Hi Chaim,
Sorry for the long question. I have a dearest friend from childhood who lives in Israel now. We maintain a regular phone contact and tend to have very long conversations of spiritual and philosophical nature. My friend has been very much into esoteric literature, which I don't know much about, but I am beginning to question the kind of literature she has been reading. For example, she has been studying Kabbalah and being very insistently that the concepts of the Good and Evil don't exist in Judaism, according to the Kabbalah. This sounds very "gnostic" to me, if you know what I mean. Chaim, I find it hard to believe that our great tradition and religion advocates that there is no evil in the world. I suspect that the Kabbalah has some very complex concept about balance or trial and correction or something like that that can only be properly understood in a proper context by a real Jewish scholar. But since I don't know what it is, I can't challenge her moral relativism. Can you please tell me what argument I can make against this idea? How should I answer her? I think it is not incidental that we fundamentally disagree on politics. There is no right and wrong for her. She feels sorry for the Arabs and belongs to some group that prays for peace together, sending "good vibes/energy/thoughts" to the Universe. I guess my larger question is about the legitimacy of all these esoteric/New Age books, ideas, and movements that are so incredibly popular today. Of course, I would also like to believe in paranormal abilities, secret knowledge, wish fulfillment, as in the movie "The Secret," but something tells me I should be very careful and not succumb to the temptation to embrace these philosophies. I also get a feeling that there is something apocalyptic about this esoteric hysteria. That we live in the end of times.