27
way in which] the number one relates to the numbers one billion or one
trillion; rather they truly count as nothing.
6
The above passage from
Tanya
demonstrates the ontological gap
between the infinite
divine light [
Or Ein Sof
] and the contracted illumination that brings about the lower
worlds. This gap results from a qualitative rather than a quantitative difference: the
finite cannot be compared to the infinite, and regardless of its measurements, it is
always considered “as nothing” when seen from the perspective of infinity. Even
though in the passage above Rashaz does
not speak explicitly of time, time is
implicit in it, as in other places Rashaz does define time as an aspect of number. In
fact, for Rashaz, as for some Jewish philosophers
7
and kabbalists
8
before him, time
is finite and therefore belongs to the realm of creation,
while God, precedes the
creation, but only in the ontological rather than the temporal sense.
9
By defining God as infinity [
Ein Sof
]
10
Rashaz emphasizes the divine
separateness from the created temporal reality:
6
T1, 48:67b [Appendix 2]. Referring to this passage from
Tanya
, Rashaz’s grandson, the third Habad
leader, Menahem Mendel Schneersohn, the “Tsemah Tsedek” (
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