141
the creation of the world.
95
As such, it is located above
the order of concatenation
and is therefore free from all temporal restrictions, as the dimension of time develops
only once the order of concatenation has begun to unfold. In other words, repentance
grants the individual direct access to a transcendent reality; it makes it possible for
him to transcend his temporal limitations and to enter a reality that
comprises both
the world’s beginning and its end. Accordingly, in the present generation the
redemption is in fact always about to take place, as by repenting the community can
leap directly into a reality that is redeemed. The redemption is available on both the
collective and the personal level, as Rashaz demonstrates with the example of
Eleazar ben Durdaya, who repented and acquired his share of the world-to-come in
an instant.
96
To recap, Rashaz’s messianism is not acute in the sense of heralding an
imminent
end of days, calculating its precise date, an attaching it to a particular
historical event or messianic figure. Nevertheless, he holds a deep conviction that the
redemption can instantly be brought about by Israel as a whole, or at least by each
and every individual Jew who can reach a personally redeemed state of existence.
97
1.5. Personal redemption.
The second messianic aspect of Rashaz’s
Hasidic teaching, quite apart from the
collective effort to bring about the ultimate redemption, is the personal striving of the
individual to achieve the state of redemption irrespective of time and place, which is
95
Following the midrashic idea that repentance preceded the creation of the world, on which see
Midrash Tanhuma
, Naso, 11.
96
See
b
‘Avodah zarah 17a.
97
See Wolfson,
Open Secret
, 278-84, where he discusses the immediacy of the
messianic advent in
the teachings of the last Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menahem Mendel Schneerson, as expressed in the often
repeated slogan, the Messiah shall arrive “immediately and truly without delay” [
tekhef u-miyad
mamash
]. Wolfson points out that Rashaz takes ‘immediacy’ to mean in this context that the time of
the redemption is not bound to any sequence of historical events, as the redemption transcends
worldly time and is a “timeless moment, which cannot transpire temporally and therefore must always
be capable of occurring (in)temporally” (281). Admittedly, the acute messianism of 20
th
century
Habad was a response to certain historical events, yet the concept of the immediacy of a redemption
that may come at anytime because by its very nature, it transcends all temporal
limitations, can be
found already in Rashaz’s teachings.
142
achievable through everyday worship.
98
The interpretation of the Exodus as an
everyday event is the underpinning of this concept:
“In every generation and every day a person is obliged to regard himself as if
he had that day come out of Egypt.”
99
This refers to the release of the divine
soul from the confinement of the body, the “serpent’s skin”,
100
in order to be
absorbed into the Unity of the light of the blessed
Ein Sof
, through
occupation in the Torah and commandments in general, and in particular
through accepting the Kingdom of Heaven during the recital of the
Shema’
,
wherein the person explicitly accepts and draws over himself His blessed
Unity, when he says: “The Lord
is our God, the Lord is One.”
101
In the previous chapter I presented an excerpt from Rashaz’s epistle that refers to the
“serpent’s skin” in which the divine soul incarnates as an opportunity for the
individual to subjugate the domain of husks and transform it into divinity, thus
bringing the collective redemption closer.
102
Here Rashaz evokes the same idea to
show that there is a way out of the confinement of corporeality even before the final
redemption.
103
The personal experience of the Exodus,
defined here as an act of
incorporation in the perfect unity of God’s infinite light, takes places on a daily basis
within and in spite of the unredeemed world’s corporeality and materiality, which
create the impression that the individual exists in separation from the divine unity.
98
On the relation between personal and collective redemption in Habad, see Lowenthal, “Habad
Messianism”. On a variety of modes of redemption in Hasidism in general, see Idel, “Multiple Forms
of Redemption,” 61, where he presents the collective redemption that results from
many individual
redemptions as one of the ways in which messianism manifests itself in the teachings of the Besht.
One of the sources to which Idel refers is Gedalyah of Lynitz’s
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