The Kabbalah and Jewish Mysticism
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The Kabbalah and Jewish Mysticism

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eBook - ePub

The Kabbalah and Jewish Mysticism

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About This Book

This authoritative study of the Kabbalah celebrates the history and wisdom of Jewish mysticism while dispelling popular misconceptions. In recent decades, the Kabbalah has aroused widespread interest well beyond the realm of Jewish scholarship. Unfortunately, this popularization has also led to numerous distortions of Jewish mystical doctrine, with some alleged experts drawing on material other than original Jewish sources. In The Kabbalah and Jewish Mysticism, acclaimed Torah scholar Israel Gutwirth provides an essential corrective to this trend. Here is a retrospective look at the major figures of Jewish mysticism and the parts they played in shaping the Jewish religion. Divided into three parts, this volume examines the significance of the Zohar and the great Jewish mystics, Hasidic leaders who were distinguished exponents of the Kabbalah, and notable figures of the golden age of Jewish culture in Spain.

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Significance of the Kabbalah, the Zohar, and the Great Jewish Mystics

The Kabbalah

The name Kabbalah is derived from a three-letter Hebrew root—kbl—which means “to receive.” It occurs in the Mishna and the Gemara when referring to reception of religious traditions; thus Avot I reads: “Moses received the Torah of Sinai.”
The term Kabbalah is used to designate Jewish mystical teaching, which, being considered secret, was not written down but communicated by word of mouth, so that each generation of the chosen might receive it from the foregoing generation.
It is thus extremely difficult to determine the period in which this mystical Jewish doctrine originated. Even in the Bible there are whole words and verses that transcend their apparent meaning and seem to contain occult references to mysterious relationships between man and the Divinity. Note, for example, the passages in the Pentateuch that refer to angels or to the names of God: “I am that I am” (Exodus 3:14); the prophecies in Isaiah 6 with his visions of God’s throne and the seraphim; those in Ezekiel 1, on the divine chariot; or those in Daniel, which have a definite mystical character. At all events there is a consensus on the existence of Jewish mystical doctrines during the period of the Second Temple.
That which is known today as Kabbalah was undoubtedly revealed much later—in the 13th century, as the Kabbalists themselves admit—although it had already been “gestating” for many centuries. According to Jewish tradition the principal work of Jewish mysticism, the Zohar, was written by the Tanna Rabbi Simon Bar Yohai in the 2nd century, and all the Tannaim and Amoraim were Kabbalists.
The earliest Jewish mystics, starting from the 13th century, were Rabbi Abraham Abulafia, Rabbi Isaac Sageh Nahor, and Rabbi Moses Ben Nahman (Ramban or Nahmanides), and their disciples. Jointly with this upsurge of mysticism in Spain was its counterpart in Germany: that of the Hasidic Ashkenazim, whose leaders were notable personalities such as Yehuda Ha-Hasid and Rabbi Eliezer Rokeach.
Even in those times, the Kabbalah had both a theoretical and a practical side. The former is concerned with problems of the essence of the Divinity and with the influence of the Torah and its precepts on the world; the latter, conversely, aims at giving a practical application to secret divine powers, using them for determinate purposes, enacting miracles, or producing the supernatural through the use of Holy Writ.
Theoretical Kabbalah developed in Spain; the practical side was rooted in Germany. During that period minor works on theoretical Kabbalah began to appear, culminating with the appearance of the Zohar by Rabbi Moses de Leon in Spain, in the 13th century. After the publication of the Zohar, the Kabbalah gained increasing importance in Jewish religious life.
According to mystical doctrine, ten Sefirot (spheres) emanate from the Divinity: (l) Keter (crown), (2) Hochma (wisdom), (3) Bina (reason), (4)Hesed (grace), (5) Gevura (strength), (6) Tiferet (beauty), (7) Netzah (constancy), (8) Hod (majesty), (9) Yesod (foundations), and (10) Malchut (empire).
Much has been written about the significance of the word Sefira, but little is known about it. There is even less clarity regarding the essence of the ten spheres, but some authorities believe that these are attributes of God according to His influence on Creation; others think they are separate elements.
The highest and most important sphere is the first, Keter, whence derives the second, Hochma, which comes next in importance, and so on to the tenth and last, Malchut. The ten spheres form the World of Emanations (Olam Haalzilul). From the tenth sphere emanates the world of Creation (Olam Habria) or of finished matter, formless and in the chaotic state, whence emerges the shaped world (Olam Hayetzira), which in turn is transformed into the present, ordered world (Olam Haasiya).
This teaching clearly aims at establishing that the world forms part of Divinity, even if part of it is divine material of a lower level. All this leads to the conclusion that man, who is a part of Creation, may and must aspire to unite with the Divinity, to which purpose it is sufficient to pursue a path of contemplation, profound meditation on the Torah and its precepts, and a life of sanctity.
For the different levels, forms, and expressions of Divinity and its influence on the material world, the Kabbalah created many terms in Aramaic, such as Dohrah Venokvah (male and female; active and passive influences), Nitzotzot (sparks or remnants of Divinity), and many others.
The Kabbalah stayed with the theoretical and philosophical content as described until the 16th century, when Rabbi Isaac Luria, the Ari, set up in the holy city of Safed a yeshiva for Kabbalists, in which he taught to his disciples, and especially to his favorite pupil Rabbi Chaim Vital, a new approach to the Kabbalah, amplifying the concept of Divinity.
The Ari emphasized the need of spiritual change in order to be worthy to undergo transmigration. Such souls descended into the material world for purification, so that they might return to their original state of sanctity; it was therefore the duty of man to help them return to the path of righteousness.
Ari’s influence was a decisive factor in the emergence of practical Kabbalah, which led to the messianic movement of Rabbi Solomon Molho, Sabbatai Zevi, and Jacob Frank on the one hand, and to the Hasidic movement on the other.
Many Jewish religious authorities, on becoming aware of the abuses of the followers of so-called false messiahs, opted to prohibit young people from studying the Kabbalah.
In Jerusalem and Safed until recently there were yeshivot that offered courses in Kabbalah.
Many books have been written on the subject of this mystical science, indicating the enormous interest that it awakened among Jewish scholars, from Moses Chaim Luzzatto in the 18th century to Gershom Scholem and his numerous disciples in the 20th century.

The Zohar

The Zohar (Brightness) is the holiest book of the Kabbalah. Its name derives from the verse “And they that be wise shall shine as the brightness (Zohar) of the firmament” (Daniel 12:3).
It was written in difficult Aramaic and consists of mystical interpretations and commentaries from the sidrot (weekly readings) from the Torah, the Song of Songs, Ruth, and Lamentations of Jeremiah, and others.
The Zohar is the fundamental work of the Jewish Kabbalah for its mystical teachings, its references to religious terminology, the problems of the infinite, the divine emanations, and others.
According to Jewish tradition the Zohar was written in Israel by the Tanna Rabbi Simon Bar Yohai in the 2nd century of the Common Era. The Talmud, in its tractate Shabbat XXXIII, recounts that in order to escape Roman persecution, the Rabbi hid with his son Elazar in a cave and lived there for thirteen years, at the conclusion of which the prophet Elijah appeared before them to announce that the danger had passed.
According to tradition, the Zohar remained hidden for a thousand years, until at the end of the 13th century Rabbi Moses Ben Shem Tov de León discovered the manuscript and made it known.
Although the authorship of the Zohar is a subject of controversy, there are writings on the Kabbalah from very remote times, long before Rabbi Moses de León. His contemporary Rabbenu Bahye Ben Joseph Ibn Paquda mentions a Midrash of Rabbi Simon Bar Yohai as a primarily Kabbalistic work; other authors of that period and subsequent researchers make the same assertion.
The Zohar was made public in 1290. Two printed editions appeared in 1559, one in Cremona and the other in Mantua, and it has since been published many times, with the addition of many commentaries such as Or Hachamah (Light of Wisdom) and others.
The contents of the Zohar were translated into Yiddish in the 17th century by Rabbi Hirsch Hatash under the name of Nahalat Zevi. A Hebrew translation has been published in Israel by Reuben Margulis, on whose writings this book is based.
In Hasidic texts, the Zohar is considered so sacred that readings from it are recommended even if one does not know the meaning of the words. To this day Sephardic Jews are in the habit of reciting daily passages of the Book of Brightness, even without knowing its contents.
As a historical curiosity, it is of interest in the 18th century a “Zoharist” movement considered the Zohar superior to the Mishna and the Gemara. This trend, of course, made no headway, inasmuch as the mystics themselves rejected it strongly.

The Sanctity of the Zohar

The Zohar became deeply rooted among the Jews, much as the belief that the Talmud, like the Torah, was delivered on Mount Sinai. There were also those who claimed that the writ of the Zohar was as holy as the Torah of Moses, and the Kabbalists came to sanctify it even above the Bible and the Talmud, considering it the “fundamental book of Judaism.” Some even asserted that study of the Zohar could accelerate the coming of the Messiah.
A Jewish mystic wrote: “Study of the Zohar will produce the redemption of the Jews of the Diaspora, who will return to the Land of Israel …. Then freedom will reign over all men, who will live in a calm never before known on the face of the earth.”
The Kabbalists interpreted the words of the prophet Daniel, “ ;and they that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament” (12:3), as referring to those who had become initiated in the secrets of the Zohar.
This holy text is very difficult to interpret, since besides the difficulty that it is written in hard-to-understand Aramaic, it also contains very profound thoughts, so that very few people are able to comprehend it from the Kabbalist point of view.
The Zohar states in its third book that “in one city, only two persons can interpret it, and two in one family.” The Kabbalists therefore claim that no one should grieve at failing to understand that work, since this is a privilege reserved to a few wise men. It should nevertheless be studied, since it is Holy Writ, and whoever does so, even without proper comprehension, will be privileged to receive the Holy Spirit and with it Divine Grace.
There is no definite knowledge concerning the author of the Zohar, or where it was created. These aspects have been subject to controversy among scholars to this day. Be that as it may, the Kabbalists have always asserted that the authorship of that work belongs to the great Tanna Rabbi Simon Bar Yohai, who lived in (what is now) Israel in the 2nd century of the Common Era.
According to the Zohar, Rabbi Simon gathered together a select group of sages and revealed to them the secrets of the Torah and of the celestial world, which he had heard from the “Faithful Shepherd” (Moses), from the prophet Elijah, and from the Almighty Himself.
Rabbi Simon Bar Yohai has always been venerated by the Jewish people as a true saint who had marvelous knowledge of terrestrial and celestial mysteries. The Talmud abounds in legends about him and his son, Rabbi Elazar. In times of Roman rule, when study of Jewish Holy Writ was strictly forbidden, both went into hiding in a cave for 13 years, risking their lives. At the entrance to the cave there grew miraculously a carob tree and water sprang from the ground, providing them with food and drink throughout their concealment. At the same spot, according to the Talmud (Shabbat XXXIII) the prophet Elijah appeared before them and revealed to them all the secrets contained in the Torah.
The Talmud also says that Rabbi Simon Bar Yohai was considered a true saint in his time and that by virtue of his merits no rainbow ever appeared in the sky, which meant that God did not intend to unleash the fury of the Universal Deluge over the Earth.
For these reasons, only he alone could have written a book so holy and full of secrets as the Zohar.
Some scholars of centuries past expressed serious doubts in that respect; most sages rejected it outright. Among the rejections were such notable mystics as Rabbi Moses of Córdoba, Rabbi Isaac Luria (the Ari), and Rabbi Chaim Vital, all of whom lived in the holy city of Safed in the 16th century.
Rabbi Moses of Córdoba wrote a commentary on the Zohar, maintaining that its text had been created by Rabbi Simon Bar Yohai. In that respect the weight of the opinions of the Ari and of his favorite disciple, Rabbi Chaim Vital, also made itself felt, since the Ari was greatly revered, his word being held sacred and incontrovertible. The Ari similarly affirmed that only after the coming of the Messiah might the content of the Zohar be understood in all its splendor.
It was thus with good reason that the book’s first printers entitled it The Sacred Book of Zohar on the Torah, by the Holy Tanna Rabbi Simon Bar Yohai.
Contemporary researchers nevertheless hold that in reality the Zohar is a compendium of fragments from various authors who lived in different epochs, some of them very remote. They must have included Rabbi Abraham Abulafia and Rabbi Moses de León.
The Zohar, an incomparable book in Jewish literature, is of a mystical-religious character. In its words there burns continuously the sacred fire of praise of God. Each one of its phrases contains a deeply felt spiritual sentiment, brimming with love of our Lord. It proclaims the almighty power of God and asserts that everything lives and moves by virtue of His works and thanks to His secret power of creation. On the other hand it declares that all the concepts of the Torah, even those that seem superficial, constitute a sacred and inexhaustible mystical source.
The Zohar emphasizes the sanctity of the Book of Books. Like the Zohar, every expression, word, syllable, and letter of the Bible contains some secret or veiled symbolic allusion. That which we have read, studied, and understood, though it is important, is nothing more than the outer crust, the cloak that covers the body of the Torah and its enigmas still to be solved. The Zohar says:
Only fools see the external garb of aspects of everyday life in the Torah, without noticing what lies beneath. All the words of the Torah are divine and each one of them contains a secret. A flesh-and-bones king does not use common speech, nor write it himself. Why should not God (who is the King of Kings) use loftier and indeed celestial words, rather than those used by Esau, Hagar, Lavan, Balaam and his mule, Balak and Zimri? … The Torah is holy and complete. Everything written in it is divine … so one should interpret its text correctly and seek to unravel the mysteries and sacred thoughts that it contains.

The Prophet Elijah

Elyahu Ha-Navi (Elijah) is, after Moses, the prophet most venerated by the Jews. They have always believed, in times of exile, that at the hour of redemption Elijah would reappear.
In the Talmudic tractate Baba Metzia CXIX, some Tannaim tell tha...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Contents
  4. Preface by Chief Rabbi Ovadia Yosef of Israel
  5. Introduction by Dr. Yosef Burg, Interior Minister of the State of Israel
  6. Foreword
  7. Significance of the Kabbalah, the Zohar, and the Great Jewish Mystics
  8. Hasidic Leaders Who Were Also Outstanding Exponents of the Kabbalah
  9. Noted Figures of the Jewish Golden Age in Spain
  10. Index
  11. Copyright