Truths - Jewish Wisdom for Today

How God Made Room for the Universe: Exploring the Primordial Contraction

November 09, 2023 Season 4 Episode 11
Truths - Jewish Wisdom for Today
How God Made Room for the Universe: Exploring the Primordial Contraction
Truths - Jewish Wisdom for Today
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Show Notes

In this rich exploration of Lurianic Kabbalah, Rabbi Dr. Levi Brackman dives deep into the concept of Tzimtzum, the primordial "contraction" or concealment of God's infinite light that allowed for the possibility of creation. He frames the discussion by recapping key foundational ideas previously covered in the podcast. First, God created the universe to actualize what was previously only potential – demonstrating His greatness instead of remaining forever hidden. Second, this act echoes the desire for masculine/feminine unity, with God's wisdom desiring to partner with the universe as the feminine.

Rabbi Brackman then reminds us the question of why God created the world specifically at this moment in time is answered through Seder Hishtalshelut, the Kabbalistic chain of cause-and-effect dating back to the origins of creation that allowed for this particular world. He also reviews how the 10 Sefirot – the central Kabbalistic symbols – permeate each level of creation.

This leads to an apparent contradiction in Kabbalistic texts about whether the 10 Sefirot are described as concentric circles (Igulim) or straight lines (Yosher). For Rabbi Brackman, resolving this contradiction provides the jumping off point to discuss Tzimtzum. Even though the concept seems to address deeper philosophical questions about how multiplicity emerged from God's unity, it is framed textually to fit the non-philosophical nature of Kabbalah.

The podcast then explores Tzimtzum itself – God contracting His infinite light into a central point, drawing it aside to create a vacuum, and then allowing some light to re-enter through a central line, giving rise to creation. Different interpretations of Tzimtzum as literal or symbolic contraction are discussed. The philosophical implications around God limiting Himself and creating space for "otherness" to exist are unpacked, including how this may or may not ultimately limit an infinite deity.

Future discussions will move to more abstract explanations of Tzimtzum and elaborate on whether it was a physical contraction of divine light or something more metaphorical. For now, this provides a rich grounding in core Kabbalistic concepts and the innovation of Tzimtzum in particular.

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Levi Brackman is a rabbi, Ph.D. in psychology, best-selling author of Jewish Wisdom for Business Success, and founder of Invown, a platform for real estate fundraising and investing.