Lishkat Hashaim: Difference between revisions
An Avatar.Global Resource
Created page with "{{template:connectionnav}} {{navmenu}} <h1 class="customtitle">{{FULLPAGENAME}}</h1> <blockquote class="definition">A '''lishkât ḥashāīm''' is a syncretic term for Connection Cocoon, popular in Palestine and Babylon among t..." |
No edit summary |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
==Syncretic Terms== | ==Syncretic Terms== | ||
[[Connection Cocoon]] {{#ask:[[Is a | [[Connection Cocoon]] {{#ask:[[Is a syncretic term::Connection Cocoon]]}} | ||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
{{template:endstuff}} | {{template:endstuff}} | ||
[[category:terms]][[category:judaism]][[Is a | [[category:terms]][[category:judaism]][[Is a syncretic term::Connection Cocoon| ]] |
Revision as of 20:37, 16 July 2019
- Connection
- Connection Framework
- Connection Practice
- Connection Appliance
- Connection Supplement
- Connection Manual
- Connection Event
- Connection Outcome
- Connection Pathology
Lishkat Hashaim
A lishkât ḥashāīm is a syncretic term for Connection Cocoon, popular in Palestine and Babylon among the Hashaim.
Syncretic Terms
Notes
"There are several heterogeneous passages which speak of the existence within the ancient Temple at Jerusalem of a special apartment, called the lishkât ḥashāīm (' chamber of the silent [or secret] ones'). According to the statement of Tosefta Shekalim, ii. 16, there were to be found in some cities of Palestine and Babylon men known as Ḥashāīm, who reserved a special room in their house for depositing in it a charity-box into which money for the poor could be put and withdrawn with the utmost silence. It was collected and distributed by men appointed for the purpose by the Ḥashāīm, and, as it was all done with the strictest secrecy, it looks as though there was a kind of communism among the members of the order."[1]
Citation and Legal
Treat the SpiritWiki as an open-access online monograph or structured textbook. You may freely use information in the SpiritWiki; however, attribution, citation, and/or direct linking are ethically required.
Footnotes
- ↑ Abelson, J. Jewish Mysticism. London: G. Bell and Sons, 1913. https://archive.org/details/jewishmysticism00abel/page/n21. p. 21-2.