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The Sacred Shadow: Kabbalistic Heresy and the Antinomian Roots of Medical Dissent

Julian Ungar-sargon

Journal of Traditional Medicine & Applications July 1, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.33140/jtma.04.02.01

Summary

Drawing on Jewish mystical traditions, particularly Kabbalistic antinomianism and Sabbatian theology, this analysis argues that medical dissidents unconsciously echo ancient patterns of sacred rebellion against institutional authority. By examining figures like Sabbatai Zevi and Jacob Frank, the work demonstrates how the paradoxical necessity of heresy in mystical traditions provides insights for understanding resistance to medical orthodoxy. The antinomian principle that authentic spiritual realization sometimes requires violating established law offers implications for practitioners seeking to transcend biomedical orthodoxy while honoring healing's sacred dimensions.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Medical dissidents unconsciously echo ancient patterns of sacred rebellion against institutional authority, as illuminated by Jewish mystical traditions of antinomianism.

Abstract

Building upon previous analyses of medical heresy as secularized religious orthodoxy enforcement, this study examines how Jewish mystical traditions particularly Kabbalistic antinomianism and Sabbatian theology illuminate deeper dimensions of the heresy-orthodoxy dialectic in contemporary medical practice. Through analysis of figures like Sabbatai Zevi, Jacob Frank, and their theological frameworks, we demonstrate how the paradoxical necessity of heresy in mystical traditions provides essential insights for understanding resistance to medical orthodoxy. Drawing on concepts of divine concealment (tzimtzum), sacred transgression, and the redemptive function of apparent evil, this work reveals how medical dissidents unconsciously echo ancient patterns of sacred rebellion against institutional authority. The antinomian principle that authentic spiritual realization sometimes requires violation of established law offers profound implications for medical practitioners seeking to transcend the limitations of biomedical orthodoxy while honoring the sacred dimensions of healing.

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