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A Library of the Great Spiritual Masters
THE CLASSICS OF WESTERN SPIRITUALITY
A LibraryoftheGreatSpiritualMasters
President and Publisher
Kevin A. Lynch, es.p.
EDITORIAL BOARD
Editor-in-Chief
John Farina
,,'
Editorial Consultant
Ewert H. Cousins-Professor, Fordham Un1wrsity, Bronx, N.Y.
f.{.y
John E. Booty-Professor of Church History, Episcopal Divinity
School, Cambridge, Mass.
Joseph Dan-Professor of Kaballah in the Department of Jewish
Thought, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.
Albert Deblaere-Professor ofthe History ofSpirituality, Gregorian
University, Rome, Italy.
Louis Dupre-TL. Riggs Professor in Philosophy of Religion, Yale
University, New Haven, Conn.
Rozanne Elder-Executive Vice President, Cistercian Publications,
Kalamazoo, Mich.
Mircea Eliade-Professor in the Department ofthe History of
Religions, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill.
Anne Fremantle-Teacher, Editor and Writer, New York, N.Y.
Karlfried Froehlich-Professor ofthe History ofthe Early and
Medieval Church, Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, N.].
Arthur Green-Associate Professor in the Department of Religious
Studies, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.
Stanley S. Harakas-Professor of Orthodox Christian Ethics,
Holy Cross Greek Orthodox Seminary, Brookline, Mass.
Jean Leclercq-Professor, Institute ofSpirituality and Institute
of Religious Psychology, Gregorian University, Rome, Italy.
Miguel Le6n-Portilla-Professor of Mesoamerican Cultures and
Languages, National University of Mexico, University City, Mexico.
George A. Maloney, S.J.-Director, John XXIII
Ecumenical Center, Fordham University, Bronx, N.Y.
Bernard McGinn-Professor of Historical
Theology and History of Christianity, University of Chicago
Divinity School, Chicago, III.
John Meyendorff-Professor of Church History, Fordham
University, Bronx, N.Y., and Professor of Patristics and Church History,
St. Vladimir's Seminary, Tuckahoe, N.Y.
Seyyed Hossein Nasr-Professor of Islamics, Department of Religion,
Temple University, Philadelphia, Pa., and Visiting Professor, Harvard
University, Cambridge, Mass.
Heiko A. Oberman-Director, Institute fuer Spaetmittelalter und
Reformation, Universitaet Tuebingen, West Germany.
Alfonso Ortiz-Professor of Anthropology, University of New
Mexico, Albuquerque, N. Mex.; Fellow, The Center for Advanced Study,
Stanford, Calif.
Raimundo Panikkar-Professor, Department of Religious Studies,
University of California at Santa Barbara, Calif.
Jaroslav Pelikan-Sterling Professor of History and Religious Studies,
Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
Fazlar Rahman-Professor of Islamic Thought, Department of Near
Eastern Languages and Civilization, University of Chicago, Chicago, III.
Annemarie B. Schimmel-Professor of Hindu Muslim Culture,
Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
Sandra M. Schneiders-Assistant Professor of New Testament
Studies and Spirituality, Jesuit School of Theology, Berkeley, Calif.
Huston Smith-Thomas J. Watson Professor of Religion,
Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, Syracuse University, Syracuse, N.Y.
John R. Sommerfeldt-Professor of History, University of Dallas,
Irving, Texas.
David Steindl-Rast-Monk of Mount Savior Monastery,
Pine City, N.Y.
William C. Sturtevant-General Editor, Handbook of North
American Indians, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
David Tracy-Professor of Theology, University of Chicago Divinity
School, Chicago, III.
Victor Turner-William B. Kenan Professor in Anthropology, The
Center for Advanced Study, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.
Kallistos Ware-Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford;
Spalding Lecturer in Eastern Orthodox Studies, Oxford University,
England.
The €arly Kabbalah
EDITED AND INTRODUCED BY
JOSEPH DAN
TEXTS TRANSLATED BY
RONALD C. KIENER
PREFACE BY
MOSHE IDEL
PAULIST PRESS
NEW YORK. MAHWAH
Cover Art:
One of Israel's best known painters, MORDECAI ARDON was born in 1896 in Tuchov,
Poland. He studied at the Bauhaus from 192~25 under Klee, Kandmsky and Feininger.
He emigrated to Israel in 1933 and has received the Unesco Prize, the Israel Pnze, and
honorary doctorates from the Hebrew University, the Weizman Institute and Tel Aviv
University. The artist created these beautiful stained glass windows at the Jewish National
and University Libraryofthe Hehre\\ University in Jerusalem.
Copyright © 1986 by
Joseph Dan and Ronald C. "Kiener
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form
or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any
information storage and retrieval system without permission in writing from the publisher.
Libraryof Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
The Early Kabbalah.
(The Classics of Western spirituality)
Bibliography: p.
Includes indexes.
I. Cabala-Collected works-Translations into
English. 2. Mysticism-Judaism-Collected works-TtII11Slations
into English. I. Dan, Joseph, 1935-
II. Kiener, Ronald c., 1954- III. Series.
BM525.A2E18 1986 296.1'6 86-5116
ISBN: 0-8091-2769-5
Published by Paulist Press
997 Macarthur Boulevard
Mahwah, New Jersey 07430
Printed and bound in the United States of America
Contents
FOREWORD
PREFACE
IX
Xl
INTRODUCTION
THE 'IYYUN CIRCLE 43
THE BOOK BAHIR 57
RABBI ISAAC THE BLIND OF PROVENCE 71
RABBI AZRIEL OF GERONA 87
RABBI JACOB BEN SHESHET OF GERONA 109
THE KOHEN BROTHERS 151
GLOSSARY 183
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY OF EARLY KABBALAH 187
INDEXES 193
VB
Editor and Introducer of this Volume
JOSEPH DAN, Gershom Scholem Professor of Kabbalah at the
Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Israel, was born in Bratislava,
Czechoslovakia, in 1935. He is a graduate ofthe Hebrew University
and earned his Ph. D. there in 1963. An editor ofthe journals Tarbiz
and Jerusalem Studies in Jewish Thought, he has published fourteen
books in Hebrew and numerous articles. Among his English titles
are Hasidic Teachings (1982), Gershom Scholem and the Mystical Dimension
in Jewish History (forthcoming), and Jewish Mysticism and Jewish Ethics
(forthcoming).
f
Translator of this Volume
RONALD C. KIENER, Assistant Professor of Religion at Trinity
College, Hartford, Connecticut, was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota,
in 1954. He is a graduate ofthe University of Minnesota and
received his Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1984. His
published studies have focused on the relationship between Jewish
and Islamic mysticism.
Author ofthe Preface
MOSHE IDEL, Associate Professor of Jewish Thought at the Hebrew
University in Jerusalem, Israel, was born in Rumania in 1947.
He is a graduate ofthe Hebrew University, where he also received
his Ph. D. An editor of Jerusalem Studies in Jewish Thought, he is the
author of numerous articles on the history of Kabbalah and Jewish
Renaissance thought.
, "
Vlll
Foreword
The texts presented in the following pages span nearly a century
and represent the variety of Jewish mystical currents alive in Europe
during the thirteenth century. What is unique about the Jewish mysticisms
of this century-whether mixed with Neoplatonism, or
Gnosticism, or ethics, or some combination ofthese-is the myriad
of spiritual possibilities put forward. The thirteenth century proved
to be a time of explosive creativity, as the pioneering and masterful
studies of Gershom Scholem have established. No static dogma or
interpretive traditions predetermined how a Jewish mystic might
resonate with his tradition. For later generations of Jewish mystics,
the Sefer ha-Zohar (Book of Splendor) set the parameters for theosophical
speculatIOn, but for the mystics ofthe thirteenth century,
nearly all possibilities were open.
Some ofthe texts appearing in this volume have never appeared
in print before, either in translation or in their Hebrew original. The
obscurity ofthe documents-their provenance, their language, and
their mystical content-proved to be extremely vexing, but we trust
not insurmountable. In every instance we sought to present texts
that were representative, historically significant, and translatable.
Taken with the other volumes devoted to Jewish mysticism in The
Classics of Western Spirituality series, our volume supplies a crucial
link between the Hellenistic Judaism of Philo and the authoritative
theosophy ofthe Zohar. In fact, the reader WIll discover that many
IX
F9REWORD
ofthe mystical trends present in the Early Kabbalah ultimately
found an authoritative venue in the Zohar. Thus, as a reader in the
history of Jewish mysticism, the texts presented herein are essential
for a proper diachronic understanding of Kabbalah. And though our
work provides important historical material, the volume was also intended
to be a reader in Jewish spiritual inventiveness and dynamism.
In pursuing this twofold purpose, we did not shy away from
dense or ramified texts, and in many instances we offer an interpretation
or translation that will quite probably give rise to debate. We
are well aware ofthe difficulties present in these texts, but this
awareness did not deter us from our task of providing a useful and
accurate rendition ofoften perplexing material. It is our hope that
the notes and introductions will orient the reader and provide even
the unmitiated with the proper tools to study the Early Kabbalah.
Our thanks go out to the people and institutions that contributed
to our collaborative effort. First and foremost, we thank our
colleague Arthur Green for bringing us together on this project. For
their care and assistance, we thank Richard Payne, orIginator, and
John Farina, editor, of this series. Our home institutions, the Hebrew
University in Jerusalem and Trinity College, have provided
generous support for researching, typing, and editing the manuscript.
It has been six years since our project began. Though this is certainly
not a ringing endorsement of long-distance, overseas collaborative
efforts, each of us has benefited from the strengths and
talents ofthe other. Our work is all the better for it.
x
Preface
No area of Kabbalah has enjoyed such an abundance of research
as the period of its development in Provence (or Languedoc) and Catalonia.
Since the second half ofthe nineteenth century, scholars like
M. Landauer, H. Graetz, A. Jellinek, and D. Neumark-to name
only a few-have been fascinated by what were considered to be the
first Kabbalistic documents; these were published, analyzed, or
translated time and time again. Far and above all others, the late Gershorn
G. Scholem provided several comprehensive versions of his
numerous researches on this period, the last and longest being the
monumental Ursprung und Anfange der Kabbala, completed in 1963.
These findings focus on two major developments that contributed to
the emergence ofthe Kabbalah in Southern France: (1) the appearance
ofthe Book Bahir in Europe; according to Scholem, this work
came to Languedoc from Germany; (2) the rise of circles of Jewish
mystics in Languedoc, including such figures as R. Abraham ben
David ofPosquieres and R. Jacob ben Shaul ha-Nazir of Lunel. Due
to their mystical inclinations and experiences, these and other teachers
innovated mystical interpretations and techniques of prayer using
as material, again according to Scholem, Gnostic elements that
were present in the traditions ofthe Book Bahir. Roughly speaking,
these views have been accepted as a framework for further research
into Kabbalah by Scholem's followers. The present book is situated
in this line of research, both in the introduction, by J. Dan, and in
the choice of texts.
Xl
PREFACE
Of course, difficult choices had to be made in selecting the materials
for such an anthology, and not all the important sources could
be included. Moses ben Na~man (Na~manides), a towering figure
among the Kabbalists ofthe mid-thirteenth century, is notably absent,
although, of course, some of his works are available elsewhere
in English. Here, for the first time, an English-speaking reader will
be able to encounter not only a scholarly interpretation of early Kabbalah
apud Scholem, but also a significant segment of literature written
during the first hundred years ofthe existence of Kabbalah as a
historical phenomenon.
As we all know, translation is also interpretation, and therefore
the reader will enjoy relatively "clear" texts, due to their rendering
into English. In the Hebrew original, these texts are only rarely so
transparent as are their English versions; sometimes their obscurity
can but tantalize even the scholar who struggles to comprehend
them. An example of such difficulties is the commentary on Midrash
Konen, attributed to R. Isaac Saggi-Nehor (the Blind), translated in
this volume.
The importance and novelty ofthe present endeavor lies, therefore,
in the struggle the editor and translator had to wage, with the
rendering not only of specific phrases, or even short passages, but
also with rather comprehensi ve Kabbalistic texts; the obscurities that
remain in our understanding ofthe material bear evidence as to the
real nature ofthe early Kabbalistic literature, substantial parts of
which, even after hundreds of years of scholarly research, remain
highly problematic.
Any perusal of early Kabbalistic texts, whether in Hebrew or
- English, will undoubtedly perplex the reader who sees their complexity
and opacity, in comparison with the relatively clear expositions
of Kabbalah by contemporary scholars. This plight is partly
due to the inceptive stage ofthe scholarly study of Kabbalah: significant
parts of Kabbalistic literature, including important texts
written in the first century ofthe emergence of Kabbalah, are still in
manuscript form; their authors, viri obscuri; some oftheir basic concepts,
ignored. For the time being, the fact that great segments of
Kabbalistic literature remain beyond the scope of academic research
prevents more profound analysis ofthe texts in print.
This plight is partly the result ofthe overemphasis academic research
had placed on the historical and philological approaches at the
expense of phenomenological analysis, on the one hand, and com-
XII
PREFACE
parative studies on the other. Mainly focused on names, dates,
places, bibliography, and literary sources ofthe Kabbalah, academic
research has rather systematically evaded the psychological and phenomenological
facets of this branch of mystical literature. Scholars
of Kabbalah have made only rare and scant efforts toward such kinds
of analysis. Given the complexities inherent in the Hebrew texts,
scholars of other areas of mysticism have only rarely referred to Kabbalistic
sources in their comparative studies. This volume does not
constitute an intentional departure from the main avenue of Kabbalistic
research; it will, however, contribute-as I hope-to improving
the acquaintance of scholars of mysticism with Kabbalistic
texts, helping the integration of Kabbalah into the general study of
mysticism, and thereby enriching our perception of mysticism as a
whole. Likewise, students of Renaissance thought will profit from
this relatively comprehensive collection of texts, parts of which represent
modes of thought that served as a starting point of a bizarre
branch of Christian theology-the Christian Kabbalah. The general
reader will encounter a significant literature that constitutes a turning
point in Jewish spirituality.
XIII
Introduction
1. THE EMERGENCE OF KABBALAH
The texts presented in the following pages provide an overview
of Jewish mystical speculation during the first hundred years ofthe
movement known by the Hebrew term Kabbalah (literally, "Tradition").
The beginnings of this movement are usually set in the last
decade or two ofthe twelfth century C.E., and this period of Kabbalistic
incubation is generally thought to end with the composition
ofthe masterful Sefer ha-Zohar (The Book of Splendor). 1 Thus, "early
Kabbalah" is the period of Jewish mystical creativity in Kabbalistic
form bracketed by two literary creations of mystical theosophy: the
Sefer ha-Bahtr (The Book of Brilliance) marks the beginning of this
stage and the Zohar, written by the Spaniard Kabbalist Moses de
Leon (c. 1240-1305), marks the end.
Scholarship in the last century has brought to light a wealth of
material concerning this first century of Kabbalistic speculation.
The efforts ofthe pioneering historian Gershom Scholem, who devoted
many of his studies to this period, 2 have been followed by complementary
studies by both Israeli and diaspora scholars.3 We are
now in the possession of a detailed picture ofthe main trends and the
most important works of many ofthe mystics belonging to this period.
Yet a myriad of unanswered questions remains. In the following
pages of this mtroduction, we will provide a brief overview and
characterization of this crucial period in the history of Jewish mys-
INTRODUCTION
tlclsm. To accomplish this characterization, we will first need to
place Kabbalah in the wider context of Jewish mysticism; then we
shall describe briefly the essential differences that delineate the Kabbalah
from previous or contemporaneous Jewish mystical trends.
A millennium of Jewish mystical creativity preceded the Kabbalah.
The first evidence of Jewish mystical trends dates to the period
ofthe Tannaim (the Sages cited in the Mishnah), in second
century C.E. Palestine. 4 These first mystics contemplated a visionary
experience devoted to the divine heikhalot (palaces) and the merkavah
(the divine chariot). Though this movement can be traced to the circle
of Rabbi Aqiba in the first half ofthe second century C.E., the
heikhalot and merkavah texts that have reached us were written much
later. Therefore, it is a formidable task to describe in any accurate
sense the historical sequence and the interrelationship ofthe various
trends within Jewish mysticism of Late Antiquity. It is quite clear,
however, that for at least five centuries there was an active mystical
tendency within Rabbinic Judaism of Late Antiquity that produced
several works having an important impact on the subsequent development
of Jewish mysticism in the Middle Ages.
The principal works ofthese early Jewish mystics describe experiences
in terms of an ascent (and often in terms of a descent!) to
the divine chariotS and a vision ofthe supreme palaces, one above the
other, which in their totality comprise the divine realm. An early
work of this mystical school, Heikhalot Zutartey (The Smaller Book
of Celestial Palaces), deals with the ascension of Rabbi Aqiba to the
seventh palace, and is structured around the famous and enigmatic
Talmudic account ofthe four Sages who entered pardes. 6
The most detailed work of this genre, Heikhalot Rabbati (The
Greater Book of Celestial Palaces), describes a similar experience by
Aqiba's contemporary Rabbi Ishmael. Here Rabbi Ishmael is portrayed
as the most junior scholar in the mystical school of Rabbi Ne
~unia ben ha-Qanah, a relatively obscure tanna whose name became
prominent only in the later history ofthe Kabbalah. 7 Similarly, Heikhalot
Rabbati is constructed around another famous Talmudic legend,
this time the martyrological account ofthe torture and execution of
Rabbi Ishmael, Rabbi Aqiba, and eight others by the Roman authorities.
8
These early mystical works reflect in part a continuation of a
literary and ideological trend first present in the Enoch literature of
the Pseudepigrapha. They also build on an esoteric interpretive tra-
2
INTRODUCTION
dition ofthe first chapter ofthe book of Ezekiel and its description
ofthe divine chariot. But these new mystics were not only preserving
earlier traditions; it seems that a major new element was introduced
early in the second century C.E. that was destined to have an
enormous impact on all subsequent Jewish mystical thought. This
new element centered around a novel interpretation ofthe biblical
Song of Songs.
The central document expressing this new attitude to the Song
of Songs is entitled Shi'ur Qomah (The Measurement ofthe Divine
Height).9 The work is based on the physical description ofthe divine
lover in the Song of Songs. The book contains a detailed description
ofthe limbs ofthe Creator in what seems to be an extreme indulgence
in anthropomorphic imagery. Each divine limb is given a magical
name, usually concocted from a nonsensical and unpronounceable
combination of disjointed Hebrew letters. Each limb is also measured
in millions of parasangs. With magnitudes such as these, it is
not surprising that the basic unit of measure is nothing less than the
divine little finger, extending from one end ofthe earth to the other.
It is possible that the work is not really the anthropomorphic
travesty it first appears to be. When compared with the lover/God
ofthe Song of Songs, the Shi'ur Qomah seems to insist that the description
ofthe Creator's limbs should not be taken literally, but
rather in an esoteric, interior, and ultimately mystical sense. Clearly,
the magnitudes serve to evoke the awesome and ineffable object of
mystical meditation. Similarly, the concatenation of meaningless
names for the divine limbs border on magical incantations.
The works of this early period gave later Jewish mystics two
basic elements that served as a foundation for their formulations
down through history: the heikhalot books provided a hierarchic description
ofthe divine realm, one stratum above the other; they also
provided for the possibility of ascending in mystical experience
through these layered strata. The Shi'ur Qomah approach to the Song
of Songs combined this element with an interior and mystical investigation
into the nature of God. Thus, a theological element was
added to the earlier visionary theme ofthe heikhalot. Medieval Kabbalah,
though different in many respects from heikhalot and merkavah
mysticism, preserved and developed these two complementary elements.
Another contribution of this early Jewish mysticism to the Kabbalah
ofthe Middle Ages is the perception ofthe T annaitic age as
3
INTRODUCTION
the apex of Jewish mystical activity and authority. Both the Bahir
and the Zohar are ascribed to Tannaitic masters: the Bahir to Rabbi
N e~unia ben ha-Qanah and the Zohar to Rabbi Simeon bar Y oi:lai,
student ofthe great Rabbi Aqiba. This was not just an external ascription,
for these books were purposely written in the literary forms
prevalent in the Tannaitic period. Thus, both the Bahir and the Zohar
were written in midrashic (running commentary of Scripture) form,
couched whenever possible in the language and expression of second-century
Hebrew and Aramaic. Since literary form cannot but
have an impact on content, the affinities between ancient and medieval
Jewish mystical schools were preserved in the strongest possible
way, even though enormous differences reflected the transition
from the late Roman Empire to Christian Europe in the High Middle
Ages.
While it is possible to compare textually and ideologically ancientJewish
mysticism with the Kabbalah and thereby discover the
terminology and ideas that passed from the former to the latter, it is
much more difficult to describe the history of Jewish mysticism during
the intervening centuries. The basic problem ofthe emergence
ofthe Kabbalah is the difficulty in discovering a continuous line of
development from Palestine and Babylonia in Late Antiquity to
southern Europe in the twelfth century. This key question in the
history of Jewish mysticism is still quite obscure.
When the first Kabbalistic circles began to appear in Provence
and Spain in the Middle Ages, their symbols and terminology, as
well as their concept ofthe divine world, seemed to be completely
novel. Though we do not have a clear understanding ofthe roots of
the Kabbalah in the generations immediately preceding its appearance,
we do have some evidence that what is characteristic ofthe concepts
ofthe first Kabbalists was not known to scholars living only a
short time before them.
Early in the twelfth century there lived in Spain a Rabbi Judah
ben Barzillai of Barcelona, a great rabbinic authority who was in possession
of a wealth of ancient speculative theological material. He
developed a keen interest in Jewish esoteric traditions and collected
everything he could find. His library included many sources that
were later lost. He presented the material he had collected in a detailed
and extensive commentary to the unusual Sefer Ye{irah (Book
of Creation; to be described below).10 This commentary tells us
much about the status of medieval European Jewish theology, for it
4
INTRODUCTION
is revealing in what it contains as much as what is absent. Careful
examination of this work fails to reveal any trace of specific symbols,
ideas, or formulae characteristic ofthe Kabbalah. II It is difficult to
assume that Rabbi Judah ben Barzillai deliberately obscured these
ideas, for they are no different in their degree of esotericism from
many others that he explicitly details.
In a similar vein, we have many volumes of esoteric and mystical
works from the medieval German Pietist schools in the late
twelfth and first half ofthe thirteenth centuries (this movement is
described below, section 3). In all the detailed discussions in these
Pietist tracts of topics that were to playa central part in later Kabbalistic
theories, we do not find any evidence ofthe unique Kabbalistic
approach. 12 Though an argument from silence should always be
regarded with great caution, it still is a fact that the eruption of Kabbalistic
symbolism in the late twelfth century seems to be a revolutionary
rather than an evolutionary process.
This issue becomes even more complicated once we introduce
another key element into it: the Gnostic tendencies in the early Kabbalah.
Heikhalot and merkavah literature has been described by scholars
as belonging-at least to some extent-to the great and variegated
family of Gnostic phenomena. 13 G. Scholem once characterized this
"palace room" and "chariot" literature as expressing a specifically
Jewish/Gnostic world view. 14 This thesis has been severely criticized
in recent years, due largely to parallel investigations into contemporary
Christian Gnosticism. 15 Furthermore, much ofthe later Jewish
esoteric systems lack most of what is regarded as classical and
characteristic Gnostic symbolism. But early Kabbalah (and, somewhat
surprisingly, sixteenth-century Kabbalah) abounds in Gnostic
ideas and symbols.
In fact, the appearance ofthe Kabbalah in the twelfth century
might best be regarded as an eruption of Gnostic attitudes in the
heart of Rabbinic Judaism of southern Europe. Where did these
Gnostic symbols come from? How did they suddenly appear in the
late twelfth century after languishing for more than a millennium in
the labyrinths of obscure and largely ignored heikhalot and merkavah
texts?
One tempting answer to these questions rests in proposing a
connection between the early Kabbalah and contemporary Christian
movements containing Gnostic elements. Such Gnostic movements
as the Cathars and Albigensians dominated thetheological horizon
5
INTRODUCTION
of southern France, in close proximity to the Proven
INTll00UCl"ION
We cannot be sure, were it not for indications provided by the
philological clues provided by the Bahir, which seem to indicate that
Gnostic sources of some sort did reach the author or editor ofthe
work. The content ofthese sources and their precise path of transmission
is still a mystery. The question of why this injection of
Gnosticism did occur at precisely the end ofthe twelfth century is
presently unanswerable, and thus a full account ofthe emergence of
the early Kabbalah is far from complete. However, some important
facts concerning the circumstances of this emergence can be understood
when we survey the mystical background to this emergence,
especially while remaining cognizant ofthe cultural and historical
factors that coalesced just before the appearance ofthe Kabbalah.
Before we can embark on this task, however, some definition ofthe
Kabbalah and its symbolism is required.
2. THE NATURE OF EARLY KABBALAH
The Kabbalah is only one of many forms of Jewish mysticism
during its nearly two millennia of development. Since the thirteenth
century it has emerged as the most important current, and in subsequent
centuries all Jewish mystical expressions were made, with
few exceptions, through the symbolism provided by the Kabbalah.
In the period ofthe development ofthe early Kabbalah it was not
the only Jewish mystical system; it achieved this status only after the
Zohar became the authoritative text of Jewish mysticism. It is necessary
now to explain briefly the dividing lines between Kabbalah
and other Jewish attempts at mystical expression.
The most characteristic and recognizable symbol ofthe Kabbalah
is that ofthe ten sefirot (singular: seftrah). This strange and untranslatable
term first appears in the Sefer Ye~irah (Book of Creation),
a short cosmological and cosmogonical work probably written during
the fourth century C.E. 18 Some ofthe terms used in this work are
closely related to the heikhalot and merkavah literature, but its cosmology
and terminology have no prior source in Hebrew literature.
All later theologians undoubtedly drew the term seftrah, as well as
many other terms that became central to Jewish philosophical and
mystical speculation in the Middle Ages, from this short tract.
The sefirot in the Book of Creation probably denote the concept
of "numeral" and are ten in number. 19 As cosmological symbols
these ten sefirot express ten extremities or polarities in a three-di-
7
IN'jflt()J)1JCTION
mensional world: up, down, east, west, north, south (the dimensions
of space); beginning and end (the dimension of time); and good and
evil (the moral dimension).
In the Kabbalah, the sefirot are a series of divine emanations,
spreading forth from the Godhead 20 and comprising the divine
world, which separates the created worlds-the world of angels, celestial
bodies, and earth-from the hidden Godhead. This hidden
Godhead does not take part in any change or activity, thus resembling
to some extent the Aristotelian concept ofthe Prime Mover or
First Cause, or the Plotinian One.
As described by the early Kabbalists, the sefirot contain many
elements derived directly from Neoplatonic theologies and cosmologies.
For example, the metaphor of radiating light emanating from
a blinding Godhead is often employed by Kabbalists. The Godhead
itself is beyond all symbolic description and can therefore be described
only by negative statements. The most frequently used negative
appellation for the Godhead is Eyn Sof(No End), but this term
does not contain any specific meaning that renders it superior to any
other negative term such as "no beginning" or "no color." Symbolism
begins with the first sefirah, containing an element of specific
characterization that can be hinted at by a symbol (most often by
"Thought" or "Supreme Thought" or "Will").
The system ofthe ten sejirot can be, therefore, nothing more
than a philosophico-cosmological attempt at explaining the world,
both earthly and divine-not very different in most respects from
similar ones put forth in the eleventh and twelfth centuries by Muslim,
Christian, and Jewish philosophers influenced by ancient Neoplatonic
world views. What differentiates the Kabbalah from other
systems that use emanation as the metaphor for the unfolding of
Being is twof
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