• II: The Primordial Light: The Ecstatics' Quest

    From Carolyn Hoffman to All on Saturday, January 31, 2026 07:05:59
    II: The Primordial Light: The Ecstatics' Quest
    Thursday 18 April 1991

    [The introduction to the lecture
    mentioned that the lecture series would
    eventually be coming out as a book to
    be published by the University of
    Washington Press.]

    [The introducer mentioned an article
    in the Jerusalem Post about Scholem and
    Idel. Idel has established the basis
    for a critical look at Scholem's work.
    Scholem's approach was historical and
    contextual: he interpreted the Kabbalah
    as a system of thought. Idel's approach
    is phenomenological: he endeavors to
    discern what the symbolism and ritual
    meant to those who practised it. For
    Idel, the Kabbalah is not a system of
    ideas but a practical path to mystical
    experience. For Scholem, Kabbalah
    entered Judaism from the outside, and
    was the result of the influence of Greek
    gnosticism on Rabbinic Judaism. It was,
    in effect, an alien heresy with an
    underground existence. For Idel,
    Kabbalah is an esoteric tradition
    flowing from within Judaism itself,
    though with links and correspondences
    with other mystical traditions. Idel
    feels that the study of the manuscript
    tradition has just barely begun, and
    that therefore most of the field has yet
    to be explored.
    He also feels that even the most
    theoretical texts are experientially
    oriented. This has led him to try to
    reconstruct the techniques that were
    actually used. He has done so in part
    through observation of practices of
    ultra-Orthodox communities in Israel -
    and they in turn have come to him for
    technical advice on reading and
    understanding their texts.]

    There is another paradigm through which the
    story of the entry to Pardes can be read - one
    which is not philosophical, but ecstatic. This
    variety of paradigms by the way is very
    important. It shows that Jews were less
    interested in establishing a unified theology
    than they were in finding secret interpretations
    that would attract many different kinds of
    people. They were open to having a different
    way for each sort of person. This is a sign of
    the openness of the elite culture to allowing
    different approaches for a variety of people -
    not so much to attract the masses, but to allow
    for diversity among the elite.
    This second interpretation of the Pardes was
    the result of the merger of Jewish mysticism and
    Neoplatonic philosophy. For Maimonides, it was
    a Pardes ha Chokmah, a Pardes of Knowledge. It
    had to do with the solution to cognitive
    problems. For Maimonides, Adam was lost in
    contemplation of metaphysical truths. Thus, for
    Maimonides, R. Aqiva was the central figure, the
    most perfect of the four sages.
    But for some Kabbalists at the beginning of
    the Thirteenth Century the major figure was not
    R. Aqiva but Ben Azzai, the Talmudic master who
    died. For them, the Pardes was not a matter of
    intellect, but of the experience of a supreme
    light. This Light was not an intellectual or
    conceptual light, but an experiential light.

    Ancient Jewish textual material is rich in
    emphasis on the importance of light - as in
    Genesis, where Light is the first created
    entity. Midrashic texts portray Adam as an
    entity of Light, and as having garments of
    Light, which were lost after his expulsion from
    Eden. In this tradition, the basic activity of
    Adam was the contemplation of the Light, of the
    Shekinah. The "Light of the Shekinah" is a key
    term in these texts.
    Both Pardes and Paradise, in this tradition,
    are seen as full of Light. Adam's experience in
    the Fall is the loss of the possibility of
    contemplating the Light. The loss of garments
    of Light leads to their replacement by garments
    of skin (a pun in Hebrew). This loss of the
    possibility of experience of the Light is
    crucial in ancient Hebrew texts.
    For example, in the Book of Adam and Seth (as
    preserved in Armenia): "But Adam .. in being
    stripped of the Divine Light .. became an equal
    of the dumb beasts. Enoch for forty days and
    nights did not eat. Then he planted a garden ..
    and was in it for 552 years. Then he was taken
    up into heaven ...." [The quotation was quite a
    bit longer; unfortunately, I couldnot keep up.]
    This portrays an attempt by Enoch to reconstruct
    and re-enter the situation of Adam. This is a
    basic pattern in later discussions of the Pardes
    texts: an attempt to return to the ability to
    contemplate the Light as Adam once did.
    In the Hekhaloth texts, too, the idea of Light
    is paramount. Pardes is described as full of
    the radiance of Light.
    There is a manuscript text by an unknown
    author - one which I needed some 60 pages to
    analyze, so we can only deal witha small part of
    it here. There are some ten lines in it about
    Ben Azzai (who did not return). "Ben Azzai
    peeked and died. He gazed at the radiance of
    the Divine Presence like a man with weak eyes
    who gazes at the full light of the sun and
    becomes blinded by the intensity of the light
    that overwhelms him... He did not wish to be
    separated, he remained hidden in it, his soul
    was covered and adorned ... he remained where he
    had cleaved, in the Light to which no one may
    cling and yet live." [Quotation approximate]
    This text portrays people gazing not at a
    Chariot or a marble throne, but at the radiance
    of God (Tzvi ha Shekinah), a light so strong
    that no one can bear it. The idea of
    "overwhelming" is textually crucial. The idea
    of having a great desire to cleave, as described
    in the medieval text, is new. In ancient
    literature, contemplation is of something far
    away, across an unbridgeable gap. There is no
    idea there of love, only of awe. Here, however,
    we see a trace of a radical change: the
    intensity of the experience is linked with a
    great desire to cleave to the radiance of the
    Shekinah. There is a strong experience of union
    with the Divine, the result of a desire to enter
    and become a part of the Divine realm. There is
    an attempt to enjoy the Divine without
    interruption. The language of desire implies
    erotic overtones to the experience, especially
    since "Shekinah" in Hebrew is feminine. The
    text then is speaking about an attempt to cleave
    to a feminine aspect of the Divine - also a
    development unique to the medieval literature
    (and not found in the ancient literature). And
    also the idea of "sweet radiance" has erotic
    overtones.

    So what happened? He couldn't return from the
    experience. The Hebrew terms are very strong.
    After his death he was "hidden away in the place
    of his cleaving." This death was the death of
    the pious ones whose souls are separated from
    all concerns with the mundane world, and who
    cleave to the supernal world. It was, in other
    words, not an accident but an achievement.
    There is a threefold structure implied here,
    reminiscent of Christian and Neoplatonic
    mysticism. The first phase is the via
    purgativa, "Those who are separated from all
    concerns of the lowly world." The second phase
    is the via illuminativa. The third phase is the
    via unitiva. There is here a combination of
    ancient Jewish material with pagan or Christian
    Neoplatonist material to portray or interpret
    the experience of Ben Azzai. This interpretive
    paradigm continued in active use from the
    Thirteenth through the Eighteenth centuries,
    where it was used among the Hasidim. It was a
    tradition that lasted 600 to 700 years, and it
    is exactly the kind of tradition it is hard to
    study without looking at manuscripts.

    This text was also copied by a Thirteenth
    Century Kabbalist who gave it an even stronger
    nuance of mysticism. Ben Azzai died because of
    the cleaving of his soul out of a great love;
    his soul didn't return because he reached a
    great attainment. The assumption: out of
    intense love, his cleaving was total. Later,
    there were even stronger formulations, in which
    the soul and the Light become one entity.
    This text is one example of texts dealing with
    the unio mystica. It allows for bridging in a
    total manner the gap between man and God. This
    is another example of the formative power of the
    Neoplatonic mystical tradition, as it also
    expressed itself in Christianity and Islam.
    However, for the Kabbalists the major events
    took place in the past. He is reporting not on
    a contemporary but on Ben Azzai. Is this simply
    a matter of an intepretation? Or is there
    something more to it - a practical interest?
    Can we extract from the sources a method, a
    practice?

    In my opinion, since the end of the Thirteen
    Century there is evidence that there were
    experiences of Light connected with the story of
    Ben Azzai and the Kabbalists who discussed it -
    but this is not always simple to demonstrate.
    Another anonymous text, written in 1290 or so
    in Galilee, describes a technique, and afterward
    describes a personal experience characterized by
    amazement, confusion, and a need for
    clarification and interpretation. Its author
    describes the Divine Light as attracting the
    Light of the soul, "which is weak in relation to
    the Divine Light." (There is a magnetic
    metaphor here, and we can see in this adoption
    of non-traditional metaphors an attempt to come
    to terms with personal experience.) This
    experience was the result of letter-combination
    techniques. Later the anonymous Kabbalist
    attempts to describe how he approached a master
    to learn a technique to stop the experience.
    Thus, discussing this experience in terms of the
    story of Ben Azzai is an attempt to relate
    personal experience to a model. It is not
    simply an attempt to provide an interpretation
    for the story of Ben Azzai.
    Another ecstatic Kabbalist also relates his
    experience to the story of Ben Azzai: "If a man
    does that which his soul wishes in the proper
    ways of hitbodeduth, his soul is immersed in
    this light and he will die like Ben Azzai."
    The Kabbalists tried to reach the pre-fall
    state of the Primordial Man, to enteragain the
    radiance of the Shekinah, and even to enter a
    certain erotic relationship with the Divine
    Presence, as later we find in the Zohar in other
    forms. They also provided, by the end of the
    Thirteenth Century, certain detailed techniques.
    "By letter combinations, unifications, and
    reversals of letters, he shall call up the Tree
    of Knowledge of Good and Evil... [list of
    encounter with various polarized qualities and
    entities, e.g., Mercy and Severity] ... he will
    be in danger of the same death as Ben Azzai."

    Beginning with the end of the Fourteenth
    Century, there are descriptions of Kabbalists
    studying together, and of each observing the
    others to see if they become luminous.
    "Likewise today, if someone will look at the
    faces of students who are worshipping out of
    love .. you will see on them the radiance of the
    Divine Presence so that those who see them will
    be afraid, and each of them will have the
    radiance of the Divine Presence according to his
    rank." There is, in other words, the
    expectation of a corporeally observable
    radiance.

    For Maimonides the experience of the Pardes
    was mental, with no outward sign; for the
    Kabbalists it was corporeal and visible.
    For Maimonides, God was an intellect; for the
    Kabbalists, God was a radiance.
    For Maimonides, Adam was a perfect intellect;
    for the Kabbalists, Adam was a creature of
    Light.
    For Maimonides, Paradise and Pardes were
    intellectual (cerebral) states; for the
    Kabbalists, they were corporeal, sensuous,
    erotic, sexual and an object for practical
    striving.
    The Kabbalists developed techniques -
    Maimonides had no clear method.
    The Kabbalists attempted to describe
    techniques, and signs of attainment.
    Thus the Kabbalistic tradition is not one of
    speculations about mysticism; it is full-fledged
    mysticism. In the Kabbalistic tradition, an
    extreme type of experience is sought out and
    considered positive.
    The mystical death is the real goal of
    ecstatic Kabbalah. For Maimonides, the ideal is
    to remain in a state of intellection. For the
    ecstatic Kabbalists, extreme experience is final
    experience.

    The Pardes was thus idealized by Jewish
    mystics, and given new meanings. This
    idealization opened another avenue, one
    exploited especially by Eighteenth Century
    Hasidic mysticism. We can see a continuous line
    from the beginning of the Kabbalah up to the
    founder of the modern Hasidic movement who
    himself quoted parts of the same text. This can
    be understood as an inner Jewish development,
    and not a historical accident.


    Questions

    Q: Did all Kabbalists wish actual death? For
    those who did not, what was the rationale for
    not wanting it?
    A: That is a matter of the mystic's role in
    society. Moses, it is said, wanted to die,
    to leave the world, to remain in a state of
    union. But God said he had a role as a
    mystic - to reach the extreme and yet return.
    But that is not the case for all Kabbalists:
    not all of them were oriented toward society.
    There as also a controversy about the
    desirability of it, but the idea that it
    could be achieved was admitted on all sides
    of the controversy. It was not theologically
    denied. Even those who opposed it admitted
    that a total union was possible.
    Q: In that case, how was Aqiva understood?
    A: He was understood as someone who could
    balance, who could enter and leave. Aqiva
    (like Moses) could enter, but he knew when to
    retreat. He knew how to combine the two.

    Q: On Tuesday you discussed the role of
    Halakhic ritual as a way of controlling
    impulses, for Maimonides. Tonight you did
    not mention it at all. Did it have a role?
    A: Maimonides was a Halakhist. But most of
    the Kabbalists we have mentioned were not.
    Most were anonymous - they were not Halakhic
    masters, but mystics. For them, keeping the
    norms was not as important as reaching beyond
    the norms. Basically, they were a-nomian.
    They did not regard the Commandments as a
    major tool. They might be preparatory, but
    they were not final.
    Q: Certainly not all aspects of Halakha would
    have been neutral: it afforded major
    opportunities for ecstatic experiences on
    certain feasts, for example...
    A: These Kabbalists were not unobservant, they
    were not antinomian. But as mystics (rather
    than as Jews) they used other types of
    rituals or techniques. Ritual anyway would
    be suspended at the peaks of ecstatic
    experience, when one cannot do anything. The
    issue is not simple - but there seems to have
    been no friction. It is highly significant
    that there are no critiques of the use of
    mystical techniques, e.g., of combining
    Divine Names. Their practice probably did
    not interfere with regular Halakhic
    observances.

    Q: How did such experiences tend to affect
    their experience of the material world? Did
    it enhance their opinion of it? Lower it?
    A: Here we touch on the paradoxical connection
    of the mystic and the prophetic mission. As
    ecstatics, they were escapist. But they also
    felt that the experience prompted or provoked
    a mission. In coming back, the return was
    interpreted as a being sent forth, as having
    a mission. This offered a rationale for
    coming back. "You are permitted to return if
    you are needed." Thus there was a tension
    between the drive for attainment and the
    feeling of a mission.

    Q: What about free will? Could one say that
    Ben Azzai got what he wanted, and that Aqiva
    got what he wanted?
    A: Not exactly. At a moment in an experience
    one may be caught up or captured by another
    dynamic. You may lose control; free will may
    be overwhelmed, overridden.

    Q: Is there an attempt to revive these things
    in Israel?
    A: Yes; some are studying and practising these
    techniques.
    Q: For example?
    A: Breathing, letter combination - I have
    contacted at least ten people I know.
    Q: They base this on Kabbalistic descriptions?
    A: They ARE Kabbalists.

    Q: In this Kabbalistic context God is
    described as radiance, energy, but in basic
    Judaism God is also anthropomorphic,
    interested in the world. Is there a
    connection?
    A: If one is speaking about erotic experience,
    there must be some sense of a personalistic
    object. The Kabbalists tried to compromise
    between anthropomorphic and spiritualistic
    content. The Sefiroth were seen as a
    structure of Light, but also as corporeal.
    They were able to shape the anthropomorphic
    content to a more spiritual, energic model.


    [Afterward, as is usual at such lectures,
    people approached the speaker with
    congratulations, comments, and assorted
    questions. Two stand out.]

    [A thin, intense young man kept asking Idel
    about energy experiences, and the sense of
    "energy coming in," and asked if anyone had
    done any EEG studies of Kabbalists. Idel
    said that Judaic studies were still in their
    infancy; mostly they were textual studies, an
    attempt to figure out what the texts actually
    said and what they were about - and even just
    to find them and get them edited and printed.
    No one had gotten to doing anything else,
    though he knew of the work by Ornstein and
    others, and thought it would be interesting
    to do in a Kabbalistic context.
    [The young man, consumed by his questioning,
    didn't quite see Idel's point about the
    emphasis on textual scholarship; Idel
    gradually realized the young man wanted
    advice about his own meditational
    experiences, and was a little taken aback,
    and tried to achieve polite closure.

    [Idel turned to another questioner, who
    asked something textual:

    Q: You mentioned that these techniques became
    discussed and elaborated in the Thirteenth
    Century or so. Is there any textual evidence
    for their source?
    A: Yes; in fact some of them can be found in
    texts of the Hellenistic period, especially
    those involving breathing and letter
    combination and visualization. They seem to
    be a part of a general fund of such
    techniques at the time, parallel to similar
    things one finds in Hellenistic magical
    papyri, for example.

    [Then, as though realizing then that the
    young man's questions {about what it meant
    when energy came in, as opposed to finding
    oneself elsewhere, about the dangers of
    possession, and so on} were pressing, Idel
    turned back {despite attempts by various
    professors to ease him out of the hall} and
    began quietly to address himself to his
    queries.]

    [end of part II]

    Carol,
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080