149
of God in a discursive manner, whereas the
redemption liberates language,
transforming it into a suitable means of divine revelation.
131
To sum up, the redemption has an epistemological dimension. In the
redeemed state, the individual is released from his corporeal limitation and can
perceive Godliness intuitively, totally and directly,
in a manner unmediated by
discursive thought or the division between one sense and another. Still, this
liberation from corporeality does not entail the rejection of the body: just as at the
Giving of the Torah, so in the throes of personal ecstasy, the senses absorb Godliness
freely, as a synesthetic experience; and in the future-to-come, the body will exist in
its subtle,
sublimated form, enabling everyone to experience God sensually.
1.6 The messianic figure.
The definition of redemption as synonymous with
teshuvah
raises the question of the
role of the messianic figure in the redemptive process: if the redemption comes about
through Israel’s repentance, results in the divinization of the entire world by filling it
with the overflowing light of the Infinite, then the messianic figure, whose task is to
redeem the Jewish people or the world becomes irrelevant, all the more so if,
regardless of the final redemption of the future-to-come,
everyone can achieve a
redeemed state of being individually, while still in exile. Indeed, in light of the
redemptive significance of repentance, the messianic figure plays only the marginal
role of prompting the righteous to repent.
132
As explained above, repentance is a
means of transcending the time limits of the emanated worlds, to enter the redeemed
reality of an “everlasting day” filled with divine light. Thus, while penitents [
ba’alei
teshuvah
] are both the instruments of redemption and its beneficiaries, the righteous,
who technically do not need to repent, appear to be excluded from the redemption.
133
The Messiah is therefore given the task of concluding
the redemptive process by
131
Elsewhere Rashaz describes circumcision as a revelation of God’s voice to the mute congregation
of Israel. See LT
Pinhas
79c.
132
Following the description of the redeemer’s mission in Ziii, 153b.
133
This follows on from Rashaz’s valorisation and empowerment of ordinary people’s mode of
worship, which will be further discussed in the next chapter.
150
elevating the righteous to the redeemed state which the penitents have already
merited by dint of their repentance.
134
Even though the messianic figure plays only a marginal role in the process of
redemption, its significance grows in the post-exilic world. As mentioned above,
while the Messiah reigns primarily over Israel, his authority
spreads to the gentile
nations who flock to his court in order to learn wisdom from him.
135
The messianic
task of revealing wisdom can be linked to one of the distinctive features of messianic
times: the gentiles will be permitted to study the revealed layer of the Torah, while
the Jews will freely explore its inner mystical meanings. In this context, the task of
the Messiah reflects that of Moses, through whom the Torah was first given to the
Israelites: just as Moses drew down the revealed aspect of Torah on Sinai, so the
Messiah will draw down its inner aspect.
136
Finally, one other question should be raised about
the messianic figure in
Rashaz’s teachings: can the Hasidic
tsadik
fulfil this role? There is no indication that
Rashaz’s followers associated him with this redemptive role,
137
and yet some of the
tsadik
’s functions may be interpreted as being messianic.
138
In his sermons, Rashaz
134
See for example LT
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