I studied with Rabbi David Aaron at his Isralight Institute, so I can say with authority that the writing style in this, his first book, is exactly like his speaking style. He makes the spiritual concepts of Kabbalah accessible because he relates them to everyday life experiences. And he’s funny. The title of his first chapter is “What’s It All About?” “No sense starting small,” he begins. Then he devotes the next three chapters to explaining why G-d created humanity. The main concept is the Kabbalistic “tzimtzum,” which literally means “contraction,” but Rabbi Aaron explains it as “making space.” If you love someone, you make space for him in your life, even if he gets on your nerves sometimes. That’s exactly what G-d did in creating us.
My favorite chapters are on the theme of fate vs. choice. Rabbi Aaron quotes the famous line from Shakespeare, “All the world's a stage and the men and women merely players." “The word ‘merely’ disparages our role,” he says. Our actions have tremendous impact in this world. To illustrate this, he tells stories of how people live their lives, some from modern times and some Torah examples, specifically Joseph and Queen Esther. The conclusion of that chapter is especially inspiring: “There is fate - a clear direction, a goal, a plan. What's going to be is going to be. But how it's going to happen is ...our choice ... It is a very basic Kabbalistic idea: The evolution of the world of love will go on no matter what. But you have a choice. Do you want to have a role in it, or not?...What role do you choose to play? The hero? The villain? The protagonist? The antagonist?...That is your choice.”
This is only a taste of the insights to be found in Endless Light. People with all levels of exposure to traditional Jewish scholarship can appreciate it. Like much about Kabbalah, Endless Light embodies a contradiction. It’s stimulating and profound yet a fast and easy read.