The Participation of God and the Torah in Early Kabbalah
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Torah and the Godhead in Early Kabbalah
2.1. Torah as the Sefirot
2.2. Torah as Divine Name
“We further possess a true tradition that the entire Torah consists of names of the Holy One, such that the words can be divided into names with another meaning. […] It appears that the Torah was written through Black Fire on White Fire, in the manner that we have mentioned, namely, continuous writing without any break between words. It could be read according to the names or according to our reading about the Torah and the Law (lit. commandments). It was given to our master Moses according to the division [that yields] the reading of the commandments, and the reading of the names was orally transmitted to him”.34
2.3. Torah as the Icon and Body of God
2.4. God as the Commandments
2.5. Erotic and Creative Dimensions of the Torah
2.6. Union with the Torah
3. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | On possible historical connections between Muslim and Jewish perceptions of scripture as possessing enormous dimensions and as a body with various organs see Moshe Idel (1981, pp. 46–47); on Christian and Jewish concepts of scriptural embodiment see Wolfson (2005b, especially pp. 480–82); on phenomenological similarities between Jewish and Sufi notions of embodied text see Wolfson (2013a, pp. 837–52). Of course, this is not an exhaustive list, but rather one that is designed to demonstrate the potential of such comparisons. |
2 | The precise origins of the kabbalah are much debated. Scholem (1987, pp. 199–364) traced its beginning to certain provençal circles, notably that of the Rabad and R. Isaac the Blind. Pedaya (2001) conducted a broader review of kabbalistic ideas that originated in Provence. Bar-Asher (2019) has challenged many of the assumptions about writings attributed to Provençal kabbalists. Cf. (Weiss 2021). |
3 | |
4 | On the distinction between theosophic-theurgic and other types of kabbalah see Scholem (1995, p. 124); Idel (1988a, xi–xx). For a criticism of this distinction Wolfson (2000, pp. 94–134). |
5 | For a general overview of this process and its implications, see Sanders (2001, pp. 121–36), and studies collected in Schipper and Teeter (2013). |
6 | See the detailed discussion by Idel (2002, pp. 31–37). |
7 | Tosefta Sota, 7:9; PT Sota, 8:3; BT Sota, 42b-43a. Quoted in Wolfson (1993a, p. 54). |
8 | Regarding the rabbinic perception of Torah as feminine, and as the “daughter of God” Wolfson (1989, pp. 271–76). |
9 | |
10 | |
11 | |
12 | For a full articulation and discussion of this process see Liebes (1992, pp. 1–64). |
13 | |
14 | On this phrase, see Tishby (2008, pp. 454–85). |
15 | On the sefirot and kabbalistic theosophies in general see Scholem (1995, pp. 205–43); Scholem (1974, pp. 105–16); Scholem (1991, pp. 15–55); Tishbi and Lachower (1989, pp. 229–443); Green (2003, pp. 28–59, 101–8); Hallamish (1999, pp. 121–65); Ginsburg (1989, pp. 24–58); Afterman (2020, pp. 160–64). |
16 | Scholem (1987, pp. 144–45); Abrams (1994, pp. 179–81). Wolfson (1989, p. 89), identifies Emet with Mahshava—the highest Sefira—as it resides within the Sefira of Tiferet. The fundamental association of written Torah with Tiferet and oral Torah with Malkut was accepted by Geronese kabbalah and came to dominate much of thirteenth-century as well as later kabbalah. Scholem (1965, pp. 47–50); Idel (2002, p. 121). In some kabbalistic systems, the primordial Torah was identified with either the first sefira, Keter (“crown”), or the third, Bina (“understading”). See also an anonymous kabbalistic commentary, dated by Idel to the late thirteenth-early fourteenth century, in which the written and oral Torah are described as the white and black fire, respectively: Idel (2002, pp. 54–55). |
17 | See, among others, Wolfson (2004a, 224–25). |
18 | |
19 | Scholem (1987, pp. 285–89), attributed a similar theory already to R. Isaac the Blind (1160–1235), but studies conducted since have cast doubts on the attribution to R. Isaac of many of the texts referenced by Scholem. See most recently, and most comprehensively, Bar-Asher (2019, pp. 269–384). |
20 | |
21 | |
22 | See for example the commentary by Moses Nahmanides in which the first chapter of the book describes the emanation of the Godhead. Cf. Hayman (2004, p. 74); Segol (2012, pp. 65–87). For a 10th-century reading of Sefer Yetzirah that interprets the Sefirot as part of God, and relates them both to the name of God, the Hebrew alphabet, and Torah, see Wolfson (1992, pp. 294–300); Cf. the three interpretations analyzed by Weiss (2013a, pp. 26–46). |
23 | In Abraham Abulafia’s thought, heavily influenced by neo-Aristotelianism, the Torah was at times identified with the separate intellects and at times with the active intellect, which contains the foundations of language and all intelligible forms. In Abulafia’s system, this identification opened the possibility for mystical conjunction with the Torah, and thereby with the divine realm, through the act of intellection, by which the personal intellect is actualized into the general, active intellect. Abulafia also associated the Torah as active intellect with the Angel Metatron, as well as with the people of Israel. see the detailed discussion by Idel (1988b, pp. 34–41). |
24 | |
25 | A similar conception of the Torah as including the sum of all the sciences appears in Nahmanides as well. Nahmanides, however, insists on this type of wisdom being the Peshat (plain sense) of Torah, associated in his system with the Sefira of Malkhut. Ben Nahman (2006, pp. 63–71). Cf. Funkenstein (1986, p. 215). |
26 | Moshe ben Nahman, Commentary on the Torah, Deuteronomy 30, v. 6. See Halbertal (2020, pp. 48–50); Yisraeli (2020, pp. 121–50). |
27 | |
28 | |
29 | Ezra ben Solomon of Gerona (d. 1238 or 1245) wrote in his commentary to the rabbinic homilies: “the five books of the Pentateuch are God’s name”. Cf. Azriel of Gerona (1989, pp. 37–38); Scholem (1972, p. 78); Pedaya (2003, pp. 173–78); Afterman (2004, pp. 125–29). |
30 | Ezra Commentary, 34b; Azriel of Gerona (1989, p. 76); Chavel (1964, chp. 19; Zohar. Revuven Margaliot Edition. Jerusalem: Mossad Harav Kook, 1999, II, 87b; Zohar III, 361). Scholem (1965, pp. 42–47). |
31 | |
32 | |
33 | |
34 | |
35 | Pedaya (2003, pp. 174–75), distinguishes between the view of R. Ezra and R. Azriel, who view the Torah as the name of God, and that of Nahmanides, who views it as a series of names. Cf. Ben-Sasson (2019, pp. 252–53). |
36 | The opposite view, in which the written Torah represents the plain sense of the text (commandments) and the oral Torah represents the names of God, appears in Abulafia. See Idel (1988b, pp. 46–48). |
37 | For an explication of the term hyper-nomianism and its implications see Wolfson (2006, pp. 186–285); Wolfson (2020, p. 215). |
38 | |
39 | |
40 | |
41 | (Ezra of Gerona n.d.) Commentary on the Song of Songs, 23a; Azriel of Gerona (1989, pp. 37–38); Zohar III, 134b. Quoted in Scholem (1965, pp. 47–49). |
42 | |
43 | Tiqqunei Zohar, Reuven Margaliot Edition. 2nd Printing. Jerusalem: Mossad Harav Kook, 1978, 146a. Cf. Tiqqunei Zohar, 131a; Zohar III, 28a-b; Roi (2017, pp. 388–90). |
44 | Sefer ha-Yihud, Ms. Milano-Ambrosiana 62, 113b; Idel (2002, pp. 70–74); Meier (1974, pp. 79–80); Wolfson (1995, pp. 59–60). Cf. (Wolfson 2005b, pp. 479–500; Wolfson 2004b, pp. 1–28). |
45 | |
46 | See the detailed discussion by Idel (2005a, pp. 122–64). |
47 | |
48 | See the famous discussion by Gikatilla (1994a, pp. 7–8). |
49 | BT, Bavli Makot, 23:2; cf. Wolfson (2005b, p. 490, no. 30). |
50 | |
51 | |
52 | |
53 | Sefer ha-Yihud, Ms. Milano-Ambrosiana 62, 114a and 11a-b; cf. Moshe Idel (2005b, pp. 204–5); Wolfson (1995, pp. 74–75). |
54 | |
55 | This is one of the most studied and discussed sections in the Zohar, and discussing its full implications is beyond the scope of the present article. For a recent review of scholarship on this issue see Bennaroch (2018, p. 4 no. 13). See also the summary by Abrams (2003, LXI no. 5) and Weiss (2013b, pp. 60–76). |
56 | The Zoharic homily intentionally plays here with the Hebrew words for plain meaning of text (Peshat, פשט) and undressing (Pashat, פשט); Wolfson (2013b, pp. 321–43). |
57 | |
58 | |
59 | |
60 | See the detailed analysis by Pachter (2004, pp. 236–64); Pachter (1984, pp. 171–93); Sack (2008, pp. 149–53). |
61 | Alkabetz (2000, 12a). Translated by Pachter (1984, p. 178): “The Torah which is God, blessed be He... since He and His wisdom, which is the Torah, are one.” |
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Afterman, A.; Hayut-man, A. The Participation of God and the Torah in Early Kabbalah. Religions 2021, 12, 471. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12070471
Afterman A, Hayut-man A. The Participation of God and the Torah in Early Kabbalah. Religions. 2021; 12(7):471. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12070471
Chicago/Turabian StyleAfterman, Adam, and Ayal Hayut-man. 2021. "The Participation of God and the Torah in Early Kabbalah" Religions 12, no. 7: 471. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12070471
APA StyleAfterman, A., & Hayut-man, A. (2021). The Participation of God and the Torah in Early Kabbalah. Religions, 12(7), 471. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12070471