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- Lecture III: Pardes: From Sefiroth to
- Demonology
- Monday 22 April 1991
-
-
- We have already examined two paradigms for
- reading the story of the entry into Pardes.
- Tonight, I want to talk about two others:
- the Theosophical and Theurgical paradigms.
- The paradigms already covered in the first
- two lectures, different though they were,
- had a common feature: both deal with inner
- experience, whether intellectualistic or
- ecstatic. The drama takes place in
- consciousness. Even if ecstasy involves
- possession, it is still occurring in human
- consciousness.
- The Divine is not affected by the entrance
- of the philosopher or mystic into the
- Pardes. This activity only affects the
- human intellect or soul - not the Divine.
- The two other paradigms also have an
- assumption in common: that the entry into
- the Pardes has a deep effect on the non-
- human realms. In the Theosophical paradigm,
- the Divine is not a simple entity, but a
- system of divine powers. The entry into the
- Pardes influences the relationships between
- these divine powers. The other paradigm,
- the Theurgic, involves an influence on, or
- struggle with, the demonic realm. These two
- may seem quite different, but, according the
- Kabbalah, the demonic and the Divine share a
- common anthropomorphic structure. The
- Sefiroth are prototypes for the demonic as
- well as the Divine realms. Both paradigms,
- then, deal with attempts to affect the
- structure and relationship of external
- entities, either by inducing harmony in the
- Divine world or by combatting some aspect of
- the demonic world.
- In both cases, the Pardes again represents
- a danger zone: an aspect of these realms
- that is too strong for most mortals. And
- both approaches, in their reading of the
- Pardes story, take as the key figure that of
- Akher, or Elisha ben Abuya, the heretical
- figure, he who "peeked and cut the shoots."
- He is seen as one who was unable to
- understand appropriately either the
- sefirotic or Demonic realm.
- I would like to deal first with the
- demonic, so that we can finish with
- something more positive. The basic
- assumption of this type of Kabbalah became
- important around the end of the Thirteenth
- Century (it is not generally found earlier):
- that the knowledge of the structure of the
- demonic is the most profound form of
- Kabbalah, the most recondite. A commonly
- used name for members of this tradition can
- be translated, "The More Profound
- Kabbalists." Their texts run to long lists
- of evil angels, and detailed discussions of
- the relationships between the demonic and
- the Divine. The tradition also includes a
- strong reinterpretation of the Pardes story.
- In this tradition, it was held (e.g. by
- Moses de Leon) that it was a religious duty
- to know, and pursue knowledge of, the
- demonic world - but not to be immersed in
- it. Only when one has the ability to
- distinguish good and evil can one truly know
- the good, and truly worship God. But this
- must be done so that one is not attracted by
- or immersed in or inundated by the demonic
- realm.
- Thus, one also finds in these texts long
- lists of sinners, with Akher as the last
- major figure.
- These sinners were those who were attracted
- by the demonic realm, who were, in essence,
- sexually seduced by it. They were those who
- had become immersed in a certain commerce or
- intercourse with demonic sexual figures.
- Thus one finds Adam (seduced by Lilith), and
- Solomon, whose "thousand wives" were
- regarded as a multitude of demonic powers,
- and Balaam, said to have had intercourse
- with his ass. These figures were all
- seduced into sin. Sexual attraction, then,
- becomes an explanation of the power of the
- Pardes, which one must understand but not be
- immersed in.
- Why did this paradigm arise at the end of
- the Thirteenth Century? Most of the
- Kabbalists who used it lived in Castile,
- where there was a certain phenomenon of Jews
- having sexual relations with Christians, or,
- more often, with Muslims. There are
- discussions of this phenomenon in de Leon
- and others: the fascination with the Other
- is there portrayed as a demonic attraction.
- Now, there is a basic pattern well-known in
- the history of religions, often called
- "katabasis:" the descent into hell to
- perform some rite. Usually the katabasis is
- a salvific descent - an attempt to rescue
- some of the dwellers in hell (though
- generally not demons). But in Cabalistic
- tradition it often ends negatively: the
- person who makes the descent is unable to
- surface. Already in the Talmud Ben Abuya is
- described as being in some relationship with
- a prostitute. Kabbalists exploited this to
- portray him as indulging in sexual
- transgression.
- The others are portrayed as more
- successful. R. Aqiva entered, but did not
- get involved. A parallel was seen with
- Abraham, who descended into Egypt (often
- taken as a type of the demonic realm) and
- who was able to emerge in peace. Another
- similarity was found with Noah, who
- experienced the Flood but who came out in
- safety. This is, in other words, a
- typological approach. The Pardes story is
- used to summarize certain prototypical
- stories from Adam onward. That the
- interpretations are typological is obvious
- because of the range of figures adduced to
- make the point. One of the most exciting is
- the projection of the Pardes story onto the
- Biblical story of Samson. At the beginning,
- Samson is able into a relationship with
- Delilah, and ultimately he is able to
- destroy the realm of evil. Samson met
- Delilah in the equivalent of Pardes: in a
- vineyard. All of these are instances that
- indicate that medieval Jewish hermeneutics
- was in fact very typological - which quite
- contradicts the claims of certain modern
- scholars, who see the typological approach
- as typical of scholastic philosophy, and not
- at all Jewish.
- This approach remains, from the Thirteenth
- Century up through the Lurianic Kabbalah,
- where it reaches an apex.
-
- The other paradigm I wish to consider
- addresses itself to the Sephirotic realm.
- This paradigm was typical of those
- Kabbalists who assumed that the crucial
- issue was to induce or re-induce the harmony
- in the Divine spheres which had been
- disturbed by primordial human transgression.
- There were two metaphors for the Divine:
- that of the Tree, and (to simplify) the
- anthropomorphic one of the couple. In the
- latter, the first nine Sefiroth were taken
- as male, and the last as female. The basic
- sin of Akher was to break the connection
- between the first nine and the tenth (seen
- as the shoots, or as a female figure). The
- challenge created by this transgression is
- to see the Pardes as a Garden.
- In Paradise, the transgression was the
- separation of the fruit from the tree,
- projected on high. The transgression was
- not eating, but separating one aspect of the
- Divine from the rest. By separating the
- fruit from the Tree, Akher (or Adam)
- separated aspects of the Divine from each
- other, thus inducing a disturbance in the
- Divine realm often referred to as "the
- devastation of the plantations." Even more
- dangerously, by affecting the Divine world
- in this way you are prone to accept the
- assumption that there are two different
- powers, to believe no longer in a Unity on
- high, but a Duality. In the moment of
- separation, in other words, the possibility
- of a dualistic misunderstanding arises. The
- challenge, then, is to heal this rupture,
- which took place in the primordial era.
- The work of restoring the lost unity is
- open to Jews in general, but especially to
- the Kabbalists, by the use of Jewish ritual,
- which is seen as a Theurgical technique,
- i.e., one able to influence God (which is
- one way of understanding the word
- "theurgy"). According to the Theosophical-
- Theurgical Kabbalah, the major role of the
- Kabbalist is to restore the organic unity
- between the Divine powers.
- It is, in a sense, the transposition of
- the mystical project into another key, the
- attempt to repair the rupture in the Divine
- (rather than between the human and the
- Divine) induced by human transgression.
- R. Aqiva, then, was seen as one who was
- able to act ritualistically to restore the
- relationship between the two last Sefiroth
- [the ninth and the tenth]. This projected a
- certain type of sacramental value onto
- Jewish ritual which was absent in other
- forms of Kabbalah or in Maimonides. In
- other traditions, the individual was the
- center. But in these demonic or Sephirotic
- pursuits, the focus is on repairing the
- cosmos, on inducing a more harmonious state
- in general, in the nation, and in the
- cosmos.
-
- The last issue I wish to consider involves
- making a comparative observation about the
- distribution of the discussions of the
- Pardes story. It is found of course in
- ancient literature, but in the medieval
- period, surprisingly (and this surprised me
- when I first looked into this question),
- only the Sephardi were interested in it. It
- does not appear in medieval Ashkenazi texts.
- The Sephardic literature is less interested
- in the Talmud and the Hekhaloth, and more
- interested in the Pardes. It was in the
- Sephardi literature that the interpretations
- we have discussed were invented.
- Now, Sephardi culture was in much more open
- contact with alien cultures, and thus more
- endangered. Muslim (and even Christian
- philosophic/scholastic) culture were
- perceived as a danger, and openness to it
- was experienced as a danger - a dangerous
- ideal.
- Ashkenazi society of the period was closed;
- there was not much scholarly interchange
- with other cultures. Ashkenazi culture was
- very confident, and it was not open
- precisely because it was confident that
- Jewish culture was the highest form of
- religion. Thus for it there was no
- dangerous ideal. The story of "Entering
- Pardes," then, did not meet any cultural
- need, because there was no sense of cultural
- danger. Even later, in the Sixteenth
- Century, when the Pardes story is discussed,
- the discussion is inspired by Sephardi
- literature, and this is true even up to the
- mid-Eighteenth Century. But by the
- Nineteenth Century, a deep change has
- occurred: all interest in the Pardes theme
- is found among the Ashkenazim. This, I
- think, is connected with the entry into
- interaction with general culture, with the
- Enlightenment. There came to be a need to
- explain the meaning of this interaction.
- Elisha ben Abuya, in fact, could be seen as
- one of the major protagonists in much modern
- Hebrew literature.
- It was, then, cultural exposure and
- openness which invoked, provoked, and evoked
- (all three!) the interest in the Pardes
- theme. The Pardes story explained the
- encounter between the Jewish and other
- mentalities. In fact, this may also be the
- explanation for the Talmudic treatment of
- Elisha Akher, especially if he is taken as a
- Gnostic, as modern scholars often do. Even
- the early forms of his story, then, would
- typify the encounter of Jews with a general
- culture - in this case, a Gnostic culture.
- Akher would be someone open to a non-Jewish
- type of culture - though in fact it is hard
- to be sure which of many it might have been.
- There area as many different scholarly
- Elishas as there were contemporary cultures.
- Akher typifies a situation in which there is
- a willingness to be open, but a danger of
- being unable to return to one's patrimony.
- There is a danger that one will be seduced
- by, and remain immersed in, philosophy,
- Gnosticism, Neoplatonism ... or whatnot.
- His plight is used to describe an
- existential situation in which Jews found
- themselves between Judaism and a general
- culture that fascinated and endangered them.
-
-
- Questions
-
- Q: Is there any connection between these
- interpretations and a current of
- opposition to Maimonides?
- A: Well, I don't believe in single
- explanations. All of these Cabalistic
- explanations became published or exposed
- after the period of Maimonides. Most
- Cabalists were probably acquainted with
- Maimonides. But this was probably not so
- much a matter of a silent polemic with
- Maimonides as a matter of a tension
- between a ritualistic and experiential
- approach and an intellectualistic one
- (often regarded as alien).
-
- Q: One interpretation of the Pardes theme
- is of an entry into the demonic sphere.
- How was this combat carried out?
- A: By the commandments - mitzvoth. The
- idea was to explore, and attempt to
- subdue, by performing the Commandments in
- a Cabalistic manner, thus extricating some
- part of the demonic world. In the
- Sephirotic realm, by means of the positive
- commandments, one worked to unify the
- Divine world; by observing the
- prohibitions, one could subdue (but not
- eradicate) the demonic world. The
- Kabbalists werequite uneasy with the idea
- of destroying an aspect of reality, even a
- demonic one. As a part of reality it was
- needed, and had to be not destroyed but
- managed or coped with.
-
- Q: How is the Pardes story understood and
- used by Kabbalists now?
- A: I don't know. I haven't yet discussed
- this with them. After I make up my mind
- on the basis of the texts, then I will go
- to them and see what they think.
-
- Q: What about Ben Zoma: how was he seen?
- A: As someone who had progressed to a
- certain level, but who was not able to
- enter metaphysics, so to speak. He forced
- himself into the Physics, but he became
- mentally disturbed. The ecstatic
- Kabbalists took him as one who had
- entered the strong experience and become
- crazy. Others assumed that he had been
- damaged by the demonic world. But he did
- not receive much treatment as an ideal
- type, unlike Akher or Ben Azai, or Elisha
- the prototype of imperfection. Ben Zoma
- was not a strong type, he was not so
- interesting, so he was not taken as a
- type. And I have not found him
- interesting enough to discuss much
- myself...
-
- Q: What if you are in a group having
- religious experiences, can you then go out
- into the world to change the world?
- A: Look: most Kabbalists functioned at a
- social level. Some were leaders, andwere
- very important members of their
- communities, so often they naturally were
- social figures. But even ecstatic
- Kabbalists who were sometimes very
- individualistic became messianic in their
- external activities. Most known
- Kabbalists contributed the perfection of
- the Divine, or of individual perfection,
- in service of messianic aims. The same by
- the way is often true of non-Jewish
- mysticism, which could also be a way to
- energize the personality to return to the
- group in an activist manner.
-