in cosmic repair. A merchant conducting honest business, a parent raising children with wisdom, a laborer working with gratitude—all perform tikkun. This concept radically elevates mundane life, suggesting that nowhere exists outside sacred responsibility. Personal transformation and world redemption become inseparable; the two occur simultaneously.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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