158
rabbinic depiction of the sinner’s soul in the world-to-come being cast from the
hollow of a sling – an image based on Abigail’s cursing of David’s enemies [1 Sm
25:29]. The rabbis envisaged this as the angels casting the souls of the sinners from
one corner of the earth to another,
168
or as God shaking them out of the redeemed
Land of Israel “as a man who shakes his garment,”
169
while according to the
Zohar
,
the image refers to the banishment of sinful souls to this world, where they are
doomed to suffer endless wanderings through countless incarnations,
170
even as
demons.
171
In one place, the
Zohar
explains that the cord of the sling is formed out
of all of man’s deeds which have not been entirely devoted to divine service.
172
Rashaz clearly draws on this idea. Even though he sees man’s mundane
actions as his garments rather than the cord of the sling, as described above, he still
considers them a yoke, which must be carried over to the world-to-come, where it
attracts appropriate punishment. In Rashaz’s interpretation, the hollow of the sling is
a procedure that shakes off the impure, worldly garments of the soul
173
rather than
the punishment of transmigration. Thus, for example, the zoharic understanding
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