Avoiding Idolatry

Many modern forms of avodah zarah (idolatry) still exist. The Torah requires that that all Jews learn to recognize and adamantly reject all forms of avodah zarah.The Rambam ZTL, our greatest rabbi, posek, and Jewish philosopher in the last 1000 years, laid down a very clear foundation of Torah monotheism in his Torah p

Avoiding Idolatry

Many modern forms of avodah zarah (idolatry) still exist. The Torah requires that that all Jews learn to recognize and adamantly reject all forms of avodah zarah.
The Rambam Z”TL, our greatest rabbi, posek, and Jewish philosopher in the last 1000 years, laid down a very clear foundation of Torah monotheism in his Torah philosophy sefer “Moreh Nevuchim” (Moreh Nevuchim) and in his halachic compendium the “Mishneh Torah”.

“You know from texts of the Torah figuring in a number of passages that the first intention of the Law as a whole is to put an end to idolatry, to wipe out its traces and all that is bound up with it …everyone who professes idolatry, disbelieves in the Torah in its entirety…”
(Moreh Nevuchim III:29)

The Universe Exists and is Not “Godliness”:

” there exists nothing except God, may He be exalted, and this existent world…it necessarily behooves one to consider this existent as it is…”
“the foundation of the whole Law is the view that God has brought the world into being out of nothing…”
(Moreh Nevuchim I:71)

Hashem has no body or form, and we can only describe Him in terms of His actions, not His essence:

“We have no way of describing Him unless it be through negations…We are only able to apprehend the fact that He is not a body.. every attribute that we predicate of Him is an attribute of action.”
(Moreh Nevuchim I:58)

“Five individuals are described as minim (intellectual idolators) … one who accepts that there is one Master, but maintain that He has a body or form…”
(Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Teshuvah, 3:7)

The practices of wearing Red Strings are the “ways of idolaters”:
An ancient Tosefta in Tractate Shabbos warns Jews about certain idolatrous practices which we still observe today, such as dancing around a bonfire on Lag B’Omer:

“These things are from the ways of the Emorim (i.e., behavior of idolaters): one who cuts his hair koomi (i.e., like the idolaters), and one who makes a plait (locks worn by Roman or Greek youth or upper classes) and offers it to the gods, one who raises her child between the dead, one who ties a cushion to his hip (a superstitious custom), or a red string to his finger, and one who appoints and throws rocks to the sea or the river, these are idolatrous behaviors; one who and claps and dances to the fire, this is idolatrous behavior.”
(Tosefta Shabbos, Chapter 7)

Negative Theology

What is the concept of

What is “Negative Theology” (NT)?

The concept of “Negative Theology” seems to be rarely discussed in the current Orthodox world but it is an essential component of Torah theology that was well known to the medieval rabbis.

Negative Theology is a method of describing Hashem’s essence (as opposed to His relationship with the world) using language employing only negative attributes such as “Hashem does not have a body”, “Hashem is not a man”, “Hashem does not occupy space”, etc.

These types of descriptions are necessary because Hashem’s “essence” does not resemble anything in the Universe He created so we have no positive language to describe Him.

Our understanding is limited to Hashem’s relationship with the world, not to Hashem’s essence. For example “aveinu malkeinu” does not mean Hashem is a father as we know it, it means Hashem relates to us as a father does to children.
For those who might believe that “Kabbalah” has replaced the medieval concepts of Negative Theology, please see Section 46 of the Ramchal’s Daas Tevunos where he strongly emphasizes the basic concepts of Negative Theology. The Ramchal was certainly a rabbi who was knowledgeable in “Kabbalah”.

The hashkafacircle site provides some of the best available shiurim on the subject of Negative Theology.
http://www.hashkafacircle.com/category/moreh-nevuchim/page/2/

Ain Od Milvado – Ein Od Milvado

What does the Torah verse ein od milvado mean?. “You have been shown, so that you know that Gd is the L-rd, there is none other beside him (ain od milvado).”. (Deuteronomy 4:35). The classical meaning of this statement in Deuteronomy is explained in non-Kabbalistic terms in several places in the Talmud, and it is N

Refuting Pantheism

“Pantheism” is a non-Torah philosophy that asserts that God is a deity who fills the matter and energy of the physical Universe so that God’s essence is considered the prime reality of the Universe.

Much of Chabad philosophy claims that God “fills the Universe” and this represents a type of pantheism (or if Chabad insists, the term panentheism can be used, but it represents the same problem as pantheism).

Pantheism causes a severe conflict with the Torah as it nullifies fundamental principles of the Torah, such as the fundamental principle (expressed in Rambam’s 4th Ikkar), that God created the Universe from absolutely nothing.

What does the Torah verse “ein od milvado” mean?

“You have been shown, so that you know that G-d is the L-rd, there is none other beside him (ain od milvado).”
(Deuteronomy 4:35)

The classical meaning of this statement in Deuteronomy is explained in non-Kabbalistic terms in several places in the Talmud, and it is NOT what many of the Kabbalists seem to be saying it is.

In the Talmud, Sanhedrin 67b and in the Ramchal’s Daat Tevunot, it explains that “Ein od milvado” means that there are no other POWERS that control the Universe, that Hashem is the only ruler in the Universe, and Hashem can nullify any sorcery if he chooses. “Ein od milvado” does NOT mean that everything is God. This seems to be the correct understanding of ein od milvado as opposed to radical replacement theologies that associate the Universe with Hashem. We do not have to believe in any “replacement theologies” that claim that the Universe itself is Hashem.

Rav Hirsch zt”l in his brilliant perush on Chumash refuted the Chabad and/or Chassidic rabbis who claim the Creation is “part of” or “filled with” Hashem. Rav Hirsch explained that the Torah verse “God SAW that the light was good…” (Genesis 1:4) is teaching man that Hashem created the Universe from nothing, He did not create the Universe from Hashem. Those who claim everything is Hashem have committed a deplorable error according to Rav Hirsch.

In a privately published anti-Kabbalah sefer “B’Orach Mishor” I received from a Hareidi Torah scholar, it quotes Rav Saadyah Gaon 2:11 that space itself was created by Hashem and that it is unthinkable that as a result of the Creation, Hashem then transported Himself into the space as this would constitute a change in Hashem Himself. Consistent with this, I have seen in modern physics textbooks that what we know as outer space is a type of perfect fluid, it is not empty (as Einstein explained). So how can the ARI speak about clearing out space to create the Universe? This apparently erroneous concept of clearing out space might raise a question as to whether the ARI was really a prophet, and this would also suggest that Rav Saadyah Gaon was much closer to the emet.

Many Kabbalistic “preachers” nowadays, especially in the Chabad movement, are constantly claiming the Torah verse in Davarim “ein od milvado” should be interpreted to mean that the Universe is somehow a part of Hashem. Some non-Chassidic rabbis are even repeating this mantra. However, it is important to know that such a radical belief is an attack on traditional Torah monotheism that distinguishes God from His creation.

A scholarly essay appears on the vilnagaon.org website that thoroughly debunks the whole concept that the Universe is “part of God”.
Also, see the 3rd ikkar of the Rambam’s 13 Ikkarim, where the Rambam states that Hashem cannot be described in any physical or geometric terms.

Vilna Gaon Monotheism

It seems that certain erroneous theological beliefs, which conflict with Chazal and with normative Torah beliefs, only became mainstream in the last few hundred years under the influence of Chassidism and Kabbalah. However, these popular but erroneous beliefs may actually be endangering religious Jews nowadays.

I believe it is imperative to reexamine the teachings of earlier rabbis who presented more authentic Torah opinions than what we hear nowadays.

Phrases like ’Ein od milvado’ are being abused to imply that everything is Hashem, therefore everything that happens in the world has been caused by Hashem, and man is essentially a spectator. However, Chazal in Sanhedrin 67b teach us that ’Ein od milvado’ does NOT mean that “everything is Hashem”, it means there is no other ultimate power than Hashem.

Was the Universe Created Less Than 6000 Years Ago?

(Note: This article was written at the beginning of the Jewish year 5783.). Was the Universe Created 5783 Years Ago?. Apparently, not according to the Rambam.The Rambam does not seem to state anywhere a specific age to the Universe.It seems that according to the Rambam, those who claim the Universe was created at a spe

Was the Universe Created Less Than 6000 Years Ago?

Not according to the Rambam it would seem.

The Rambam does not seem to state anywhere a specific age to the Universe.
It seems that according to the Rambam, those who claim the Universe was created at a specific time, such as 5783 years ago, are actually positing the existence of time before Creation, which the Rambam considered to be a heretical idea.
According to the Rambam, the Universe was certainly created by Hashem in the finite past, and it did not exist forever, but we cannot say that it was created at any particular time. We must believe that the Universe had a beginning, but we cannot really state when the Universe was created.
The Rambam discusses the nature of time and the nature of the Universe in the second section of his great Torah philosophy book “Moreh Nevuchim” (The Guide to the Perplexed), written in the 12th century CE. The viewpoint of the Rambam in Moreh Nevuchim is that time itself and the matter and energy of the Universe were created ex-nihilo (from absolutely nothing) by Hashem.

The Rambam’s viewpoint implies that the current day “Orthodox fundamentalist” belief in a Universe created at a specific time (such as 5783 years ago) may actually be “heresy”, because it invokes the existence of time before creation of the Universe, implying an eternal Universe. We cannot state a specific time that the Universe was created, as this would contradict the Torah by positing Aristotle’s concept of the eternity of the Universe!

“The first opinion is that of all who believe in the Torah (teaching) of Moshe Rabbeinu. It is that the entire world, that is everything which exists other than God, was brought by God into existence after absolute nothingness…The correct position, in accordance with our opinion, is that time was created ex-nihilo along with all other objects and their accidental properties. Therefore, God’s creation of the world did not take place at any specific time, for time itself is included in the creation. Reflect upon this deeply in order that you will not bring upon yourself counter arguments which you will not be able to answer. Any positing of time before creation requires belief in the eternity of the world. For time itself is an accidental property (mikreh) and must therefore be a property of some other object. As a consequence, (for the world to have been created at a specific time) something must have existed before the world which we know of now. One must therefore free oneself from this viewpoint (i.e. that time was not created).”
(Moreh Nevuchim II:13)

The Rambam explains in Moreh Nevuchim II:25 that a belief in a finite age of the Universe allows the Torah and miracles to become possible. In contrast to the Torah viewpoint, an eternal Universe or eternal Multiverse, as taught by Aristotle, philosophers, and/or certain modern Multiverse scientists, would be controlled only by scientific law, without the possibility of any Torah, any prophecy, or any miracles. This is because a Torah, prophecy, and miracles require the Creator’s free will, which does not exist in an eternal Universe/Multiverse.

Modern science is consistent with the Rambam to a large extent on this. I have seen in a modern astrophysics textbook that time itself began (at the “Big Bang” singularity) so that we cannot state when the Universe began.

In a modern astrophysics textbook, it states an idea that is quite consistent with what Rambam wrote in the 12th Century CE!
“it (the Big Bang) couldn’t have occurred at a particular time, because time itself was created at the moment the Big Bang occurred.”
(“Astrophysics is Easy”, p. 273)

The scientific evidence in modern times of a finite age of the Universe has profound implications for the existence of a Creator. Any beginning in time to the Universe and a beginning to the Laws of Nature requires a non-physical supernatural Creator who exists and operates outside the Laws of Nature.

Torah Sages Rejected Pantheism

Kabbalists (in particular Chabad) have emphasized for some time now their concept that Hashem is “memalei kol almin”, meaning that Hashem allegedly “fills” this Universe and all the other “worlds” postulated by the Kabbalists. Such a concept can be very problematic for a whole number of reasons. One such re

Torah Sages Rejected Pantheism

Certain Kabbalists (in particular Chabad theologies) have emphasized for some time now their concept that Hashem is “memalei kol almin”, meaning that Hashem allegedly “fills” this Universe and all the other “worlds” postulated by the Kabbalists. Such a concept can be very problematic for a whole number of reasons. One such reason is that “memalei kol almin” would seem to contradict the very first verse in the Torah, which most Torah sages interpret to mean that Hashem created the Universe from absolutely nothing.

Chabad books or websites may often cite various Biblical verses, such as Jeremiah 23:24, in an attempt to validate some of Chabad’s radical Kabbalistic theologies, such as the claim that Hashem’s atzmut “fills” the heaven and Earth. However, Chabad tends to cite such Biblical verses in a vacuum by simply ignoring the pre-Chassidic commentaries that sharply conflict with Chabad’s interpretation of such verses.

“Do I not fill the heaven and the earth? Says the Lord.” (Jeremiah 23:24)

However, if we study the classical commentaries (such as Radak) on Jeremiah 23:24, we see that the pre-Chassidic Torah sages interpreted that verse in a very different way than the way Chabad is interpreting it:

“…this is a metaphor because Hashem is not a body that He fills space, rather it is teaching Hashem’s providence over the heaven and the Earth.” (Radak on Jeremiah 23:24)

The Rambam’s theology and cosmology were largely based on authentic statements from Chazal such as Perek Ein Dorshin in the Talmud tractate Hagigah. In Moreh Nevuchim I:70, the Rambam cites Hagigah 12b (which cites Deuteronomy 33:26) that describes Hashem as the “rider of the heavens” who resides “upon” the heavens, NOT in the heavens. Thus the Rambam, based on the Chumash and the Talmud, rejects any concept of Hashem being a “spirit of the heaven”, a concept the Rambam connects with the pagan Sabians. This is quite significant in my opinion because it greatly refutes, based on the most fundamental Torah sources, Chabad’s claim that Hashem’s atzmut “fills” the world.

The Rambam apparently considered Hashem’s thoughts to be one with the metaphysical form (tzura) of the Universe, not that Hashem’s atzmut filled the Universe. This is discussed in detail in Moreh Nevuchim I:69.

Chabad’s sefer Tanya is a primary Chabad book that is frequently described by Chabad as “the one size fits all life manual”. If we now examine Chabad’s sefer Tanya, Chapter 33 (and other places) advises us “to consider how He (God) permeates all worlds, both upper and lower”. This seems to be suggesting that man can somehow contemplate the essence of God that allegedly fills all the worlds (“ממלא כל עלמין”).

Tanya, Chapter 33, also describes how God, “before” the Creation event, allegedly filled the “space” wherein the Universe was “later” created.
These concepts in Tanya are very problematic for several reasons:

  1. Based on the classical Torah sources, man cannot at all comprehend God’s essence.
  2. “Filling”, i.e. occupying physical space, is a physical property. God has no physical properties and cannot be described as occupying space.
  3. By describing God as “filling all worlds”, the distinction between the Creator and the created objects is essentially eliminated, opening the door to a violation of the strict prohibition of “shituf”, i.e. associating God with created objects.

Rav Saadyah Gaon was certainly one of the foremost rabbinic authorities shortly after the period of the Talmud. His opinions on fundamental Torah principles should carry great weight even at the present time. In his Torah sefer Emunot V’Deot 2:11, Rav Saadyah Gaon explains that Hashem is the Creator of all space, space itself being a creation. Thus Hashem would not have transported himself into space after having created it. This concept would certainly be consistent with scientific observations in the last 100 years that demonstrated how the Universe began from a tiny point of matter and later expanded. (Ramban states explicitly in his commentary on Genesis that the Universe began with a tiny point of matter). As a result, Tanya’s claim that any “space” or “makom” existed before the Creation appears to be in error.

It is also rather significant that the great Kabbalist Ramchal, in his sefer Daat Tevunot, section 58, describes how “the entire creation continuously depends on God’s will for its existence”. Ramchal then cited various ancient Torah sages, including the Talmud, who taught that “God is above what he supports”(Chagigah 12b & Yalkut Shimoni 964). Ramchal describes the view of the Torah sages as “God is supporting every element of existence, while at the same time standing above it.” The Ramchal makes no mention here of “God filling the Universe”, apparently because the ancient Torah sages did not explain it that way, and also because of the prohibition of “shituf”, mentioned above.

Thus Tanya’s theology urging us “to consider how He (God) permeates all worlds, both upper and lower” appears to be a radical departure from classical Torah theology in various ways. Man cannot contemplate such concepts as God permeating all the worlds. Man can only know something about the Creator through examination of the works of the Creation, because man cannot know the Creator through examining His essence.

In the sefer Nefesh HaChaim 2:5, Rav Chaim of Volozhyn explains that one can only understand Hashem in terms of His relationship to the world. This viewpoint would probably be quite consistent with ideas taught in “Negative Theology”.

The theological conflicts between the Vilna Gaon and the first Chabad Rebbe, the Baal HaTanya, seem to go back centuries before the modern era to the Middle Ages.

According to Rambam, the Universe provides evidence for Hashem, but Hashem is a Being NOT included in the Universe.

Is the Universe Eternal?

The short answer seems to be that the Torah is teaching that the Universe had a beginning, but the Torah is not stating the age of the Universe.The fourth ikar (principle) of the Rambam’s 13 principles states that Hashem preceded the Universe and created it exnihilo (from absolutely nothing). So the Universe (or the mu

Is the Universe Eternal?

The short answer seems to be that the Torah is teaching that the Universe had a beginning, but the Torah is not stating the age of the Universe.

The fourth ikar (principle) of the Rambam’s 13 principles states that Hashem preceded the Universe and created it ex-nihilo (from absolutely nothing). So the Universe (or the “multiverse” if a multiverse exists) can only have existed for a finite time. In a later version of the 13 principles the Rambam added that this fourth principle is “a great foundation of the Torah of Moshe Rabbeinu”.

Until the early 20th Century, many scientists and philosophers argued that the Universe was eternal. The Rambam argued strongly against this prevailing concept of an eternal Universe as this concept would preclude the existence of prophecy or Torah. An eternal Universe would be subject solely to scientific law.

However it does not appear that the Rambam ever stated the age of the Universe. The Rambam states in Moreh Nevuchim 2:13 that the Torah is teaching that the Universe had a beginning, and time itself was created, but we cannot state that the Universe was created at a specific time. This is because a Universe created at a specific time would necessarily invoke a condition of eternal Aristotelian time. Such an eternal Universe precludes the existence of prophecy or Torah. Therefore, according to the Rambam we can’t state that God created the world at a particular time.

The Rambam in Moreh Nevuchim seems to be teaching that the six days mentioned in Breisheet are six stages in the creation of the Universe.

In an informative video, Rav David Bar-Hayim explains that the six days mentioned in the first chapter of Genesis do not necessarily correspond to the present periods of time we call days:

“The creation was a process that played out over a period of time, an undefined period of time, clearly the reference in the Torah to six days has to be understood to be six periods or six stages in time…the sun did not exist at the beginning, clearly the day referred to in the Torah is an allegorical or approximation of what is truly meant…we do not know how much time was involved, it may be billions of years…science also understands today that all of reality, the entire Universe came into existence from nothing…” ( Rav David Bar-Hayim, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YdvLfJGQYgw )

In the last 100 years, scientists have discovered substantial evidence that this Universe did have a definite beginning.
It appears that modern science has actually confirmed some critical Torah concepts that had been challenged in earlier periods of history.
“Scientists came to the conclusion that the Universe had a beginning from two separate lines of evidence…”
(Interview with Intelligent Design scientist Dr. Stephen Meyer, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHcuZsdv6DE )

Universe Has a Purpose

“In the beginning God created heaven and earth.” (Genesis 1:1). As mentioned previously, in Moreh Nevuchim II:13 the Rambam explains that one who believes in the Torah believes that Hashem brought the Universe into existence after the Universe had been purely and absolutely nonexistent.In Moreh Nevuchim II:19, the

Universe Has a Purpose

“In the beginning God created heaven and earth.” (Genesis 1:1)

As mentioned previously, in Moreh Nevuchim II:13 the Rambam explains that one who believes in the Torah believes that Hashem brought the Universe into existence after the Universe had been purely and absolutely nonexistent.

In Moreh Nevuchim II:19, the Rambam explains that, according to Aristotle, the Universe is eternal and proceeds from the Creator in a cause and effect manner. Thus the Universe exists solely by necessity and not by purpose. Since exists out of necessity can have no purpose, and according to Aristotle, the Universe can have no purpose.

In contrast to Aristotle’s belief in an eternal Universe, the Torah viewpoint is that the Universe does not exist out of necessity, but was created in the finite past by Hashem for a purpose. As mentioned earlier in a reference from Chovot HaLevavot, Shaar HaYichud, Chapter Six, the great wisdom, complexity and order of the Universe demonstrates that it must be the result of an
Intelligence that created the Universe with intention. We thus cannot entertain the notion that the Universe came into existence from any random, natural forces.

Likewise, the Rambam in Moreh Nevuchim also explained how the existence of plan and purpose within the natural order of the Universe demonstrates the existence of a beginning to the Universe that did not occur within nature.

Modern theories espoused by atheist “scientism”, such as Neo-Darwinism and Multiverse theories, clearly have a goal to provide purely natural, material explanations for the origins of the Universe and the origins of the natural order. These materialist explanations also attempt to explain the origins of biological creatures and Man. However, it has become clear to intellectually honest people that “scientism” in no way can explain Man’s existence in this world.

We have seen clearly that Multiverse is purely unproven speculation that atheist scientists developed in desperation when massive scientific evidence developed that the Universe had a beginning. In a similar way, Neo-Darwinism cannot explain the origins of life on Earth and it cannot explain the origins of the many complex animal phyla that have appeared. Neo-Darwinism certainly cannot explain the existence of an advanced being such as Man who has the ability of intellectual apprehension, and the ability of speech.

As Man becomes more aware of his rather unique and unusual existence within the Universe, it is inevitable that Man will begin to recognize more clearly his unique role and purpose within the Universe.

Cosmology-Torah vs Science

Upon occasion, (atheist scientist Stephen) Hawking has stated that time actually began with the Big Bang, and that questions about what happened before the Big Bang are meaningless. This lessnuanced, but commonly repeated formulation has received criticisms from philosophers such as Aristotelian philosopher Mortimer J.

Cosmology-Torah vs Science

“Upon occasion, (atheist scientist Stephen) Hawking has stated that time actually began with the Big Bang, and that questions about what happened before the Big Bang are meaningless. This less-nuanced, but commonly repeated formulation has received criticisms from philosophers such as Aristotelian philosopher Mortimer J. Adler.”
[Time and the Big Bang] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time#Time and the Big Bang)

Although the Bible is intended as an ethical guidebook for man, and not as a science textbook, the basic sequence of events in the Creation process were explained in the book of Genesis using simple language so that all could understand.

The Biblical sequence of Creation events would seem to be perfectly compatible with advanced modern science:

  1. The Universe did not exist forever and had a beginning in the finite past. In addition, according to Maimonides (12th century CE) we cannot know exactly when the Universe was created because time itself was created.
  2. The initial Universe described as unformed matter in Genesis 1:2 was an extremely tiny point of formless matter. (Nachmanides 13th century CE)
  3. All the matter in the Universe was initially created (Genesis 1:1) and the components of the Universe were gradually separated (Maimonides, Guide for the Perplexed II:30).
  4. The first animals were various types of swarming marine invertebrate. (Genesis 1:20).
  5. There was a gradual metaphysical upward increase in biological complexity over time, that was NOT due to Darwinism.
  6. Man (as we know him) is the most complex creature and was created last and very recently (Genesis 1:26). Thus recorded human history is much shorter than the age of the Universe.

Creation Ex Nihilo

In the beginning God created heaven and earth.. (Genesis 1:1). In the Rambam’s Moreh Nevuchim II:13, the Rambam explains that “the opinion of all who believe in the Torah of Moshe Rabbeinu is that Hashem brought the Universe into existence after the Universe had been purely and absolutely nonexistent.”. As explai

Creation Ex Nihilo

“In the beginning God created heaven and earth.”
(Genesis 1:1)

In the Rambam’s Moreh Nevuchim II:13, the Rambam explains that “the opinion of all who believe in the Torah of Moshe Rabbeinu is that Hashem brought the Universe into existence after the Universe had been purely and absolutely nonexistent.”

As explained earlier, if the Universe was created from any existing material or existing “being”, great doubts would be created as to the validity of monotheism, or else doubts about Hashem’s control over the Universe.

The Rambam also explains in Moreh Nevuchim II:19 that Aristotle’s opinion on the creation of the Universe in a cause and effect manner means that the Universe exists solely by necessity and not by purpose. What exists out of necessity can have no purpose, and thus according to Aristotle, the Universe can have no purpose.

In contrast to Aristotle, the Torah viewpoint is that the Universe does not exist out of necessity, but was created in the finite past by Hashem for a purpose.

There appear to be serious conflicts (about fundamental issues) between what the Rishonim (medieval rabbinic authorities) taught and what the later Kabbalists taught.

A few years ago I had a long, interesting discussion with a senior Chareidi rabbi in Lakewood about apparent inconsistencies between certain popularly accepted Kabbalistic concepts and the opinions of earlier rabbinic authorities. This rabbi requested that I not mention his name publicly for various reasons.

One such apparent inconsistency involves the concept of beriyah yesh mi-ayin (creation ex-nihilo). The concept that Hashem created the Universe ex-nihilo seems to be widely accepted by various rabbinic sources such as the Rambam, the Chovot HaLevavot, the Ramchal’s Daat Tevunot, and other sources.

The Lakewood rabbi explained to me that the Kabbalists are really teaching that Hashem created the Universe from “part” of Himself, a process that cannot be considered beriyah yesh mi-ayin as the Rambam and many other great rabbis had taught.

Since Chabad’s Sefer Tanya is a popular explanation of Kabbalistic principles, I decided to consult it as to the issue of beriyah yesh mi-ayin. In several places in the Shaar HaYichud section of the Tanya, the Tanya does state that the heaven and earth were created yesh mi-ayin. However, the Tanya also explains that as a result of the contraction process the Kabbalists refer to as “tzimtzum”, a concealed chiyus (life force) from Hashem enables the continued existence of the Universe.

The Lakewood rabbi I spoke with seems to have a valid point on this problematic issue of beriyah yesh mi-ayin. The concept of beriyah yesh mi-ayin taught by Tanya would seem to be a Universe that Hashem created from “part” of Himself, but it is not a Universe that had been absolutely non-existent before its creation as taught by the Rambam.

The implications of Tanya’s concepts may be quite serious. At least some Chabad Chassidim I have spoken to consider the Universe to be an “illusion” as they believe the only thing that exists is Hashem. It is rather questionable as to whether certain radical Kabbalistic concepts can be considered consistent with many non-Kabbalistic rabbinic concepts.

From the viewpoint of Jewish tradition, the Bible was delivered from God to the Jewish prophets and was intended as a book of ethics and law, not as a scientific treatise. The Bible is teaching that the Universe has a purpose, and Man has role and purpose within the Universe. However, science cannot provide any ethics or meaning or purpose to the Universe. The Bible picks up where science leaves off.

The “work of creation” was described obscurely in the first few chapters in Genesis. Those chapters were not read literally by the ancient rabbis. The “work of creation” was considered a great secret. In fact the rabbis prohibited the public teaching of the secrets of the “work of creation”. Therefore, a literal reading of the Bible will not reveal the secrets of the “work of creation”. The medieval rabbis did teach that space and time were created from nothing in the finite past, and the Universe is not eternal. But the creation ex-nihilo process cannot be understood by man.

A Natural Order Exists

The increasing emphasis in Judaism on esoteric Kabbalistic cosmologies that basically negate the existence of the Universe by morphing it into God has tended to suppress any beliefs in a scientific order to the Universe.There are many valid Torah sources that emphasize the existence of a natural order that most Jews a

A Natural Order Exists

The increasing emphasis in Judaism on esoteric Kabbalistic cosmologies that basically negate the existence of the Universe by morphing it into God has tended to suppress any beliefs in a scientific order to the Universe.

There are many valid Torah sources that emphasize the existence of a natural order that most Jews are subjected to. Regrettably there seems to be a trend in the last few hundred years to ignore or suppress such viewpoints.

“…the majority of the Israelite nation save an elite few, without a doubt are under the control of nature and the heavenly forces…similar to other living creatures who are not subject to God’s providence individually, but only in terms of their species…”
(Sforno, commentary on Leviticus 13:47)

“Hashem wants the natural order to remain functional…he thus allows idol-worshippers to naturally prosper in their idol worship, and even a righteous saint might be impoverished and afflicted, if nature so imposes.”
(Maharal, Commentary on the Pesach Haggada, at the word “Hallelukah”)

A belief that most Jews are subjected to the natural order does not in any way have to promote atheism or negation of belief in Hashem’s providence over the world. On the contrary, the very existence of life in this world including man’s own existence depends very much on an intelligent Creator performing an enormous level of fine tuning of the physical laws and constants to allow us to exist.

Traditional Judaism placed a strong emphasis on a person’s requirement to guard their lives from random or natural misfortunes. The earlier rabbis, unlike many of the Kabbalistic “preachers” nowadays, believed that most people are subject to the natural order. This citation from Sefer Hachinuch sums it up well:

“To remove obstacles and misfortunes from our surroundings, on this (Torah) says to make a guard-rail around your roof…so that no one will fall there…on this we say to make a wall and a fence near every obstacle. Hashem directs all the matters of man, and everything good or evil that He degrees is based on man’s merit or guilt…even so man must guard himself from all the random occurrences in this world because God built a world based on Nature, and decreed that fire burns and water extinguishes the flames…God gave man daas to guard himself from injuries…man is obligated to use his wisdom to guard himself from random occurrences…the majority of mankind in their sins do not merit a great deliverance, so the Torah commanded them to guard their surroundings so that random deaths don’t occur…whoever relies on a miracle then a miracle won’t be done for them etc etc.” (Sefer HaChinuch, Parshas Ki Tsetseh, Mitzvah 538)