<p>&lt;i&gt;&amp;ldquo;After reading two or three paragraphs the hair of my head stood up. Nothing like this was ever seen or known from any heretic or disbeliever of this world . . . and it certainly deserves to be burned.&amp;rdquo;&lt;br /&gt;</p><p>&lt;/i&gt;&lt;br /&gt;</p><p>The Hebrew Kabbalistic text called &lt;i&gt;I Came This Day to the Spring&lt;/i&gt; (&lt;i&gt;Va-avo ha-Yom el ha-&amp;lsquo;Ayin&lt;/i&gt;) created a scandal among the Jewish communities of Central Europe when it surfaced in manuscript in 1725. It was obviously linked to the cult of Sabbatai Zevi the would-be Messiah who drove the Jewish world wild with excitement in 1665 and converted to Islam the following year. Its author was the brilliant young rabbi Jonathan Eibeschuetz (1695&amp;ndash;1764) soon to become one of the foremost preachers and rabbinic authorities of the era.&lt;br /&gt;</p><p>&lt;br /&gt;</p><p>Now for the first time Eibeschuetz&amp;rsquo;s extraordinary book&amp;mdash;a charter for the world religion of the future rooted in Kabbalistic Judaism but unlike any religion ever known&amp;mdash;is available in English translation by a leading scholar of Judaism and its Kabbalah. It is not easy reading. But David Halperin&amp;rsquo;s full annotations will give readers the guiding thread they need to follow Eibeschuetz on his amazing journey &amp;ldquo;to the spring of wisdom&amp;rdquo;&amp;mdash;and beyond.&lt;br /&gt;</p>
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