93
Having crossed the Red Sea and left Egypt, the Israelites, now liberated from
slavery, were about to embark on a forty-year journey in the wilderness, divided
further into forty-two stages [see Nm 33]. In Rashaz’s teachings, this journey, too,
constitutes a part of the redemptive process, as well as being a paradigm of the future
redemption.
100
The wilderness symbolises the domain of evil husks
101
and is
associated with the gentile nations,
102
namely, the lowly and “external” aspect of the
creation, sustained by the excess of life-giving energy that flows to them indirectly
via Israel.
103
Accordingly, the purpose of Israel’s forty-two-stage journey in the
wilderness is to cut off the external forces from the flow of divine energy. As long as
the husks can draw on this life-giving energy, the Israelites are not entirely free but
rather trapped within the limits and boundaries of the material world. The forty-two
stops on their journey in the wilderness are the stages through which they set
themselves free.
Just as the source of entrapment within boundaries lies in the creation of the
world, so the ability to free oneself is rooted in the creation of man. The Jew was
created as God’s subject, a concept supported by the principle that “There is no king
without a nation.”
104
His task is to transform the material world into God’s
dominion. For this reason he was created as a dual entity: in God’s image and after
100
See LT
Mas’ei
88c-89a.
101
Because the Bible describes it as the place of “fiery serpents and scorpions” [Dt 8:15].
102
Based on Ezekiel’s reference to the wilderness as the “wilderness of the people” [Ez 20:35].
103
Rashaz compares the Congregation of Israel [
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