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role only as leader of the liberated Jewish people in the redeemed Land of Israel.
And yet the redemption is a tangible reality for Rashaz. He is convinced that the
world stands on the threshold of redemption, a situation to which he refers as being
the generation of the “footsteps of the Messiah.” This generation has already lasted
for hundreds of years, but it may nevertheless complete the task of purifying the
world at any moment now, and thus finally bring about the messianic era. Moreover,
even in exile, the individual can reach the divine by way of personal redemption. As
repentance, according to Rashaz,
is above temporal limitations, it can redeem the
individual, and indeed, the whole world, at anytime.
The exilic world is a world of confusion, as opposed to the redeemed world,
in which the hierarchy of beings is fixed. This worldly confusion has both negative
and
positive aspects, e.g. the enslavement of the Jews by the nations on the one hand,
and the possibility of repentance and self-improvement, on the other. The process of
the soul’s purification does not end with death, which is followed by the purifying
torments of
Gehinom
or the “hollow of the sling.” Only then does the soul ascend
through the numerous Gardens of Eden, constantly uncovering
new aspects of the
light of the
Shekhinah
. In the redeemed world, however, after the resurrection of the
sublimated bodies, not only the radiance specifically of the
Shekhinah
but the whole
divine light of
Ein Sof
will be fully revealed, which would mark the end of the
process of the souls’ ascension. In the perfected world following the resurrection, the
constant rhythm of the divine light’s descent
and withdrawal will cease, as the
overflow of light will be never-ending. Time, which measures the pulse of the divine
light, will come to a complete halt in the everlasting Sabbath – the holy day that
transcends mundane time, or on
the eight day of circumcision, that day that is
“entirely good.”