191
when they delve into the secrets of Torah, for the Torah of ordinary people crosses
the boundaries of intellect and is brought into the material world: "This is the case of
tradesmen [
‘oskei masa u-matan
] who occupy themselves with the Torah and
commandments by means of their palate and tongue, as Scripture says: ‘And the roof
of thy mouth (of the congregation of Israel, etc.) like the best wine’ [Sg 7:9], in the
manner of scent that is above the delight limited to wisdom and understanding,
which are the vessels.”
93
In this passage, Rashaz takes the opportunity to present the
intellectual deficiency of nonscholars as their advantage. Indeed,
their study is
restricted to short sessions twice a day, and they do not enter the secret, inner
pathways of the Torah; nonetheless, this should not be perceived as a disadvantage,
but rather as a gift, by virtue of which they bring the Torah out of the ivory tower of
intellectual cognition. In other words, the nonscholars do not comprehend the Torah
fully, be it because of lack of time or because of their intellectual deficiency, but
they can experience it sensually, or as Rashaz put it, with their “palate and tongue,”
and therefore they disclose
the Torah on the sensual, material levels, which are
beyond the reach of the scholars. Greater delight results from such revelation of the
Torah, than from its revelation on higher, intellectual levels, for the former
transcends the “vessels” of the Torah—wisdom and understanding—and
reaches
down to the lower, sensual attributes.
94
Worship through setting times for Torah study is thus presented in three
ways in Rashaz’s doctrine. Firstly, it is a necessary complement to worship through
full-time Torah study or, in kabbalistic terms, the reflected
light that complements
the direct light in the economy of the divine light. Secondly, Torah study at set times
resembles the Torah study of the spiritual elite inasmuch as it makes a human being
the transmitter of divine influx to the world, or the sanctuary and abode of the divine
in the lower worlds, allowing the ordinary man to attain in exile the spiritual level of
the high priest in the Temple. Thirdly, particular features of Torah study at set times,
when it is accompanied by deeds and immersed in materiality, determine its
superiority to full-time study: Torah study mixed with materiality is more far
reaching than purely intellectual study.
93
MAHZ
5571
, 119 [Appendix 9].
94
MAHZ
5571
, 119; see an alternative version of the discourse in TO 80c.