The kabbalist Yitzhak
Luria (1534-1572) was one of the most influential figures in the history
of Jewish spirituality. His name entered Jewish tradition in the form
of an acrostic of his Hebrew names ("the divine Rabbi Yitzhak"),
the Ari (Lion), and his disciples were referred to as "the lion's
cubs." Born in Jerusalem and brought up in Egypt, he acquired a reputation
for halakhic and kabbalistic scholarship, but otherwise little is known
about his early years. He settled in Safed in 1570 and died in the plague
of 1572. These two years, about which no reliable details are known, laid
the foundations for the subsequent explosion of legend, hagiography, and
doctrinal innovation known as Lurianism.
|
Ari Synagogue, Safed (exterior)
|
Luria appears to have collected
around him a band of devoted disciples who had to pledge not to divulge the
new esoteric teachings to outsiders. The first known reliable document is a
solemn contract in which several disciples pledge not to discuss or commit to
writing any of the master's teaching except in the presence of Hayyim Vital,
who had drawn up the contract in an effort to establish his claim to be the
spiritual heir and sole repository of canonical Lurianism. In spite of the intended
secrecy, pirated copies of Vital's "canonical" writings as well as
other, and on some points divergent, versions of the master's doctrine began
to circulate and were eagerly spread. According to legend, Luria himself had
hardly written anything because the rush of inspiration was so powerful that
it could not be reduced to writing. The vast corpus of Lurianic literature was
composed by his disciples and by kabbalists influenced by them; it is still
inadequately analyzed and any account of the Lurianic revolution is therefore
provisional and incomplete. Luria's fame as a charismatic man of God spread
through hagiographic epistles and books (such as Shivhei ha-Ari and Toledot
ha-'Ari) long before his doctrines.
Ari
Synagogue, Safed (interior)
|
The revolutionary aspect
of Lurianism resides in the notion that perfection is not in the past, not even
in the eternal Godhead before creation, but in the future. The achievement of
perfection is the purpose of all existence, the divine realm as well as the
created order. Luria addressed the problem of the purpose of existence in a
more radical manner than other theologians. Whereas the early Spanish Kabbalah
was concerned mainly with the spiritual achievements of the individual, Lurianism
transformed the Kabbalah into a teleological and history-oriented system, teaching
the meaning of exile and messianic expectation not only on the level of the
individual but also on that of the community of Israel. In Lurianism, mystical
life thus acquires a redemptive and potentially messianic quality
Luria utilized an ancient
term, tzimtzum (retraction, reduction), found in Talmudic literature
and in the writings of the Hasidei Ashkenaz[*]
but gave it a novel twist. If God is All in All, how is a non-divine existence,
such as creation, possible? According to Luria's theological mythology, the
Godhead "retracted" and "withdrew itself into itself" so
as to create an empty space in which creation could take place. This process
is said to be cathartic, since the new vacuum (tehiru, Aramaic for empty)
contained residues (reshimu) of elements in the primordial Godhead that
would develop later into forces of evil. During the following process of creation,
however, a major catastrophe occurred. The vessels (kelim), or channels,
were not able to contain the power of the divine light that flowed through them,
and so they collapsed (shevirat ha-kelim, breaking the vessels). This
brought into being a new independent realm, into which fell many divine lights
and sparks (nitzotzot), which are held captive by the powers of evil
until they are raised again in a process that is the ultimate meaning and purpose
of history.
The
kabbalistic version of the early liturgical prayer order (siddur)
in Eretz Yisrael was known as Minhag Ari (Tradition of the Ari),
named after Yitzhak Luria. Individual Hasidic communities developed their
own variants on that version; to this day, there are prayerbooks designated
as following this tradition. |
Creation is thus out of
joint from its very beginning and it is Israel's, and especially the kabbalist's,
duty to set it right (tikkun olam, repairing the universe). The way to
do this involves the practice of the proper intentions and meditations, in both
daily life and especially in ritual actions. The raising of the sparks is thus
the inner purpose of everything. All historical events, from Adam and the garden
of Eden to the theophany on Mount Sinai and the sin of the golden calf and beyond,
were interpreted as failed attempts to bring about this tikkun.
The Lurianists created
several mystical rituals and also re-edited the prayer book. It has been suggested
that the Lurianic Kabbalah was a response to the traumatic experience of the
expulsion from Spain. The symbolism and terminological apparatus of Lurianic
thought was taken up by both Hasidism and non-Hasidic kabbalists of the eighteenth
century.
|
[*]
The pious ones of Ashkenaz, a term referring to the various circles of Jewish
mystics and pietists in Ashkenaz (Germany mainly
the Rhineland, and northern France), in the late-12th, early-13th centuries.
[back] |
|
From:
The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion, editors in chief: R.J.
Zwi Werblowsky and Geoffrey Wigoder (Oxford University Press, 1997). |
|
Joseph
Dan, Gershom Scholem and the Mystical Dimension in Jewish History
(New York, 1987), pp. 244-285.
Gershom Gerhard Scholem, Kabbalah (Jerusalem, 1974), pp. 420-428
Gershom
Gerhard Scholem, "Kabbalah and Myth," in On the Mystical
Shape of the Godhead (New York, 1991).
Gershom Gerhard Scholem, Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism (New
York, 1954), pp. 244-286.
|
LIONS
Table of Contents
|