The Religions Book

(ff) #1

186


Jewish men at penitential prayers,
the Selichot, in Jerusalem. According
to kabbalah, observance of the
commandments will help lead
people from exile to redemption.

GOD AND


HUMANKIND ARE


IN COSMIC EXILE


MYSTICISM AND THE KABBALAH


T


he texts of Judaism include,
along with the Hebrew
Bible (p.171) and the
Talmud (a compendium of rabbinic
interpretations), a body of mystical
knowledge known as kabbalah.
Originally an oral tradition, it was
collected in the Zohar (“Divine
Splendor”) in the late 13th century
in Spain. The Zohar and its
kabbalistic ideas took on a special
significance for exiled Jews—
in particular for the scholars of
Safed in Palestine—after their
expulsion from Iberia (present-day
Spain, Portugal, and Andorra) in
the 1490s. Among them was the

teacher Isaac Luria, whose
interpretation of the Zohar gave
a unique description of the
creation that was applicable to
the experience of Jews in exile.
It provided an explanation of good
and evil, and the way to redemption.
In Luria’s interpretation, before
the creation only God existed. In
order to make space to create the
world, he contracted or withdrew
into himself (tzimtzum): a form of
self-imposed exile for the sake
of creation. A divine light streamed
into the created space in the shape
of 10 sefirot—emanations of the
divine attributes of God. Adam
Kadmon (meaning primordial
man) formed vessels to contain
the sefirot. But the vessels were too
delicate to hold the divine light: the
upper three were damaged, and the
lower seven completely destroyed,
scattering the divine light. This
destruction of the vessels (known
as shevirat ha-kelim or shevirah)
upset the process of creation and
divided the universe into those
elements that assisted, and those
that resisted, the creation: good and
evil, and the upper and lower worlds.
This damage can be repaired,
Luria explained, by detaching the
holy sparks of divine light to which

IN CONTEXT


KEY FIGURE
Isaac Luria

WHEN AND WHERE
16th century, Palestine

BEFORE
From 1200 BCE Zoroastrians
believe that every act of right
moral conduct by humans
collectively aids the cosmic
struggle of good against evil.

10th–15th century CE
Christian mysticism flourishes
in Europe in the Middle Ages.

AFTER
18th century In Europe,
as the Haskalah (Jewish
Enlightenment) dismisses
mysticism, Israel ben Eliezer
founds Hasidic Judaism in
Ukraine, based on Isaac Luria’s
exposition of kabbalah.

1980s In Los Angeles, the
Kabbalah Center attracts
celebrity followers with
teachings derived from the
Judaic mystical tradition.
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