The Barzakh of Al Khidr in the Cave of Elijah


This week’s Parshat is Parshat Pinchas. It has two haftarot...one which is read on a Shabbat that occurs before the  Fast of Tamuz (Melachim I 18:46 to 19-21)  and  one if it occurs after that date (Yirmeyahu1:1 to 2:3).

Because of the  Calendar, The  first of those haftarot is rarely read— but I propose that we in this  Tariqa should always  read it annually in private,  as our  “second haftarah”. 

Our Tariqa is  named after Elijah the  Prophet —in a  sense he is  the root of our silsila— and  the  Melachim I haftarah recounts his most famous contemplative experience: The dialogue with the “Still,Small Voice”.

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Though the Egyptian Pietist manuscripts are replete with poignant references to Elijah in a Jewish Sufi context— most often in connection with celibacy,sufic attire, and the Murshid/Murid relationship—I am not aware  of  any that discuss the Epiphany of Elijah in the Cave. If any of our members know  of such  a passage: Please tell us!

Because of this  I am  going to post my own personal commentary on the Elijan Epiphany this week. 

It is Chapter Nine  of  my unpublished book “The Mitkarevim”, and  as I may never finish that book— I have  decided to publish this entire chapter online  here.   Consequently this  week’s Hegyon Ha Lev is unusually long.  Perhaps  you  might  print it out to read on Shabbat.  

Most of it  was written in 2007, but this  draft is from 2021.

You will appreciate  that my comments on the concept of  “threshold” are closely related to the  sufic concept of Barzakh......which I had never heard of at the  time I wrote the  chapter.  You will also  pick up on the  reference to the  Hadith Qudsi 25 (“When I love him I am his hearing with which he hears, his seeing with which he sees”) which I was also unaware of at the  time. 

When reading it ....members of Tariqa Eliyahu should understand that the “Jewish Contemplatives” and “Mitkarevim” and  the "Children of Eliyahu HaNabi" that I describe in this chapter........ are  you and  I in this Tariqa.

 

Shabbat Shalom

 

Nachman Davies

Safed

July 25 2024

 

IN THE CAVE OF ELIJAH

The Threshold of the Cave of Eliyahu is an image  for the place or state in which we encounter the Divine. It bears a profound  and remarkable connection with the Cleft in the  Rock  in which Moshe Rabbeinu "heard"  the Divine Attributes, and  also with the prophetic discourse which he engaged in whilst in the Tent of Meeting.  

But even more remarkably, we can share something of all three of those encounters, to some  degree at least, when we stand at the threshold of our own Tent...our own interior Cave....and  realise that by our attention to the still small voice, we can stand with them (as it  were) and thus we can prepare the  way for  the return of Prophecy to Am Yisrael.  

והיה כבא משה האהלה ירד עמוד הענן ועמד פתח האהל ודבר עם־משה: וראה כל־העם את־עמוד הענן עמד פתח האהל וקם כל־העם והשתחוו איש פתח אהלו: 


“And when Moshe entered the tent, the pillar of cloud would descend and stand at the entrance of the tent, and He would speak with Moses. Whenever all the people saw the pillar of cloud standing at the entrance of the tent, all the people would rise and prostrate themselves, each one at the entrance of his tent.”
Shemot 33:9-10


This passage describes a communal liturgy which took place in the period between the destruction of the golden calf and the erection of the Desert Sanctuary. It would seem possible from Shemot 33:7 that Moshe Rabbeinu had set up a special ‘Tent of Meeting’ outside the camp specifically for his private contemplative prayer. This tent was guarded by Yehoshua who seems to have been in full-time retreat there (Shemot 33:11) and so it may have had a wider cultic usage.

We read of the liturgy to which I refer in Shemot 33:8-11: As  Moshe Rabbeinu leaves the community to speak  with G-d in the Tent, he is respectfully observed by all the Israelites who are positioned in prayer at their own tent doors. When Moshe Rabbeinu enters the Tent of Meeting, the Pillar of Cloud descends and takes up a position at the threshold of the Tent of Meeting.  At this point the community prostrates in worship while facing the Pillar of Cloud as before, with each individual at the door of his own tent.[i]


I hope that the reader is immediately aware of the important resonances between this biblical passage and the symbolism of the  Maarat Ha-Lev, for  it is significant that Moshe Rabbeinu's prayer initiates the appearance of the Cloud at the threshold of the tent of meeting, and doubly significant that Moshe Rabeinu’s intimate hitbodedut is mirrored by that of the individual members of the community who share in Moshe Rabeinu’s communion at the threshold of their own dwellings. 

The prayer of the People is thus bound to the prayer of the Tzaddik. The Divine Presence  is being revealed at the various thresholds according to the capacity and specific perception of each individual.

  The Presence inside the Tent is simultaneously active (i) in the form of  the Cloud at the Tent threshold and (ii) as the synchronised communion taking place  in the hearts of each Israelite  as they  prostrate themselves at their own tent doors.  Time  and space  are somehow blurred and fused in this liturgical-contemplative  event.

  The Torah has here decribed the fusion of the Olamim and the communal yet paradoxically individual nature of  G-d’s revelation to Israel.  

From all of the above, it certainly provides a remarkably good model for Jewish contemplative prayer. It might also, one day, be taken as a model for communal silent hitbonenut in Jewish eremetic communities or retreat centres. [editorial note: this has actually become fact in 2024 in the silent Dhikr practiced during the weekly meetings of our Safed Jewish-Sufi Group]


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The significance of the threshold, (the doorway of a tent or the mouth of a cave) is something which links the biblical liturgy with the Theophany to Moshe Rabbeinu in the cleft of the rock; with the Theophany to Eliyahu at the mouth of his cave; and with the Kodesh HaKodoshim declaration of the Divine Name on Yom Kippur. In a sense—these events are all one.


The interior of the Tent of Meeting may be said to represent the ‘realm’ of G-d Himself. The Pillar of Cloud may be said to represent the Shechinah, G-d’s Presence as we encounter it. This encounter takes place for us at the point represented by the door of the Tent of Meeting.  The door of our own tent—our own interior centre of prayer—is present, in some way, at exactly that same point when we worship.

Moshe Rabbeinu is said to have spoken with G-d ‘Face to face’ inside the Tent of Meeting. Each of us is encouraged by the possibility of such Human/Divine contact and that is suggested symbolically in the Torah text because there we read that  the ordinary Israelite faced in the direction of  the Tent of Meeting and followed Moshe Rabbeinu’s lead, thus sharing in the  contact despite spiritual and spatial distance.

When we pray as Jewish Contemplatives, we have located ourselves at the threshold of the Tent of Meeting by having oriented ourselves in that same supernatural direction.

We are, as it were,  standing at the ‘point’ inside the Pillar of Cloud which is the Maarat Ha-Lev, the Cave of the Heart. We are standing at the threshold of that ‘cave’ looking  inward.  Our focus is on  a process, an event, an encounter that takes place within our very own souls.


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When you imagine Eliyahu Ha Navi standing at the mouth of the cave listening to the  kol d’mamah dakah (still small voice), do you imagine him standing at the cave’s entrance, looking out at a dramatically expansive panoramic landscape?


  If you  do, you are maybe missing a significant detail which makes it quite clear that his attention and vision was actually directed inward: The Biblical text  tells us  that he had wrapped his face in the prophetic mantle.  His focus was inward-looking.

The text in question is a familiar and especially significant one for all Jewish Contemplatives:

“And after the fire, there came a still small voice. And when Eliyahu heard it, he wrapped his face in his mantle and went out, and stood at the mouth of the cave.” [ii]



Eliyahu had encountered the earthquake, wind, and fire within the cave of his own mind—and then on hearing the first ‘sound’ of the Voice he moves to the threshold of the spiritual cave of contemplation and faces into it. 

The cave is now  filled with a ‘concentrated’ form of the Divine Presence that has usurped the inner turmoil of the symbolic earthquake, wind, and fire.

  It is thus  an image  of the way the contemplative  seeks/is inspired to make room for the Divine through bitul ha yesh (self-nullification).

  There is a tradition that Moshe Rabbeinu’s cleft in the rock  and Eliyahu’s cave were one and the same.[iii]

Their attentive focus, and their revelation experience was internal rather than  something they were watching, as it were, on a cosmic cinema screen outside the  cave.   They were inside the  cave of their hearts—and  simultaneously, at the core of the Divine Presence. 

The prophetic mantle of Eliyahu and  the Divine Hand which blocked Moshe Rabbeinu’s gaze (in Shemot 33) both underline  the introspective nature of the experience.

Significantly, the Gemara  in  Megillah 19b positions both Prophets  inside the cave at the time  of the Divine Revelation:


“Had there been left open a crack so much as the size of a small sewing needle in the cave in which Moses and Elijah stood when God’s glory was revealed to them…they would not have been able to endure it due to the intense light that would have entered that crack.”


If you would  follow me for  a moment into that description in the  Gemara, I would  like to suggest a possibility, just a possibility, that we are here reading a description of the Presence of G-d  as simultaneously filling a space (the  interior of the cave), the interior world of the  prophetic soul, and (incomprehensible  to us) as the One who fills all worlds but is contained by none of them. 

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Turning now to examine the powerful connection between the Mosaic-Elijan Cave and the Holy  of Holies in the  Desert Sanctuary and Temple:

Parshat Pekudei describes a special moment in the dedication of the Mishkan  as follows:


“So Moshe finished the work. Then the cloud covered the tent of meeting and the Glory of the Lord filled the tent. And Moshe was not able to enter into the tent of meeting, because the Cloud rested there, and the Glory of the Lord filled the tent.” [iv]


In the Haftarah reading  attached to Parshat Pekudei we read of the dedication of the  Second Temple in Yerushalayim: 


“And it came to pass, when the priests had come out of the Holy Place, that the Cloud filled the House of the Lord, so that the priests could not stand to minister by reason of the Cloud: for the Glory of the Lord filled the House of the Lord.”  [v]


I was immediately struck by the way that the ‘descent’ of the Divine Presence  in the Mishkan and the Beit HaMikdash caused such an overwhelming sense of  Yirah[vi] in Moshe Rabeinu, Shlomo HaMelech[vii], and their attendants that they had to flee the enclosure.  Perhaps this is exactly what made Eliyahu HaNavi move to the ‘threshold’ of the cave.  Was the encounter almost too intense to be  bearable?   


   The descriptive  terms ‘Cloud’ (Anan) and ‘Glory’ (K’vod)  used in the two scriptural texts just quoted are terms relating to G-d’s Presence. In making the  following comments about  the  Elijan experience, I will refer to both  using the term ‘The Presence’ for a moment, as I try to demonstrate how my thoughts developed:


 At the start of each of three  narratives


(i) Moshe Rabbeinu and his team had just completed the construction and ritual dedication ceremonies of the Mishkan;


(ii)Shlomo HaMelech’s team had just completed the construction and dedication of the  Beit HaMikdash in Jerusalem;


(iii)Eliyahu had been seeking G-d desperately in the activity of earthquake, wind and fire but had neither found G-d nor made G-d a dwelling place.


   Then:


(i) The Presence descends upon the Mishkan in the form of a cloud and totally fills it;


(ii) The Presence descends upon the Temple of Shlomo HaMelech in the form of a cloud and totally fills it;


(iii) The Presence fills the cave (or Eliyahu’s mind) in the form of a Voice.


We might observe  that the reactions of the  human participants in each narrative are very similar: (i) Moshe Rabbeinu cannot enter the Tent any more as The Presence is overpowering; (ii)Shlomo HaMelech’s priests cannot remain in the Temple Sanctuary as The Presence is overpowering; (iii) Eliyahu HaNavi cannot bear the power of The Presence inside the cave and he does two things, he covers his face and he moves to get out of the cave fast.


In each of these three narratives, the human protagonists are now standing at the threshold of the ‘Place where The Presence is’.  In all three cases they are facing The Presence but unable to be ‘in it’.  Yet being at the threshold they are susceptible to its radiation outwards, so in some sense they are in an intimate relationship with it.


Immediately after the quoted verse, Shlomo Ha Melech says: “The Lord has said that  He would dwell in the thick darkness”.[viii] The Temple priests see nothing but an impenetrable cloud (Arafel).  Moshe Rabbeinu has already ‘seen’ more than anyone before or since, yet even he is aware that the particular extended revelation he (and all Israel) is experiencing is beyond his power to bear at close proximity.


And Eliyahu? He has seen nothing, yet he covers his face with his mantle.  The Presence is heard and  not seen. Similarly, when Moshe Rabeinu stands in the cleft of the rock, the Hand of G-d blocks his sight.

  

The Presence is heard .[ix]


Moshe and Eliyahu have each covered their eyes because they are in a state of Divinely infused contemplation.   They are  ‘seeing the sounds’  of Sinai.[x]


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THE STILL SMALL VOICE


I would like now to comment on the content of the vocal revelation to Eliyahu:


The Voice which Eliyahu heard came with a persistent question,


מה־לך פה אליהו

What are  you  doing here,Eliyahu?[xi]


According to my perspective, this is  not a reprimand questioning his retreat from zealous activity and social engagement. Far from it. The mah l’cha po? question of the Voice of Horeb can be regarded as a reprimand to a man avoiding a call to a more contemplative lifestyle.


Eliyahu HaNavi, the fiery prophet of Carmel was without doubt a model fundamentalist zealot. Like many other prophets he was an aggressive defendant of his own G-d and his massacre of the prophets of Baal on Carmel stands as one of the most brutal incidents of slaughter in the Bible.

In Haftarah Pinchas we read how Eliyahu had challenged the prophets of Baal to a duel. Each had to prepare an altar and an offering to their deity and the team whose offering burst into flames would be declared the winner. At Mount Carmel, Eliyahu’s prayer was dramatically answered by fire and he concluded his display by slaughtering everyone of the false prophets. Zealotry certainly. Eliyahu  flees for his life from Yezevel, who was far from impressed with this outcome, and within moments of his triumph Eliyahu slumps into suicidal depression.[xii]

Fortunately he was refreshed by the shade of a tree, water and freshly baked angel’s cake.

Thus rested and fortified Eliyahu went on to Mount Horeb (Sinai). There Eliyahu enters a Cave where The Voice confronts him with the question we are considering.

 Most Jewish commentators on the place of this question in the Eliyahu story seem to read it with the inflection: “What on earth are you doing here, hiding away and wasting your time meditating when you should be up and doing?” 

I read it as: “What on earth are you doing here, fretting and dwelling on the past, being self-congratulatory one minute then focusing on your failings and anxieties the next. You are spending your time here in self observation when what you should be doing is listening to My Voice. This Cave is a place of meeting.  A place of mission not escape.”

Let me explain where my perspective comes from—I would suggest that Eliyahu’s answer is both apologetic and panic-ridden, and that it reflects a truth he wishes to avoid.

Paraphrasing his tripartite reply in I Melachim 19, here is Eliyahu’s evasive response:

(i) I have been very zealous for You;

(ii) I am the only loyal Israelite left, the others are  unfaithful;

(iii) I came here because they were trying to kill me for what I did.

One might identify those responses as representing:

(i) his over compensation for insecurity in melodramatic action;

(ii) his delusions of self-importance masking those insecurities;

(iii) his fundamental paranoia. 


The Voice is not satisfied with this answer and responds by replying with three symbolic events or experiences which are called Wind, Earthquake, and Fire.  To my understanding these are  the embodiment of the self-focussed psychological issues which Eliyahu had been pondering inside the cave (of his mind), and they might be unpacked as: the Wind of futile activity to mask a lack of understanding or facing up to facts; the Earthquake of destructive or negative speech and actions which do not create anything; and the  Fire of  violent and uncontrolled extremism.  

In each case the biblical text tells us that G-d was not in any of these.  At this point the question “What are you doing here, Eliyahu?” is repeated.

I would like to suggest that  the Voice  which questions  Eliyahu in I Melachim 19: 9 is not quite the same Voice that he encounters in I Melachim 19: 12 even though its descriptive text is identical.

The first time Eliyahu hears the question, he is listening to the Dvar HaShem (Word of G-d) as it begins to enter his troubled mind. It is the classic voice of conscience that he is struggling with.  It is predominantly a function of his own mental ruminations.  The second time he hears the question it is described as coming from the Kol d’mamah dakah  (still small voice). These two voices share the same Divine source but they are as distinctly nuanced  as the Presence  over  the Ark and the Pillar of Cloud at the threshold were in the Mishkan.

The Kol d’mamah dakah  is the infused revelation of  the Divine Voice which is capable of overpowering all the human obstacles we might care to place in its path (however surreptitiously) whenever  it comes too close us with its burning Truth. 

Eliyahu’s shocking but understandable reaction to the approach of the Vocal Presence of the Kol d’mamah dakah is to blather his flustered three-part answer  a second time and (in my reading) he thus fails the test—he is dismissed from the cave of meeting, from the mountain of contemplative intimacy, from his prophetic post—and shortly afterwards, in verse 19,  he is retired and passes on his prophetic mantle to Elisha.[xiii]

I believe the voice of his conscience was telling him that (specifically for him) the way of peace and a life of contemplation were superior to the bustling activism of his political career. I am not saying here that ‘contemplative lives’ are superior per se—only that Eliyahu was, I believe, called to a more contemplative and peaceable lifestyle than the one he had followed.

In the biblical narrative, Eliyahu did not die but was taken up to heaven in a fiery chariot.      

Eliyahu the warrior prophet, the zealot fundamentalist, hears a fragile but insistent voice: not in earthquake,wind, or fire—but in silent retreat.   The violence of his ‘first’ life is burnt out in the chariot’s ascent.  He becomes an archetype.  As a result of this purifying closing chapter to his earthly life, Eliyahu HaNavi becomes the father of all contemplatives who seek the revelation he only experienced as his life was coming to a close.

In the biblical tradition, long after his passing he is described as being the herald of the messiah[xiv] and is described, somewhat mysteriously, as being the one who will “turn the heart of the fathers to the children and the heart of the children to the fathers”[xv]

  Perhaps the fathers referred to are an overly inflexible tradition and the children  are its permissible development and flowering. Perhaps the  text is speaking of the balance and compromises which both types of Jew will need to make as the stabilising authority of one needs to be respected just as much as the envigorating new-growth of the other.

According to traditional legend in his ‘second’ archetypal life he has become Eliyahu the Comforter and  Eliyahu the Peacemaker.   In that post-biblical legendary tradition he appears as the one who rescues the Jewish community, as one who tests the charity and forbearance of Jews by appearing as a needy beggar or an often tiresome and puzzling old man; and he attends every circumcision to comfort and effect healing.   Interestingly, the Midrash states that he attends every circumcision as a kind of reparative penance because he claimed to be so zealous and had criticised Israel for not being meticulous in observing the covenant of the brit. [xvi]

In a very special sense, Eliyahu is the father of all Jewish Contemplatives. We are, as it were, the Descendants of Eliyahu the childless.  I would suggest that what he realised too late in the cave  is a task we develop and perhaps even embody ourselves today.


 Perhaps when we stand at the mouth of the cave which is the Maarat Ha-lev, to some  we may appear to have turned our back to the world, but that is only appearance.  Priests and levites faced the Sanctuary but that is not to say they were turning their backs on society.  They were facing the Aron HaKodesh (Ark) because their vocational focus was entirely on G-d.   In maintaining this focus they simultaneously bore the needs and the prayer intentions of the nation on their shoulders in an attempt to offer a prayer of atonement and healing.


As children of Eliyahu, we cover our eyes with Eliyahu’s mantle.  You can take that literally and regard yourself as one who hopes to receive a portion of his contemplative spirit as did Elisha.  Or you can take it more generally as meaning that when you stand before G-d in prayer, you are demonstrating or declaring the same awe as Eliyahu did.  You can take it practically and imitate both  his gesture and  his intention when you pray under your tallit.  Beneath that mantle, with our eyes closed, we stand in prayer ‘facing’ The Presence.  Though our perception of The Presence is always filtered by an almost impenetrable cloud, we too can still hope to see G-d’s Voice.


Like Eliyahu,we too can allow ourselves to be waylaid by distractions, self-obesession, or anxieties and may fail to hear what the still small voice is really demanding of us.  We should not fail that test of the Earthquake, Wind, and Fire.


The Dedicated Jewish Contemplative, the Mitkarev, may appear to be facing away from other people in solitude, but in the very next moment our inner vision can turn as we begin to see through G-d’s eyes, back into our own world.   At this point spatial or geographical direction is actually irrelevant: As we are at the threshold of the Mishkan, the threshold of the core of the Beit HaMikdash, the threshold of the Maarat Ha-Lev : we are enveloped in the outpouring radiance of the Shechinah and we ourselves can become a point of its entry into the world.  


© Nachman Davies

Safed June 2021


NOTES

[i] To a certain extent and despite the disagreement  amongst poskim, this liturgical format was  also reflected  in the  “porch minyanim” in use during  the global  coronavirus outbreak  that began in 2020.

[ii] I Melachim 19:12

[iii]  In Pesachim 54a   we read that one of the ‘ten things that  were created on Erev Shabbat at twilight’  was ‘the cave in which Moshe and Eliyahu stood.’ 

[iv] Shemot 40:33-35

[v] I Melachim 8:10

[vi] being in  fearful awe of the Divine

[vii] King Solomon (builder of the  Second Temple)

[viii] I Melachim  8:12

[ix] (in the verbal proclamation of the Divine Attributes)

[x] Vayikra 20:14

[xi] I Melachim 19:9,  and again in   I Melachim 19:13 

[xii] I Melachim 19:4

[xiii] A similarly consecutive forced retirement/appointment of a successor after a failed test seems to have  occurred to Moshe  Rabbeinu in Devarim 3:27

[xiv] Malachi 3:23

[xv] Malachi 3:24

[xvi] In Shir HaShirim Rabbah 1:6.  See also Zohar 1:93a

 




Walking the Path: The Suluk al Khass

Hegyon Ha Lev for Shabbat of Parsha Balak


As aspiring Sufis, we walk a Path.
(The term "Tariqa" is an arabic word for a "Path" or a "Road".)
*
As practicing Jews we observe the Halacha
(a term related to walking on a path).
*
As Jewish-Sufi pietists we walk the Suluk al Khass
(a special Path)

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In his Kifaya [written in Judeo-Arabic],  Rabbenu Abraham Maimuni writes:

"The Torah’s Spiritual Path—which extends far beyond the basic observance of the Law [al-Sharīʿah]— is composed of two paths: the Common (general) Path [sulūk Am] and the Special Path [sulūk al-Khass].

 

We walk the Common Path when we observe the explicit mitzvot of the Law,performing what is commanded and avoiding that which is forbidden....

 

The Special Path is that followed by one who—like the prophets and saints— is aware of the essential and implicit purpose of the mitzvot and the hidden meanings which they contain.

 

The one who follows the Special Path is called “holy”[kadosh], “benevolent” [hasid] ,and “humble” [anav]...but the best name for such a one is “hasid” because the term is derived from hesed (benevolence) for, due to his own benevolent desire, he goes beyond what is demanded by the Law."
 S. Rosenblatt, ed., The High Ways to Perfection of Abraham Maimonides vol. 1,p.134

"We say it is a “special”way because it is not something which every one who observes the Law can fully attain and we say it is “implicit”  because it is not explicitly obligatory..."
Rosenblatt vol. 1 p.138

 

Hegyon HaLev

In the Kifaya passage describing his suluk al khass, Rabbenu Abraham singles out the  importance of Compassion and Humility using  the  terms  hesed and  anav.

We also read of the  importance of  both those attributes in the  haftarah reading (Micah 6)   for this Shabbat of Parsha Balak,where,coincidentally, they are  also directly related  to walking on a  Path.

And  what is that path?

It is the  very same  path of intimacy with G-d that is  the goal of the salik....the  seeker on the Jewish Sufi Path.

For Micah writes:

Act with Justice

Love Mercy

AND WALK WITH YOUR G-D IN HUMILITY

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Shabbat Shalom!!



Nachman Davies

Safed

July 18 2024




R. Abraham ben HaRambam: On Snakes in the Sky

 

Hegyon HaLev for Shabbat of Parsha Chukkat


In this  week’s Torah Portion (Parsha Chukkat)  we read of a Plague  of Snakes sent  to punish the members of the  community who were complaining against G-d and Moses our Teacher.

In the  Kifaya  chapter on “Bitachon/Reliance”, Rabbenu Abraham ben HaRambam makes the  following commentary on this passage, relating it to the  subtleties of Divine Providence. (translation derived from Rosenblatt Vol 2 page 161).

Rabbenu Abraham  writes:

“Our scriptures have already testified how the  Israelites were bitten by vipers and  how their repentance was brought about when they repented from their sin and began to trust G-d (exalted be  He) again. Describing this, the scriptures say ‘And the  people  came  to Moses and said to him: We have  sinned because we have spoken against Hashem and against you’. 

And  it is  said, with reference to their faith and trust in G-d (exalted be He) ‘Pray to Hashem that He may take away the  serpents from us’.  Now G-d (exalted be  He) did not [actually] remove  the  serpents  from them, but instead He acted according to the  usual manner of His miracles and  signs [as follows]:  He allowed the  serpents to continue  biting them, but their bites were no longer fatal. By this  He taught them that their sufferings were caused by the removal of Divine Providence because of  their lack of trust and  reliance on Him.”

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My Brief Hegyon Ha Lev

When “snakes” bite us they are sometimes ‘sent’ to correct or chide us.

Sometimes their  purpose is  to test our equanimity under duress.

Sometimes their  purpose is  to strengthen us in our own resilience.

Sometimes their purpose is to warn us of potential failings or of even greater dangers.

But it would seem from this text and commentary that the severity of their ‘bite’ is tempered by two things: A penitent spirit born of a frank awareness of our own failings; and by an increase in our personal trust in G-d.

Rabbenu Abraham then reminds us that the ensuing installation of a copper serpent had no magical power to cure or absolve the  Israelites.....it merely provided a focus for uplifting their thoughts when they “looked upwards, dedicating their hearts to their  Father in Heaven”, for  “if they did  this,they would  be  healed. If they did not, they would perish.” 

oooOooo

These days  in Northern Israel when  we look upwards to the  heavens we  frequently see plagues  of fiery snakes with tails  of smoke.  We might also see them variously  as trials,or warnings, or tests of strength.  Maybe  even as acts sent  to admonish our lack of united trust in each other as well as in Providence.   

We have to look beyond those metal serpents and  remember that G-d is  Master of Wars.....that He is  the  Lord of the  Heavens... and His Providence is often hidden and subtle. 

Personally, I would  also add that He dwells in our midst as well as in the  Heavens—and  that it is perhaps more crucial, in these times—that we look “inside” ourselves  rather than “up” and  outside ourselves if we are to find  both His Healing and  His  Love.

Shabbat Shalom!

 

Nachman Davies

Safed July 11 2024

 

   

R. Abraham Maimuni on Prayer in Times of War



(Hegyon Ha-Lev for Shabbat of Parsha Korach)


Parsha Korach tells of strife and rebellion within the Israelite  community. That 'plague' is stemmed when Aharon burns  incense—the  biblical and  ritual  symbol for  prayer and  purification. 

We are currently  fighting a defensive war with those who would  destroy us, but we are  also plagued by several civil wars in our Nation’s internal politics.   Our silent prayers and petitions have  the  same  role  to play in these wars as the  incense of Aharon.

Before our Tariqa’s weekly meeting in Safed last Wednesday, I opened the Kifaya of Rabbenu Abraham ben Ha Rambam “at random”—looking for a passage that might be the basis of a short Hegyon Ha Lev introduction to our silent prayer session.

In Northern Israel we are under daily attack from Hezbollah at the moment and many are frightened by the endless booms and bangs of the enemy overhead. (As I write we have today received 200 rockets in such indescriminate bombing).

It appeared to me that the 'randomly chosen' text had a very significant message for us all here in Israel—so at the meeting, we discussed it and read it in both English and Ivrit. (Currently nobody attending is fluent in the original Judeo-Arabic though we hope that will change! )

In that "sohbet" discussion, our shared belief and awareness was that our weekly act of congregational vocal and silent dhikr was a crucial part of the process of “trusting in Providence” that the Kifaya passage in question was describing.

We were declaring our trust in Providence by meeting in times of danger to perform Dhikr/Hazkarah as a focussed way to remember  the Divine Presence in our hearts and in every detail of what happens in Creation— both that which seems "good" and that which  seems "bad".

The Kifaya passage actually confirms this stance, as it opens with the statement that such “prayer and supplication” reinforces our confidence in Divine Providence:

“One who relies on God must reinforce [that reliance] through prayer and pleading. (tefillah and baqashot)”

 oooOooo



The paragraphs which follow this statement from the Kifaya are highly relevant to our current war situation in Israel. They balance Trust in Providence with Prudence in self-preservation/military action. Ultimately the passage supports both forms of action but insists that one must never lose faith and trust in G-d's Providence.

Here is the Kifaya text in English (derived from Wincelberg’s translation beginning on page 250 of his “Guide to Serving God”. *1


One who relies on God must reinforce it through prayer and pleading. (tefillah and baqashot)  David said, 'I call to God in praise, and I am saved from my enemies' (Tehillim 18:4). He also said, 'In my troubles, I called out to the Almighty; I cried to my God, and He heard me from His palace' (v. 7). There are many such passages. The Torah states, 'Who is a great nation that has a god close to it, like the Almighty, your God, whenever we call upon Him' (Devarim 4:7). And the Torah ordains, 'And when you approach war in your land against the  enemy who oppresses you, you shall blow trumpets, and God will remember you and save you from enemies' (Bemidbar 10:9).

 

However, although you should inwardly rely on God, reinforce that internal feeling with supplications[baqashot], and seek His compassion to prevent whatever the Torah considers harmful, you undoubtedly must help yourself with the things God has designated for repelling danger[....]

 

Although He ordered us to blow the trumpets and recall the concept of Divine Providence before going into battle—as it says, “When you approach the battle, the Kohen shall come and address the nation, saying,Listen, Israel, You come today in battle against your foes. Let not your heart be weak, fear not, and do not panic’ (Devarim 20:2-3)—it also says, “they shall appoint officers at the front of the people” (v. 9); “and you shall build a siege against the ‘ city that wars with you until it falls” (v. 20).

 

[...]they were not saved solely by their swords and  strength. They did not rely [solely] on their military capabilities, but on God’s Providence over them and His approval of them, as it says there, “but by Your right hand, Your arm, and the light of Your face, for You desire them (Tehillim 44:4)."

Rabbenu Abraham ben Ha Rambam

Kifaya (Kitab Kifayat al-‘ābidīn)   


ooo0ooo

My Brief Hegyon Ha Lev

The  Love of God  for  His people (of our  nation and  all nations) is conditional upon the  Divine  Will and  does not  always depend  on what we might describe as  “our own worthiness"—  for how could we  ever be  truly worthy of any Divine  benificence.  Nevertheless—if we Jews take  the  words of  the  Sh’ma seriously, we should also remember that Divine support is  often conditional upon our loving and  wholehearted observance of the  mitzvot. 

For this reason it is not sufficient for us merely to rely on our military defences or  solely on Divine Providence—We must also heed the closing words in that Kifaya text and actively attempt to gain Divine approval by our actions: we need to examine our consciences and ask ourselves if ALL our actions at the moment (as a State, as a People, and as Individuals) are truly deserving of such Divine support. If we are lacking in any way, our prayers must be accompanied by practical deeds of teshuva and tikkun.

We must do all we can to seek Justice and  Compassion in every move  we make if we are to be considered, as it  were, “worthy” of Divine Protection.  

ooo0ooo 

For this  reason (I believe) Rabbenu Abraham chose the shofar to illustrate the importance of “prayer and  supplication/ tefillah and beqashot ” ... for  it  is  the  shofar that calls to battle, but also it is  the  shofar that we use to plead for mercy and forgiveness from  God on Rosh Hashanah.

Our “baqashot” are acts of praise and supplication made in prayerful humility rather than in  jingoism or bravado. 

The  shofar is  a call to action but its  Voice also pleads for Mercy, Forgiveness, and Divine Protection.

 

May Justice and  Compassion overcome  Hatred.

May we be sheltered in the  Sukkah of Peace.

 

Shabbat Shalom

 

Nachman Davies

Safed

July 4 2024  



*1  Ha Maspiq L'Ovdei Hashem / The  Guide to Serving God (Kifaya) trans.Y. Wincelberg. Feldheim Publishers , Jerusalem ,New York 2008 (page  250 &foll.)

R.David ben Joshua on Tzitzit (Shabbat of Parsha Sh'lach)

 


This is  the  first in a series of Shabbat Greeting posts related to the  Parshah.....

each one featuring a short Jewish-Sufi text for Hegyon HaLev (Lectio Divina)


In the Sh’ma we are  commanded to love G-d  “with all your heart, with all your soul, and  with all your might”— “bchol levav’cha,uv’chol nafsh’cha,uv’chol meodecha” (Deut 6:5).

 However we translate  the original hebrew—and  there are many options, each with rich shades of meaning —  the  message  of this  text is  clearly that we must be throroughly whole-hearted in the  service of  G-d, using  absolutely everything that we are,  and everything that we have  in doing so.

This  week’s Parsha (Sh'lach)  includes a description of the  mitzvah of tzitzit: the  fringes one  wears on one’s four-cornered garments to remember all the  commandments of the Torah. 

There are many traditional ways to tie the  knots on these tassels, some  simple and  some extremely complex and decorative.  

As  an expression of my allegiance to the  Jewish-Sufi hasidim of the middle-ages, I wear the “Rambam 7”  tzitzit on my own talitot  — as I am fortunate to have  a friend here in Tzfat who knows how  to tie them for me professionally.

As you will have  guessed  this particular  tying method uses seven very simple knots.


Rabbenu David ben Joshua  Maimuni (1335–c.1414)— One of the  leading lights of our Jewish-Sufi movement — saw a connection between the knots of the tzitzit and our  referenced  Sh’ma phrase  enjoining total dedication of every part of one’s being in serving G-d. 

R. David presents the  seven knots as  reminders of the way in which we are to use the five bodily senses of sight, hearing, taste, touch, and  smell, plus the  super-senses of the intellect and soul (heart and  mind) in concert.....each and  every part of one’s being exercised to the  fullest extent  possible in a unity of purpose.  The physical  and  the  spiritual.....the  apparent  and  the  hidden.....the demonstrable  and  the  intuitive.   All.

We know  from  R.David ben Joshua’s “Murshid” that this is intended to produce a  state where the  devotees  may themselves become, as it  were, a channel for activity of G-d in this  world—becoming in some  sense, G-d’s eyes and hands.  But for  this  to happen, our devotion needs to be utterly without reserve and  thoroughly whole-hearted.

The commentary on the  tzitzit to which I refer  comes from Rabbenu David ben Joshua’s letter known as MS NLR Yevr.-Arab. (formerly II Firk. Yevr.-Arab.) II 2170 . Here  is  the passage  on tzitzit translated by Professor Paul Fenton: 

 “As for the number of knots (required for the) ritual fringes, they vary in accordance with two opinions. The first is that man’s (body) is composed of four elements versus a single soul and therefore there are five knots. (Alternatively,) there are four threads which are borne by a single fringe, and these four threads are borne by a single hole. This second analogy is more noble.

As for those that tie seven knots, they consider the five senses, the soul, and the intellect — a total of seven.

This prompts them (to recall) that the faculties, the body, one’s soul, and one’s intellect, the most sublime together with the most coarse, all incline toward God and engage in introverting their outwardness, and extroverting their inwardness.

It is for this reason that the verse states: “with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might” (Deut 6:5), referring to the intellect, soul, and body together.

It is written, furthermore, “and you shall see it and remember the commandments of the  Lord:(Numbers 15:39)—that is,the Divine commandments are  witnesses within us and remind us of that of which we are continuously forgetful.”

(Professor Fentons translation [emphasis mine]  from R. David’s “EPISTLE ON ESOTERIC MATTERS BY DAVID II MAIMONIDES FROM THE GENIZA”;Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilisation No 66, University of Chicago)


 

Shabbat Shalom!!

 

Nachman Davies

Tzfat

June 26 2024