100
compares the complexion of man to a state in which the divine soul is in the prison
of the body and the animal soul.
123
However, he does not identify the redemption
with stripping the divine element off materiality, to wit the rejection of materiality.
As Rashaz explains elsewhere, the separation of good from evil in the lower worlds
is just the first stage in the process of purification. This stage is akin to the
process of
digestion, in which an energy-giving element of food is separated from refuse, with
the former absorbed and the latter rejected by the body. At the second, higher stage,
the impure [
tame
], instead of being rejected is transformed into the pure [
tahor
]. The
separation of good from evil is effected by the highest
sefirah
,
Hokhmah
.
Hokhmah
organizes reality from within the world, without changing its substrates: good
remains good, evil – evil, yet they are separated from one another. However, the
transformation of evil into good or the purification of the impure changes the
substrates of the world and therefore must be carried out by an entity that is not part
of it: it can be achieved only by means of
Keter
– an entity located above the internal
hierarchy of the
sefirot
, which precedes the breaking of the vessels.
124
Notwithstanding the processes of separation and
transformation effected by
the supernal forces, Rashaz also emphasizes every individual’s power to purify the
sparks precisely because he is immersed in materiality:
Now, the celestial beings do not have the power to purify and elevate that,
which is in the husk of
nogah
as a result of the breaking [of the vessels].
Only the terrestrial beings [can achieve this], for they are vested in a material
body [known] as the “hide of the serpent,”
125
which derives from the husk of
nogah.
These [embodied souls] weaken its strength by crushing the passions,
thereby subjugating the
sitra ahara
, so that “all the workers of iniquity shall
be scattered” [Ps 92:9].
126
Clearly, for Rashaz, materiality and its particular mode – corporeality – are as much
a curse as they are a blessing. Indeed,
as the product of the husks, the body is
123
See note 78 above.
124
See LT
Hukat
59d-60a.
125
See
Tikunei zohar
xxi, 48b.
126
T4, 26:144b-145a [Appendix 20].
101
connected to sin and to the evil side of creation, but it is
precisely this connection
that enables the purifications to take place. One can rectify materiality only by acting
through and within it, which is why the task of purification has been given to
“terrestrial beings,” namely, to humans who are made up of an immaterial soul and a
material body.
By contrast, “celestial beings”, such as angels, who are of a more
subtle composition than humans, as well as souls prior to incarnation, do not possess
a material body and are therefore incapable of subjugating the Evil Side through its
materiality. Furthermore, purification is the purpose of the soul’s
descent from its
supernal source to the lower worlds, where it is to be incarnated.
127
Thus the body
becomes
a necessary redemptive tool, to the point where Rashaz states that: “The
redemption depends on us, who have bodies. We must quell and break all [worldly]
passions. Through this merit we will be redeemed.”
128
The redemption in this case is
referred to as God’s “dwelling place in the lower worlds” [
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