<snip>
PPS: Kabbalah is NOT magic... No more than Chemistry is magic. It is our belief that Kabbalah is the mechanism by which the universe was created. If we could harness it we could understand all the secrets of creation. Only very humble tzaddicks even have a chance of using it to alter reality.
When gentiles get it wrong I let them because they shouldn't be using the term in the first place and sounding jewish..
But you should know better. The plural of Tzaddik is Tzaddikim. Not saddicks or Tsaddicks or whatever you think.
You don't just add an 's' to a hebrew word to make a plural. Sometimes people do it if a word is difficult.. (like the plural for tallus/tallit may not be obvious to people). But everybody gets Tzaddikim right!BTW, in the shuir on the Secrets of Lashon HaKodesh the Rabbi mentioned a fact I had heard before. The words "Abbra Cadabra" are based on Hebrew. In Hebew the words "Avera CaDabera" roughly translates to "I do what I speak".
Well if you have heard the fact before you should know it's based on the aramaic. I doubt that you heard it wrong twice.
<snip>
PPS: Kabbalah is NOT magic... No more than Chemistry is magic. It is our belief that Kabbalah is the mechanism by which the universe was created. If we could harness it we could understand all the secrets of creation. Only very humble tzaddicks even have a chance of using it to alter reality.
When gentiles get it wrong I let them because they shouldn't be using the term in the first place and sounding jewish..
But you should know better. The plural of Tzaddik is Tzaddikim. Not saddicks or Tsaddicks or whatever you think.
You don't just add an 's' to a hebrew word to make a plural. Sometimes people do it if a word is difficult.. (like the plural for tallus/tallit may not be obvious to people). But everybody gets Tzaddikim right!BTW, in the shuir on the Secrets of Lashon HaKodesh the Rabbi mentioned a fact I had heard before. The words "Abbra Cadabra" are based on Hebrew. In Hebew the words "Avera CaDabera" roughly translates to "I do what I speak".
Well if you have heard the fact before you should know it's based on the aramaic. I doubt that you heard it wrong twice.