 | Kabbalah: Encyclopedia II - Kabbalah - Mystic doctrines in Talmudic times
Kabbalah - Mystic doctrines in Talmudic times
In Talmudic times the terms Ma'aseh Bereshit ("Works of Creation") and Ma'aseh Merkabah ("Works of the Divine Throne/Chariot") clearly indicate the Midrashic nature of these speculations; they are really based upon Genesis 1 and Book of Ezekiel 1:4-28; while the names Sitrei Torah (Talmud Hag. 13a) and Razei Torah (Ab. vi. 1) indicate their character as secret lore. In contrast to the explicit statement of the Hebrew Bible that God created not only the world, but also the matter out of which it was made, the opinion is expressed in very early times that God created the world from matter He found ready at hand — (according to some, this is an opinion probably due to the influence of the Platonic-Stoic cosmogony).
Eminent rabbinic teachers in the Land of Israel held the doctrine of the preexistence of matter (Midrash Genesis Rabbah i. 5, iv. 6), in spite of the protest of Gamaliel II. (ib. i. 9).
In dwelling upon the nature of God and the universe, the mystics of the Talmudic period asserted, in contrast to Biblical transcendentalism, that "God is the dwelling-place of the universe; but the universe is not the dwelling-place of God". Possibly the designation ("place") for God, so frequently found in Talmudic-Midrashic literature, is due to this conception, just as Philo, in commenting on Genesis 28:11 says, "God is called ha makom (המקום "the place") because God encloses the universe, but is Himself not enclosed by anything" (De Somniis, i. 11). This type of theology, in modern terms, is known as either pantheism or panentheism. Whether a text is truly pantheistic or panentheistic is often hard to understand; mainstream Judaism generally rejects pantheistic interpretations of Kabbalah, and instead accepts panentheistic interpretations.
Even in very early times of the Land of Israel as well as Alexandrian theology recognized the two attributes of God, middat hadin (the "attribute of justice"), and middat ha-rahamim (the "attribute of mercy") (Midrash Sifre, Deuteronomy 27); and so is the contrast between justice and mercy a fundamental doctrine of the Kabbalah. Other hypostasizations are represented by the ten "agencies" (the Sefirot) through which God created the world; namely, wisdom, insight, cognition, strength, power, inexorableness, justice, right, love, and mercy.
While the Sefirot are based on these ten creative "potentialities", it is especially the personification of wisdom which, in Philo, represents the totality of these primal ideas; and the Targ. Yer. i., agreeing with him, translates the first verse of the Bible as follows: "By wisdom God created the heaven and the earth."
So, also, the figure of Metatron passed into Kabbalah from the Talmud, where it played the role of the demiurgos (see Gnosticism), being expressly mentioned as God. Mention may also be made of the seven preexisting things enumerated in an old baraita (an extra-mishnaic teaching); namely, the Torah, repentance, paradise and hell, the throne of God, the Heavenly Temple, and the name of the Messiah (Talmud Pes. 54a). Although the origin of this doctrine must be sought probably in certain mythological ideas, the Platonic doctrine of preexistence has modified the older, simpler conception, and the preexistence of the seven must therefore be understood as an "ideal" preexistence, a conception that was later more fully developed in the Kabbalah.
The attempts of the mystics to bridge the gulf between God and the world are evident in the doctrine of the preexistence of the soul, and of its close relation to God before it enters the human body — a doctrine taught by the Hellenistic sages (Wisdom viii. 19) as well as by the Palestinian rabbis.
In the 17th century, Baruch Spinoza may have had this passage in mind when he said that the ancient Jews did not separate God from the world. This conception of God may be pantheistic or panentheistic. It also postulates the union of man with God; both these ideas were further developed in the later Kabbalah. (He was excommunicated from the main Jewish community of his times by the rabbis at the time for espousing these views).
Other related archives1160, 1194, 1235, 1270, 1340, 1488, 1492, 1522, 1525, 1534, 1570, 1572, 1575, 1609, 1626, 1648, 1654, 1676, 1698, 1707, 1720, 1726, 1746, 1760, 1791, 1797, 1864, 1906, 1935, 1980, 1984, energies, Abracadabra, Abraham, Abraham Isaac Kook, Adam and Eve, Alan Moore, Aleister Crowley, Alexandrian, Anti-Semitism, Apocalyptic literature, Apocryphon of John, Aramaic, Ashton Kutcher, Azriel (Jewish mystic), Bahir, Bahya ben Asher, Baruch Ashlag, Baruch Spinoza, Ben Sira, Bnei Baruch, Book of Ezekiel, Book of Genesis, Brahma, Britney Spears, Buddhist, Burning bush, Catholicism, Chaim Vital, Chaim Volozhin, Chesed, Chicken Qabalah, Chmielnicki Uprising, Christian, Conservative, Crowley, Dead Sea scrolls, Demi Moore, Derekh Hashem, Deuteronomy, Dion Fortune, Divine simplicity, Donmeh, Dragon Rouge, Egyptian, Ein Sof, Elijah ben Solomon, Elijah of Vilna, End of Evangelion, English, Enochian, Essene, Essenes, Europe, Ezekiel, Foucault's Pendulum, Freemasonry, Garden of Eden, Genesis, Gershom Scholem, Gevurah, Gnosticism, God, Golem, Greek, Gregory Palamas, Hasidic, Hasidic Judaism, Hasidism, Hebrew, Hebrew Bible, Hebrew alphabet, Hebrew letter, Hermetic, Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, Hindu, Hippolytus, Idries Shah, Isaac Hutner, Isaac Luria, Isaac the Blind, Isis, Islam, Islamic, Israel Regardie, Israel ben Eliezer, Italy, Jacob, Jacob Frank, Jewish, Jewish Messiah, Jewish Theological Seminary, John Dee, Josephus, Jubilees, Judah Loew ben Bezalel, Judaism, Jupiter, Kabalistic Laws, Kabbalah Center, Kabbalah Centre, Kabbalah astrology, Kabbalistic use of the Tetragrammaton, Knights Templar, Land of Israel, Liber 777, Lithuania, Lon Milo DuQuette, Los Angeles, Lubavitch, Madonna, Maharil, Manichaean, Masonic, Messiah, Metatron, Michael Laitman, Mick Jagger, Middle Ages, Midrash, Midrashic, Miguel de Cervantes, Millennialism, Mishnah, Mitnagdim, Mizrahi, Modern Orthodox, Moses, Moses ben Jacob Cordovero, Moses de Leon, Moshe Chaim Luzzatto, Mount Sinai, Mysticism, Nahmanides, Neon Genesis Evangelion, Netherlands, New Age, O.T.O., Oral Law, Orthodox, Orthodox Judaism, Ottoman, Philip Berg, Philo, Platonic, Poseidon, Prague, Promethea, Provence, Pulsa diNura, Pythagorean, Qliphoth, Rabbi, Rabbi Akiva, Rabbi Lamed Ben Clifford, Raziel, Reform, Religious Zionism, Rosicrucian, Rosicrucianism, SEELE, Sabbatai Zevi, Sabbetai Zvi, Samael Aun Weor, Satan, Saul Lieberman, Schneur Zalman of Liadi, Sefardi, Sefer Raziel HaMalakh, Sefer Yetzirah, Sefirot, Sephardic, Sephirah (Kabbalah), Sephiroth, Serpent, Shabbat, Shimon bar Yohai, Shulkhan Arukh, Sitra Ahra, Spanish Inquisition, Standard Hebrew, Stoic, Sukkah, Sultan, Systema Sephiroticum, Talmud, Talmudic, Tanakh, Temple in Jerusalem, Tetragrammaton, Thelemic, Tiberian Hebrew, Torah, Tree of Death, Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, Tree of Life, Tzimtzum, Ukraine, Umberto Eco, Venetian, Vilna Gaon, Yehuda Ashlag, Yosef Karo, Zionism, Zohar, Zoroastrianism, amethysts, angel, angels, apostate, cabal, ceremonial magic, commandments in the Torah, creation, death, discipline, divine, druidism, eighteenth century, epistemological, esoteric knowledge, evil, exegesis, forbidden fruit, gnosticism, good, heresy, hermeneutic, instincts, intellect, ladder to heaven, love, medieval, mercy, midrash, mishnaic, monotheism, moral, mystical, mysticism, neo-Pagan, new age, panentheism, panentheistic, pantheism, pantheistic, pogroms, rabbinical literature, rebbe, religion, rishonim, rituals, sefirot, siddur, strength, syncretism, the afterlife, theodicy, twentieth century, virtues, yeshiva
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Mystic doctrines in Talmudic times", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |