ELEVEN. To make you skillful of understanding1Par. Daniel 9:22. that this is not the way in which the light of the L–rd dwells,2Job 38:19. i.e., in there being a desire for the “life of flesh,”3Proverbs 14:30. and children, and sustenance, for on this our Sages, of blessed memory, said: “Make naught your will….”4Avot 2:4. That is, one’s will should be nullified so that one has absolutely no will in any worldly matters that are implied by “children, life, and sustenance,”5See Moed Kattan 28b [Zohar I:43b; ibid., 181a; et passim. See also Biurei Hazohar, Vayera 11b (in comment on Zohar I:115a)]. and as our Sages, of blessed memory, said that “Despite yourself, do you live.”6Avot 4:22.
This means: There is to be only an absolute belief in the Yotzer Bereishit7Lit., the Former of the Beginning. The latter word, which has a cosmological connotation, is often used and translated as “creation,” or “universe.” It was left untranslated in the text because there is a play on words (bereishit here, reishit further on). (See also Pardes Rimonim 23:10, s.v. Yotzer Bereishit, on this term.); that is, that the creation of being ex nihilo (yesh meayin) [which is called reishit chochmah,8Par. Psalms 112:10 or Proverbs 4:7. Reishit (the beginning) is another term for chochmah (see above, Epistle 5, notes 80-82). Chochmah is the ayin (naught) out of which the creation came into being (see further on, and cf. Addendum, Mystical Concepts in Chassidism). i.e., His wisdom which is not apprehensible to any creature]—this creation occurs constantly and every moment,9Likkutei Amarim, Part II, ch. 1 ff. below, Epistle 25; see Kuzari 3:11 and cf. also Chagigah 12b and Zohar I:207a. by all creatures coming into being [as a substance ex nihilo (yesh meayin)] from His wisdom, blessed be He, which animates everything.10See Likkutei Amarim, Part I, ch. 18 ff. and Zohar I:207a. See also Addendum, ibid. And when man will contemplate in the profundity of his understanding, and will imagine in his mind his coming to be ex nihilo—truly every moment, how can he possibly think he has ever suffered, or had any afflictions related to “children, life, and sustenance,” or whatever other worldly sufferings. For the naught (ayin) which is His wisdom, blessed be He,11See Tikkunei Zohar 42 (81b); 70 (127a) and 133b. See also Zohar I:246b; II:43b and 64b; et passim. Cf. Pardes Rimonim 23:1, s.v. Ayin. (See Kitzurim V’Hearot, p. 100, par. 7.) is the source of life, welfare, and delight. It12Ayin, chochmah. is the Eden which transcends the World to Come,13See above, Epistle 5, and notes 17 ff., ad loc. (Eden is chochmah, and the World to Come is binah.) except that, because it is not apprehensible, one imagines to have sufferings, or afflictions. In fact, however, no evil descends from above14Bereishit Rabbah 51:3. and everything is good, though it is not apprehended because of its immense and abundant goodness.
And this is the essence of the faith for which man was created: to believe that “there is no place void of Him”15Tikkunei Zohar 57 (91b); ibid., 70 (122b). See Shemot Rabbah 2:9. and “in the light of the King’s Countenance there is life,”16Proverbs 16:15. and, conclusively, “strength and gladness are in His place,”17I Chronicles 16:27. because He is but good all the time.
Therefore, first of all, man ought to be happy and joyous at all times and truly live by his faith in the L–rd who animates him and is benignant with him every moment. But he who is grieved and laments makes himself appear as if he has it somewhat bad and (is) suffering and lacking some goodness; he is like a heretic, Heaven forfend. That is why the Kabbalists strongly rejected the trait of sadness.18See Iggeret Hateshuvah, ch. 12 (cf. Tanchuma, Yitro 16; Arizal, Likkutei Torah, beg. Ekev); also, ibid., ch. 11, and Likkutei Amarim, Part I, chs. 26 ff., 31, and 33.—With respect to the Kabbalists’ emphasis on joy and rejection of sadness, see Zohar II:184b and Hagahot R. Chaim Vital, ad loc.; Zohar II:218a, and the commentaries Derech Emet, and Nitzutzei Orot, ad loc.; Pardes Rimonim 23:16, s.v. Etzev VeEtzavon. See also Reishit Chochmah, Shaar HaAhavah, ch. 10 (also quoting Arizal’s celebrated comment on Deuteronomy 28:47); Shaarei Kedushah 2:4. See further: Likkutei Torah, Tazria 20c; Maamarei Admur Hazaken—5562, p. 77 ff. and p. 305.
The faithful, however, is not indisposed by any afflictions whatsoever, and with respect to all mundane matters “yes” and “no” are all the same to him, in a true equation.19Cf. Tzavaat Harivash, beg., in comment on Psalms 16:8.
But he to whom they are not the same shows of himself that he is of the erev rav20“Mixed multitude”—(Exodus 12:38), thus not of the truly faithful, the “believers, descendants of believers” (cf. also Zohar I:25a; 28b; et passim. who act but for themselves and loves himself to the extent of removing himself from under the hand of the L–rd and to live the life of heathens because of his self-love; that is why he desires the “life of the flesh” and “children and sustenance”—for that is his good.
It would have been better for him had he not been created. For the purpose of man’s creation in this world is to test him by these trials, to ascertain what is in his heart:21Cf. Deuteronomy 8:2; II Chronicles 32:31. whether he will turn his heart toward the other gods, namely the passions of the body which evolve from the sitra achara, and desire these, or whether his desire and wish is to live the true life which evolves from the living G–d.22In the text here follows “though he is unable.” A gloss inserted in the text notes the ambiguity of this phrase and states that it does not appear in some manuscripts. There is another version, which reads “or whether his desire and wish—though he is unable—is to live the true life”—according to which that phrase is but parenthetical.
One must believe that he really lives in it,23I.e., the “true life.” and all his needs, and everything related to himself, truly evolve in all their details [not from the sitra achara, but] “From the L–rd by whom the steps of man are established,”24Psalms 37:23. “and there is not a word…”25Psalms 139:4; see Midrash Tehillim, ad loc., and Bereishit Rabbah 9:3.; conclusively, everything is absolutely good, except that it is not apprehended.26Cf. Likkutei Amarim, Part I, ch. 26.
By believing this truly, everything becomes good even in appearance. For by such a faith, that one believes that the very substance of what manifestly seems to be evil is (in fact) of the Supreme Good [i.e., His wisdom, blessed be He, which is non-apprehensible and is the Eden which transcends the World to Come]; through this faith the imagined evil is truly absorbed and sublimated in the concealed Supreme Good.
לְהַשְׂכִּילְךָ בִּינָה, כִּי לֹא זוֹ הַדֶּרֶךְ יִשְׁכּוֹן אוֹר ה׳ לִהְיוֹת חָפֵץ בְּחַיֵּי בְשָׂרִים וּבָנֵי וּמְזוֹנֵי, כִּי עַל זֶה אָמְרוּ רַבּוֹתֵינוּ־זִכְרוֹנָם־לִבְרָכָה ״בַּטֵּל רְצוֹנְךָ כוּ׳״, דְּהַיְינוּ, שֶׁיִּהְיֶה רְצוֹנוֹ בָּטֵל בִּמְצִיאוּת, וְלֹא יִהְיֶה לוֹ שׁוּם רָצוֹן כְּלָל בְּעִנְיְנֵי עוֹלָם הַזֶּה כּוּלָּם, הַנִּכְלָלִים בְּבָנֵי חַיֵּי וּמְזוֹנֵי, וּכְמַאֲמַר רַבּוֹתֵינוּ־זִכְרוֹנָם־לִבְרָכָה שֶׁ״עַל כָּרְחָךְ אַתָּה חַי״;
ELEVEN. To make you skillful of understanding1Par. Daniel 9:22. that this is not the way in which the light of the L–rd dwells,2Job 38:19. i.e., in there being a desire for the “life of flesh,”3Proverbs 14:30. and children, and sustenance, for on this our Sages, of blessed memory, said: “Make naught your will….”4Avot 2:4. That is, one’s will should be nullified so that one has absolutely no will in any worldly matters that are implied by “children, life, and sustenance,”5See Moed Kattan 28b [Zohar I:43b; ibid., 181a; et passim. See also Biurei Hazohar, Vayera 11b (in comment on Zohar I:115a)]. and as our Sages, of blessed memory, said that “Despite yourself, do you live.”6Avot 4:22.
וּבֵיאוּר הָעִנְיָן, הוּא רַק אֱמוּנָה אֲמִיתִּית בְּ״יוֹצֵר בְּרֵאשִׁית״, דְּהַיְינוּ, שֶׁהַבְּרִיאָה ״יֵשׁ״ מֵ״אַיִן״, הַנִּקְרֵאת ״רֵאשִׁית חָכְמָה״ – וְהִיא חָכְמָתוֹ שֶׁאֵינָהּ מוּשֶּׂגֶת לְשׁוּם נִבְרָא – הַבְּרִיאָה הַזֹּאת, הִיא בְּכָל עֵת וָרֶגַע, שֶׁמִּתְהַוִּים כָּל הַבְּרוּאִים ״יֵשׁ״ מֵ״אַיִן״ מֵחָכְמָתוֹ יִתְבָּרֵךְ הַמְחַיָּה אֶת הַכֹּל, וּכְשֶׁיִּתְבּוֹנֵן הָאָדָם בְּעוֹמֶק הֲבָנָתוֹ, וִיצַיֵּיר בְּדַעְתּוֹ הֲוָויָיתוֹ מֵ״אַיִן״ בְּכָל רֶגַע וָרֶגַע מַמָּשׁ, הַאֵיךְ יַעֲלֶה עַל דַּעְתּוֹ כִּי רַע לוֹ, אוֹ שׁוּם יִסּוּרִים מִבָּנֵי חַיֵּי וּמְזוֹנֵי, אוֹ שְׁאָרֵי יִסּוּרִין בָּעוֹלָם, הֲרֵי הָ״אַיִן״, שֶׁהִיא חָכְמָתוֹ יִתְבָּרֵךְ, הוּא מְקוֹר הַחַיִּים וְהַטּוֹב וְהָעוֹנֶג, וְהוּא הָעֵדֶן שֶׁלְּמַעְלָה מֵעוֹלָם־הַבָּא, רַק, מִפְּנֵי שֶׁאֵינוֹ מוּשָּׂג, לָכֵן נִדְמֶה לוֹ רַע אוֹ יִסּוּרִים, אֲבָל בֶּאֱמֶת אֵין רַע יוֹרֵד מִלְמַעְלָה, וְהַכֹּל טוֹב, רַק שֶׁאֵינוֹ מוּשָּׂג לְגוֹדְלוֹ וְרַב טוּבוֹ.
This means: There is to be only an absolute belief in the Yotzer Bereishit7Lit., the Former of the Beginning. The latter word, which has a cosmological connotation, is often used and translated as “creation,” or “universe.” It was left untranslated in the text because there is a play on words (bereishit here, reishit further on). (See also Pardes Rimonim 23:10, s.v. Yotzer Bereishit, on this term.); that is, that the creation of being ex nihilo (yesh meayin) [which is called reishit chochmah,8Par. Psalms 112:10 or Proverbs 4:7. Reishit (the beginning) is another term for chochmah (see above, Epistle 5, notes 80-82). Chochmah is the ayin (naught) out of which the creation came into being (see further on, and cf. Addendum, Mystical Concepts in Chassidism). i.e., His wisdom which is not apprehensible to any creature]—this creation occurs constantly and every moment,9Likkutei Amarim, Part II, ch. 1 ff. below, Epistle 25; see Kuzari 3:11 and cf. also Chagigah 12b and Zohar I:207a. by all creatures coming into being [as a substance ex nihilo (yesh meayin)] from His wisdom, blessed be He, which animates everything.10See Likkutei Amarim, Part I, ch. 18 ff. and Zohar I:207a. See also Addendum, ibid. And when man will contemplate in the profundity of his understanding, and will imagine in his mind his coming to be ex nihilo—truly every moment, how can he possibly think he has ever suffered, or had any afflictions related to “children, life, and sustenance,” or whatever other worldly sufferings. For the naught (ayin) which is His wisdom, blessed be He,11See Tikkunei Zohar 42 (81b); 70 (127a) and 133b. See also Zohar I:246b; II:43b and 64b; et passim. Cf. Pardes Rimonim 23:1, s.v. Ayin. (See Kitzurim V’Hearot, p. 100, par. 7.) is the source of life, welfare, and delight. It12Ayin, chochmah. is the Eden which transcends the World to Come,13See above, Epistle 5, and notes 17 ff., ad loc. (Eden is chochmah, and the World to Come is binah.) except that, because it is not apprehensible, one imagines to have sufferings, or afflictions. In fact, however, no evil descends from above14Bereishit Rabbah 51:3. and everything is good, though it is not apprehended because of its immense and abundant goodness.
וְזֶהוּ עִיקַּר הָאֱמוּנָה שֶׁבִּשְׁבִילָהּ נִבְרָא הָאָדָם, לְהַאֲמִין דְּ״לֵית אֲתַר פָּנוּי מִינֵיהּ״, וּ״בְאוֹר פְּנֵי מֶלֶךְ חַיִּים״, וְעַל כֵּן ״עוֹז וְחֶדְוָה בִּמְקוֹמוֹ״ – הוֹאִיל וְהוּא רַק טוֹב כָּל הַיּוֹם.
And this is the essence of the faith for which man was created: to believe that “there is no place void of Him”15Tikkunei Zohar 57 (91b); ibid., 70 (122b). See Shemot Rabbah 2:9. and “in the light of the King’s Countenance there is life,”16Proverbs 16:15. and, conclusively, “strength and gladness are in His place,”17I Chronicles 16:27. because He is but good all the time.
וְעַל כֵּן, רֵאשִׁית הַכֹּל, שֶׁיִּשְׂמַח הָאָדָם וְיָגֵל בְּכָל עֵת וְשָׁעָה, וְיִחְיֶה מַמָּשׁ בֶּאֱמוּנָתוֹ בַּה׳, הַמְחַיֶּה וּמֵטִיב עִמּוֹ בְּכָל רֶגַע. וּמִי שֶׁמִּתְעַצֵּב וּמִתְאוֹנֵן – מַרְאֶה בְּעַצְמוֹ שֶׁיֵּשׁ לוֹ מְעַט רַע וְיִסּוּרִין וְחָסֵר לוֹ אֵיזֶה טוֹבָה, וַהֲרֵי זֶה כְּכוֹפֵר חַס וְשָׁלוֹם. וְעַל כֵּן הִרְחִיקוּ מִדַּת הָעַצְבוּת בִּמְאֹד חַכְמֵי הָאֱמֶת.
Therefore, first of all, man ought to be happy and joyous at all times and truly live by his faith in the L–rd who animates him and is benignant with him every moment. But he who is grieved and laments makes himself appear as if he has it somewhat bad and (is) suffering and lacking some goodness; he is like a heretic, Heaven forfend. That is why the Kabbalists strongly rejected the trait of sadness.18See Iggeret Hateshuvah, ch. 12 (cf. Tanchuma, Yitro 16; Arizal, Likkutei Torah, beg. Ekev); also, ibid., ch. 11, and Likkutei Amarim, Part I, chs. 26 ff., 31, and 33.—With respect to the Kabbalists’ emphasis on joy and rejection of sadness, see Zohar II:184b and Hagahot R. Chaim Vital, ad loc.; Zohar II:218a, and the commentaries Derech Emet, and Nitzutzei Orot, ad loc.; Pardes Rimonim 23:16, s.v. Etzev VeEtzavon. See also Reishit Chochmah, Shaar HaAhavah, ch. 10 (also quoting Arizal’s celebrated comment on Deuteronomy 28:47); Shaarei Kedushah 2:4. See further: Likkutei Torah, Tazria 20c; Maamarei Admur Hazaken—5562, p. 77 ff. and p. 305.
אֲבָל הַמַּאֲמִין – לֹא יָחוּשׁ מִשּׁוּם יִסּוּרִין בָּעוֹלָם, וּבְכָל עִנְיְנֵי הָעוֹלָם ״הֵן״ וְ״לָאו״ שָׁוִין אֶצְלוֹ בְּהַשְׁוָואָה אֲמִיתִּית.
The faithful, however, is not indisposed by any afflictions whatsoever, and with respect to all mundane matters “yes” and “no” are all the same to him, in a true equation.19Cf. Tzavaat Harivash, beg., in comment on Psalms 16:8.
וּמִי שֶׁאֵין שָׁוִין לוֹ, מַרְאֶה בְּעַצְמוֹ שֶׁהוּא מֵ״עֵרֶב רַב״ דִּ״לְגַרְמַיְיהוּ עָבְדִין״, וְאוֹהֵב אֶת עַצְמוֹ, לָצֵאת מִתַּחַת יַד ה׳ וְלִחְיוֹת בְּחַיֵּי הַגּוֹיִם בִּשְׁבִיל אַהֲבָתוֹ אֶת עַצְמוֹ, וְעַל כֵּן הוּא חָפֵץ בְּחַיֵּי בְשָׂרִים וּבָנֵי וּמְזוֹנֵי, כִּי זֶה טוֹב לוֹ.
But he to whom they are not the same shows of himself that he is of the erev rav20“Mixed multitude”—(Exodus 12:38), thus not of the truly faithful, the “believers, descendants of believers” (cf. also Zohar I:25a; 28b; et passim. who act but for themselves and loves himself to the extent of removing himself from under the hand of the L–rd and to live the life of heathens because of his self-love; that is why he desires the “life of the flesh” and “children and sustenance”—for that is his good.
וְ״נוֹחַ לוֹ שֶׁלֹּא נִבְרָא״, כִּי עִיקַּר בְּרִיאַת הָאָדָם בָּעוֹלָם הַזֶּה הוּא בִּשְׁבִיל לְנַסּוֹתוֹ בְּנִסְיוֹנוֹת אֵלּוּ, וְלָדַעַת אֶת אֲשֶׁר בִּלְבָבוֹ, אִם יִפְנֶה לְבָבוֹ אַחֲרֵי ״אֱלֹהִים אֲחֵרִים״, שֶׁהֵם תַּאֲווֹת הַגּוּף הַמִּשְׁתַּלְשְׁלִים מִ״סִּטְרָא אָחֳרָא״, וּבָהֶם הוּא חָפֵץ, אוֹ אִם חֶפְצוֹ וּרְצוֹנוֹ לִחְיוֹת חַיִּים אֲמִיתִּים הַמִּשְׁתַּלְשְׁלִים מֵ״אֱלֹקִים חַיִּים״.
It would have been better for him had he not been created. For the purpose of man’s creation in this world is to test him by these trials, to ascertain what is in his heart:21Cf. Deuteronomy 8:2; II Chronicles 32:31. whether he will turn his heart toward the other gods, namely the passions of the body which evolve from the sitra achara, and desire these, or whether his desire and wish is to live the true life which evolves from the living G–d.22In the text here follows “though he is unable.” A gloss inserted in the text notes the ambiguity of this phrase and states that it does not appear in some manuscripts. There is another version, which reads “or whether his desire and wish—though he is unable—is to live the true life”—according to which that phrase is but parenthetical.
וְיַאֲמִין שֶׁבֶּאֱמֶת הוּא חַי בָּהֶם, וְכָל צְרָכָיו וְכָל עִנְיָנָיו מִשְׁתַּלְשְׁלִים בֶּאֱמֶת בִּפְרָטֵי פְּרָטִיּוּתֵיהֶם שֶׁלֹּא מִ״סִּטְרָא אָחֳרָא״, כִּי ״מֵה׳ מִצְעֲדֵי גֶבֶר כּוֹנָנוּ״ וְ״אֵין מִלָּה כוּ׳״ וְאִם כֵּן, הַכֹּל טוֹב בְּתַכְלִית רַק שֶׁאֵינוֹ מוּשָּׂג.
One must believe that he really lives in it,23I.e., the “true life.” and all his needs, and everything related to himself, truly evolve in all their details [not from the sitra achara, but] “From the L–rd by whom the steps of man are established,”24Psalms 37:23. “and there is not a word…”25Psalms 139:4; see Midrash Tehillim, ad loc., and Bereishit Rabbah 9:3.; conclusively, everything is absolutely good, except that it is not apprehended.26Cf. Likkutei Amarim, Part I, ch. 26.
וּבֶאֱמוּנָה זוֹ בֶּאֱמֶת, נַעֲשֶׂה הַכֹּל טוֹב גַּם בְּגָלוּי, שֶׁבֶּאֱמוּנָה זוֹ שֶׁמַּאֲמִין שֶׁהָרַע הַנִּדְמֶה בְּגָלוּי, כָּל חַיּוּתוֹ הוּא מִ״טּוֹב״ הָעֶלְיוֹן, שֶׁהִיא חָכְמָתוֹ יִתְבָּרֵךְ שֶׁאֵינָהּ מוּשֶּׂגֶת, וְהִיא הָ״עֵדֶן״ שֶׁלְּמַעְלָה מֵעוֹלָם־הַבָּא, הֲרֵי בֶּאֱמוּנָה זוֹ נִכְלָל וּמִתְעַלֶּה בֶּאֱמֶת הָרַע הַמְדוּמֶּה בַּ״טּוֹב״ הָעֶלְיוֹן הַגָּנוּז:
By believing this truly, everything becomes good even in appearance. For by such a faith, that one believes that the very substance of what manifestly seems to be evil is (in fact) of the Supreme Good [i.e., His wisdom, blessed be He, which is non-apprehensible and is the Eden which transcends the World to Come]; through this faith the imagined evil is truly absorbed and sublimated in the concealed Supreme Good.