The Kabbalah of Meaning: New Course at Chabad of Austin Logo
  • The Kabbalah of Meaning: New Course at Chabad of Austin

  • The Kabbalah of Meaning - Jewish Wisdom for Finding Purpose

     Material comforts are more widespread than ever, yet so many feel empty, overwhelmed, or adrift without a clear “why.”

    This course confronts the crisis of meaning head-on. We’ll explore what truly makes life meaningful and how to live with clarity and purpose in uncertain times.

    Together we’ll tackle the big questions:

    • What is meaning?
    • What does it mean to be human?
    • What’s the difference between feeling meaningful and having actual purpose?

    The Kabbalah of Meaning offers not just insight, but practical tools to build a life of purpose.

    When: Six Sessions, Tuesdays/Wednesdays, Nov 4-Dec 10 (see exact schedule below)

    • Evening session (includes refreshments):
      Six Sessions, Tuesday evenings | Nov 4-Dec 9 | 7:30pm-9:00pm

    • Lunch session (includes lunch):
      Six sessions, Wednesday afternoons | Nov 5-Dec 10 | 11:30am-1:00pm 

    Where: Chabad of Austin, 3500 Hyridge Dr

    Instructor: Rabbi Levi Levertov

    Cost: $99 per person, includes textbook. Early Bird $89 until October 22.

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    This is first course of our JLI courses this year:

    • Fall Course: The Kabbalah of Meaning | Nov 4-Dec 10
    • Winter Course: Captivating Cases in Rabbinic Responsa | Jan 20-Feb 25 
    • Spring Course: For All Humankind | Apr 29-Jun10

     Sign up for all three courses below for a special discount!

    • Read more about the lessons and see the schedule: 
    • Lesson 1 | Tues, Nov 4 (Evening) | Wed, Nov 5 (Afternoon):

      The Meaning We Seek

      What do people mean when they say “my life feels meaningful”? We begin with the foundational insight that human beings feel most alive and fulfilled when they live in harmony with their core capacities. Using the metaphor of a tree, drawn from Deuteronomy and developed in Chasidic thought, we examine four essential human capacities: personal growth, meaningful contribution, authentic giving, and genuine connection.

      Lesson 2 | Tues, Nov 11 (Evening) | Wed, Nov 12 (Afternoon):

      To Make or Not to Make Meaning

      Many people today pursue meaning as a feeling—something personally enriching or inspiring. Jewish thought, however, introduces something more stable and resilient: purpose. Drawing on Ecclesiastes, the Tanya, and various philosophical texts, this lesson guides students from self-focused meaning-making toward purpose-driven living. It presents purpose as an externally given mission that precedes the individual self and serves to integrate all areas of life.

      Lesson 3 | Tues, Nov 18 (Evening) | Wed, Nov 19 (Afternoon):

      Meaning in the Mundane

      People often assume that meaning must emerge from grand gestures or obviously spiritual activities. This lesson makes a revolutionary claim: Everything in your life can matter. Drawing on Jewish mysticism, the book of Proverbs, and classic ethical literature, we discover that a spiritually meaningful life encompasses work, household chores, and personal talents and even our character flaws are not obstacles to spiritual meaning but rather tools for achieving it. Meaning isn’t located in some distant realm—it’s already present at your desk, in your kitchen, and on your walk to work.

      Lesson 4 | Tues, Nov 25 (Evening) | Wed, Nov 26 (Afternoon):

      Meaning in the Rhythms of Time

      Modern life tends to view time as a monotonous blank canvas for us to fill with whatever color we choose. Judaism, however, insists that time has texture and significance. This lesson explores how the Jewish calendar—with its daily, weekly, and annual cycles—creates meaningful rhythms that assign different spiritual energies to different moments. We examine the mystical dimensions of the Jewish calendar and what it truly means to “live with the times.”


      Lesson 5 | Tues, Dec 2 (Evening) | Wed, Dec 3 (Afternoon):

      Living Joyfully

      Not all meaning derives from what we actively do. Sometimes, it emerges from what happens to us. Jewish mysticism’s understanding of Divine providence teaches that meaning can be found even in the unplanned and unexpected. This lesson explores how belief in continuous creation and G-d’s ongoing involvement reframes disappointment and apparent randomness as potentially meaningful experiences. The question shifts from “Why did this happen to me?” to “What can I do with this experience?” Meaning, it turns out, can emerge through our acceptance of and response to life’s challenges.

      Lesson 6 | Tues, Dec 9 (Evening) | Wed, Dec 10 (Afternoon):

      Refreshing Relationships

      This final lesson challenges everything we’ve explored by posing a fundamental question: Does life have meaning even when I’m not actively doing anything? Many philosophies link human value directly to productivity or output. Jewish spirituality offers a radically different foundation: Every person possesses inherent worth simply by virtue of existing. This lesson explores the philosophical and psychological implications of being created in G-d’s image. It helps students internalize the profound truth that their worth is not earned through achievement but is inherent to their very being, establishing the bedrock for more stable self-worth and deeper enthusiasm in their pursuit of meaning.

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