Chayei Sarah - Sarah's Legacy

Tuesday, October 30, 2018 · Posted in , ,




And Yitzchak brought her [Rivkah] into the tent of his mother Sarah...and he loved her; and Yitzchak was comforted after his mother's death. (Bereishit 24:67)

Sarah lived on…in Rivkah's virtues.

The Midrash reports that as long as Sarah was alive there used to be a [sheltering] cloud over her tent. (Bereishit Rabbah 60:16) The doors were open to offer hospitality, the challah displayed signs of having been blessed, and a light burned from one Erev Shabbat to the next. All of these phenomena ceased when Sarah died; they now resumed when Rivkah moved into that tent.

Woman had been assigned three tasks to help repair the imbalance created in the universe due to the sin of Chavah. They are: the consecration of the first part of her dough [called "challah"], the observance of the laws of family purity, and the periodic kindling of a light [i.e. on Shabbat eve].

Man is composed of 4 basic elements: matter [in Hebrew, "chomer"], life-force [Nefesh], spirit [Ruach], and soul [Neshamah]. Chavah had upset three [the most elemental] of these four elements; the soul, however, had not been damaged, being incapable of corruption at the hands of human beings, according to Kabbalah. A sin which would potentially corrupt the soul would result in the soul leaving man before he had a chance to commit such a sin.

Bereishit Rabbah 14 states that the mist rising from the earth prior to the first rainfall was like a woman who mixes water with the dough and separates the challah, the kohen's portion. Only after this process had been completed did G‑d create man from the dust which had been so treated.

Man is viewed as the "challah" of nature, in that just as challah represents the entire dough, so man represents the whole earth. Just as challah is holy, so man is the holy part of nature. Until sanctity was formed, one could not partake of any part of Creation, just as one must not benefit from the dough until challah has been separated from it.

Man may be viewed as having been created from the site of his eventual atonement, the site of the altar, the Temple. By having caused contamination of this most refined of raw materials in existence, Chavah caused eventual death. Therefore she had to make repairs, albeit of a symbolic nature.

Concerning the Nefesh, the life-force, she had to atone through the blood of menstruation [spilling some of her life-force - blood]. Concerning the contamination of the Ruach, spirit, she had been guilty of corrupting a spirit originating in the realms of angels; she therefore had to light the Shabbat candles which symbolize the enhanced spiritual nature of the Shabbat. Concerning the physical raw material, she had to set aside the challah, a portion of the most hard-won fruit of nature, bread.

By performing her part as the woman par excellence, Sarah's virtue was recognized through the blessing she spread and conferred on others. Her dough was blessed, her light never went out, her doors remained open for all to look inside and to see that there was no impurity concealed within her tent. The fourth phenomenon, the one which had never been absent, is the proximity of the Divine Spirit which rests on all that is complete and whole.

Although Sarah had had to correct only three imbalances, the author of that same Midrash credits her with having restored all four elements to their appropriate position and condition. The fact that all these phenomena ceased to be manifest after her death proved to one and all that their presence had been due to her merit. Yitzchak had wanted to test Rivkah's ability to restore these phenomena, i.e. to restore his mother's tent to its former glory. This is why he brought her into his mother's tent instead of providing new quarters for her. When he saw that the four "halos" of Sarah had been restored, he considered her presence the fifth such halo, the fifth ingredient. This is the allusion represented by the letter ה (heh), whose numerical value is 5, in front of the word "ha'ohalah" ["to her tent"].


Source: Torat Moshe by Rabbi Moshe Alshich of Tzfat-Safed, Chabad.org

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Parashat Chayei Sarah
Chayei Sarah Pardes
Haftarah Chayei Sarah


Vayera - Say Little and Do Much

Sunday, October 21, 2018 · Posted in , , , ,

“Shammai said, make your Torah study fixed, say little and do much, and receive everyone with a cheerful countenance.” (Pirkei Avot)

Tzaddikim promise little and do much, while the wicked make big promises and do not even keep a minimum. 

All Avraham promised the angels was a little bread, but subsquently he served them a meal fit for a king for which he slaughtered three oxen and used nine sa'ah of flour. He also served them butter and milk. (Bereishit 18)

How do the tzaddikim know that one must promise little and do more? They imitate Hashem Himself. When He promised that He would judge the Egyptians as the end of the exile. He assured Avraham, "And also the nation whom they shall serve will I judge!" (Bereishit 15:14) The promise contained merely two letters - דן (I will judge) yet subsequently He brought Ten Plagues upon the Egyptians!


Vayera - Good Deeds


Hachnasat Orchim - Hospitality

Avraham, by means of his hospitality and teachings, drew tens of thousands of people to Hashem's service. (Rambam)

A person must constantly ask himself, "When shall my deeds equal those of my forefathers, Avraham, Yitzchak and Yaakov?" (Tanna D'bai Eliyahu)

The lives of our forefathers are portrayed in the Torah to make us aware of our responsibility in life. Wherever we live, it is our duty to strengthen Yiddishkeit by maintaining Yeshivot and Batai Yaakov and helping to establish new ones. (Midrash Says)

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Parashat Veyera | Vayera Pardes | Haftarah Vayera |



Lech Lecha - Bitachon

Wednesday, October 17, 2018 · Posted in , ,


How can one comprehend the fact that a Jew in the most miserable of situations nevertheless affirms, "Gam zu l'tovah! (It is all for the best!)"

It is a character trait inherited from our forefather Avraham who was unshakable in his bitachon (belief - trust) in Hashem. Even when exposed to famine, Avraham did not complain but trusted in Divine Providence. Hence his descendants in all generations were able to bear without despair the intolerable living conditions of the ghetto and the tyranny of the gentiles among whom they lived.

- Nefesh Hachayim

Lech Lecha - Heavenly Decree

Tuesday, October 16, 2018 · Posted in ,


FOUR ACTIONS HAVE THE POWER TO CHANGE A HEAVENLY DECREE


  • Tzedakah - Giving Charity
  • Tefillah - Prayer
  • Teshuvah - Improving one's deeds
  • Shinui Shem - Being renamed
Some add:

  • Shinui Hamakom - Changing residence
We learn this last point from the fact that Hashem told Avram, "Go out rom your land, etc. and I will make of you a great nation." Avram only merited children after changing his residence.

Moving to a strange place helps annul a Heavenly decree since a man's heart is humbled when he is exiled from his home.

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Source: Midrash Says




Noach Sends out the Dove

Friday, October 12, 2018 · Posted in , , , ,


(Picture from Chabad)

"He waited another seven days, and once again he sent out the dove from the Tevah. The dove came to him toward evening and there was a torn off olive leaf in its beak. Noach knew that the water had receded from the earth." (Bereishit 8:10, 11)

The world was still covered with water, but the dove brought an olive leaf from a tree in the Holy Land. Others say that it was from Gan Eden. (Bereishit Rabbah; Ramban, Cf. Yafeh Toar, Tetzaveh)

The account of the dove and Noah's ark alludes to the history of the Jewish People.

The dove's journey is recorded in the Torah as a prophecy for the future. K'lal Yisrael is likened to a dove. The nations are compared to water. Just as the dove found no resting place in the midst of the water, so too would K'lal Yisrael find no resting place in exile. Just as the dove returned home to the Tevah, so will Benei Yisrael in the future return to their land.

Rabbi Pinchas said: Every time the Jewish People were sent into exile, the Holy One blessed be He set a limit to the exile, and they were always aroused to repentance. But this final exile has no set limit, and everything depends upon repentance.

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Source: Me'am Lo'ez; Zohar


Noach - Life in the Tevah

Wednesday, October 10, 2018 · Posted in , , , ,


During the twelve months' duration of the mabul, the Heavenly planets did not operate in order. The inhabitants of the Tevah therefore could not tell from sun or moon whether it was day or night. Only the precious stones which Noach had brought into the Tevah served as an indication of the time. When they shone, the tevah's inhabitants knew it was night; when they dimmed, it was day.

The Tevah floated securely like a ship in the ocean, while the world around it was transformed into a tremendous no-man's land of water. It rained heavily for forty days. Each raindrop which Hashem sent down was previously boiled in Gehinnom. The rain was so hot that people's skin peeled on contact with it.   The drops did not consist only of water, but also of fire. In addition to the rain from above, all the wells and fountains of the earth opened up and poured forth boiling hot water. The giants of the Generation of the Flood had believed that they could prevent the wells from overflowing by merely stepping on them, but the water was so hot that this plan failed. What did this cruel generation do? They took their smallest children and put them into the opening to seal it. When the water continued to gush out, they placed one child after another at the opening of the fountain to save themselves. Where it not for the fire and water from above, they would have survived.

The water reached fifteen amot (30 feet) above the highest mountain tops, because this generation had sneered, We are giants, fifteen amot high, and if there will ever be a flood, we will stand on the mountain tops and be safe!" Now the water level was above their heads and they drowned.

The water of the mabul wore down the heaviest substances. Only the fish survived, because they had not sinned like the other creatures. Some say, the flood did not affect the sea at all. This was because G-d had given the fish a special blessing, as referred to in Bereishit so they did not die in the flood. They escaped to the depths of hte sea, where the water remained cool.

The flood did not cover Eretz Yisrael, not even in inhabited areas. The residents of the Holy Land did not die by drowning, but from the heat of the waters of the flood. The water was boiling hot; it made the entire world like a furnace, killing all air-breathing creatures. (Zevachim, loc. cit.)  G-d wrought another miracle for Noach. The waters of the flood were boiling hot, since it had been decreed that many of the sinners should be boiled alive. But in the vicinity of the Tevah, the waters were cool and pleasant. This was done for the benefit of Noach. (Pirkei Rabbi Eliezer; Zevachim 113)

Of all the creatures on earth, man died last. G-d delayed his doom as long as possible, giving him a chance to repent. (Bachya)

All human bodies totally disintegrated. Not a single bone was left intact, not even the smallest luz at the lower end of the spine (some say at the top end, depending on tradition).

The emperor Hadrian asked Rabbi Yehoshua ben Chananya, "From which part of the body will G-d in future revive the dead?" "From the spinal bone luz." answered Rabbi Yehoshua. "How do you know?" he questioned. "Bring me such a bone and I shall prove it," replied Rabbi Yehoshua. When the bone Luz was brought to Rabbi Yehoshua, he demonstrated to the emperor how although he ground it in a mill, it would not be crushed. He threw it into the fire and it did not burn. Neither did it dissolve in water. Finally Rabbi Yehoshua brought a hammer and struck the bone. The hammer cracked and the bone survived. (Bereishit Rabbah)

When a man dies, his bone luz is preserved, in order to form the basis from which the body will be reconstructed at the time of Techiyat HaMetim (Resurrection of the Dead).  But the Generation of the Mabul was so wicked that not one bone of their skeleton remained, net even the bone luz. None of them will be restored to life at the time when the dead will rise from their graves. They will not even be among those who will be revived to be judged and then doomed, the memory of the Generation of the Mabul was blotted out from the world.

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Source: Midrash Says; Me'am Lo'ez


Noach - A Tzaddik

Monday, October 8, 2018 · Posted in ,



Noach was an extraordinary man, a tzaddik whose righteousness upheld the entire world.  

"Three tzaddikim comprised the foundation of the world: Adam, Noach and Avraham."

This is to be taken in the literal sense of the word. Each of these ensured the survival of the world. If not for Noach, the world would have been annihilated.

In spite of the general laxity in moral and ethical conduct, his own record was impeccable. he did not allow himself to be influenced by his peers. He submitted to the humiliation of being ridiculed by the three generations in whose time he lived:
  1. Generation of Enosh
  2. Generation of the Deluge
  3. Generation of the Dispersal
And remained steadfast in his service of Hashem. He faithfully observed the six mitzvot which Hashem commanded to Adam. (Bereishit Rabbah 26:1)

His wife Na'amah was equally righteous. Her name Na'amah signifies that her deeds were pleasing. (Bereishit Rabbah 23:3) She gave birth to three sons, Yefet, Cham, and Shem, who all followed Hashem's ways as taught to them by their father, Noach, and grandfather, Metushelach. Of the three, Shem is listed in the Torah first because he was the greatest of them.

Noach is described by the Torah as a tzaddik, "...perfect in his generations." (Bereishit 5:9) What is the implication of this last addition? It teaches that  Noach was righteous only in relation to his own generation. Had he lived in Moshe's or Shumel's time, He would not have been considered great.  Thus Noach is termed tzaddik as compated to his wicked generation.

According to another view, however, the above verse is said in Noach's praise, implying that if he maintained his righteousness even in an immoral climate, he would have become incomparably greater had he lived in Moshe's or Shmuel's time (by learning from their examples).

How can we reconcile these contrasting views and understand Noach's personality?

It is true that by obeying all of Hashem's commandments and refraining from sin, Noach did what was expected of him. For this, the Torah calls him a tzaddik. Yet he is criticized by Chazal (our Sages) in a subtle manner for not exerting himself beyond that which was required of him. Noach should not have quietly acquiesced to the flood. He should have stormed the very gates of heaven with fasting and prayer, seeking mercy from G-d. Noach offered a sacrifice after the flood, but he really should have brought it before the catastrophe; it might have caused the decree to be revoked. 

Some say that the reason Noach did not pray for his contemporaries was not that he was neglectful, but that he could not find ten righteous people to participate with him. In Noach's family, counting both men and women, there were only eight people. Without ten righteous people, an evil decree cannot be revoked, as in the case of Sedom (Bereishit 18:32). (Bachya; Yad Yosef)

Although the generation was granted a hundred and twenty years' time to reflect upon Noach's words and repent, no one was impressed by his constant warnings. People did not fear danger because they felt secure in the knowledge of their colossal physical strength.  Besides their extraordinary bodily strength, these generations were well versed in the art of magic and therefore felt secure and unafraid.

Rabbi Yehudah said that even though Noach was righteous, it was still not worthwhile for G‑d to protect the world because of him. Come and see! Moshe did not ask for anything on the basis of his own merit. Rather, he depended on the merit of the Patriarchs. But Noach, unlike Moses, had no other person on whose merit he could depend.

The building of the tevah served not only as a reminder to the wicked but was also necessary to purify Noach himself. Through fulfilling Hashem's mitzvah of constructing the tevah despite everyone's jeering, Noach himself became spiritually elevated.


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Source: Midrash Says; Me'am Lo'ez; Chabad

Noach - The Mabul

Sunday, October 7, 2018 · Posted in , , ,



Although mankind no longer lived in Gan Eden, their life-style before the mabul (flood) still resembled Gan Eden. (Midrash Hagadol)

Life was good. In fact, it was too good. It was a life of uninterrupted serenity and enjoyment. For example, children were conceived and born on the same day. A newborn child was immediately able to stand and walk, and also had the ability to speak. Furthermore, no child would ever die during his parents' lifetime. In fact, all parents would live to see not only their children but also their grandchildren. (Bereishit Rabbah)

  • The generation before the mabul possessed enormous physical strength, as the verse says, "There were giants on earth in those days" (Bereishit 6:14) They were able to uproot whole cedar trees and considered lions and panthers as harmless as fleas. Their strength did not diminish in old age, but, on the contrary, it grew with age. This strength only disappeared after the mabul.
  • They lived a very long life, hundreds of years. Only when they sinned did Hashem say, "and his days shall be a hundred and twenty years."
  • They knew no suffering of any kind.
  • They sowed only one every forty years and the earth produced a sufficient amount for the following forty years.
  • They did not have to endure excessive heat or cold since there were no changing seasons, but the weather was a continuous, enjoyable and mild spring climate. It was only after the mabul that Hashem said, "Seed time and harvest and cold and heat and summer and winter and day and night shall not cease."
As a result of these benefits, however, they cast off Hashem's authority, saying, "For what purpose do we still need Him? We do not even require His help to obtain water, since we need no rain. We get an abundant supply of water from difference sources; we have the streams and wells of the earth" Answered Hashem, "Is it with the very goodness that I bestowed upon you that you rebel against Me? I shall punish you with the same substance, rain water, and therefore, 'And behold I will bring the flood of water.'" (Sanhedrin 108)

What were the crimes of those generations?  They were guilty of idol worship, bloodshed, and immorality. (Bereishit Rabbah)


Idol Worship

"They said to G-d, 'Depart from us, we do not desire the knowledge of Your ways. Who is the Almighty that we should serve Him? Why should we pray to Him?'" (Iyov 21:14-15).  They strengthened their independence from Hashem by acquiring expertise in witchcraft.  They forsook their Maker and served idols.


Bloodshed

They were murderers. Their depravity was similar to that later found in the wicked city of Sedom. (Yerushalmi)


Immorality

These generations ignored the commandment give to Adam (1:28), "Be fruitful and multiply." (Bereishit Rabbah) Since their goal in life was to gratify their instincts, they attempted to minimize the number of children that they had. (Midrash Hagadol) This explains the atrocities prevalent at that time.

  • A man would take two wives, one for the purpose of childbearing, and the other for his pleasure.
  • They exchanged wives.
  • They arranged "marriage contracts" between men and beast, thus legalizing forbidden relationships.
  • The judges themselves were corrupt.*
Even the animals imitated their corrupt ways; the dog associated with the wolf and the rooster with the duck.

However, Hashem would have spared even these wicked generations, had they sinned unknowingly. But they had been taught the six mitzvot commanded to Adam which included the prohibition against idolatry, murder, and adultery. They were punished because they chose to ignore Hashem's commandments. Nevertheless Hashem would have continued to exercise patience and restraint if not for the additional crime of robbery.

*The source of corruption in all generations to this day is the court of law itself. Legislation that is lenient and judges who are "liberal-minded" are responsible for the destruction of the country.


Robbery

Hashem said, "The end of all flesh has come before Me" (6:13). "The accusation of their thievery has come before Me, and therefore I can no longer delay their punishment!" (Sanhedrin 108)

What were the habits of the Generation of the Flood? If a man brought out a basket full of peas, he would soon be surrounded by a mob snatching them away. Each one cleverly took a small amount worth less than a pruta (small coin). The man's basket was soon empty. Yet the victim was unable to present the matter to a judge because each culprit could claim that he had stolen an amount so minute that he was not liable to punishment by law.  (Bereishit Rabbah)

It was among the practices of that generation to move their neighbors' landmarks in order to extend their property. They also commonly stole sheep from each other. If someone saw an ox or donkey in the hands of a helpless orphan or widow, he took it away. People, afraid that the clothes they wore would be stolen from their bodies decided that was safer to walk around naked. 

Why was their guilty verdict finalized for the sin of theft more than for the crimes of idol worship, bloodshed or immorality? The answer is that robbery undermines the basis of all civilization. it is common sense that another person's property may not be stolen. (Ramban) Whenever Hashem sits in judgment over a person guilty of several crimes, there is one crime that accuses him above all others - the sin of robbery. (Vayikra Rabbah)


Chronology of the Mabul

Day of Flood /  Hebrew Date / Civil Date

0 / 17 Cheshvan / October 27 - Flood begins
40 / 29 Kislev / December 8 - Forty-day rains ends; torrents begin
190 / 29 Iyar / May 6 - 150 day period of torrents ends
191 / 1 Sivan  May 7 - Water begins to recede
207 / 17 Sivan / May 23 - Tevah (Ark) rests on Mt. Ararat
250 / 1 Av / July 5 - Mountaintops are visible
290 / 10 Elul / August 13 Raven sent out
296 / 16 Elul / August 19 - Dove sent out
303 / 23 Elul / August 26 - Dove brings olive leaf
310 / 1 Tishrei / September 2 - Dove does not return. Water is gone and earth begins to dry.
365 / 27 Cheshvan / October 27 - Earth completely dry


The Flood was a reversion to the initial state of creation, in which the earth was physically submerged under water and spiritually submerged in Divine awareness.

At the very beginning of creation, all was water because dry land did not yet exist. On the spiritual level, this means that the world was filled with Divine awareness because dry land, which represents the facade of a self-sustained world independent of G‑d, did not yet exist.

G‑d's ultimate desire, however, is that Divine awareness permeate even a world with "dry land," i.e., self-awareness. Indeed, this will be the state of the world in the messianic age, when "the world will be filled with the knowledge of G‑d like water covers the seabed" (Yeshayahu 11:9). At that time, even though the world will not be covered by water and we will still be in a state of self-awareness, we will nevertheless enjoy the Divine awareness normally associated with submersion under water, i.e., self-nullification.

However, for the earth to reach this stage, it first had to have been immersed in the waters of the Flood, which "destroyed the earth," i.e., which nullified the earth's sense of self. This one-time experience conditioned the earth to be able to later attain Divine awareness — even after the waters receded and the earth reverted to dry land. The Midrash (Vayikra Rabbah 7:4) therefore compares the messianic age to the days of Noach, since the Flood initiated the process of conditioning the world for its ultimate state — Divine awareness despite the presence of self — which it will attain in the messianic age.

Once this conditioning occurred, G‑d promised never to Flood the earth again, in keeping with His original intention for the world to exist in its "natural" state and still be a vessel for Divine awareness.

In fulfilling our own Divine mission on earth, we also experience a period of immersion in the waters of Divine awareness: the High Holy Days of the month of Tishrei. Our challenge is to successfully experience Divine awareness even after Tishrei, when the "waters have receded" and our "dry" self has emerged.

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Source: Midrash Says; Me'am Lo'ez; Chabad

Bereishit - Shabbat

Friday, October 5, 2018 · Posted in , , , ,

[Art by Anna Zarnitsky]

 וַיְכַל אֱלֹהִים בַּיּוֹם הַשְּׁבִיעִי מְלַאכְתּוֹ אֲשֶׁר עָשָׂה וַיִּשְׁבֹּת בַּיּוֹם הַשְּׁבִיעִי מִכָּל-מְלַאכְתּוֹ אֲשֶׁר עָשָׂה
Vayechal Elokim bayom hashvi'i melachto asher asah vayishbot bayom hashvi'i mikol-melachto asher asah.
2:2 And on the seventh day, G-d finished all His work which He made. He rested on the seventh day from all His work which He made.

The world was established in its beauty and perfection, but an essential ingredient was lacking - Shabbat, rest! Only when Shabbat came to the world, did rest come to the world. It was the Rest which Hashem created on the seventh day! (Bereishit Rabbah)

Each day, when G-d commanded that something be created, the creative process would continue. Thus, for example, when G-d said, "Let there be a firmament," it came into being; until Friday evening, it continued to increase and spread out. (Bereishit Rabbah) It is for this reason that one of G-d's Names is Shakkai, coming from the word Dai, meaning "enough." If G-d had not said, "Enough," to the universe, commanding that the firmament stop, it would still be expanding. The same is true of the earth, since it did not know its destined size.

It therefore appears that the world continued to work all through the week. Although translated as "He rested on the seventh day," it can also be translated, "It rested on the seventh day," where "it" refers to the universe. This indicates that the universe itself had rest and repose on the Shabbat.

In Hebrew this verse is וַיִּשְׁבֹּת בַּיּוֹם הַשְּׁבִיעִי where the subject is implied, but not actually designated.  The verse does not say, "G-d rested on the seventh day," in the same manner as it says, "and G-d finished," or "G-d blessed." The subject of this phrase is creation as a whole, which rested on the Shabbat. (Ibid.)


"And G-d blessed the seventh day..." (2:3)

Shabbat was blessed above all the other days of the week in various ways:

  1. In the Wilderness, the Benei Yisrael received a double portion of mann on every Erev Shabbat, providing food for Shabbat. The blessing of extra mann is but one example of the Divine guarantee that whatever a person spends in honor of the Shabbat is refunded to him by Hashem. (Shabbat 1:1 [2a])
  2. Not only is a person recompensed for any financial loss he might seem to incur for the sake of Shabbat observance, but, in fact, one who honors this day is rewarded also with a good life and with wealth. (Bereishit Rabbah)
  3. Hashem also blessed the Shabbat with tasty food.
  4. Another blessing of Shabbat is that the wicked in Gehinnom are granted respite from their punishment and torture every seventh day. 
  5. The primeval Light created by G-d was so intense that it shone from one end of the universe to the other, but because of the wicked, G-d stored it away for the righteous in the Olam Haba. This Light, however, was not put away immediately. Chazal taught that this light functioned for thirty-six hours, consisting of twelve hours on the sixth day, and twenty-four hours on the first Shabbat. As soon as Adam sinned, G-d wished to remove this remarkable Light, but He put aside doing so because of the merit of the Shabbat. This is the Extra Soul (Neshamah Yeterah) that every Jew has on this holy day, one more spiritual and holy than that of the weekdays. Because of this extra soul, we say each Shabbat in the morning service, the prayer Nishmat: "The soul of all life shall bless Your Name." (Levush 281)
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Source: Me'am Lo'ez; Midrash Says






Bereishit - Before Physical Creation

Before the Beginning, There Was Nothing But Light, Infinite Light - Ohr Ain Sof

“When the King first desired a world, He engraved its forms in the pure Supernal Light.” (Zohar 1:15a)

The hollow engraved in the Supernal Light was the vacated space, in which all creation subsequently occurred.

This Constriction (tzimtzum) or hollowing of the Divine Essence did not occur in physical spakce, but rather, in conceptual space. It is "hollow" insofar as it contains the possibility for information, but not actual information. As such, it is the "Tohu and Bohu" (chaos and void) mentioned in the account of Creation, where the Scripture states, "the earth was chaos and void" (Bereishit 1:2). Chaos is a state where information can exist, but where it does not exist.

The hollow was made through 32 paths, since letters and digits are the basic bits of information. While random letters and numbers do not actually convey information, as long as they exist, it is also possible for information to exist. The Vacated Space is therefore the state where it is possible for information to exist, but where this possibility has not yet been realized.

These letters were subsequently combined into words, forming the Ten Utterances/Sayings of Creation. Each of these sayings brought information into the Vacated Space, through which creation could take place there.

The order was therefore first "engraving," and then "creation." The Sefer Yetzirah therefore states that the Creator "engraved...and created His universe." (Sefer Yetzirah; Bahir 2; Ramban on Bereishit 1:2)

Physical creation, as reported in the Torah, is not the beginning of the story, but the end of a process that began much earlier and which was totally spiritual at first. It is the essence of what true Kabbalah discusses at length. Kabbalah describes Creation as existing inside a Challal (hollow), a ball like structure in the "center" of the Infinite Light of Ain Sof, surrounded by Ohr Ain Sof on all sides.  The creation of the Challal was the first stage in making physical creation possible since it held back the powerful Ohr Ain Sof, which is far too spiritual to allow anything physical to exist. The next stage allowed a stream of Ohr Ain Sof, Kav Ain Sof, to enter the Challal in Divinely measured amounts, creating levels of existence on its way in. By moving towards the center of the Challal the Kav Ain Sof, in effect, was moving away from its Source, the Ohr Ain Sof beyond the Challal, allowing Creation to become increasingly more physical. Ohr Ain Sof resulted first in the Challal, then in the Kav Ain Sof, and eventually in the countless sefirot and partzufim, all just to make a world in which man could exist, exercise free will, and earn his portion in the Olam Haba (World to Come). (Rabbi Pinchas Winston, The Physics of Kabbalah, p. 3, note #10 quoting from Otzrot Chaim, p.5; and p. 17 of The Physics of Kabbalah)

In the beginning, a simple divine light filled the entirety of existence.  When there arose in His simple will the desire to create the worlds, He contracted His light, withdrawing it to the sides and leaving a void and an empty space in its center, to allow for the existence of the worlds. (However, this was not an absolute void, for there remained a residue of the divine light within the void.) He then drew a single line of His infinite light into the void to illuminate the worlds. In the teachings of Kabbalah, the act of creation is described as an act of tzimtzum—an act of contraction, concealment and withdrawal. In the beginning, the “light” of G‑d (i.e., the manifest expression of His omnipresence and omnipotence) filled the entirety of existence. A world such as ours—finite, self-defined and independent, with the capacity to turn away from and even deny its Creator—could not exist, for it would have been utterly nullified within the divine light. In order to allow for the existence of the world, G‑d “contracted” His light, creating a “void” and “empty space” within which His infinite being and power is not manifest. Into this void G‑d then allowed a single “line” (kav) of light to penetrate, through which flows a divine energy that is meted out to every level of reality in accordance with its capacity to receive it. (Chabad, Tzimtzum





Bereishit - Twilight at Creation


There is a time at sunset when it is neither day or night. This twilight period of the sixth day therefore pertained neither to the six days of creation, nor to the ensuing Shabbat. Chazal teach that the following ten things were created during this twilight period preceding the Shabbat (Avot 5:4)

  1. The "mouth of the earth" which swallowed Korach and his followers. (Bamidbar 16:32)
  2. The "mouth" of Miriam's well. This followed the Benei Yisrael throughout their wanderings in the desert.
  3. The mouth of Balaam's donkey, which was destined to speak to him at the appointed time. (Ibid. 22:28)
  4. The rainbow which was seen by Noach. (Bereishit 9:13)
  5. The grave of Moshe. (Devarim 34:6)
  6. The Shamir. This is a worm the size of a barleycorn, which has the power to split the largest mountains. King Shlomo made use of it to cut the stones of the Holy Temple.
  7. The writing [of the Ten Commandments] on the two Tablets. This writing was miraculous, since it could be read from all four sides.
  8. The Tablets themselves. These were two blocks made from the substance of the sun. Their length and breadth was six handbreadths (approx. 20 inches), while their thickness was three handbreadths (approx. ten inches).
  9. The staff of Moshe
  10. The ram that Avraham sacrificed in place of Yitzchak.
Some say that the shedim (demons) were also created on the twilight of the first Shabbat. These shedim were created to punish the wicked. Since they were created so late, they consist of spirits without bodies. They approach people quietly, intending to harm them. (Zohar, Bereshit p. 47. Cf. Zohar, Nasa p. 142b; Bereishit Rabbah 7:7) The shedim resemble angels in three ways, and man in three ways. (Chagigah 16a; Shalshelet HaKabbalah 3, quoting Ramban):

  1. Like angels they have wings
  2. Fly from one end of the world to the other
  3. They have knowledge of the future
They resemble man insofar as:

  1. They eat and drink
  2. have children
  3. and die
Some say that they have the ability to make themselves appear in any form that they desire. They can also remain invisible. (Avot DeRabbi Natan 37:3) They were not created from all four elements like man, but only from two, fire and air. When the Talmud says that they "eat and drink," it means that they  can be nourished by the smoke of a fire. It is for this reason that sorcerers would burn incense to the shedim

There are some authorities that include the caves in which Moshe and Eliyahu beheld the Divine Presense, the grave of Ahron, and the garments of Adam among the things created on the twilight of the first Shabbat.

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Sources: Me'am Lo'ez

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