Printed fromJewishDanville.com
Ask the Rabbi
Subscribe
Subscribe to Chabad of Paso Robles General
View all subscriptions »
Contact
Home
About
Sign In
Chabad of Danville & S. Ramon
Upcoming Events Past Events Photo Albums
Challah Club Shavuot 2026 CTeen Events Calendar Holidays Unboxed Soul Trek Torah Kabbalah Class Event Reservations
Lag B’Omer BBQ & Community Celebration Passover 2026 Purim 2026 Danville Hebrew Shabbat Dinner Chanukah 5786 Rosh Chodesh Society: It's About Time Shavuot 2025 RCS: It's About Time Schedule Lag Ba'Omer 2025 The Challah Bake
Chanukah 5785 Sukkot 2025 High Holidays 2025 Community Chanukah Challah Bake Community Torah High Holidays 2024 Friday Night Live Lag BaOmer Lag BaOmer BBQ
Online & Live Passover 2024 Passover Model Matzah Bakery Purim in Paradise 2020 Shavuot Shofar Factory @ Whole Foods Workshops Sukkot 2024 Flower Arrangement Workshop
Resin & Rosé Ladies Night Purim in the Stadium 2026 Spirit of Triumph VR Mega Challah Bake 2026 Bar & Bat Mitzvah Clubs Celebrate Chanukah Cteen Menorah Lighting with Reutlinger Residents The Miracle of Chocolate - Chanukah Ladies Night Community Chanukah Celebration 2025 Women’s Rugelach Bake Sukkot 2025
Camp Gan Izzy Danville 2025 4th of July Parade Ladies Night Out: Mezuzah Design Cteen Regional Golden Gate Danville Hebrew End of Year Ceremony Cteen Chopped! Danville Hebrew Matzah Bake-Off! The Challah Club Purim Fiesta 2025 Mega Challah Bake
Danville Hebrew Learns about Shabbat End of Year Ceremony 2024 Community Chanukah Celebration 2024 Pre-Chanukah Ladies Night Holiday Boutique & Chanukah Wonderland Cteen Cookies 4 Cops in the Sukkah Sukkot Men’s Night All Day Sukkot Party Cteen Kickoff Passover Seder 2024
Events
JLI: For All Humankind JLI: Captivating Cases in Rabbinic Responsa JLI: Kabbalah of Meaning RCS: Insight Torah Kabbalah Class JLI: Colorful Profiles Online Learning
JLI Registration
JLI Registration
JLI Registration
RCS: Insight Schedule RCS: Insight Registration Form
Torah Class Sign up
JLI: Colorful Profiles
Adult
Education
2026-27 Camp Gan Israel Hebrew School CTeen 2025-2026 2025-26 Camp Gan Israel OMA Teens Kids Club Babyccino Bat Mitzvah Club Bar Mitzvah Club Teen Club
Registration 2026 Camp Calendar Dates & Rates Divisions Registration for Early/After Care Photos: Jewish Summer Camp Camp Shirt Order Form Scholarship Application 2026
About Us Our Program Registration 2026-2027 Yearly Calendar Hebrew Reading Boost
About Us Contact Us CTeen Danville Registration CTeen Event Registration CTeen Challah Bake Calendar Gallery 2023 Gallery Kickoff 2024 CTeen Shabbaton
Registration 2025 Camp Calendar Dates & Rates Divisions Registration for Early/After Care Camp Handbook 2025 Scholarship Application 2025
Babyccino Sign up
BMC Registration 2025-26 Ceremony 2024
BMC Registration 2025-26
Youth
Spirit of Triumph: In honor of International Holocaust Remembrance Day Oct 7 Memorial Bima Cover Havdalah Community Party Community Art Calendar Ad Form ARK (Acts of Random Kindness)
Synagogue
Services
Jewish Women's Circle Calendar Rugelach Bake Ladies Night Out Flower Arrangement Workshop The Village Creative Workshops Loaves of Love Seasonal Events Challah Bakes The Danville Jewish Women Book Club
Pinot's Palette 2015 Queen for a night
Loaves of Love 2016 Loaves of Love 2015
Chanukah- Gift exchange party! Women's Night Out Pre-Rosh Hashanah Ladies Night
PINK CHALLAH BAKE Mega Challah Bake 2025
The Women's
Club
Donate
About Search Contact
ב"ה
KabbalaOnline.org Basics History of Kabbalah

Authenticity of the Zohar

 Beginner
By Moshe Miller
The Zohar's Mysterious Origins
Was It Really Written by Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai?
The Book of Zohar, the primary text of the Kabbalah, contains the teachings and doings of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai and his disciples, who flourished in the Land of Israel in the second century.
26 Comments
Arguments of the Skeptics
Comments from "Higher Criticism"
6 Comments
Responses to the Claims of the Skeptics
Review of the critics...
9 Comments
Other Claims and Responses
They weren't doing their homework....
5 Comments
Other Claims and Responses (Continued)
Torah vocabulary and ideas...
17 Comments

Join the Discussion

15 Comments
Newest Oldest
Posting Guidelines
characters remaining
Webmaster via kabbalaonline.org March 5, 2012

To: Anonymous in Brooklyn To learn more about Zohar, you can start in our Zohar folder. Just click on "Classic Kabbalah in the left menu on any page Reply

Anonymous brooklyn, ny March 3, 2012

zohar I wish to learn more about the zohar. How can I do that online? Reply

Anonymous Tzefat via kabbalaonline.org March 9, 2011

Re: bar-ben Bar Yochai is used sometimes in Midrash too and even occasionally in the Talmud. And more often simply "Rabbi Shimon" and sometimes "Rashbi" where the 'b' can be 'ben' or bar'. Reply

H May 7, 2023
in response to Anonymous:

1. in aramic bar means the same thing as ben. 2. even in hebrew the word בר can be an acronym for "the son of Rabbi..." Reply

David דוד Reghay Flushing February 27, 2011

why "bar" and not "ben"? I believe in the authenticity and holiness of the Zohar, but I have always wanted to know why in the Gemara Rashbi is always referred to as Shimon "Ben" Yochai and not Shimon "Bar" Yochai as he is called by the Zohar. After all, the Gemara is also written in Aramaic yet uses the Hebrew word for son. Are there perhaps other ancient sources such as Midrashim that also use the term "bar"? Thanks, I've searched a lot of the answer to this question and have not been able to find one! Reply

פגל משיח October 15, 2022
in response to David דוד Reghay:

מגילה יב"ב, יט"א, שמו"ר ב, ו, תמחומא ויקהל א, א, רות רבה ז, יג, איכה רבה א, כג ונד, וכו Reply

webmaster Tzefat, Israel via kabbalaonline.org December 31, 2010

Zohar from beginning Go to our Zohar section under "Classic Kabbalah" Reply

Zapata via kabbalaonline.org December 20, 2010

Learning i wish learn more of zohar from begining Reply

Yosef via kabbalaonline.org December 20, 2010

Thanks This is a true service to our people. Thank you for this incredibly important work. Reply

Rabbi Yerachmiel Tilles June 8, 2010

Reply to JIF from R. Moshe Miller I believe that since the publication of several works by Professor Moshe Idel (current head of Dept of Jewish Mysticism and Kabbalah at the University of Jerusalem) much of Scholem's work on the Zohar has been called into question. Interestingly, Scholem himself wrote a treatise explaining why Moshe de Leon could not possibly have been the author of the Zohar. He suddenly changed his thesis when appointed the head of dept of Jewish Mysticism, without ever disproving his previous proofs. There are those who suspect that he changed his opinion in order to capture that post.
You are right; I could have used more measured tones. Attribute that to the passion of youth. Reply

Josef I Friedman Hillsborough, NJ May 2, 2010

Some Comments on Your Articles As I'm sure you're aware and have even alluded to, Scholem's main conclusion that de Leon is the main author has continued to be accepted although certain details of his analysis have rightly been questioned (such as the quality of the Zohar's Aramaic), as we'd certainly expect in any scholarly exercise. Some of your comments on individuals, seem overly harsh. Reply

Rabbi Yerachmiel Tilles October 16, 2009

reply to Art Millerfrom R. Moshe Miller, part 2 In any event, review the verses in Bamidbar 17:11-13 and see the Targum Onkelos and Yerushalmi. This, my friend, is the origin of the phrase itbasma dina – when Aaron was told to use the incense (busmin or busmaya in Aramaic – itbasma is the verb form) to mitigate the plague which was causing people to die – i.e. to overcome the harsh decree with incense [or in general with good deeds that are “a pleasing scent to Hashem”] (which a better translation of the phrase itbasma dina). Why Scholem finds it necessary to dig up some extremely unlikely connection to Spanish instead of looking first and foremost in Jewish literature, I don’t know. Perhaps he had an agenda?

All the best.
Rabbi Moshe Miller Reply

Rabbi Yerachmiel Tilles via kabbalaonline.org October 16, 2009

reply to Art Miller from R. Moshe Miller, part 1 I know of no Spanish in the Zohar at all, other than the very dubious claims to the Spanish origins of a couple of words (no more than that!) that Scholem makes in his Major Trends p. 165.

One of those words Scholem believes is spanish in origin is “gardin” (see Major Trends p. 165 footnote 43). How then does he explain the existence of the word in Masechta Avoda Zara 26a and Yalkut Shimoni Vayishlach remez 133 which have the same meaning there as the word in the Zohar eg. Vol. 3 63a? Perhaps Scholem was no expert in the Gemara or in Midrash but he could at least have checked in a Concordance!

The second example Scholem cites (footnote 44) is itbasma dina, usually translated as “to sweeten judgments” or harsh decrees, which he claims comes from the Spanish endulzar. He adds that the Hebrew phrase hamtakat hadin is of much later origin. But a similar phrase (not identical, true, but similar enough, and IN THE SAME SENSE) is used in Bamidbar Rabba 10:3; Mechilta Beshallach 15 and in Talmud Yerushalmi Avodah Zara 2:8. Reply

Ben New York February 26, 2018
in response to Rabbi Yerachmiel Tilles:

in response to Rabbi Moshe Miller via Rabbi Tilles You are referring to the wrong "gardin." It is the word "gardini" Zohar 1:34a:6 which translates to guardian angels. This is clearly Spanish. The "gardin" that you brought down from Avodah Zara 26a and Yalkut Shimoni is referring to a weaver and not an angel. And other places in Shas that prong down the word "gardin" and other words with the same root are all referring to weavers and not angels. Reply

Art Miller Baltimore, Maryland via kabbalaonline.org September 11, 2009

Spanish words found in the Zohar Dear Rabbi Moshe Miller:
Will you tell me why Spanish found its way into the Zohar? The earliest mention of the Spanish language used verbally or in written form was that it was an ougrowth of Vulgar Latin in the Fifth Century, or that it became a "language" in the 9th Century around the time of Charlemagne, and Rabbi Shimon and his colleagues apparently "wrote" the Zohar in the second century when hiding from the Romans, and were living in an area far, far away from Spain -- across the Mediterannean Sea, I believe. Thank you. Reply

Basics
What is Kabbalah?
History of Kabbalah
Timeline of Kabbalah
Authenticity of the Zohar
Biographies of Major Kabbalists
First Steps
Recommended Resources
FAQ's
Quick Links
Latest Events
Contact
Subscribe
Donate

The larger, bold text is the direct translation of the classic text source.

The smaller, plain text is the explanation of the translator/editor.
Text with broken underline will provide a popup explanation when rolled over with a mouse.

Programs
Events

Past & Upcoming Events

Synagogue Services
Adult Education
Youth Programs
Online Learning
Women's Club

Chabad of Danville & S. Ramon
Danville, CA 94526
925-272-9672

Powered by Chabad.org © 1993-2026 Privacy Policy