Thursday, January 4, 2018

tzimtzum

Chabad.org: Ask the Rabbi { Ref. No. 4413912 }


http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/361884/jewish/Tzimtzum.htm


http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/361884/jewish/Tzimtzum.htm


Hi Edward,

Apologies for not responding sooner. You suggest an interesting idea. Chassidic teaching (based on the Midrash) speaks about the effects of later events and deeds on creation. For example it is said that Israel arose in G-d’s mind even before creation. The Maggid of Mezeritch (one of the founders of the Chassidic movement) explains that G-d foresaw the Jewish people, and that image became engraved in His mind in the way a child’s image is engraved in his or her parent’s mind. 

There is also a Mishnah that says that “G-d created the world with ten utterances, in order to punish the wicked who destroy a world created by ten utterances, and to give reward to the righteous who sustain the world created by ten utterances.” Another Midrash says that “At first G-d wished to create the world with the attribute of judgment (related to tzimtzum); He saw that the world would not be able to be maintained, so He paired with it the attribute of mercy.” So certainly there were strategies taken by G-d before creation in a preemptive response to future actions. 

However, it is interesting with regard to the tzimtzum specifically that Rabbi Schneur Zalman says in the book of Tanya, that tzimtzum was an act of love, so that man could be created and we could enter into a relationship with G-d. And “just as G-d laid down and set aside His infinite light… because of His love for lowly man, in order to raise him up to G-d, for ‘love impels the flesh’… it is fitting that man also should relinquish and set aside all he possesses… in order to cleave to Him…” So tzimtzum is an act of love, not of punishment. 









Kabbalah explains the various names of G‑d. One may not pronounce the four letters of G‑d’s name as they are written due to the name’s great sanctity. We shall therefore employ the word Havaye to denote that name. The Tetragrammaton, Y-H-V-H, is composed of three words: Haya—He was, Hoveh— He is, Yihyeh—He will be. This name describes the Sovev Kol Almin. In a later chapter we shall discuss the name Havaye in a different context, as it relates to the four worlds. The name of G‑d that describes Memale Kol Almin is Elokim. The numerical value of Elokim is the same as the word “nature” (hateva), implying G‑d’s Presence within creation. Kabbalah talks of the “unification” (yichud) between Havaye and Elokim. The Torah tells us, “Know this day that Havaye is Elokim.” Hassidism calls it a unity of Sovev Kol Alminand Memale Kol Almin, seeing G‑d as both transcendent and imminent.
We can now explain why G‑d first revealed the Infinite Light and why only then through a process of Tzimtzum revealed the Finite Light. The purpose of creation is Dirah BeTachtonim (a dwelling place for G‑d in the lower world). In order to fulfill this purpose, two things were necessary: the creation of a lower world and the ability of the lower world to be absorbed within the Divine. Initially, G‑d revealed the Or Ein Sof; the transcendent Light of Sovev Kol AlminTzimtzum revealed Memale Kol Almin. Since the latter stems from a pre- Tzimtzum Light, it always has a desire and an ability to be nullified in its source. Simply put, G‑d wants a person to live within this world and be above it at the same time. Being within is Memale Kol Almin, while staying above is Sovev Kol Almin. In the mundane activities of business pursuits, eating, etc., one should “know G‑d in all their ways.” In spiritual activities, one stands above the creation when praying or learning Torah. The purpose of creation is the fusion of the two. This is achieved only through a total “nullification” (Bittul) to Atzmut; to G‑d Himself in fulfillment of His desire in creation.

Kabbalah examines the very origins of creation. In the Kabbalah, G‑d is referred to as the Ein Sof; meaning the Being that has “no end.” In the act of creation, G‑d made something very finite out of the infinite. How did this come about?
While some Kabbalistic texts speak of a gradual contraction of Divine Power as it streamed into this finite world, eventually reaching a point of complete concealment in this world, the Kabbalah of the Arizal, however, held a different view. According to the Arizal, there was a quantum leap from infinite to finite, calling this leap of states Tzimtzum (contraction).
In order to visualize how this happens, the Etz Chaim of Rabbi Chaim Vital presents the following structure. The power and ability of the Ein Sof is called the Or Ein Sof (the Light of the Ein Sof). Because physical light is perceived as being ethereal and intangible, and because light gives life and warmth, it is often used in Kabbalah as a metaphor for Divine Power.
In the initial stage of revelation, the prevalent manifestation was that of the infinite Light. Contained within the Or Ein Sof in a most sublime way was the potential for finitude, however initially it was undistinguished from the powerful manifestation of the Or Ein Sof. In order for creation to take place it was necessary somehow to conceal this infinite Light, thus creating a vacuum for the Finite Light to be revealed. One may draw an analogy to a ray of light from the sun. While it is within the sun, the ray has no independent identity because it is totally nullified by the greater light of the sun itself. Only when the ray has left the sun can it be recognized and perceived as having an independent identity.
To explain further, a parallel may be drawn from the world of teaching. Imagine Albert Einstein entering a primary school and being invited to teach a class of elementary mathematics.
For the genius to communicate with the child’s mind, it is necessary that he put to the side all the theories and complexities of advanced mathematics and to focus on basic addition. In time, the child he is teaching may progress to study mathematics in high school, college, and then university. The student may even become a professor of mathematics himself, and may even surpass Einstein in brilliance. However, in the first stages the end product was concealed. The same is true with regards to Tzimtzum–G‑d purposefully drew back the infinite to create a space in which finitude could be realized.
This concealment of the Or Ein Sof is called by the Arizal the Tzimtzum HaRishon. This “first” Tzimtzum was the most radical in the sense that it was the quantum leap that allowed finitude to surface. It must be noted that the concealment of the Or Ein Sofdid not affect Atzmut itself, for Atzmut is the essence of G‑d which transcends everything, including changes.
This is what Malachi the prophet meant when he spoke, “I, G‑d, have not changed.” G‑d remains the same after creation as before creation. He remains totally aloof from any change within the creation. All change took place within a manifestation of revealed power–the Or Ein Sof.

Hassidism explains that what was left after the Tzimtzum were the “letters of the residue” (Reshimu). The Zohar states that “He engraved letters in the supernal purity” (i.e. in the Or Ein Sof). This means that when it arose in G‑d’s will to create the world, “G‑d measured out within Himself in potential what would exist in actuality.” In the Zohar, this act of measuring out is referred to as “engraving letters.” These letters signify the structuring and formation of the Divine will prior to the Tzimtzum. They are the potential for limitation that existed within the Or Ein Sof.
Explained another way, in order for finitude to take on parameters and definition, there had to be some form of definitive language. These dimensions are called letters. Letters are the building blocks of words which can build sentences, speak a language, and subsequently communicate. The Kabbalah calls these letters “Vessels” (Kelim), and the meaning within the words “Lights” (Orot). Every sentence is composed of letters which are the Vessels for the meaning of the sentence, and the message conveyed which is called the Light (Or). The revelation of Vessels came about through the Tzimtzum, although they existed in an abstract form before the Tzimtzum. As previously stated, within the Or Ein Sof was also the power of finitude. Prior to the Tzimtzumthese “Letters” were filled with Or Ein Sof and they represented only the potential for limitation.

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