131
aspect of the divinity (
Nukba
).
62
Here, too, the gentiles are allowed to merit the life
of Torah and
mitsvot
, but their inferior status in relation to the Jews is not that of the
ger
versus Israelite but rather the status of the female versus that of the male.
63
The texts discussed above provide a somewhat inclusive perspective on the
messianic future, as they incorporate the gentiles in the community of Torah
students, even though it grants them only an inferior position within it.
64
There are,
however, many references throughout Rashaz’s corpus of teachings to some mode of
gentile participation in the resurrection. These references follow the path of the
rectification and sublimation of material reality in the future-to-come. For example,
while acknowledging that the Israelites had already merited the dew of the
resurrection on Sinai,
65
Rashaz goes on to say as follows:
62
See LT
Shelah
43a. The female aspect of the Godhead and its role in the redemptive process will be
discussed in chapter 5.
63
Also the passivity of the gentiles in the process of redemption testifies to the fact that Rashaz
constructs the gentiles as being feminine. On Rashaz’s association of passivity with femininity, see
chapter 5 below.
64
Rashaz does not state this explicitly, but the idea concurs with his view whereby the gentile nations
will acquire the status of
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