brit hachayim ברית החיים
In Genesis, God commits to a relationship with Abraham and his spiritual descendants, defined by trust, justice, and walking before God—not ethnicity or methodolatry.
connecting the Living to Abraham
Hachi'im manifest medura, community hearths that enable Zion when ignited, wherever Jews may gather, continuing Abraham's Covenant in spirit as intended, not as a physical place or bloodline.
המשימה של החיים the mission
שיקום ברית אברהם the restoration
We offer apolitical restorations of ancient texts and practices, allowing ha'akorim (העקורים, the uprooted) to determine where and how they wish to grow within the Living Covenant of Abraham.
the Breath of Knowing נִשְׁמַת הַדַּעַת
Nishmat haDa’at is the subtle, living rhythm to how awareness influences reality.
It is the metronome syncing personal intuition and collective resonance.
נָבוּת — navút
Navút is the shared prophetic presence, the communal field that emerges when individual prophetic essence resonates with others.
It is prophecy made relational—where personal awareness expands into collective insight through lived connection, both in the present moment and throughout history via text, song, and now, digital media.
צִיּוֹן — Zion
Zion is the experienced harmony of navít and navút both within a single soul and throughout a broader collective, providing the substrate for God to inspire Kingdom on Earth.
It is the state of prophetic wholeness in which an entire people stand fully awake in the Living Covenant.
נָבִית — navít
Navít is the inner prophetic essence, the innate spark of awareness through which a person first senses truth, present in all souls regardless of Abrahamic lineage.
It awakens when Nishmat haDa’at, the breath of Knowing, stirs within the mind and begins shaping raw awareness into intuition, occurring on God's schedule, not at the call of parents, teachers, and governments.
prophetic parity
Hachi'im do not rest their community on any one claim, prophet, or institution, believing instead that God provides odef kdush (עודף קדוש, sacred excess).
Not even the Torah is essential; it is simply a reliable and shared seed from which living connections with God may continue to grow.
The truth is true in many ways, and it's more important that we continue to respect and grow with the truth than to micromanage decisions when all forks in the road lead to the same place.
the heresy paradox
Hachi'im don't shy away from the core contention behind all major Abrahamic religions; did the prophecies stop, and if so, when?
According to God, Abraham, and the Torah, prophets are to be expected as God would never abandon the people of israel permanently.
Recognizing that we are all damned if we do and damned if we don't, Hachi'im respect shchnua muda (שכנוע מודע, conscious conviction) around acceptance or refutation of prophecy, not allegiance to any specific prophecy or sectarians.
prophetic parity
Hachi'im do not rest their community on any one claim, prophet, or institution, believing instead that God provides odef kdush (עודף קדוש, sacred excess).
Not even the Torah is essential; it is simply a reliable and shared seed from which living connections with God may continue to grow.
God > Meaning > Word > Text > Institution > Teacher > Our Minds > God.
There are countless viable paths that can complete the loop.
as alive as can be
Hachi'im offer many things; insight, mediation, innovation, and more.
But the Hachi'im cannot promise what most people come to religion for; closure.
It is the duty if Hachi'im to expect drastic change in duty, with the potential for what was once holy becoming unholy and vice versa.
This is why when it comes to experiencing and serving God, Hashi'im follow the core principle of presence over precedence.
