164
days and elevates the sparks that have been purified during the week to their supernal
source; the influx of divine energy flowing to the worlds during the six days of the
week returns to its infinite source, and all the lower worlds experience a moment of
eternity by being elevated to the
sefirah
of
Keter
, which lies above time.
200
But when
the Sabbath ends, the worlds descend and time is recreated anew.
201
Now, the
supernal Sabbath, or “the day that is entirely Sabbath,” follows the same pattern, as it
marks the conclusion of the work of purification performed
during the days of the
exile, and the supernal delight of the upper Sabbath is the source of the delight
experienced on each and every Sabbath day throughout history.
202
In the era of
redemption, the world will return to its source within
Keter
– the transcendent
attribute of God’s will and His delight.
203
In some cases Rashaz presents circumcision day
as an alternative paradigm
of the redemption, “the day that is entirely long and entirely good.” He interprets
circumcision, which marks the covenant between Abraham and God, as the
disclosure of Israel that conditions full receipt of the divine revelation in the world.
He also sees it a more important
rite than the Sabbath, for according to the Sages,
“circumcision and all its preliminaries takes precedence over the Sabbath.”
204
The
delight of the Sabbath, which comes from above, is still somehow dependent on the
preparatory work done during the six days of the week. By contrast, as a process that
takes place within the divine realm, removing all the obstacles that prevent the full
revelation of God, circumcision is a free gift “from above,” which is independent of
any activity carried out in the lower realms.
205
Moreover, circumcision is performed
on the eight day, and thus it supersedes the Sabbath, which is the seventh day.
206
The
number eight also symbolises the Messiah inasmuch as it comprises the number
200
See for example TO 10a; LT
Shir ha-shirim
32a;
Seder tefilot
169a-174a.
201
See for example LT
Shir ha-shirim
25a,
202
See
Seder tefilot
139c; TO 8c.
203
On the idea of delight, see Idel, “Ta‘anug.”
204
b
Shabat 131b; see
Seder tefilot
, 139a, 141b.
205
On “circumcision from above” as “arousal from above” without prior arousal from below, see LT
Tazri’a’
21a.
206
See
Seder tefilot
, 139a.
165
seven
of the Sabbath day, representing holiness, and the additional number one,
representing the freedom it brings.
207
The eschatological circumcision “from above” will come to pass only after
the fulfilment of the whole Torah and the ingathering of the exiles.
208
Its description
is based on the Biblical account of Abraham’s circumcision:
Abraham merited the disclosure of the mode of “and the LORD thy God will
circumcise thine heart” [Dt 30:6], and therefore Scripture said: “was
Abraham circumcised,” [Gn 17:26] etc. And this is the meaning of [the
beginning of the same verse], “in the selfsame day was [Abraham]
circumcised”, that is to say, in the essence of that day, and that day is the day
that is entirely long and entirely good, etc. And the essence of that day is the
disclosure that will come to pass in the future-to-come, the disclosure of “thy
great goodness” [Ps 31:19, 145:7].
209
The passive voice used by the Biblical author in the verse “In the selfsame day was
Abraham circumcised” [Gn 17:26] indicates to Rashaz that Abraham’s circumcision
was not merely a rite
that he performed upon himself, but rather an act initiated
entirely by God and conducted “from above to below,” as a result of which his heart
was circumcised.
210
The emphasis in the verse on “the selfsame day” [
be-‘etsem ha-
yom ha-zeh
] alludes, in Rashaz’s view, to the essence [
be-‘atsmiyut
] of the final
redemption, which was revealed to Abraham on that occasion; thus his circumcision
207
See LT
Tazri’a
21d, based on Bahya bar Asher
Midrash Rabenu Bahya
, Naso, 4:47;
Bamidbar
rabah
15:11.
208
See TO 13c.
209
TO 13d [Appendix 20], discussed in Wolfson,
Alef Mem Tau
, 113-15.
210
See also T4, 4:105a-b, where Rashaz compares the two stages of circumcision,
milah
and
peri’ah
,
to circumcision as performed respectively by man (from below) and
by God in the messianic era
(from above).
Milah
stands for contemplation, in which the individual casts off all his worldly
concerns and strives to understand and know God;
peri’ah
stands for God’s response to man’s
contemplation, whereby He uncovers the innermost part of man’s heart, ceases to be an object of
man’s contemplation, and becomes “literally your whole life” beyond discursive comprehension. This
spiritual
transformation, achievement by the individual’s worship of God will become a collective
experience in the messianic era, “when
da’at
is diverted” (T4, 4:105b). On individual worship that
transcends
da’at
, see section 1.5 above.
166
and its theosophic consequences prefigured the final redemption. On the eighth day
of the redemption, the divine abundance and all its goodness will be revealed in full
(hence: “entirely good”), with no hindrances, equally everywhere, both above and
below.
211
Here too, Rashaz’s concept of time gives away its functional character of a
measure of the flow of the divine light, which at the end of days will radiate equally
everywhere, filling the entire cosmos and turning it into the everlasting divine day.
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