Learning The Kabbalah: The Heart of Kabbalah

The Triangular Connection: Creator, Creation & the Human Being
Kabbalah is not theology in the strict sense of the word. Theology implies God and world as if they are separate, and Kabbalah comes to dispel this notion. Neither is it, strictly speaking, a mystical branch of thought.

Kabbalah is referred to as The Tree of Life. In the following essay I wish to explore the three fundamental truths of our lives: our Source of being, who we are, and where we are. In other words the divine, man and world. Once we secure a better understanding of the above-mentioned, we can begin to understand the kabbalistic weltanschauung of life, both our personal, collective and cosmic purpose.

Ultimately, the journey of life should make us ‘more’ not ‘less’ via ‘expansion’ not ‘denial’, with a renewed gratitude and appreciation for the beauty of all that life contains.

Creator:
The Or Ein Sof – the endless light, is one, infinite, unity. The light is unified and yet when you look around you see many. Duality, up and down, right and left, past and future, the question is why? Why do we see duality and many?

On all level of existence multiplicity seems to be the operative term; time appears to flow from a gone-by past into the fleeting present, impregnating a distant future. Space functions within clear and fixed dimensions. Historically speaking, history, superficially observed seems to be a great unfolding of unrelated events and stringed together episodes. Psychologically, we tend to view our inner psyche as an inner battle between various forces within us. Because of this, it seems if we are not warring between each other, then we are collectively warring against our environment, or warring within ourselves.

Creation is not a process of converting pure energy, infinite spirit into reified finite contextualized matter. Rather creation occurs through a great quantum leap, a tzimtzum-contraction of the light within itself. So while there was and is only the ‘Or Ein Sof- the endless light’, to create otherness and apparent separation there was a tzimtzum – contraction and concealment of the Ein Sof that allowed finite otherness to come into focus.

We have the Godlike power to create, but to do so we need to blend with it the practice of ‘tzimtzum’-contraction and holding back. The most beautiful of creations is that which emerges from the union of two people. Healthy relationships with others are founded on the balance between creating and giving, and standing back and listening. Learn to speak properly, but also learn to listen, and listen deeply. The greatest gift we can give another is to listen to them and allow them to be.

Initially, the ‘otherness’ took shape as an undifferentiated actual containing the possibility for all eventual individuated life. Then slowly a ‘line’ was formed, with distinct points, and an up-and-down structure, with a clear beginning and a definite end.
These original points are the sefiros, as in the screens through which the infinite light penetrates our reality. These distinct ‘formed’ ‘shaped’ and ‘colored’ vessels serve as curtains, or colored containers through which the infinite colorless, formless, unified light is reflected into our world, albeit in a way that it seems differentiated and colored.

The order of the sefiros is as follows:

First there are the three intellectual sefiros: chochmah – intuition and wisdom, binah- cognition and reason, and da’as- knowledge and awareness.

Next are the three primary ‘internal emotions’; on the right expansive column is chesed love and giving. On the left, restrictive column is gevurah – strength and restraint. In the middle is their synthesis, tiferes -compassion and harmony. –The idea of the ‘giver’ giving with a sensitivity of how much the ‘receiver’ could and needs to receive.–

The ‘outer’ emotions are also divided into three; on the right expansive column is netzach – confidence and perseverance. On the left column is hod – humility and devotion, and in the middle is the unifying agent, connecting the ‘giver’ and the ‘receiver’ the idea of yesod- relationship and intimacy. Malchus- kingship is receptiveness, as it represents the vessel that receives from the preceding nine sefiros and re-channels the energies downward, thus becoming the ‘crown’ for the subsequent partzuf – structure of sefiros.

So while the light is one and formless when the light is projected into our reality it seems differentiated and colored. We delve deeply into the mystery of creation and observe the Ein Sof’s chochmah / wisdom, or we sit and watch the sunset over the horizon and observe the Ein Sof as tiferes/ beauty. It’s the same ‘light’ just manifesting through a different vessel.

When life seems difficult, and we are observing the LIGHT as reflected through gevurah- non- openness and restrictiveness, remember there is only ONE. Everything that we experience in life is a reflection of The ONE, and the ONE creates out of love.

Yet, as the instrument of our understanding is our brain, a binary apparatus by its very existence, the image we have of the Ein Sof, as it is in its pure nature, is that it is detached and transcendent, beyond the tzimtzum. Pure formless light is beyond creation and what we can appreciate is merely the rays of the infinite light reflected within our finite world. What we get is ‘manifestation’ not ‘essence’ yet, the primary book of Kabbalah, the book of Zohar -illumination teaches, “There is no thought that can grasp You, – thought You can be grasped- by the arousal of the heart.” The heart metaphor is indicative of a non brain – dualistic insight rather a deep heart awareness.

The image of or/light being separate or ‘higher’ then the ‘vessel’, the infinite being beyond the finite is merely another construct of duality and separateness, in the world of absolute oneness there is only ONE, and both infinite ‘light’ and finite ‘vessel’ are both simply manifestations of the ONE. This one is referred to as ‘etzem’ or ‘atzmus’- pure essence, that which is beyond finite, but also beyond infinite, and even beyond the definition as being the source of the infinite.

Creation:
All creative existence, referred to as yesh is an expression of the ultimate existence, yesh amiti, the essence. Being a reality that is a manifestation of the Real it too is real. The universe and its manifest energy is a radiant expression of the absolute oneness.
The uniqueness of physicality, in the spiritual scheme of creation is that it lives in the illusion that it is self-referential and independent of a creator. Yet, from a more expansive state of awareness, the physical reality does not exist the way we may perceive it, separate and autonomous, rather, it is merely another expression of essence, and enfolded therein.
In our mind perception, for the infinite light to appear as a finite vessel, for oneness to manifest as many, there needs to first be a tzimtzum – contraction and concealment.

Creation occurs through a shattering, and this process is replicated throughout all creation. Every creation we achieve is through a course of shattering. Birth on a macrocosmic level, as in the birth of the entire creation, and on a microcosmic level, the birth of child all ensues with a form of concealment, with pangs of birth. But even in our day-to- day life experiences every creative birth, every new moment begins with a tzimtzum of sort, a withdrawal from the past to create the new.

We all seek tikun, to repair and bring the world of ‘two’ into ‘one’, we all desire ‘oneness.’ We all crave relationships, to bring together ‘two’ and live in a condition of ‘one.’ Sadly, this primordial spiritual force when undirected compels us to buy more shoes then we need, and consume more food than desired. Walking around with a deep sense of emptiness and as we desire to feel ‘connected’ we erroneously assume that if we reach out and connect with the newest version of the i-pod, or buy the latest model SUV we will feel connected and satisfied, but of course it never comes. It is like trying to patch an existential wound with a bandage.

We all seek oneness, within and with others, the two into the one. One alone is like the infinite before creation, absolute oneness excluding all otherness, but now life is about relationships, bringing two into one. Whether it is a relationship with other people, or with other ‘things’ when we understand the spiritual nature of our attractions a deeper relationship is forged, and everything in our life, all the ‘twoness’ is included within the transcendent context of the oneness.

Life is not about denial; for everything in life is a divine expression and should be appreciated as such. Everything in our lives, whether people, objects or subjects can and should be included within oneness. In this way we achieve our Tikun and feel spiritually satisfied.

Our unique purpose and tikun is fulfilled when we are truly honest with ourselves. When we are fully aware of our strengths, and pursue them, and equally attuned to our weaknesses and aspire to overcome them. Write a daily journal, or mentally review your day before retiring to bed and observe your strengths and weaknesses.

Practically the notion of two into the one translates that in order for us to personally reach our own tikun, which will help and empower us to bring a world tikun, we need to be fully honest with ourselves. We need to uncover what our unique ‘two’ is all about, so we can express the infinity within our diversity.

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