36
it should be as if it was given today [
ha-yom
].”
38
In other words, despite the fact that
the Torah was given at a certain moment of history, it has lasted unaffected by the
passage of time, providing access to the Sinaitic experience to every Jewish person
through the ritual of Torah reading.
The presence of the eternal Torah in the temporal
world results from the
divine will to bring God’s wisdom into the lowest domain of reality. This reality, in
Rashaz’s teachings, is the spatio-temporal world, described as a “contrary thing” to
God, on account of its separateness and ultimate distance from the divine unity. The
presence of the divine wisdom in the spatio-temporal world is established through
rituals and ritual objects prescribed by the Torah. Indeed, objects such as the
tefilin
,
the ritual fringes or the parchments of
mezuzot
are subject to spatiality, while the
Sabbath and festivals
are subject to temporality, yet since they are commanded by
the Torah, they also belong in the eternal divine wisdom and will.
The significance of Torah, commandments and ritual objects, will be of great
importance in the discussion of the divine service of the individual in the next
chapters of the present thesis. Here it is important to stress the role of the Torah as
the intermediary between eternity and temporality, a relationship which Rashaz
expresses in even stronger terms when he pronounces the Torah the very reason for
the existence of the world. As he explains, it was God’s will that His wisdom (the
Torah) should extend down
to the spatio-temporal reality, and to make His will come
true, he created and sustained time and space. Consequently, the Torah is what
causes the life force to be drawn into the worlds.
Furthermore, if the Torah is the cause of the existence of the world, it must
have preceded the creation. Rashaz explains the eternity and pre-existence of the
Torah, not in the simplistic
terms of the Midrash, which speaks of two thousand
years that separated the Torah from the world,
39
but rather by transposing the idea of
the Midrash to the sefirotic scheme: the Torah, being God’s will and wisdom,
originates in
Keter
, that is in an entity that transcends the sefirotic tree, and in
38
MAHZ
5570
, 10 [Appendix 15].
39
Bereshit rabah
8:2.
37
Hokhmah
, that is
in the highest of all the
sefirot.
40
Hence, the Torah precedes the
lower worlds in the ontological rather than the temporal order.
2.3 Time and the divine names.
Another interpretative strategy, which Rashaz adopts to tackle the problem of the
supra-temporal God’s involvement in temporality, relates
to the dynamics of the
divine names that represent different aspects of God’s relationship, whether
separateness from or involvement in temporal reality, and in more general terms,
aspects of God’s transcendence and immanence.
The juxtaposition of the Tetragrammaton and the names
Elohim
and
Adonai
plays a prominent role in Rashaz’s model of the creation, of which the discourse on
time constitutes only a part. Used as a hermeneutical model for the contraction of the
divine light in the process of creation, it makes its way to the second part of the book
of
Tanya
: Sha‘ar ha-yihud veha-emunah,
41
as well as to some of Rashaz’s
ma’amarim
:
Now, Scripture says that “the Lord [
YHVH
] God [
Elohim
]
is a sun and a
shield” [Ps 84:11]. Just as the sun has its covering that can bear its radiance
[…], so, by way of allegory, [the name]
Elohim
is the covering for the name
HVYH,
which conceals [the name]
HVYH
. This is [the meaning of the verse]
“
HVYH
is
Elokim
” [Dt 4:39], for the coming into being of the worlds is due
to [the name]
Elohim
, that is, on account of the contraction [
tsimtsum
] […],
and since the radiance [
ziv
] is unlimited, two contractions, general and
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