Ba-midbar
18a,
Be-ha’alotekha
, 33d.
161
righteous [
tsadikim
] “have no rest in the world-to-come, as Scripture says: 'They go
from strength to strength' [Ps 84:7].”
187
However, these ascensions, and the delights
related to them, refer most likely to life after death rather than to the messianically
redeemed world at the end of days.
The River of Fire, therefore, can be seen as a transitory stage, either between
the Lower and the Upper Gardens of Eden, or between countless other levels of the
Garden. The image of the River of Fire is not uncommon in the Jewish sources; it
originates in the vision of Daniel [Dn 7:10] and was reinterpreted time and again in
the mystical tradition. It is said to issue from the perspiration of the four living
creatures [
hayot
] of the vision of Ezekiel [Ez 1:5-14],
188
and it surrounds the Throne
of Glory, regulating access to the Divine Presence; it invests the Throne of Glory
with extra splendour, and has both a punitive and a restorative function: it pours fire
over the heads of the wicked, and yet the angels bathe in it to be renewed every
day.
189
In the
Zohar
, the River of Fire has one effect on the souls of the wicked and
another on those of the righteous: “The souls of the righteous immerse and are
purified in it, [while] the souls of the wicked are judged in it, and they burn before it
like a straw before fire.”
190
The
Zohar
also underlies Rashaz's idea that the River of
Fire constitutes the second stage of purification, because even in the Lower Gan
Eden, the soul has not yet been fully cleansed of its worldly appearance:
When she [the soul] is raised above, she must separate from all lowly
appearance and matters; so she is passed through that River of Fire. Then the
soul is cleansed completely; she emerges and appears before the Master of
the Universe.”
191
187
b
Berakhot 64a;
b
Mo'ed katan 29a. Note, however, that in both these instances, the Talmud refers
to “scholars” [
talmidei hakhamim
] rather than to “the righteous” –
tsadikim
, as Rashaz does in most
cases, for which see note 186 above.
188
See
b
Hagigah 13b;
Bereshit rabah
78:1; Zii 221b, and LT
Shelah
41a,
Matot
86b.
189
See, for example,
3
Enoch
, ch. 18:19, 33:5, and the notes there;
b
Hagigah 13b;
Eikhah rabah
3,
Het
;
Tikunei zohar
, Hakdamah, 4a.
190
Ziii 16b [Appendix 17]; see also Zi, 201a; Zii, 247a; Ziii, 159b.
191
Zii 211b [Appendix 18]. See also de Vidas,
Reshit hokhmah
, Sha’ar ha-yir’ah, ch. 33.
162
In some of Rashaz's sermons, the stage of being cleansed in the River of Fire
acquires special significance: the pure souls who have arrived in the lower levels of
the Garden of Eden do not need to shed off any traces of worldly impurity, but rather
they must leave behind the worldly delights that they experienced there, so as not to
be confused when they experience the delights of the higher Garden of Eden. The
crossing of the River of Fire grants them the experience of complete oblivion and
prepares them for the new delights awaiting them at the higher level of the garden
they are about to enter.
192
It is worth noting that, the
function of the River of Fire
here resembles that of the River Lethe which flows through Hades, whose waters
were drunk by the dead in order to make them forget their earthly lives.
193
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