Traditional Jewish religious thought can be divided into
Nigleh ("Revealed") and
Nistar ("Hidden") dimensions. Hebrew
Scripture is, in the
Kabbalistic tradition, explained using the four level
exegesis method of
Pardes. In this system, the first three approaches, Simple, Hinted and
Homiletical interpretations, characterise the revealed aspects. The fourth approach, the Secret meaning, characterises a hidden aspect. Among the classic texts of Jewish tradition, some Jewish Bible commentators, the
Midrash, the
Talmud, and mainstream
Jewish philosophy use revealed approaches. Other Bible commentators, the
Kabbalah, and
Hasidic philosophy, use hidden approaches. Both dimensions are seen by adherents as united and complementary. In this way, ideas in Jewish thought are given a variety of ascending meanings. Explanations of a concept in
Nigleh are given inherent, inner, mystical contexts from
Nistar. Descriptions of divine immanence can be seen in
Nigleh, from the Bible to Rabbinic Judaism. In
Genesis, God makes a personal covenant with the forefathers
Abraham,
Isaac and
Jacob. Daily Jewish prayers refer to this inherited closeness and personal relationship with the divine, for their descendants, as "the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob". To
Moses, God reveals his
Tetragrammaton name, that more fully captures divine descriptions of
transcendence. Each of the Biblical names for God describe different divine manifestations. The most important prayer in Judaism, that forms part of the Scriptural narrative to Moses, says "Hear O Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is One." This declaration combines different divine names, and themes of immanence and transcendence. Perhaps the most personal example of a Jewish prayer that combines both themes is the invocation repeatedly voiced during the time in the Jewish calendar devoted to
Teshuva (Return, often inaccurately translated as Repentance),
Avinu Malkeinu ("Our Father, Our King"). Much of the later Hebrew Biblical narrative recounts the reciprocal relationship and national drama of the unfolding of themes of immanence and transcendence. Kabbalistic, or Hasidic Jewish thought and philosophy describe and articulate these interconnected aspects of the divine-human relationship. Jewish mysticism gives explanations of greater depth and spirituality to the interconnected aspects of God's immanence and transcendence. The main expression of mysticism, the
Kabbalah, began to be taught in 12th-Century Europe, and reached a new systemisation in 16th-Century Israel. The Kabbalah gives the full, subtle, traditional system of Jewish
metaphysics. In the Medieval Kabbalah, new doctrines described the 10
Sephirot (divine emanations) through which the Infinite, unknowable divine essence reveals, emanates, and continuously creates existence. The Kabbalists identified the final, feminine
Sefirah with the earlier, traditional Jewish concept of the
Shekhinah (immanent divine presence). This gave great spirituality to earlier ideas in Jewish thought, such as the theological explanations of suffering (
theodicy). In this example, the Kabbalists described the
Shekhinah accompanying the children of Israel in their exile, being exiled alongside them, and yearning for Her redemption. Such a concept derives from the Kabbalistic theology that the physical World, and also the Upper spiritual Worlds, are continuously recreated from nothing by the
Shefa (flow) of divine will, which emanates through the
Sefirot. As a result, within all creations are divine sparks of vitality that sustain them. Medieval
Kabbalah describes two forms of divine emanation, a "light that fills all worlds", representing this immanent divine creative power, and a "light that surrounds all worlds", representing transcendent expressions of Divinity. The new doctrines of
Isaac Luria in the 16th Century completed the Kabbalistic system of explanation. Lurianic Kabbalah describes the process of
Tzimtzum (צמצום meaning "Contraction" or "Constriction") in the Kabbalistic theory of creation, where God "contracted" his infinite essence in order to allow for a "conceptual space" in which a finite, independent world could exist. This has received different later interpretations in Jewish mysticism, from the literal to the metaphorical. In this process, creation unfolds within the divine reality. Luria offered a daring cosmic theology that explained the reasons for the
Tzimtzum, the primordial catastrophe of
Shevirat Hakelim (the "Breaking of the Vessels" of the
Sefirot in the first existence), and the messianic
Tikkun ("Fixing") of this by every individual through their sanctification of physicality. The concept of
Tzimtzum contains a built-in
paradox, as it requires that God be simultaneously transcendent and immanent: • On the one hand, if the Infinite did not "restrict itself", then nothing could exist. There would be no limits, as the infinite essence of God, and also His primordial infinite light (Kabbalistic sources discuss God being able to reign alone, a revealed 'light' of the
Sefirah of Kingship, "before" creation) would comprise all reality. Any existence would be nullified into the divine infinity. Therefore, we could not have the variety of limited, finite things that comprise the creations in the universe that we inhabit. (The number of such creations could still be potentially limitless, if the physical
universe, or
Multiverse had no end). Because each limited thing results from a restriction of God's completeness, God Himself must transcend (exist beyond) these various limited things. This idea can be interpreted in various ways. In its ultimate articulation, by the Hasidic leader
Shneur Zalman of Liadi, in the intellectual Hasidic method of
Chabad, the
Tzimtzum is only metaphorical, an illusion from the perspective of man. Creation is
panentheistic (taking place fully "within God"), and
acosmic (Illusionary) from the divine perspective. God himself, and even his light, is unrestricted by
Tzimtzum, from God's perspective. The
Tzimtzum is merely the hiding of this unchanged reality from creation. Shneur Zalman distinguishes between the "Upper Level Unity" of God's existence from the divine perspective, with the "Lower Level Unity" of God's existence as creation perceives him. Because God can be above logic, both perspectives of this paradox are true, from their alternative views. The dimension of the
Tzimtzum, which implies divine transcendence, corresponds to the Upper Level Unity. In this perspective, because God is the true, ultimate infinity, then creation (even if its physical and spiritual realms should extend without limit) is completely nullified into literal non-existence by the divine. There is no change in the complete unity of God as all Reality, before or after creation. This is the ultimate level of divine transcendence. • On the other hand, in Lurianic
Kabbalah, the
Tzimtzum has an immanent divine dimension. The
Tzimtzum formed a "space" (in Lurianic terminology, the
Halal, "Vacuum") in which to allow creation to take place. The first act of creation was the emanation of a new light (
Kav, "Ray") into the vacated space, from the ultimate divine reality "outside", or unaffected, by the space. The purpose of the
Tzimtzum was that the vacated space allowed this new light to be suited to the needs and capacities of the new creations, without their being subsumed in the primordial divine infinity. Kabbalistic theology offers metaphysical explanations of how divine and spiritual processes unfold. In earlier, mainstream Jewish philosophy, logical descriptions of creation
ex nihilo (from nothing) describe the new existence of creation, compared to the preceding absence.
Kabbalah, however, seeks to explain how the spiritual, metaphysical processes unfold. Therefore, in the Kabbalistic system, God is the ultimate reality, so that creation only exists because it is continuously sustained by the will of God. Creation is formed from the emanated "light" of the divine Will, as it unfolds through the later
Sefirot. The light that originated with the
Kav later underwent further contractions that diminished it, so that this immanent expression of Divinity could itself create the various levels of Spiritual, and ultimately, Physical existence. The terms of "light" and temporal descriptions of time are metaphorical, in a language accessible to grasp. In this immanent divine dimension, God continuously maintains the existence of, and is thus not absent from, the created universe. In Shneur Zalman's explanation, this corresponds to the conscious perception by Creation of "Lower Level Unity" of God. In this perspective, Creation is real, and not an illusion, but is utterly nullified to the immanent divine life force that continuously sustains and recreates it. It may not perceive its complete dependence on Divinity, as in our present World, that feels its own existence as independent reality. However, this derives from the great concealments of Godliness in our present World. "The Divine life-force which brings all creatures into existence must constantly be present within them ... were this life-force to forsake any created being for even one brief moment, it would revert to a state of utter nothingness, as before the creation ...". (
Tanya, Shaar Hayichud, Chapter 2–3. Shneur Zalman of Liadi). == Continental philosophy ==