3. The female in relation to time.
The distinctive position of the female in time-related discourse is stressed in the
following passage from Rashaz’s sermons:
Now,
Malkhut
,
which is the supernal speech, receives from the aspect of
Ze‘ir anpin,
that is, from the chest down, for the constitution of the feminine
[
binyan ha-nukba
] begins there, and that is why it is called [Hos 1:10] “the
number of the children of Israel,” for the root of the aspect of number
[comes] from there (as does the root of the aspect of time’s coming to being,
as is written in
Likutei Torah
, pericope
Be-reshit
,
81
namely time, too, is an
aspect of number and division [
mispar ve-hithalkut
]). But in the future-to-
come [
le-‘atid la-vo
], when
Malkhut
, which is speech, will ascend to receive
from the very aspects of
Hokhmah
and
Binah
, which constitute the aspect of
[Ps 147:5] “his understanding is infinite” [
li-tevunato en mispar
], then it will
be by way of [Hos 1:10] “the number of the children of Israel (…) which
cannot be measured nor numbered”. That is to say, even the world of
disclosure [
‘alma de-itgalya
] which is currently in the aspect of finitude [lit.
“number” –
mispar
], will be in the future on the level of secret and the world
of concealment [
‘alma de-itkasya
], which is in the aspect of infinity [lit. “no-
number” -
lo mispar
].
82
This passage not only hints at the position of the female in the sefirotic
tree and its
relation to the divine speech, but also at the correlation between the feminine and
time, and in particular at the function of the feminine in two temporal settings: the
MAHZ
Ketsarim
, 178-9: “[
b
Kidushin 9a] ‘He writes on paper or on a shard, [that is to say,] whether
he studies Kabbalah [and]
Zohar
or simple
Gemarah
– she is sanctified unto him.”
80
Mondshine,
Migdal ‘oz
, 291-92. A similar concept of the relationship between the “male”
tsadik
and the “female” Hasid can be found in the writings of other hasidic masters, including those who
preceded Rashaz. See Rapoport-Albert,
Women and the Heresy
, 273-4. In hasidic literature the
tsadik
can be perceived as changing gender roles, being male as “donor” in relation to his followers but
female as “recipient” when in relation to God, see Idel,
Kabbalah and Eros
, 97.
81
See Vital,
Likutei Torah
, Hakdamah le-Ta‘amei mitsvot, 34-35
.
82
LT
Ba-midbar
7d [Appendix 8].
223
time of creation and the time of redemption. The female aspect of the Godhead is
identified as the source of time, for time is an aspect of multiplicity, which originates
in
Malkhut
from the influx she receives from
Ze‘ir anpin
. However, in the future-to-
come, the female shall rise above
Ze‘ir anpin
to receive the influx from the higher
sefirot
of
Hokhmah
and
Binah
, and therefore it will transcend the boundaries of time.
The material world of revelation, linked with femininity, will be elevated and
transformed to the level of the loftier world of concealment. The transition from
temporality to eternity, which the created world will undergo in the future-to-come,
is unequivocally related to the dynamic of the feminine. I shall discuss this relation
in the next section of the chapter.
3.1 “A help meet for him.”
Rashaz’s exposition of the female is deliberately ambiguous and may be seen as an
expression of a general tendency that is discernible in his teachings to view evil as an
epistemological rather than an ontological problem, which vanishes if looked upon
from a proper perspective. In accordance with this tendency, the female as the
negative factor that brings about separation from God, impurity, and enhancement of
the power of the external forces, is to be re-examined when looked upon from a
different, soteriological perspective.
Rashaz’s soteriology is rooted in his doctrine of creation: the contraction and
apparent withdrawal of God from the world in the process of creation
83
constitute a
part of the divine plan to bring into existence separate beings opposed to the divine
unity, which in time would carry out the task of reinstating cosmic unity and
bringing about the redemption. Leaning on the maxim that what was “last in
production, came first in thought,” [
sof ma’aseh ‘alah be-mahashavah tehilah
],
84
Rashaz explains that the creative thought of God above, with which everything
began, would be completed through actions by Israel below – a power bestowed
upon the congregation of Israel by virtue of its own origin in the primordial divine
83
On the contraction in Rashaz’s doctrine of creation, see Elior,
Paradoxical Ascent
, 79-91 Schwartz,
Mahashevet Habad
, 86-114.
84
See chapter 2, n. 21 above.
224
thought.
85
Hence the eschatological state, described as [God’s] “Dwelling place in
the lower worlds” [
dirah ba-tahtonim
], is to be reinstated through the efforts of the
congregation of Israel, identified as the female, who is to be elevated to the level of
its male counterpart:
As Scripture says [Prv 12:4]: “A virtuous woman is a crown to her husband”:
the aspect of
Malkhut
of the world of Emanation, [which is] the source of the
congregation of Israel [
keneset Yisra’el
], is the “crown to her husband,” [that
is, to] the aspect of
Ze‘ir anpin
, which is the end of the world of
Ein Sof
, for
“their end is fixed in their beginning [
Sefer yetsirah
1:7].”
86
This passage introduces the topic of the elevation of the female from her lowly state
to be the crown of the male at the time of the redemption. The female, identified here
with the congregation of Israel, is lifted out of her state of separateness to be
reinstated within the unity of
Ein Sof
, and to rise above the male
Ze‘ir anpin
, a
constellation [
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