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The Jewish Leadership Knows Their God Is Not Real
The Rabbi's the leadership of the Jewish Race in their own personal texts know that reincarnation is the reality of the soul. Not going to their heaven with Yahweh. This also means they know the supernatural claims of their ideology are false. They just reincarnate back into their own race. The Jewish Rabbi's were keeping this hidden to themselves.
"Gilgul/Gilgul neshamot/Gilgulei Ha Neshamot (Heb. גלגול הנשמות, Plural: גלגולים Gilgulim) describes a Kabbalistic concept of reincarnation. In Hebrew, the word gilgul means "cycle" or "wheel" and neshamot is the plural for "souls." Souls are seen to "cycle" through "lives" or "incarnations", being attached to different human bodies over time. Which body they associate with depends on their particular task in the physical world, spiritual levels of the bodies of predecessors and so on. The concept relates to the wider processes of history in Kabbalah, involving Cosmic Tikkun (Messianic rectification), and the historical dynamic of ascending Lights and descending Vessels from generation to generation. The esoteric explanations of gilgul were articulated in Jewish mysticism by Isaac Luria in the 16th century, as part of the metaphysical purpose of Creation."] [1]
Sources:
[1] Wiki
Tree of Souls, Schwartz
The Rabbi's the leadership of the Jewish Race in their own personal texts know that reincarnation is the reality of the soul. Not going to their heaven with Yahweh. This also means they know the supernatural claims of their ideology are false. They just reincarnate back into their own race. The Jewish Rabbi's were keeping this hidden to themselves.
"Gilgul/Gilgul neshamot/Gilgulei Ha Neshamot (Heb. גלגול הנשמות, Plural: גלגולים Gilgulim) describes a Kabbalistic concept of reincarnation. In Hebrew, the word gilgul means "cycle" or "wheel" and neshamot is the plural for "souls." Souls are seen to "cycle" through "lives" or "incarnations", being attached to different human bodies over time. Which body they associate with depends on their particular task in the physical world, spiritual levels of the bodies of predecessors and so on. The concept relates to the wider processes of history in Kabbalah, involving Cosmic Tikkun (Messianic rectification), and the historical dynamic of ascending Lights and descending Vessels from generation to generation. The esoteric explanations of gilgul were articulated in Jewish mysticism by Isaac Luria in the 16th century, as part of the metaphysical purpose of Creation."] [1]
Sources:
[1] Wiki
Tree of Souls, Schwartz