32
the principle that in order to be able to create all beings as they are, the creator must
already in some way possess their qualities. He proceeds to apply this principle to
the existence of time: from the fact that time permeates all created beings, Rashaz
infers that temporality should be somehow related to God too. Indeed,
God is not
subject to time, but He comprises time in a state preceding its division into three
tenses: past, present and future, to which the Tetragrammaton alludes, interpreted as
comprising the past, present and future forms of the Hebrew verb “to be.”
24
More
detailed discussion of the relation of God’s names to time will follow below; at this
point, however, it is important to stress the fact that God comprises the totality of
time, which in turn enables Him to cause temporal reality to exist.
The passage quoted above underscores the
complexity of the relation
between God and time in Rashaz’s writing, which, as Dov Schwartz has noted,
cannot be exhausted by the dichotomy of “supra-temporal” versus “infra-
temporal.”
25
In fact, the God of Rashaz’s teachings is above time, is the source of
time and acts through time. In order to elaborate on the philosophical idea of God as
the existent who brings to existence
time and temporal reality, Rashaz turns to
kabbalistic terminology.
2.1 World, year, soul
.
There are several
ma’amarim
in Rashaz’s teachings that explain the emergence of
time from the creator into the created world. One of
them refers to the triad of
“world, year, soul” [
‘olam, shanah, nefesh
], drawn from
Sefer yetsirah
.
26
These three
24
Stern (
Time and Process
, 33 n. 21) names the piyut
Ha-ohez be-yad midat ha-mishpat
as the first
occurrence of this idea.
25
As opposed to the doctrine of the Maggid of Mezeritch. See Schwartz,
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