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Eating from the Tree of Life: A Course on the Zohar
INTRODUCTION
THE ZOHAR AND KABBALAH The Zohar's purpose is not to teach us Kabbalah; it assumes that
we know Kabbalah. Other Kabbalistic books, even when they speak
in hints rather than openly, tend to be fairly systematic expositions
of ideas. (Two accessible examples, rewarding to study, which
are available in English translations, are The Palm Tree of Deborah
by Rabbi Moshe Cordovero [16th century], and Gates of Light by
Rabbi Joseph Gikatilla, who may have been one of the authors of
the Zohar.) Such books do mean to teach you Kabbalah. The Zohar
starts with Kabbalah and wants to take you further. For this reason,
it is anything but systematic; its ideas are expressed as challenges
and paradoxes, and it is mostly a work of images and stories. TOPICS Introduction What the Zohar Is I heard from the holy mouth of Rebbe Menachem Mendl (of Premishlan)
of blessed memory: A mystery is something that a person cannot
communicate to another person. It is like the taste of food: it
is impossible to describe it to a person who has never experienced
that taste, impossible to explain to him in words its quality
or its essence. Such a thing is called "a mystery". So it is with
love and fear of God: it is impossible to explain to another person
the quality of the love in your heart. It is called a mystery. Yosher Divrei Emet, section 22 Reflections on the Sefirot The fear of God as the Zohar understands it is not just about
awe or reverence; it includes terror, and it is a realistic response
to a terrifying reality. The Zohar sometimes dwells on this fear
response and celebrates it, without sugar-coating it in any way. Imagistically, Chesed, lovingkindness, is white like mother's
milk. It is everything flowing, giving and accepting -- everything
in us and the world that says "yes". Gevurah, power, or Din, judgement,
is red like blood. It is everything that sets limits, judges,
or fights -- everything that says "no". Either can go too far
on its own, both are necessary together; always saying yes and
always saying no will both get you in trouble. Netzach and Hod are not connected with very much specific imagery
in the Zohar and, like Keter and Chochmah, are not specifically
alluded to in the texts in our course as far as I know. They are
the mysterious sources of the inspiration of prophecy, and so
it seems appropriate for them to remain in the background.
Kabbalah is many things: oral traditions, rituals, meditations,
magical practices, books of philosophy and theology, stories...
It could be a lifetime of learning. The Zohar is part of the Kabbalistic
tradition; it was written by Kabbalists and has been studied in
depth mostly by Kabbalists. Yet, because Kabbalah is taught in
many ways, having learned a little of it does not necessarily
help in understanding the Zohar; and I would argue that you do
not have to be interested in Kabbalah to appreciate and explore
the Zohar.
A Liberal Perspective
Zohar & Kabbalah
A Crash Course
Images
Plurality & Unity
Evil
Christian Ideas
The Self & Other
Female & Male
Zohar as Resource & Model
How to Study Zohar
Module 1
The Kabbalistic commentators on the Zohar approach it as a work
to be decoded: its symbolism needs to be translated into theological
ideas. The Zohar itself invites this decoding, but, as one of
the early commentators, Rabbi Shim'on Lavi, already recognized,
the result of a completely successful decoding would be a constant
repetition of a few key ideas, which the Zohar returns to over
and over again. If the purpose of the Zohar were to teach Kabbalah,
it could have been ten pages long, not thousands. Further, completely
successful decoding has turned out to be impossible, so that the
great commentators offer contradictory interpretations of the
same passages, because the Zohar deliberately teases and frustrates
the interpreter. At the same time that the Zohar works with Kabbalah,
it is also undermining it, in order to take us beyond.
Kabbalah is part of the raw material which the authors of the
Zohar were working with. They were steeped in its concepts and
built on them. Yet they drew at least as much on the Bible; on
midrashic literature; on their own physical lives and experiences.
Knowing about early Kabbalah can help us to understand the Zohar,
but so can knowing Scripture or, especially, being aware of our
own physical and emotional being. In the words of my teacher,
David Greenstein, "the Zohar succeeds in reinventing kabbalistic
consciousness by restoring its connection to lived reality."
CRASH COURSE IN KABBALAH
Since knowing some specific details about Kabbalah can be a help
in understanding the Zohar, here are a few remarks on two Kabbalistic
key-words: "secrets" and "Sefirot".
Secrets
The Zohar often introduces its teachings as "secrets" and "mysteries".
This is a stylistic feature which it shares with other Kabbalistic
books. Kabbalah as a whole is often referred to as "nistar" or
"chokhmat hanistar" -- "the mystery" or "the secret wisdom". It
presents itself as esoteric lore, only for the initiated. Kabbalistic
books emphasize that they are based on secret traditions passed
on orally from one initiate to another, and that the authors know
some things that are too secret to put into writing at all. It
is often not clear how much of the secrecy is real. In the Middle
Ages, as today, mysterious depth and secrecy had an appeal and
were paradoxically a tool for attracting more students and readers.
Typically, the Zohar will be very un-secretive about advertising
its secrets. To paraphrase my teacher Rabbi David Greenstein's
way of paraphrasing it: "There's a secret coming! A BIG secret!
... Did you catch that secret?" On the other hand, the authors
of the Zohar will sometimes slip in something truly esoteric,
truly radical, without labelling it as a secret at all -- which
is one of the most effective ways of hiding it.
What can the whole idea of "secrets" mean to us? There is a Hasidic
teaching which looks at this from a spiritual-devotional standpoint.
Although this is probably not what the authors of the Zohar had
in mind, I find it very helpful:
But as for calling the wisdom of the Kabbalah "mystery" (nistar)
-- how is it a mystery? Anyone who wants to learn it can look
in a book. If they do not understand, they are no different from
people who cannot understand the Talmud or the commentary of the
Tosafot -- does that make those works "mystery"? No, the essence
of all the mysteries in all of the Zohar and the writings of the
Ari is clinging to God (devekut)...
(R. Meshullam Feivish of Zabriza, 1740-1795)
In other words, the real "secrets" or "mysteries" of the Zohar
are the inexpressible moments of connection to God which it can
awaken for us, each of us in our own way.
Sefirot
One of the most well-known Kabbalistic teachings today, and a
key part of most Kabbalistic theology, is the idea of the ten
forces or essences called Sefirot. (The singular of Sefirot is
Sefirah; originally the word meant "counting" or "number".) There
are different ideas in Kabbalah about what the Sefirot are: are
they parts of God, separate beings like angels, basic elements
of creation? Although these questions are controversial in later
Kabbalah, the Zohar assumes that the Sefirot are divine. They
are aspects of God, and when we talk about the Sefirot, it is
God we are talking about.
The Sefirot are often diagrammed with set names in a set order,
like this

1. Keter (Crown)
2. Chochmah (Wisdom)
3. Binah (Understanding)
4. Chesed
(Lovingkindness)
5. Gevurah (Power)
also called Din (Judgment)
6. Tif'eret (Beauty)
7. Netzach (Eternity,
or Victory)
8. Hod (Splendour,
or Acknowledgement)
9. Yesod (Foundation)
10. Malkhut (Dominion)
Before and beyond the Sefirot, and beyond our understanding, is
the hidden inwardness of God, called Eyn Sof (Limitless).
There is a flow of divine power and blessing from one Sefirah
to another, finally reaching Malkhut, which is the presence of
God in the world.
In some ways the Sefirot are independent beings or forces, which
interact with each other in various ways. For example, Chesed
and Din are opposing forces; Tif'eret and Malkhut are sometimes
close to each other and sometimes distant.
In later Kabbalistic teachings the system becomes much more complex.
There are Sefirot within Sefirot; there are configurations of
Sefirot, called Partsufim (Faces); there are four worlds or levels
of reality which each contain ten Sefirot, and so on. Most of
these ideas, however, were developed after the time of the Zohar
and are not important for understanding the Zohar.
Several of the Sefirot are highlighted in the texts we will be
studying. As a preliminary guide, the following are some impressions
about them that emerge from my readings of the Zohar.
Keter (Crown) is the most hidden, inward aspect of God that is
revealed at all. Keter is pure love. It is also pure potential,
the place where everything is possible. Any deep change involves
a moment of connection with Keter. The name of God connected with
Keter is "Ehyeh asher Ehyeh" -- "I am that I am" or "I will be
whatever I will be".
Chochmah, Wisdom, is also very hidden. In human terms, it is pure
consciousness, thought before words, or the initial flash of intuition.
In the family imagery of the Zohar, Chochmah is the father. The
word Chochmah, which is grammatically feminine, can also refer
to Malchut, the feminine Presence, when she is connected with
the father and bringing his wisdom into the world.
In the Bible, there are praises of Chochmah, Wisdom, personified
as a woman, especially in Proverbs 8:1-9:6. The Zohar would understand
these as praises of Malchut.
Binah is the hidden source within God. Our texts allude to Her a few
times. In the Zohar's imagery She is a great river from which
all streams flow out; She is the mother or grandmother of everything.
Her name means "Understanding" and is also connected with ideas
of making a distinction between things (bein = "between") and
building (banah). Within and beyond Her is unfathomable unity;
out of Her emerges everything we can understand, the built-up
world of distinct entities. Thus Binah is also the beginning of
judgment. Before Binah, as far as anything can be perceived at
all, it is all love and compassion. With Binah comes the beginning
of difference, conflict and limitation, which are necessary for
the world as we know it to exist, and the beginning of necessity
itself as opposed to freedom.
The first polarities of existence to emerge from Binah are Chesed and Gevurah. They are polarities we can find in ourselves and in our experience
of the world; their imagery builds on a tradition found in the
Talmud and Midrash which finds them in God. That midrashic tradition
speaks about the midat ha-rachamim -- God's attribute of compassion
-- and the midat ha-din, God's attribute of justice. The midrashic
texts see these "attributes" as polarities of God's personality
and even as separate beings competing for God's attention: love
on one side, justice on the other side, making irreconciliable
demands. The imagery of Chesed and Gevurah also draws on the key
Jewish experiential concepts of human love and fear of God. The
attribute of compassion, and Chesed, stir our feelings of love;
the harshness of the attribute of justice, Gevurah, is frightening.
Reform Rabbi Niles Goldstein has done some interesting thinking
and writing on the topic of the fear of God. His book Forests
of the Night explores early Hasidic teachings on fear of God;
in another book, God at the Edge, he writes about the same topic
through personal experience.
Yesod is alluded to a few times in our texts. Its imagery is often
sexual: it is the circumcised penis, that is, the sanctified channel
of uniting and creative energy. Yesod is called "tzaddik" ("righteous
person") and there are texts in which the Kabbalists particularly
identify themselves with Yesod. Perhaps the experience of flowing
with creative, erotic energy was dear to them. Much later in Jewish
history the Baal Shem Tov boldly taught that a righteous person
is compared to Yesod because of the intense pleasure they experience
in spiritual life.
Yesod is the link between Tif'eret and Malkhut, the "masculine"
and "feminine" poles of divine life. Tif'eret is the Zohar's main image for what is traditionally meant by
the word "God", especially in traditional Jewish prayers, in which
God is most often called "Father" and "King" and seems to be far
beyond us, Someone to reach out to and yearn for.
Malkhut is more connected with a type of image of God that many people
today find more comfortable: the presence of God in us and around
us. Malkhut is also called Shekhinah, but this is a name which
has other meanings in other contexts. In older Midrash, "Shekhinah"
is sometimes simply a name for God (not for a particular aspect).
In some Jewish feminist thought today, Shekhinah has feminine
attributes that make sense to contemporary women, which may be
very different from those imagined by the medieval Kabbalists
(see Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb's book She Who Dwells Within). In order
to avoid confusion we will not use the term "Shekhinah" for Malkhut
in this course. The Zohar itself rarely uses either name; as with
all the Sefirot, it prefers an array of images.
Malkhut is closer to us than the transcendent, out-there-beyond-us
aspect of God; therefore, She is also more mingled with all the
ups and downs of our lives and deaths. We can call on God beyond
us, Tif'eret, to save us from trouble; from Malkhut, we can only
ask that She remain with us in our trouble. Yet because Malkhut
is the aspect of reality which we encounter, She includes everything
in the world that is terrifying as well as everything good. She
is strongly connected with Gevurah and shares its frightening
aspect. See, in this course, "The Wisdom of Solomon". Everything
good and everything bad in the world "feeds into" her, and she
straddles all kinds of borderlines. Therefore there are many possible
images of her and ways of thinking about her. Nearly every text
in this course has something new to offer about Malkhut; as you
read the texts, I invite you to be open to learn something new
each time about this way of perceiving how God is present to us.
Gershom Scholem, the founder of the academic field of Kabbalah
study, once expressed his personal opionion that "the doctrine
of emanations [Sefirot] is the great misfortune of the Kabbalah".
Perhaps what he meant is that the system of Sefirot gives the
illusion of being a complex enough scheme to really capture reality,
but in fact it ends up, like any other system, presenting a very
limited picture.
As for the Zohar, it works with this structure, but also works
against it -- for example, now and then changing the standard
order of the Sefirot, or their set characteristics, to remind
you that no system is equivalent to reality. To study Zohar, it
is helpful to memorize the standard diagram of the Ten Sefirot
-- and then let it slip to the back of your mind.
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