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- II: The Primordial Light: The Ecstatics' Quest
- Thursday 18 April 1991
-
- [The introduction to the lecture
- mentioned that the lecture series would
- eventually be coming out as a book to
- be published by the University of
- Washington Press.]
-
- [The introducer mentioned an article
- in the Jerusalem Post about Scholem and
- Idel. Idel has established the basis
- for a critical look at Scholem's work.
- Scholem's approach was historical and
- contextual: he interpreted the Kabbalah
- as a system of thought. Idel's approach
- is phenomenological: he endeavors to
- discern what the symbolism and ritual
- meant to those who practised it. For
- Idel, the Kabbalah is not a system of
- ideas but a practical path to mystical
- experience. For Scholem, Kabbalah
- entered Judaism from the outside, and
- was the result of the influence of Greek
- gnosticism on Rabbinic Judaism. It was,
- in effect, an alien heresy with an
- underground existence. For Idel,
- Kabbalah is an esoteric tradition
- flowing from within Judaism itself,
- though with links and correspondences
- with other mystical traditions. Idel
- feels that the study of the manuscript
- tradition has just barely begun, and
- that therefore most of the field has yet
- to be explored.
- He also feels that even the most
- theoretical texts are experientially
- oriented. This has led him to try to
- reconstruct the techniques that were
- actually used. He has done so in part
- through observation of practices of
- ultra-Orthodox communities in Israel -
- and they in turn have come to him for
- technical advice on reading and
- understanding their texts.]
-
- There is another paradigm through which the
- story of the entry to Pardes can be read - one
- which is not philosophical, but ecstatic. This
- variety of paradigms by the way is very
- important. It shows that Jews were less
- interested in establishing a unified theology
- than they were in finding secret interpretations
- that would attract many different kinds of
- people. They were open to having a different
- way for each sort of person. This is a sign of
- the openness of the elite culture to allowing
- different approaches for a variety of people -
- not so much to attract the masses, but to allow
- for diversity among the elite.
- This second interpretation of the Pardes was
- the result of the merger of Jewish mysticism and
- Neoplatonic philosophy. For Maimonides, it was
- a Pardes ha Chokmah, a Pardes of Knowledge. It
- had to do with the solution to cognitive
- problems. For Maimonides, Adam was lost in
- contemplation of metaphysical truths. Thus, for
- Maimonides, R. Aqiva was the central figure, the
- most perfect of the four sages.
- But for some Kabbalists at the beginning of
- the Thirteenth Century the major figure was not
- R. Aqiva but Ben Azzai, the Talmudic master who
- died. For them, the Pardes was not a matter of
- intellect, but of the experience of a supreme
- light. This Light was not an intellectual or
- conceptual light, but an experiential light.
-
- Ancient Jewish textual material is rich in
- emphasis on the importance of light - as in
- Genesis, where Light is the first created
- entity. Midrashic texts portray Adam as an
- entity of Light, and as having garments of
- Light, which were lost after his expulsion from
- Eden. In this tradition, the basic activity of
- Adam was the contemplation of the Light, of the
- Shekinah. The "Light of the Shekinah" is a key
- term in these texts.
- Both Pardes and Paradise, in this tradition,
- are seen as full of Light. Adam's experience in
- the Fall is the loss of the possibility of
- contemplating the Light. The loss of garments
- of Light leads to their replacement by garments
- of skin (a pun in Hebrew). This loss of the
- possibility of experience of the Light is
- crucial in ancient Hebrew texts.
- For example, in the Book of Adam and Seth (as
- preserved in Armenia): "But Adam .. in being
- stripped of the Divine Light .. became an equal
- of the dumb beasts. Enoch for forty days and
- nights did not eat. Then he planted a garden ..
- and was in it for 552 years. Then he was taken
- up into heaven ...." [The quotation was quite a
- bit longer; unfortunately, I couldnot keep up.]
- This portrays an attempt by Enoch to reconstruct
- and re-enter the situation of Adam. This is a
- basic pattern in later discussions of the Pardes
- texts: an attempt to return to the ability to
- contemplate the Light as Adam once did.
- In the Hekhaloth texts, too, the idea of Light
- is paramount. Pardes is described as full of
- the radiance of Light.
- There is a manuscript text by an unknown
- author - one which I needed some 60 pages to
- analyze, so we can only deal witha small part of
- it here. There are some ten lines in it about
- Ben Azzai (who did not return). "Ben Azzai
- peeked and died. He gazed at the radiance of
- the Divine Presence like a man with weak eyes
- who gazes at the full light of the sun and
- becomes blinded by the intensity of the light
- that overwhelms him... He did not wish to be
- separated, he remained hidden in it, his soul
- was covered and adorned ... he remained where he
- had cleaved, in the Light to which no one may
- cling and yet live." [Quotation approximate]
- This text portrays people gazing not at a
- Chariot or a marble throne, but at the radiance
- of God (Tzvi ha Shekinah), a light so strong
- that no one can bear it. The idea of
- "overwhelming" is textually crucial. The idea
- of having a great desire to cleave, as described
- in the medieval text, is new. In ancient
- literature, contemplation is of something far
- away, across an unbridgeable gap. There is no
- idea there of love, only of awe. Here, however,
- we see a trace of a radical change: the
- intensity of the experience is linked with a
- great desire to cleave to the radiance of the
- Shekinah. There is a strong experience of union
- with the Divine, the result of a desire to enter
- and become a part of the Divine realm. There is
- an attempt to enjoy the Divine without
- interruption. The language of desire implies
- erotic overtones to the experience, especially
- since "Shekinah" in Hebrew is feminine. The
- text then is speaking about an attempt to cleave
- to a feminine aspect of the Divine - also a
- development unique to the medieval literature
- (and not found in the ancient literature). And
- also the idea of "sweet radiance" has erotic
- overtones.
-
- So what happened? He couldn't return from the
- experience. The Hebrew terms are very strong.
- After his death he was "hidden away in the place
- of his cleaving." This death was the death of
- the pious ones whose souls are separated from
- all concerns with the mundane world, and who
- cleave to the supernal world. It was, in other
- words, not an accident but an achievement.
- There is a threefold structure implied here,
- reminiscent of Christian and Neoplatonic
- mysticism. The first phase is the via
- purgativa, "Those who are separated from all
- concerns of the lowly world." The second phase
- is the via illuminativa. The third phase is the
- via unitiva. There is here a combination of
- ancient Jewish material with pagan or Christian
- Neoplatonist material to portray or interpret
- the experience of Ben Azzai. This interpretive
- paradigm continued in active use from the
- Thirteenth through the Eighteenth centuries,
- where it was used among the Hasidim. It was a
- tradition that lasted 600 to 700 years, and it
- is exactly the kind of tradition it is hard to
- study without looking at manuscripts.
-
- This text was also copied by a Thirteenth
- Century Kabbalist who gave it an even stronger
- nuance of mysticism. Ben Azzai died because of
- the cleaving of his soul out of a great love;
- his soul didn't return because he reached a
- great attainment. The assumption: out of
- intense love, his cleaving was total. Later,
- there were even stronger formulations, in which
- the soul and the Light become one entity.
- This text is one example of texts dealing with
- the unio mystica. It allows for bridging in a
- total manner the gap between man and God. This
- is another example of the formative power of the
- Neoplatonic mystical tradition, as it also
- expressed itself in Christianity and Islam.
- However, for the Kabbalists the major events
- took place in the past. He is reporting not on
- a contemporary but on Ben Azzai. Is this simply
- a matter of an intepretation? Or is there
- something more to it - a practical interest?
- Can we extract from the sources a method, a
- practice?
-
- In my opinion, since the end of the Thirteen
- Century there is evidence that there were
- experiences of Light connected with the story of
- Ben Azzai and the Kabbalists who discussed it -
- but this is not always simple to demonstrate.
- Another anonymous text, written in 1290 or so
- in Galilee, describes a technique, and afterward
- describes a personal experience characterized by
- amazement, confusion, and a need for
- clarification and interpretation. Its author
- describes the Divine Light as attracting the
- Light of the soul, "which is weak in relation to
- the Divine Light." (There is a magnetic
- metaphor here, and we can see in this adoption
- of non-traditional metaphors an attempt to come
- to terms with personal experience.) This
- experience was the result of letter-combination
- techniques. Later the anonymous Kabbalist
- attempts to describe how he approached a master
- to learn a technique to stop the experience.
- Thus, discussing this experience in terms of the
- story of Ben Azzai is an attempt to relate
- personal experience to a model. It is not
- simply an attempt to provide an interpretation
- for the story of Ben Azzai.
- Another ecstatic Kabbalist also relates his
- experience to the story of Ben Azzai: "If a man
- does that which his soul wishes in the proper
- ways of hitbodeduth, his soul is immersed in
- this light and he will die like Ben Azzai."
- The Kabbalists tried to reach the pre-fall
- state of the Primordial Man, to enteragain the
- radiance of the Shekinah, and even to enter a
- certain erotic relationship with the Divine
- Presence, as later we find in the Zohar in other
- forms. They also provided, by the end of the
- Thirteenth Century, certain detailed techniques.
- "By letter combinations, unifications, and
- reversals of letters, he shall call up the Tree
- of Knowledge of Good and Evil... [list of
- encounter with various polarized qualities and
- entities, e.g., Mercy and Severity] ... he will
- be in danger of the same death as Ben Azzai."
-
- Beginning with the end of the Fourteenth
- Century, there are descriptions of Kabbalists
- studying together, and of each observing the
- others to see if they become luminous.
- "Likewise today, if someone will look at the
- faces of students who are worshipping out of
- love .. you will see on them the radiance of the
- Divine Presence so that those who see them will
- be afraid, and each of them will have the
- radiance of the Divine Presence according to his
- rank." There is, in other words, the
- expectation of a corporeally observable
- radiance.
-
- For Maimonides the experience of the Pardes
- was mental, with no outward sign; for the
- Kabbalists it was corporeal and visible.
- For Maimonides, God was an intellect; for the
- Kabbalists, God was a radiance.
- For Maimonides, Adam was a perfect intellect;
- for the Kabbalists, Adam was a creature of
- Light.
- For Maimonides, Paradise and Pardes were
- intellectual (cerebral) states; for the
- Kabbalists, they were corporeal, sensuous,
- erotic, sexual and an object for practical
- striving.
- The Kabbalists developed techniques -
- Maimonides had no clear method.
- The Kabbalists attempted to describe
- techniques, and signs of attainment.
- Thus the Kabbalistic tradition is not one of
- speculations about mysticism; it is full-fledged
- mysticism. In the Kabbalistic tradition, an
- extreme type of experience is sought out and
- considered positive.
- The mystical death is the real goal of
- ecstatic Kabbalah. For Maimonides, the ideal is
- to remain in a state of intellection. For the
- ecstatic Kabbalists, extreme experience is final
- experience.
-
- The Pardes was thus idealized by Jewish
- mystics, and given new meanings. This
- idealization opened another avenue, one
- exploited especially by Eighteenth Century
- Hasidic mysticism. We can see a continuous line
- from the beginning of the Kabbalah up to the
- founder of the modern Hasidic movement who
- himself quoted parts of the same text. This can
- be understood as an inner Jewish development,
- and not a historical accident.
-
-
- Questions
-
- Q: Did all Kabbalists wish actual death? For
- those who did not, what was the rationale for
- not wanting it?
- A: That is a matter of the mystic's role in
- society. Moses, it is said, wanted to die,
- to leave the world, to remain in a state of
- union. But God said he had a role as a
- mystic - to reach the extreme and yet return.
- But that is not the case for all Kabbalists:
- not all of them were oriented toward society.
- There as also a controversy about the
- desirability of it, but the idea that it
- could be achieved was admitted on all sides
- of the controversy. It was not theologically
- denied. Even those who opposed it admitted
- that a total union was possible.
- Q: In that case, how was Aqiva understood?
- A: He was understood as someone who could
- balance, who could enter and leave. Aqiva
- (like Moses) could enter, but he knew when to
- retreat. He knew how to combine the two.
-
- Q: On Tuesday you discussed the role of
- Halakhic ritual as a way of controlling
- impulses, for Maimonides. Tonight you did
- not mention it at all. Did it have a role?
- A: Maimonides was a Halakhist. But most of
- the Kabbalists we have mentioned were not.
- Most were anonymous - they were not Halakhic
- masters, but mystics. For them, keeping the
- norms was not as important as reaching beyond
- the norms. Basically, they were a-nomian.
- They did not regard the Commandments as a
- major tool. They might be preparatory, but
- they were not final.
- Q: Certainly not all aspects of Halakha would
- have been neutral: it afforded major
- opportunities for ecstatic experiences on
- certain feasts, for example...
- A: These Kabbalists were not unobservant, they
- were not antinomian. But as mystics (rather
- than as Jews) they used other types of
- rituals or techniques. Ritual anyway would
- be suspended at the peaks of ecstatic
- experience, when one cannot do anything. The
- issue is not simple - but there seems to have
- been no friction. It is highly significant
- that there are no critiques of the use of
- mystical techniques, e.g., of combining
- Divine Names. Their practice probably did
- not interfere with regular Halakhic
- observances.
-
- Q: How did such experiences tend to affect
- their experience of the material world? Did
- it enhance their opinion of it? Lower it?
- A: Here we touch on the paradoxical connection
- of the mystic and the prophetic mission. As
- ecstatics, they were escapist. But they also
- felt that the experience prompted or provoked
- a mission. In coming back, the return was
- interpreted as a being sent forth, as having
- a mission. This offered a rationale for
- coming back. "You are permitted to return if
- you are needed." Thus there was a tension
- between the drive for attainment and the
- feeling of a mission.
-
- Q: What about free will? Could one say that
- Ben Azzai got what he wanted, and that Aqiva
- got what he wanted?
- A: Not exactly. At a moment in an experience
- one may be caught up or captured by another
- dynamic. You may lose control; free will may
- be overwhelmed, overridden.
-
- Q: Is there an attempt to revive these things
- in Israel?
- A: Yes; some are studying and practising these
- techniques.
- Q: For example?
- A: Breathing, letter combination - I have
- contacted at least ten people I know.
- Q: They base this on Kabbalistic descriptions?
- A: They ARE Kabbalists.
-
- Q: In this Kabbalistic context God is
- described as radiance, energy, but in basic
- Judaism God is also anthropomorphic,
- interested in the world. Is there a
- connection?
- A: If one is speaking about erotic experience,
- there must be some sense of a personalistic
- object. The Kabbalists tried to compromise
- between anthropomorphic and spiritualistic
- content. The Sefiroth were seen as a
- structure of Light, but also as corporeal.
- They were able to shape the anthropomorphic
- content to a more spiritual, energic model.
-
-
- [Afterward, as is usual at such lectures,
- people approached the speaker with
- congratulations, comments, and assorted
- questions. Two stand out.]
-
- [A thin, intense young man kept asking Idel
- about energy experiences, and the sense of
- "energy coming in," and asked if anyone had
- done any EEG studies of Kabbalists. Idel
- said that Judaic studies were still in their
- infancy; mostly they were textual studies, an
- attempt to figure out what the texts actually
- said and what they were about - and even just
- to find them and get them edited and printed.
- No one had gotten to doing anything else,
- though he knew of the work by Ornstein and
- others, and thought it would be interesting
- to do in a Kabbalistic context.
- [The young man, consumed by his questioning,
- didn't quite see Idel's point about the
- emphasis on textual scholarship; Idel
- gradually realized the young man wanted
- advice about his own meditational
- experiences, and was a little taken aback,
- and tried to achieve polite closure.
-
- [Idel turned to another questioner, who
- asked something textual:
-
- Q: You mentioned that these techniques became
- discussed and elaborated in the Thirteenth
- Century or so. Is there any textual evidence
- for their source?
- A: Yes; in fact some of them can be found in
- texts of the Hellenistic period, especially
- those involving breathing and letter
- combination and visualization. They seem to
- be a part of a general fund of such
- techniques at the time, parallel to similar
- things one finds in Hellenistic magical
- papyri, for example.
-
- [Then, as though realizing then that the
- young man's questions {about what it meant
- when energy came in, as opposed to finding
- oneself elsewhere, about the dangers of
- possession, and so on} were pressing, Idel
- turned back {despite attempts by various
- professors to ease him out of the hall} and
- began quietly to address himself to his
- queries.]
-
- [end of part II]
-