Rabash. These Are the Generations of Noah. 4 (1985) [2026-06-01] #lesson
The episode explores a mystical interpretation of the generations of Noah, framing them not as historical lineages but as spiritual states of consciousness. Central to the discussion is the idea that Noah, described as 'righteous in his generation,' represents a person who maintains integrity not because of external validation, but because of an internal alignment with divine will—what the speaker calls 'the way of the Holy Spirit.' This contrasts sharply with Abraham, who is portrayed as one who walks with divine KELIM (vessels) and thus requires no external help, embodying a higher spiritual state. The core revelation is that true spiritual work isn't about moral superiority, but about the internal struggle between egoistic desire ('Kelim de Ashpa') and the desire to give ('Kelim de Kabbalah'), with the latter being the true path to enlightenment. The speaker warns that modern society's crises—addiction, depression, cultural decay—are symptoms of a world that has lost this inner balance, where people are trapped in endless cycles of desire without purpose. The episode concludes with a call to action: only through intentional, collective spiritual work—specifically, forming a group that holds each other accountable to higher principles—can humanity break free from this cycle and actualize its divine potential.
Noah’s righteousness was not about being better than others, but about maintaining integrity in a corrupt world—his 'generation' was a spiritual state, not a historical one.
Abraham’s spiritual superiority lies in walking with divine KELIM (vessels), meaning he doesn’t need external help because his actions are aligned with the divine will.
The core spiritual struggle is between 'Kelim de Ashpa' (egoistic desire to receive) and 'Kelim de Kabbalah' (desire to give), and only the latter leads to true enlightenment.
Modern societal crises—addiction, depression, cultural decline—are symptoms of a world that has lost the inner spiritual balance between desire and giving.
True spiritual progress requires a group that holds each other accountable, not through rules, but through shared intention and mutual responsibility.
…and 3 more takeaways available in PodZeus
The Spiritual Meaning of Noah's Generation
“In his own generation, some of our teachers are talking about this as a praise. Even more if he was living in the generation of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people of the people”
Abraham vs. Noah: The Two Paths of Spiritual Work
The speaker contrasts Noah’s need for divine support with Abraham’s self-sufficiency, arguing that Abraham walks with divine KELIM (vessels) and thus doesn’t require help—symbolizing a higher spiritual state where one’s actions are naturally aligned with the divine.
The Inner War: Desire to Receive vs. Desire to Give
“There are two forces in a person, called Kelim de Kabbalah and Kelim de Ashpa. No, but Kelim de Ashpa. It's a very strange thing. It's a lie. Kli. Kli. Kli. That's a lie.”
Modern Society as a Spiritual Crisis
“There is a two people in the world. When they start to be with the two people, they are the desire to get out of the heart, which is the point in the heart, which is the beginning, but it is the desire to get out of the heart.”
The Role of the Group in Spiritual Transformation
Individual effort is insufficient. True spiritual growth requires a group that holds each other accountable—not through rigid rules, but through shared intention and mutual responsibility.
“Inside there's a candle that glows And there is no fire That burns like the light of his friends We must understand That our work to reveal what's for us He'd be done when we join all our hearts into one And inside there are sparks Guaranteed together we pray Make a request Bye.”
“And that's why I'm saying that there are two forces in a person, called Kelim de Kabbalah and Kelim de Ashpa. No, but Kelim de Ashpa. It's a very strange thing. It's a lie. Kli. Kli. Kli. That's a lie.”
“There is a two people in the world. When they start to be with the two people, they are the desire to get out of the heart, which is the point in the heart, which is the beginning, but it is the desire to get out of the heart.”
Host
kelim
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noah
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abraham
person
kabbalah
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ustav
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adam
person
sira
other
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