Introduction
"Listen Israel, Adonai is our God, Adonai is One (Deut. 6:4)."
God is perfectly clear: God is one. He is not many. There
is a single, indivisible cause of the universe. Yet, despite this
clarity, and as demonstrated by the Golden Calf worshippers, man has
difficulty worshipping a metaphysical God. His insecurities catapult him
towards idol creation, worship, and the invention of theories and
practices that conflict with God's words. Trinitarianism, polytheism and
all forms of idolatry are additional expressions of man's fantasies;
not the Torah's words.
Even when God tells Moses to His attributes of mercy
(Exod. 34:6,7) these attributes are not independent beings, God forbid.
God refers to His "mercy, appeasement, long-suffering, abundant kindness and truth…etc."
as attributes, not as "separate beings." God holds no discourse with
these attributes, for in fact, He is One. These references to acts that
man calls "mercy" and "kindness" are merely concessions to man's feeble
nature. We need to know that God is not cruel, so He tells us He is
"kind." We need to understand that God does not seek quick punishment,
so He tells us He is long-suffering, offering man time to repent prior
to punishment. And we must know that these are not positive traits, "for
man cannot know God while alive (Exod. 33:20)." There is nothing
positive we can understand about God. Maimonides and other great minds
have discussed this.
In contrast, Zohar attempts to describe God, despite God's
words to Moses above that He is unknowable. Zohar pays no attention to
God's warning, and corruptly invents "sephiroth" (godly emanations) and
views them as independent beings: "The king (Abba) said to Imma: 'Did
I not say to you that Adam is destined to sin?' At that time he (Abba)
drove man away, and he drove away Imma with him (Zohar, Genesis 22)."
Here, Zohar depicts God's emanations or sephiroth as both Abba and
Imma, two distinct beings with their own opposing wills. But sephiroth
are not found in God's words, or in the words of His Prophets.
Therefore, sephiroth is an invention of human fantasy, with no
reflection on Torah or on reality.
Kabbalists attempt to gain credibility for the Zohar by
attributing it to Rav Shimon bar Yochai, as if anything any Rabbi says
is a validation of reality. In fact, the Rabbis themselves argue
throughout the Talmud, admitting the errors of their peers. Therefore,
the tactic of attribution is of no value, as truths must be proven based
on their own merit, and fallacy rejected by the same token.
Furthermore, the attribution to Rav Shimon bar Yochai has already been
rejected. Chassam Sofer, who was not an anti-kabbalist, said the
following to the students of his Yeshiva:
"Of the vast Zohar, only a small portion that would
make up a very small book of few pages, is attributable to R. Shimon ben
Yohai." (Quoted by talmidim of the Chassam Sofer, as stated by Gaon haRav Eliezer Lippman Nizetz, "Mei Menachot", daf 43 ammud 2)
An even stronger statement is found by Rav Eliezer Pilklush, the outstanding talmid of the Nodeh BeYehudah, and subsequently the Rav of Prague:
"I swear by Hashem's Torah that in the Zohar there are
many forgeries and destructive statements that have been added. One page
of the Talmud Bavli [containing] the discussions of Abaye and Rava is
more holy than the entire Zohar -- the [authenticating] seal of R.
Shimon ben Yohai is not affixed to them (i.e., to the words of the
Zohar). ... Anyone with half a mind must admit this, for a number of
Tannaim and Amoraim are mentioned who lived many years after R. Shimon
ben Yohai ... [This has been] explained by the Gaon Rabbi Yaakov Emden
who declared that [unidentified] hands have been at work on it (i.e.,
the Zohar)."
The Rivash wrote:
"I have also informed you that my teacher Harav Rabbi
Peretz Hakkohen never at all used to speak or think of those Sephiroth. I
also heard from his mouth that Harav Rabbi Shimshon of Chinon (the
author of Sefer HaKerithuth), who was greater than all others of his
generation used to say: I pray with the intent of this child, i.e., in
rejection of the opinion of the kabbalists, who pray sometimes to one
Sefirah and sometimes to another Sefirah, according to the subject of
the prayer ... And all this is a very bizarre thing in the eyes of those
who are not kabbalists as they are, and they (i.e., the non-kabbalists)
consider this a belief in dualism (i.e., belief in two or more
deities). I once heard one of the philosophical (i.e., non-kabbalistic)
persons denigrate the kabbalists by saying: "The Christians believe in
trinity, (i.e., the union of three), and the kabbalists believe in the
union of ten [Sephiroth]." (Rivash)
Kabbala cites the order of the progressive emanation of the ten Sephiroth, generally presented by the kabbalists as follows: Kether, Binah, Hokhmah, Gevurah, Hesed, Tifereth, Hod, Netzah, Yesod, and Malkhuth, also called Shekhinah. According
to Zohar III, llb, 70a: "He is they, and they are He." This
trinitarian/polytheistic approach does not explain sephiroth, but
incoherently says a plurality equates to a singularity. However, God
said, "God is one." Unlike Zohar, we have these words as part of our
Mesora. And unlike Zohar, God's words make sense.
Purpose of this Essay
The purpose of this essay is to determine what God said,
to make it clear that God's words are limited, and that we must accept
His words over man's words. To this end, I intend to offer arguments to
bolster your intellectual conviction and courage in this truth, so it
overpowers your emotional need to be accepted by your peers, who may
deviate. Please be sensitive to your feelings as you read on. No doubt,
you will read ideas that conflict with your present views, and the views
of many of your peers and perhaps teachers and Rabbis. I urge you be
open to accepting that you may harbor incorrect ideas. Torah
study requires a commitment to honesty first, not to men, Rabbis,
books, no matter how old or widely accepted they might be. Clearly,
throughout time, Zohar and Kabbala have met with strong opposition. Both
sides cannot be correct. The only method to arrive at truth, is first,
to desire it and search for it until it is found, to be diligent in your
search, and to follow reason and proof over emotional tendencies or
following what is familiar or popular. If you can dedicate yourself to
this search, to seeking a conclusion and not abandoning the search or
tiring…please read on. But if you have already made up your mind, you
need not waste your time.
Whats is True and What is Not
We are not bound to accept as Torah truths, any matter,
except those found in Moses' Five Books (Chumash), Prophets, Writings
and the Oral Law. For these alone did God give to Moses at Sinai; these
alone are absolute Torah truths. Therefore, notions located in the
Zohar, Kabbala or other human works, do not impose obligatory
acceptance. In all works other than the four mentioned above, we must
agree only to what is proven and true, regardless of its author.
Everything false, or unproven, must be rejected, regardless of its
author. Regarding this, Maimonides wrote:
"Know, my masters, that it is not proper for a man to
accept as trustworthy anything other than one of these three things. The
first is a thing for which there is a clear proof deriving from man’s
reasoning—such as arithmetic’ geometry, and astronomy. The second is a
thing that a man perceives through one of the five senses—such as when
he knows with certainty that this is red and this is black and the like
through the sight of his eye; or as when he tastes that this is bitter
and this is sweet; or as when he feels that this is hot and this is
cold; or as when he hears that this sound is clear and this sound is
indistinct; or as when he smells that this is a pleasing smell and this
is a displeasing smell and the like. The third is a thing that a man
receives from the prophets or from the righteous. Every reasonable man
ought to distinguish in his mind and thought all the things that he
accepts as trustworthy, and say: “This I accept as trustworthy because
of tradition, and this because of sense-perception, and this on grounds
of reason.” Anyone who accepts as trustworthy anything that is not of
these three species, of him it is said: “The simple believes everything”
(Prov. 14:15)." ("Letter to the Community of Marseilles", "Letter on
Astrology")
We accept as our "Mesora" only those authentically-proved
transmissions, that are traceable to Sinai. However, what is not in our
Mesora from Sinai, is not obligatory. Something without proven origin
from Sinai is not part of the Mesora. Zohar and Kabbala are not
traceable to Sinai, and is less than 1000 years old. This of course does
not mean everything in Zohar or Kabbala is false. If an idea is true,
it does not matter where it is found. The same applies if the notion is
false. Thus, calling an idea "part of Zohar or Kabbala", does not
validate it as true. Certainly, when an idea in Zohar or Kabbala, or any
work, contradicts the four works above, we reject it.
All Commands are not Equally Vital
You must understand that Torah ideas are not all on the
same level of importance. This explains the different levels of
punishment for violations, and the varying levels of sacrifices. Truths
about monetary damages are not as vital as our idea of what God is. This
explains why the Ten Commandments commence with the command to know
God, and why monetary laws are towards the end. Observing all the
commands while possessing an incorrect notion of God, we might forfeit
our souls.
It is not as we think, that all God asks is that we attend
shul, daven three times daily, give tzedaka, celebrate holidays, send
kids to yeshiva and attend simchas. Without the diligent search to
understand God's Torah, to learn what we can and cannot know about God,
we miss the core of Judaism, and no other act can compensate for this
loss. I understand this is rarely discussed, and why you must be
thinking, "Does this really matter?" since it is unpopular. However,
Torah says this is both central and vital. This explains why our
greatest minds like Maimonides and Rabbi Bachya (Duties of the Heart)
wrote extensively on our notions of God: what He is, and what He is not.
And they derived their ideas of God from God's words, not man's words.
They adhered to the four works stated above, Chumash, Prophets, Writings
and the Oral Law.
Today, unfortunately, Judaism has been steered off the
focus of God's four only works, towards the popularity of a man-made
work called Zohar and Kabbala, 2500 years after God's complete Torah was
given at Sinai and accepted as His undisputed, entire transmission to
mankind. Until the invention of Zohar, no Prophet, Rabbi or Sage would
heretically suggested God's Torah was incomplete. Until Zohar, no
mention of "sephiroth" was ever heard, the notion that God has ten
"emanations." But like all movements, with enough followers, the
remaining members of that culture feel obligated to accept the movement,
lest they be ostracized and lose popularity, as if personal fame
outweighs following God.
Many Rabbis, from Zohar's rise, and throughout time,
vocalized opposition to its writings, and for good reason. Here are
Zoharic quotes, and I will follow by quoting God's words to illustrate
the deviant nature of these portions of Zohar:
Zohar: Genesis 22
"When coming to the world of separation which is the
world of separated things, the builder said to the master of the
edifice: Let us make man in our image, according to our likeness. The
master of the edifice said: 'Indeed it would be good to make him, but he
is destined to sin before you, for he is a foolish son,' as it is
written (Proverbs 10:1): A wise son maketh glad a father, but a foolish
son is the grief of his mother. Whereupon she (Imma) said: "Since his
sin relates to Imma, and not to Abba, I want to create him in my image,"
as it is written: And God created man in His image; but Abba did not
want to participate in man's creation. At the time that man sinned what
is written: and for your transgression was your mother sent away (Isaiah
50:1). The king (Abba) said to Imma: "Did I not say to you that he is
destined to sin?" At that time he (Abba) drove him (man) away, and he
drove away Imma with him."
The portion of Zohar quoted above "Let us make" surely was
said of two beings, and goes on to explain that Imma said to Abba "Let
us make man", and she did as she wished and created man without the
agreement of Abba. This is the heretical view that there are multiple
divinities, and each does as he/she wishes. Zohar includes additional
corruptions stemming from it's author's inability to extricate himself
from a physical understanding of God, the source of all idolatry.
Zohar's author rejects Maimonides clear explanation in his 13
Principles, that God is not comparable to His creations. His creations
are subject to division and parts, while He is not: "To what shall you
equate Me, so that I shall be similar (Isaiah 40:25)". Yet, Zohar suggest God has ten parts, which sinfully equates God to His creations.
Philosophy: Willfully Accepted, Not Coerced or Mandated
"Majority rule" (the halachik mechanism of following the
majority of Rabbinic opinion; "rove") cannot serve to render some
philosophy part of the Mesora. Majority rule does not apply to
historical verification, since majority rule is a principle applicable
only to the sphere of halacha - Jewish law - not historical fact or
philosophical ideas. Based on a vote, the Torah never says something is
historically true, or imposes acceptance of philosophical principles.
Jews and Rabbis have erred when applying rules of Halacha –
how to act – to one's beliefs, or "philosophy." In Halacha, we follow
the majority opinion. But this cannot be applied to one's beliefs. And
belief in the notion of sephiroth are "beliefs". Beliefs can only be
accepted on our own, and not through a majority rule. A majority rule
cannot coerce one to "believe" he is standing in Ashkelon, when in fact
he stands in Jerusalem. Majority rule cannot make a person believe in
sephiroth, if his mind tells him otherwise, or if he fails to comprehend
how God being One, can simultaneously be 10 sephiroth. Therefore
majority rule or "rove", cannot be applied to philosophical matters. It
is therefore incorrect to say, "Since many Rabbis yesteryear or today
accept Zohar or Kabbala, Zohar becomes Torah or Judaism." Majority rule
does not apply.
Some wish to claim that Meilli, Rivash, Ran, R. Alkafih
who rejected Zoharic Kabbala as heresy, have been "overruled by a
majority." This claim is
equally inapplicable, as we said, majority rule plays no role in belief.
Majority cannot render ideas, to suddenly become false. Ideas of truths
and falsehoods are not subject to how many people accept or deny them.
Truths and falsehoods are determined, as Maimonides accurately said
above: 1) you realize a
truth with your mind; 2) you witnessed some phenomenon; 3) the Mesora
includes the idea. But a philosophical truth cannot be mandated,
certainly not by a rule of Halacha, i.e., majority rule.
In philosophy, anything any Rabbi says is not binding, as
we see the Rabbis argued on each other. Now, if every Rabbinic statement
was binding, how could one Rabbi oppose another? We never see any Rabbi
throughout time, waiting for a "majority rule" (rove) to agree with him
before he voiced his opinion! In the Chumash, for example, Ramban
argues on Maimonides, who argued on others. Ibn Ezra constantly voices
opposition to many Rabbis. The same applies to all thinkers. Had
majority rule been
obligatory in philosophy, no Rabbi would have been able to voice his
"sole" opinion. But, they all do. Majority rule applies only to Halacha.
Agreement can only take place by an individual who
actually agrees, and this cannot be coerced. Halacha can be coerced,
since the courts and Bet Din can coerce men to act. But force is
inapplicable to one's convictions. And while one thinking God is
physical, can have Halachik ramifications, the "belief" of any notion is
outside Halachik jurisdiction.
God Desires we Each Think for Ourselves
It is for this very reason, that God gave each human being
an intellect. God clearly desires that each person engage his/her
intellect, so as to arrive at truths independently. Rabbi Bachya, author
of Duties of the hear says the following:
"If, however, you possess intelligence and insight,
and through these faculties you are capable of verifying the
fundamentals of the religion and the foundations of the commandments
which you have received from the sages in the name of the prophets, then
it is your duty to use these faculties until you understand the
subject, so that you are certain of it - both by tradition and by force
of reason. If you disregard and neglect this duty, you fall short in the
fulfillment of what you owe your Creator."
Devarim 17:8-10 states: "If a case should prove too
difficult for you in judgment, between blood and blood, between plea and
plea, between (leprous) mark and mark, or other matters of dispute in
your courts, ....you must act in accordance with what they tell you."
Regarding this passage, Rabbi Bachya states: "the
verse does not say,.....simply accept them on the authority of Torah
sages,...and rely exclusively on their tradition. Rather, (Scripture)
says that you should reflect on your own mind, and use your intellect in
these matters. First learn them from tradition - which covers all the
commandments in the Torah, their principles and details - and then
examine them with your own mind, understanding, and judgment, until the
truth become clear to you, and falsehood rejected, as it is written:
"Understand today and reflect on it in your heart, Hashem is the G-d in
the heavens above, and on the Earth below, there is no other". (Ibid,
4:39)"
Again, "…examine them with your own mind, understanding, and judgment, until the truth become clear to you, and falsehood rejected." Therefore,
when confronted with that which the mind cannot explain, and which has
not been proven to form part of the Mesora, we do not accept such a
notion, but we reject it. Suggesting an imposed acceptance of Zohar,
contradicts this self-evident reasoning that God desires each person to
apply their mind and reject falsehood. Even when about to give His
Torah, God first gave Moses a number of laws, of which the Jews
accepted. God wished the Jews accept the Torah system, but only after
reviewing it. This does not mean Torah was optional. It means God wished
the Jews' minds be engaged in what they were to accept.
Zohar & Kabbala: Notions Alien to Torah
It is clear; Zohar presented new notions not found in
Tanach. For had Tanach contained references to sephiroth, our Rishonim
would not view Zohar as "new." What
did these objecting Rishonim find so distasteful in Zohar, that they
did not find elsewhere? It is the discussion of matters one cannot
prove, and the heretical notions of divisibility of God into many
sephiroth; praying to varying sephiroth; and the gross humanization of
God (Zohar, Vayeitze 106b).
Zohar Violates Torah's Restrictive Nature
The approach to determining truths about God's essence
must be relegated to the Mesora, since God Himself falls outside, 1)
what our mind can grasp, and 2) what we can perceive. Yes, we perceive
"evidence" of the Creator in His world, but we never perceive "Him." To
make statements about what God is, i.e., sephiroth, when not having
found such statements in the Torah, is an incorrect approach, for it
cannot be validated.
Furthermore, God told the wisest man, Moses, the following: "For man cannot know Me while alive (Exod. 33:20)." If Moses cannot know what God is, a discussion of "sephiroth" as "parts of God" falls outside human knowledge.
Torah shuns the very notion that man can know God at all.
It is for this reason that the Rabbis who crafted our prayers, included
these words to be repeated many times daily: "Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, God of hosts, His honor fills the world (Isaiah 6:3)." On these words, the great intellect Rabbi David Kimchi (1160–1235) (Radak) states, "God is distinct, elevated and totally incomprehensible (ibid)."
The word kadosh does not mean holy, but rather, "distinct," as in God
is distinct from all else and unknowable. Thus, we cannot know what He
is. The suggestion of sephiroth exceeds Torah's boundary, that God is
unknowable. Note also that the Torah says God's "honor" fills the world,
not that "He" fills the world. For God is not related to the universe
in any way. He cannot occupy space, for even space was His creation, and
He predates space. Thus, He existed, and exists, without space.
Unrelated to physical creations, God has no parts. Sephiroth must be
false.
And who recited these words, that God is unknowable? It
was the angels; beings of far greater knowledge than us. And yet, they
admit they know nothing about God! How then can humans who wrote the
Zohar depict God, in anyway?
Why do both God and the Rabbis depict the angels in the
Torah? We must understand this lesson: if higher-level beings cannot
fathom God, certainly we cannot. God also tells us that angels, and
Moses could never know what God is. But Zohar claims its does. You must
appreciate Zohar's claim as directly rejecting God's Torah.
Torah was Complete at Sinai
Ibn Ezra Exod. 13:9: "Kabbala's words are strong and don't need to be strengthened." Ibn
Ezra says that our true Kabbala (literally, "received" Torah
transmissions) predate Zoharic Kabbala. Nothing needs to be added (i.e.,
"strengthened") to what God gave Moses.
Sephiroth: Bereft of Wisdom
All of God's Torah reflects wisdom. In contrast, the
polytheistic notion of sephiroth imparts no wisdom and subscribes to
idolatrous influence, thereby opposing Torah at the core. Worse,
sephiroth truly confuse the mind, forcing physical characteristics of
parts, onto our indivisible, metaphysical God. Again, to truly comprise
Torah, an idea must be intelligent, not an empty statement, like
sephiroth.
Today's Blogs and Email Lists: No Sound Ideas or Arguments
Zohar proponents often need to personally attack those
rejecting Zohar. A recent email list discussion found it acceptable to
reprint the exact words of today's Zohar defenders, who stripped "Rabbi
X" of his title, calling him "Mr. X." This can only be explained as a
weakness in their arguments defending Zohar itself, needing to resort to
a personal jab. Rabbi X could not have known his attackers, they being
part of such a large email list. Thus, Rabbi X did not attack others,
but wrote solely against Zohar. Personal attacks were therefore
unprovoked, and unveiled an emotional bias for Zohar, not an intelligent
basis for accepting it.
Other defenders of Zohar responded with a list of Rabbis
praising Zohar or Kabbala, but without any explanation of sephiroth or
any of Zohar's views. This makes one question their beliefs, as their
defense of Zohar remains without explanation. Their defense boils down
to, "The more people repeat something, the truer it becomes", which is
not rational. Even if the many people are Rabbis.
One person voiced this sentiment: "It is an important part
of our rich intellectual and spiritual heritage", but again, without
explanation. And a final defense of Zohar was the familiar, "Some things
in life are just beyond our understanding." This admission that Zohar
is inexplicable should be well-heeded.
On the other hand, God's Torah is said to be that which the other nations will marvel at:
"And you shall guard the commands and perform them for
they will be your wisdom and understanding in the eyes of other
nations, for when they hear all these statutes they will say, "What a
wise and understanding people is this great nation". For what great
nation has God close to them, as the Lord our God whenever we call upon
Him. And what great nation possesses statutes and laws so righteous as
this Torah that I place before you today (Deut. 4:6-8)?"
These verses make it clear that unintelligible (and
heretical) notions of sephiroth cannot be part of Torah. True Torah
ideas can be understood by all nations, as God says. And those ideas
(i.e., what God is) that are beyond our capacity to grasp, is where
Zohar has fraudulently and irresponsibly has ventured to speak.
Summary
In conclusion, it is more reasonable to reject the view
that many Rabbis agreed with Zohar, as it contains unintelligent and
heretical positions. So we need not even engage the inapplicable use of
"majority rule". It's defenders have not voiced any explanations for
sephiroth or other claims. And Rav Eliezer Pilklush and Rabbi Yaakov
Emden's position that Zohar is a forgery, retains our ancient Rabbis in
an intelligent light, which maintains Kavod Hatorah.
God gave each of us intelligence. Rabbi Bachya explained in Duties of the Heart
so clearly, that this gift demonstrates God's desire that we each use
our intelligence. Our opinions of what God is and is not, are at the
core of our life's purpose. To leave this area unexamined, and merely
follow the crowd, is against God's will. If you strive to follow God's
Torah, you must start with a clear understanding of God Himself, as far
as humanly possible. You must be clear about the guidelines for
accepting and dismissing beliefs, and these rules are all within your
grasp, if you engage your intellect.
Can God truly equate to His creation, by having parts? What did God say?
"To what shall you equate Me, so that I shall be similar (Isaiah 40:25)"
What makes sense to you, is God one, or many? What did God say?
"Listen Israel, Adonai is our God, Adonai is One (Deut. 6:4)."
source: http://www.mesora.org/zoharsdeviation.html
You mention Oral Torah, but I thought Karaites don't accept the oral tradition, right?
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