Sanford L. Drob - The Only God Who Can Save Us (From Ourselves), Kabbalah, Dogmatism, and The Open Economy of Thought
Sanford L. Drob - The Only God Who Can Save Us (From Ourselves), Kabbalah, Dogmatism, and The Open Economy of Thought
Sanford L. Drob - The Only God Who Can Save Us (From Ourselves), Kabbalah, Dogmatism, and The Open Economy of Thought
com 1
“The Only God Who Can Save Us (From Ourselves):” Kabbalah, Dogmatism, and
the Open Economy of Thought
I have considered the problem of evil from a Lurianic perspective in Symbols of the
Kabbalah, in a Chapter entitled “Kellipot and Sitra Achra, The Kabbalistic Myths of
Evil.” There “evil” is discussed in the context of the Lurianic symbols of Tzimtzum,
Shevirat ha-Kelim, Tikkun ha-Olam , and the Sitra Achra or “Other Side,” and the
integral relationship between evil, freedom and knowledge is explored. Here I will
expand on certain ideas regarding the relationship between evil and dogmatism that are
implicit in the Lurianic symbol of the Kellipot; the “husks” which, according to Luria,
imprison sparks of divine light that were emanated at the dawn of creation.
According to Luria, the Sefirot, the values, vessels or archetypes which comprise the
world, were unable to fully contain the divine light that was (and is) poured into them
during the process of creation. All ten sefirotic vessels overflowed with divine energy,
were displaced, and seven of them shattered, their broken shards falling through the
metaphysical void, each shard trapping a spark of divine light. These shards, together
with the light they imprison, form the Kellipot, the “husks” which comprise the Sitra
Achra, the Other Side, and which penetrate deeply into world of Assiyah, the world of
“making” or “action” within which we reside. According to Luiria, it is our divinely
appointed task, through spiritual and ethical action, i.e. the mitzvoth, to extract (birur) the
sparks from their husks and to liberate the imprisoned divine energy, so that it can be
placed in the service of Tikkun ha-Olam (the emendation and restoration of the world). In
the meantime, the divine light entrapped within the Kellipot lends vitality to the Other
Side, thereby sustaining the forces of evil and destructiveness.
What is the significance of divine light entrapped in the husks of the Other Side? We
should recall that this light was originally destined to fill vessels which represent
intellectual, spiritual, ethical, emotional and aesthetic values, and for this reason we can
understand the husks as symbolizing a certain imprisonment of, or rigidity in thought,
faith, ethics, emotions and taste. Psychologically, the Kellipot lead to dogmatism in
intellect, and constriction in emotion and behavior. In short, the Kellipot represent what
in recent philosophy has come to known as a “closed economy” i.e. thought, faith,
emotion, etc. one that is closed to change in response to dialog and experience. The
doctrine of the Kellipot symbolizes that such a dogmatic, closed economy is the source
and sustenance of much of the destruction generated by humankind. On the other hand,
S. Drob “The Only God Who Can Save Us (From Ourselves)” www.newkabbalah.com 2
the process of Tikkun, in which divine light is liberated from the Kellipot, produces a
continual emendation of the world through an open economy of ideas, experience, action
and interpretation.
The idea that a religious or spiritual perspective on the world should involve an “open
economy” of thought and experience is implicit in the biblical ban against graven images,
a ban against limiting the divine to any single representational form. The call to an “open
economy” is beautifully expressed in two passages I will quote from the writings of the
Lurianic Kabbalah; the first from a contemporary of Isaac Luria, R. Chayyim Vital, and
the second from a later Lurianist, R. Moses Chayyim Luzzato:
At every hour of the day the worlds change, and each hour is not the same
as the next. If you consider the movements of the constellations and the
shifts in their position, how in one moment they are different, and how
someone born at a certain time will experience different things than
someone born slightly beforehand (you will see) the upper worlds are
unlimited in number. You have to come to some kind of intellectual
middle ground because a human mind cannot understand it all. With this
you'll understand how the worlds change (with) the garments of Ein-sof,
and, according to these changes, the statements in Sefer haZohar change.1
Moshe Idel quotes R. Moses Chayyim Luzatto, a later (18th century) expositor of the
Lurianic Kabbalah, on the multiplicity of Torah meanings, which are like the many
nuances of flame that emerge from a hot coal:
So too is the case with the Torah that is before us, whose words and letters
are like a coal…and whoever is preoccupied and busy with it enflames the
coals, and from each and every letter a great flame emerges, replete with
many nuances, which are the information encoded in this letter…All the
letters we see in the Torah point to the twenty-two letters found on
high…there are six hundred thousand interpretations to all the Torah,
divided between the souls of the six hundred thousand [children of]
Israel…This is the reason why though the Torah [as a whole] is infinite,
even one of its letters is also infinite, but it is necessary to enflame it and
then it will be enflamed, and so too the intellect of man.2
When the intellect of man is enflamed like a burning coal, the Kellipot are effectively
unknotted, the divine sparks are freed, and the possibility of an infinity of interpretations
is achieved. Idel, in his book, Absorbing Perfections: Kabbalah and Interpretation,
suggests that the infinite plenitude of meaning which the Kabbalists attribute to the
Torah text and the world at large points to an immanent God who is the source and
totality of all significance whatsoever, a significance that is embodied in the infinite
1
Sefer Etz Chayyim, p. 29a.
2
R. Moses Chayyim Luzatto, Qelah Pithei Hokhmah (Maqor, Jerusalem, 1961). Fol. 2a. Quoted
in Idel, M. Absorbing Perfections (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002), p. 97.
S. Drob “The Only God Who Can Save Us (From Ourselves)” www.newkabbalah.com 3
interpretability of any text. Such a God, we might say, stands in opposition to all rigid,
dogmatic points of view, symbolized in the Kellipot and the Other Side.
The view that God must be understood in the context of an open economy of thought,
follows from the mystical view of God in general, and the Kabbalistic view of God in
particular. Mystics the world over have affirmed that the God they experience in states of
mystical union and ecstasy is so vast, so all-inclusive as to be undefinable and subject to
no attributes whatsoever. Thus “negative theology” the idea that the divine can only be
understood through “negative attributes” which define what it is not, has been closely
linked to various mystical traditions.
Indeed, the Kabbalists used a variety of negative epistemological terms to make reference
to the hidden God; “the concealment of secrecy”, “the concealed light”, “that which
thought cannot contain” etc.,3 each of which signifies that this God is somehow beyond
human knowledge and comprehension. Of this God, Sefer Yetzirah had earlier said
“restrain your mouth from speaking and your heart from thinking, and if your heart runs
3
Ibid., p. 89..
S. Drob “The Only God Who Can Save Us (From Ourselves)” www.newkabbalah.com 4
let it return to its place”.4 According to the Kabbalist R. Azriel of Gerona (early 13th
century), it is Ein-Sof’s very infinitude that makes it incomprehensible:
Ein-Sof cannot be an object of thought, let alone of speech, even though there is
an indication of it in everything, for there is nothing beyond it. Consequently,
there is no letter, no name, no writing, and no word that can comprise it.5
While such negative theology has not always dissuaded mystics and even Kabbalists
from making more positive assertions about God, it serves as a warning that such
assertions are tentative, metaphorical and open to interpretation.
What I am about to say now will be disturbing to some, although properly understood, it
should be obvious and indeed, liberating. It is precisely because evil has its origin in the
dogmatism and the closed economy of the Kellipot, that (a certain understanding of) God
is the source of evil. This is because behind every dogmatism is a vision of God or gods,
one that is dogmatic, exclusive and absolute. In Sefer ha Bahir we read “The Blessed
Holy One has an attribute that is called Evil.”6 That attribute, which the Kabbalists
associate with the Sefirah Din (Judgment) involves a judgment of truth, virtue, faith, etc.
that is no longer subject to emendation; in Kabbalistic terms, it is a judgment that is so
final, so enmeshed in the Kellipot, that it lies beyond the reach of Tikkun (the restoration
and emendation that completes both the world and God). To the extent that one, anyone,
believes that he/she has exclusive knowledge of God, or that one system of thought, faith
and belief, is the exclusive avenue to the divine, he/she worships an aspect or trait of God
that the Bahir calls evil. Indeed, the worship of an exclusive God, one that is
circumscribed by a closed economy of faith and belief, is idol worship, the very idol
worship that Abraham presumably shattered when he had a vision of the one, invisible
and undefinable God.
One should, in my view, sooner adopt atheism or agnosticism as a system of belief than a
religion of dogmatism. Indeed if atheism or agnosticism is an individual’s route to an
open economy of thought, emotion and action, than becoming such an atheist leads one
far closer to the infinite, Ein-sof, than aligning oneself with those who proclaim the
absolute truth of their so-called piety and faith. Unfortunately atheists can be equally
dogmatic (if one doubts this one need simply recall the communist regimes of the last
century). Nevertheless, there is need for a healthy dose of atheism at the heart of our
conception of Ein-sof, and it is for this reason, I believe, that the great Kabbalist Azriel
4
Sefer Yetzirah. I. 8. As translated in Tishby, The Wisdom of the Zohar. Vol , 1 p 234. Padeh,
can say that Ein-sof, “is the principle in which everything hidden and visible meet, and
as such the common root of both faith and unbelief” (my italics).7 In interpreting this
aphorism, we should again not underestimate the importance of God’s “hiddeness,” for it
is indeed such hiddeness, concealment and unfathomability that serves as a condition for
free thinking. It is only a God who is supposedly fully manifest and known that can
become the foundation for a dogmatic system of belief.
Why then should we not rest with atheism or agnosticism pure and simple? The reason is
that in many if not most (but not all) cases atheism or agnosticism blinds one to the
spiritual dimension in life, inhibits one from experiencing and expressing awe, reverence,
and gratitude for one’s life and world, and cuts one off from the possibility of
participating in the forms of spiritual life offered by the great religions. Just as it is
difficult to have an aesthetic sensibility without turning one’s gaze upon objects of
aesthetic experience, I believe it is difficult to have a spiritual sensibility without turning
one’s (inner) gaze on an object of spiritual experience, whether it be called Ein-sof,
Brahman, the Absolute, the World Soul, or God. It is also, on my view, difficult (though
again not impossible) to formulate an atheistic ground for the meaning and purpose of
one’s existence and one’s place in the overall structure of humanity and the world, and
conversely, comparatively simple to do so in a theistic context, especially one that is
shared by other members of a religious community. On the other hand, if by adopting
spirituality and theism one develops an arrogant belief that one is in possession of “the
truth” then I would say that atheism or agnosticism is by far the better alternative.
7
Scholem. Origins of the Kabbalah, pp. 441-2.
S. Drob “The Only God Who Can Save Us (From Ourselves)” www.newkabbalah.com 6
I never tire of quoting the dictum of the Chabad Chasidic Rabbi Arron ha-Levi:
I believe that such a universal God, a God who is realized and completed only when the
full garden of earthly species, peoples, cultures and ideas is permitted to bloom, emerges
from a deep reflection on the Kabbalistic and Chasidic tradition. It is also, I believe, the
God who blossoms forth not only from philosophical reflection, but from mystical
experience as well; it is a God that becomes the spiritual arena within which we can
address our utmost existential concerns, without turning to a closed economy of thought,
feeling and faith. It is such an open, tolerant, infinitely interpretable, transforming God
that, to my mind, is the only God who can save us from ourselves. All other so-called
“Gods;” national Gods, Gods of certain religions and peoples, are in danger of becoming
idols. This is the simple message of Abraham, but it must be repeated with great force
today. The idol Gods of tribes, nations, and religions are divisive and potentially
destructive, unless they are seen as manifestations of a single essentially unknowable
8
I have described this in my paper, Judaism as a Form of Life, in Tradition: A Journal of
Orthodox Jewish Thought, 23, 4, 1988, pp. 78-89.
9 As quoted in Rachel Elior. Chabad: The Contemplative Ascent to God, in Jewish Spirituality:
From the Sixteenth Century Revival to the Present, ed. by Arthur Green (New York: Crossroads,
1987), pp. 157-205, p. 167
S. Drob “The Only God Who Can Save Us (From Ourselves)” www.newkabbalah.com 7
God, a God who is subject to interpretation, transformation and emendation; who is the
province of all and who embraces all peoples, cultures, species, and ideas. It is such a
God that must be liberated from the husks of the Kellipot, and it is just this liberation that
is a fundamental task in our engaging in Tikkun ha-Olam.
Sanford L. Drob is on the Core Faculty of the doctoral program in Clinical Psychology
at Fielding Graduate University in Santa Barbara, California. He holds doctorates in
Philosophy and Clinical Psychology and is the author of Symbols of the Kabbalah:
Philosophical and Psychological Perspectives, and Kabbalistic Metaphors: Jewish
Mystical Themes in Ancient and Modern Thought (both published by Jason Aronson,
1999). Dr. Drob is currently completing a book on Carl Jung, Jewish Mysticism, and
Anti-Semitism, working on studies on Kabbalah and Psychotherapy and the Kabbalah
and Postmodern thought, and developing a Kabbalistic "Tree of Life," "axiology" or
"firmament of values" (progress on which appears periodically on this website). Dr. Drob
served as head psychologist on the Bellevue Forensic Psychiatry Service from 1984-2003
and was for many years the Director of Psychological Testing at Bellevue Hospital in
New York City. He is currently also on the clinical faculty of New York University
Medical School, He can be reached by email at forensicDX@aol.com or
sdrob@fielding.edu.