48
and third leader of the Lubavitch branch of Habad, Menahem
Mendel Schneersohn
(the Tsemah Tsedek), who among his halakhic and mystical teachings, produced also
a strictly philosophical book,
Sefer ha-hakirah
, which
contained an exposition of
time in Jewish philosophy from the Habad perspective.
78
The concept of the order of the time, or a quasi-temporal order of events that
precedes the coming into being of time, appears already in the literature of the Sages:
Said rabbi Yehudah bar Simon: “Scripture does not say: ‘there shall be
evening,’ but rather ‘and there was evening’ [Gn 1:5], for there was a prior
order of time [
seder ha-zemanim
]. Rabbi Abbahu said: “this comes to teach
that He was creating worlds and destroying them,
until he created these
[worlds].
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The two Amoras in the Midrash question the significance of the
vav
consecutive in
the Hebrew account of the creation, where the presence of this
vav
changes the
meaning of the verse from the anticipated “there shall be evening” [
yehi ‘erev
] into
“and there was evening” [
va-yehi ‘erev
]. The former would have meant that evening
and morning were to follow the creation of light, whereas the latter suggests that
they had already passed before light was created. Rabbi Yehudah resolves the
difficulty by saying that even though time had not yet come into being, there must
have already existed a certain “order of time,” whereas according to Abbahu, the
creation of the world as we know it was preceded
by any number of abortive
creations.
Both these resolutions reverberate in Habad teachings. However, the
sequence of created and destroyed worlds that preceded the creation of our world is
substituted, under the influence of Kabbalah, by the sequence of emanated upper
worlds that preceded the creation of the world we inhabit:
78
On
Sefer ha-hakirah
, first published in 1912 in Poltava, see: Loewenthal, "'Reason' and 'Beyond
Reason,'” 123-126; idem, “The image of Maimonides,” 290-92; Stamler, “Sekhel,” 203-10.
79
Bereshit rabah
, 3:7 [Appendix 25].
49
And behold: in truth, “I am the Lord, I change not” [Mal 3:6], for there is no
change in Him, blessed be He […] for “He, with His name alone existed”
80
for several thousands and myriads of years before
the creation of the world
(and similarly, before the coming into being of time, for time, too, is created.
But there was an order of time before the creation of this world, that is, from
the time of the emanation and coming into being of spiritual worlds, as is
written in
‘Ets hayim
, Sha‘ar ‘igulim ve-yosher [Sha‘ar 1, ‘anaf 1, 25]. But
prior to this, even the order of time was not applicable, for He, blessed be He,
is completely above time).
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The main message communicated in this passage is the immutability of God in the
face of creation, which is a recurrent idea in Rashaz’s teaching. Much more
interesting is the difficulty that Rashaz faces
when explicating this idea, as it
involves the use of temporal notions, for example, in the description of God who
remained unchanged during the thousands of years preceding
the creation of the
world. This stands in obvious contradiction to Rashaz’s belief that time itself is a
created entity, and forces him to provide an additional explanation: the gap between
God and the creation is measured by the order of time rather than by time proper.
In order to explicate the midrashic idea of the order of time, Rashaz utilizes
the very same passage from Vital’s
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