ED,

Not sure if my posts are getting thru, but if they are I think you might enjoy 
this article. It's written about the jhanas from a Jewish perspective and is 
the 
best I've found thus far. Enjoy!


Religion & Beliefs
A Jewish Perspective on the JhanasBy Jay Michaelson / February 5, 2009
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Part II: Is there God in the Jhanas?  So what about that "Is"–that sense of 
devekut,  the numinous, the Lover, that I found in the fourth jhana? As I’ve  
indicated, I didn’t just experience the jhanas as a blissful or  contented 
state, which is how the Buddhist texts described them. I  experienced them as 
holy–which is how the Hindu texts did. I’m not  prepared to say that any 
particular experience was necessarily an  experience of God, or an angel, or 
anything in particular–but I will say  that they were extreme encounters with 
the "numinous."     Moreover, if  I were setting out on this practice from a 
specifically religious  perspective, there’s no question that these experiences 
would be  described in terms of visions, mystical union, blessings, even 
prophecy.  Jewishly speaking, they correspond in interesting ways with the 
states  described in some of Abraham Abulafia’s books, and in the Shaarei 
Tzedek, a text by one of his disciples that is translated in Gershom Scholem’s 
Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism. If the jhana practice doesn’t match these 
mystical states, I don’t know what does. (For more on this, see "Does Mysticism 
Prove the Existence of God?")  The presence, the light–it is literally bringing 
tears to my eyes as I  write this, because it is so healing, beautiful, 
gorgeous, holy, and  pure.    For example, sometimes, during the third and 
fourth jhanas,  there would arise a bright, hot light at the "third eye" 
spot–basically,  where the head part of the Tefillin rests, a correspondence I 
did not  fail to notice, although sometimes it would move up to the crown 
chakra  
point. This I will not describe further, except to say that I  experienced all 
kinds of wisdom and insight in connection with this  light. If you’ve had 
similar experiences, hameivin yavin. If not,  I’m going to shut up about it 
anyway for now. Go see for yourself.     Now, what’s going on in such 
experiences? As I see it, there are three  options:    This is a sacred state, 
and it’s just ignorant not to see  that. Buddhists experience the state but 
choose not to see it as sacred  (my Burmese teacher told me not to get 
distracted by any of these  sensations, and that doing so was dangerous); 
materialists don’t see it  because they are willfully blind. If love is real, 
this is real.    This  is purely a mindstate, which perhaps one day we can 
measure and  stimulate artificially. The sensation of "holiness" is purely a  
sensation. Any claim that this is of anything–whether God or  anything else–is 
reification, and thus delusion. Great that the states  healed you and helped 
you 
see truth; leave it at that.    God is there  if you look for Him/Her. My  
choice, no surprise, is number three. It would be dishonest to sit here  and 
tell you that I did not experience an intense closeness to God in  these 
states, 
far more than any in prayer, meditation, ecstatic,  entheogenic, or energetic 
work I had done in the past–and again, I’ve  done a lot. This is what I 
experienced, and I don’t want to lie in order  to make myself seem sane, 
credible, or level-headed. But I also don’t  want to make any assertions or 
jump 
to any conclusions. I just don’t  know. And I like resting in that question, 
because it prevents me from  falling into idolatry, fundamentalism, 
reification, 
or attachment.    As  I’ve written about at length in my book Nondual Judaism 
(coming  out next September from Shambhala), I think this word "God" is a kind 
of  naming, a way of relating to "Is" that some people choose to do and  other 
people don’t. Remember, "Ein Sof" does not mean "God"–it means  "infinite." And 
YHVH doesn’t mean God either–it means, I think, "is."  Asking whether "is" 
exists is nonsensical. Asking whether "God" exists  is a question of naming. Do 
we choose to experience this moment as You,  rather than It? If we do, You 
appear–quite reliably, the more spiritual  practice one does. God is here, 
right 
now, I know it. However, it is  also possible to choose to experience this 
moment as It, in which case  the personality of God recedes, and is replaced 
only by a placid,  transparent, omnipresent, maybe-aware emptiness. This is 
also 
true,  right now, and I know it too.     I know both of these things because,  
thank God or karma, I am blessed with these two ways of relating–the  secular 
Buddhist one, and the religious Jewish one. I find both of them  incredibly 
nourishing. On my jhanas retreat, days would go by without  God-consciousness. 
I 
would surrender to the practice, experience  ecstasy, bliss, contentment, and 
equanimity as factors of mind, and grow  very quiet and precise. Other times 
(especially since the retreat  coincided with the Jewish holiday season), the 
protective, loving, and  sometimes erotic natures of God/dess would arise even 
during quiet  concentrated mindstates. Even in the fourth jhana, there was a 
sense of  "I am always here." At the very least, there was often a sense of  
gratitude–and "God" was just a name for Who/What I felt grateful toward.     
So, 
I really do want to say that everybody is right–partly because I  experience 
both sides myself. As Ken Wilber has described in great  length and of great 
use, it’s a matter of looking, and as Wilber also  discusses, it’s really 
helpful to look from as many perspectives as  possible. I don’t think the 
Buddhists are ignorant because they’re  missing the God piece, and I don’t 
think 
the Christians are deluded  because they’re seeing Christ. I think we approach 
the mystery with  perspectives, expectations, and vocabularies that both shape 
and  interpret those experiences. The wings of the Shechinah are the flapping  
ears of Ganesh, and both are just a visual impression that should not  be 
reified. Which perspective works best depends on the moment, and your  heart.   
 
Now, this may not be enough. In a way, the jhanas really  undermine some of the 
foundations of Jewish
spiritual  life: if these amazing and holy states can be stimulated purely 
through  concentration, then what do we really mean by "an experience of God"?  
Is devekut just a mindstate? Isn’t this just the kind of non-religious  version 
of religious experience that Sam Harris, at the end of The End of Faith,  says 
we should institute in place of dogma and religion? If you can  "get there" 
purely with concentration, then what’s the point of all the  God stuff–the 
piety, the worship, and the inevitable attachment to form?  Biggest of all: is 
"God" purely a projection of the mind, a reification  of a feeling?    And not 
only that-what if "God" is an unhelpful  projection of mind? Several times 
during retreat, I found myself engaged  in what I came to call 
"pseudo-covenant," or making neurotic deals with  God to please grace me with 
another mystical encounter. From a Buddhist  perspective, this is a really 
unhelpful delusion, because it prevents  the clear seeing of the conditions 
that 
actually bring jhana about:  concentration, effort, and so on. Even from just a 
nonsectarian  spiritual perspective, though, pseudo-covenant is crazymaking. 
There’s  no end to it–it’s basically a prolonged state of fear and insecurity.  
Whereas, when the states are seen as simply conditioned states–profound,  
amazing, life-changing, loving, blissful states, but still just  states–calm 
and 
clarity prevail.    I really don’t know, but I have a  few replies–or at least, 
ways of seeing.    First, I come back to a very  basic understanding that it’s 
easier to see the truth at some times  than others. This is true in mundane as 
well as spiritual contexts. Ever  have a moment in a relationship when, due to 
whatever reasons, you  suddenly see the truth (for better or for worse) about 
your partner?  Conditions enabled that seeing–a crackling fireplace, a blown  
responsibility–but the seeing is true nonetheless. Maybe jhana is just  an 
extreme example of that. With the mind blown and the heart open, the  numinous 
just appears–at least to those of us who are looking.      Second, let’s 
remember that sometimes this state appears even when we’re not looking. I 
didn’t 
come on this retreat looking for God. I  had my intentions, and they were not 
particularly Jewish ones. In my  experience, which I trust but do not defend, 
which I fall back on but do  not proselytize, purely in my experience, without 
any assertion but  with an admission, a confession, a release: God found me. 
Again, I’m not  saying I saw God or spoke to God or anything like that. I’m 
just 
saying  these are the holiest experiences I’ve ever had, and that if I was  
inclined to ascribe such labels to them, they would certainly fit.     Third, 
let me return for a moment to the fourth jhana. One of the  lessons of that 
state is how thin it is. It’s extremely subtle, which is  why it takes the most 
concentration to enter, and why it holds so much  power for spiritual practice. 
It is devoid of qualities: it’s not loving  like the third jhana, or ecstatic 
like the first, or delightful like  the second. Just pure equanimity. Now, that 
too is a conditioned  phenomenon–but it’s a very
thin  one. The "God" that emerges in that state is the nondual God: Is. So  
we’re not really reifying a mindstate; we’re seeing What Is through  different 
prisms, some of them colored with love or joy, and some  entirely colorless. 
This seems really important, and as I mentioned  above, is one of the most 
important Jewish teachings of jhana. God is  not a name for when you feel good. 
    
Fourth, I want to really inhabit  that "I don’t know" for awhile, and see where 
it leads: not answering,  not knowing, surrendering and letting go to this 
mystery that is beyond  any capacity or concept. Surely this is wisdom. If 
there 
is God, nondual  or otherwise, surely it’s beyond our capacity to explain. And 
if there  isn’t, but there’s just a vast emptiness when all conditioned 
phenomena  are let go of, well, then it’s exactly the same, isn’t it? Both 
"God"  
and "not God" end up in exactly the same place: empty of all concepts,  
radiant, 
mysterious, and yet somehow with a tinge of knowing.     Finally, I don’t want 
to get lost in theology, when the point is the  experience, whether its 
religious in nature or not. Let’s assume these  are purely conditioned 
mindstates, whatever the consequences of that  assumption may be. Let’s let go 
of magical thinking, and religious  thinking. Great! Now the question is what 
are they good for, what do  they teach, how can they enrich our lives. Sharon 
Salzberg, following  the Buddhist canon, defines the quality of faith as 
"trusting your own  deepest experiences." Trust, not explicate or define or 
reify. That  seems right to me, and these were certainly some of the deepest 
I’ve  had. Everything is as it was: tables and chairs, loneliness and wisdom.  
But in my heart, there is now a deep knowledge of love.      All images  by 
Harriete Estel Berman. 

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