Rabbi Judah ben Bezalel Lowe, known as the Maharal of Prague was famous among Jews and non-Jews alike. He was a mystic who was revered for his holiness and Torah scholarship, as well as his proficiency in mathematics, astronomy, and other sciences. Eventually, word of his greatness reached the ears of Emperor Rudolph II.
The Emperor invited the Maharal to his castle on February 23, 1592. There they conversed for one and a half hours, and developed a mutual respect for each other.
Rabbi Judah Lowe made use of his excellent connections with the Emperor, often intervening on behalf of his community when it was threatened by anti-Semitic attacks or oppression.
There are two sorts of inner convictions of the soul, this thing we call faith.
Unbound by the confines of space and time, your soul sees a reality your mind cannot fathom. From that vision seeps down a conviction that G-d is with you, that He is good, and that there is really nothing else but Him.
Not because you understand. But because your soul sees that this is so. And she sees with a clarity and certainty the flesh eye could never attain.
Nevertheless, a higher vision means there are two and not one: There is you and there is the vision you perceive. And if there are two, two can be separated.
So that, when darkness and confusion swells and storms, threatening to rip you away from your G-d, a higher vision is not enough.
That is when you need to reach to the very core of your soul. Not to that place in the soul that sees G-d, but to the essence of the soul that is truly a part of G-d.
To say, "This is my G‑d. I am His, He is mine, and we are one."
"And so, nothing can stand between us."
