198
fills all the worlds and is bound to time.
122
For this reason,
the words of Torah are
not subject to the passage of time, but are always perceived as new. Every time
someone recites the words of Torah it is as if he has just received them from God:
“Each interpretative gesture is a re-enactment
of the revelatory experience, albeit
from its unique vantage point, each moment a novel replication of the past.”
123
Even
though study by man is bound to time, the words
of Torah are not; hence studying
the Torah brings down the eternity and unity into the world of temporality and
multiplicity, whereas in the case of prayer, the situation is opposite: one reaches out
of temporality into the moment of infinity in an ecstatic gesture of unity with the
oneness of the divine.
The relation
between prayer and study, described above in terms of the
mutual relation between two types of divine light (
sovev
and
memale
), is depicted in
sefirotic terminology as a correlation of
Malkhut
and
Ze‘ir anpin
:
124
Contemplation in prayer […] is
in the nature of
ratso
, the elevation of
Nukba
,
and is called “temporal life” [
hayei sha‘ah
], for time is in
Malkhut
, and when
one elevates it from the state of being [
yesh
] it is called “temporal life.” The
main thing, however, is “eternal life” [
hayei ‘olam
], namely that
Ze‘ir anpin
should become specifically world [
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