60
which the divine speech plays a prominent role.
122
It is also a result of associating
Malkhut,
on
the one hand
with the divine speech, and on the other hand with time:
[This is] the root of the matter of “time to love” [Eccl 3:8], etc. As is
explained in the
Zohar
, the Yanuka interpreted it to mean that it refers to love
within
Malkhut
, which is called time [
‘et,
which
is spelled with the letter
‘ayin
],
123
but it is also called
et,
[spelled] with an
alef
, for [all] “
alefs
[interchange with]
‘ayins
,”
124
etc. So the issue of time begins in
Malkhut
, and
these are the letters
alef
[and]
tav
which are set in the mouth, as is written in
Sefer yetsirah
[2:3], and this is sufficient for him who understands.
125
This passage illustrates
the relationship of
Malkhut
with time and speech. Basing
himself on the zoharic source, Rashaz ascribes Kohelet’s “time to love” to
Malkhut
,
since, following the
Zohar
,
he identifies
Malkhut
-
Shekhinah
with time.
126
He then
draws on a talmudic tradition ascribed to the school of Rabbi Eliezer, which tended
to pronounce the Hebrew guttural
‘ayin
as
alef
, and vice versa. The reference to this
tradition provides Rashaz with the ambiguity he seeks: the time of
Malkhut
[
‘et
] can
be read as the particle
et
, which contains the first and
last letters of the Hebrew
alphabet and therefore points to all the letters of the alphabet by means of which God
created the world.
127
122
On the role of the divine speech in Rashaz’s doctrine of creation, and its sources in the teachings of
the Besht, see Idel, “Le-‘olam ha-Shem,” 239-243. See also
Foxbrunner,
Habad
, 105.
On the role of
speech in the manifestation of the divine in Kabbalah, see Scholem,
Kabbalah
, 99.
123
See Zii, 155b.
124
See
b
Berakhot
32a.
125
MAHZ,
5564
, 205 [Appendix 33].
126
See Zi, 116b, 194a; Ziii, 58a-b.
127
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