The Arizal on the Torah
Soul-Trains
Parashat Bechukotai in the writings of Rabbi Yitzchak Luria
- anthologized and translated by Rabbi Moses Wisnefsky from Sefer
HaLikutim and Shaar HaGilgulim
The portion of the Torah read this week begins: "If you will
follow My laws and faithfully observe My commandments, I will grant your rains
in their season, so that the earth shall yield its produce and the trees of the
field their fruit." (Lev. 26:3-4)
It is fitting that we
understand these words, which read as if G-d is trying to convince and entice
the Jewish people, telling them that if they do such and such they will receive
such and such reward.
The tenor of these verses at face value is not that they describe a
simple cause and effect relationship, but that G-d is trying to coax us into
observing His commandments with the promise of reward.
Furthermore, the
reward seems to be blessings of material beneficence.
And our sages have told us that the true reward for keeping G-d's
commandments awaits us in the afterlife.
The explanation is
that [this passage] alludes to the concept of transmigration of souls.
As you know, the soul
is [initially] reincarnated in the mineral or vegetable kingdoms, and
afterwards ascends into the animal kingdom, i.e., cattle. If it merits further,
it ascends to the kingdom of man.
Transmigration is the means by which the soul atone for the sins it
committed in its first, human lifetime. In the words of the Arizal:
There is almost no
person on earth that is spared such transmigration. The wicked, after their
death, enter Purgatory [gehinom] and receive their punishment and
atonement there. Their judgement there lasts twelve months.
Although the Arizal uses the term "punishment", it is
important to remember that the suffering the soul endures in gehinom
(and in being reincarnated) is meant to "scour" or purify it from the
spiritual filth that it accrued during its lifetime by transgressing the
commandments of the Torah. This purification process enables it to progress
afterwards to higher levels of afterlife. Thus, the "punishment" is
an expression of G-d's mercy, an opportunity for the soul to rid itself of the
existential "encrustation" of sin that prevents it from experiencing
the higher levels of spirituality that await it in reward for the good it
performed during its lifetime.
The suffering of the soul in gehinom can be alleviated by
someone saying kaddish for it. This is why the custom is to say kaddish
for only eleven months after the person's death: saying kaddish the full
twelve months would imply that the individual was completely wicked and
requires the full term of purification in gehinom.
To certain wicked
people, however, is applied the verse, "He will fling away the lives of
your enemies in the hollow of the sling." (Sam I 25:29) They do not merit
entering Purgatory [immediately] after their death in order to be cleansed of
their sin. Rather, their soul descends from level to level through various
incarnations, until their sins have been scoured away sufficiently so that they
may enter then Purgatory for twelve months and attain full atonement.
The punishment of "the hollow of the sling" (kaf ha-kela)
is here defined as reincarnation. In the book Hayom Yom of Chabad
chasidut, it is taught that the way a person can avoid this experience is by
(while alive!) spending as much of the day as possible in reciting passages
from the Mishna, the Tanya, and Psalms by heart.
There is no set time
for these cases, for sometimes a soul can progress through its incarnations in
twenty years, or a hundred, or a thousand - all depending upon the seriousness
of the sins that it committed in this world.
There is no one
that has not committed some sin.
In contrast, the fire
of Purgatory does not singe the souls of the righteous and Torah scholars.
Therefore, they must be reincarnated into this world in order to scour them
from whatever sins they may have done, for there is no one that has not
committed some sin.
Thus, for the righteous, reincarnation is the lighter purification
process, after which they enter the World to Come directly. For the wicked,
however, reincarnation entails more suffering, and only after finishing the
reincarnation process can they proceed to gehinom.
When a righteous
person dies, he is thus ready to ascend the ladder of sublime levels of
paradise. This, however, does not happen all at once. Rather, immediately after
his death he is subjected to suffering in order to cleanse him of his more
serious sins. Only after this is he brought into his first level of paradise.
When his turn comes to ascend to a higher, more sublime level, he is again
subjected to suffering in order to cleanse him of his more subtle sins. He can
then enter his second, higher level of paradise. After this, he is again
subjected to suffering [in order to cleanse him of the sin of transgressing]
the minor details of mitzva-performance. Then he is ushered into his
true, fitting place [in paradise].
Rabbi Chaim Vital, who is writing these teachings of his master, the
Arizal, now relates the following incident:
It happened a few
times that I was walking in the field with my teacher, may his memory be for a
blessing, and he said to me: Behold, there was a certain person, named
so-and-so, who was a tzadik and a Torah scholar, but because he
committed such-and-such a sin during his lifetime, he is now incarnated into
this stone, or this plant, etc. My teacher, of blessed memory, never knew these
people.
He would gaze at
a grave and he would see the soul of the person buried there standing on the
grave.
We
[his students] would investigate the history of these departed souls, and we
invariably found the facts to be in accordance with his words. I am not going
to go into this at length, because I could never recount all the times this
happened.
Other times he would
gaze at a grave five hundred cubits away, amongst twenty-thousand other graves,
and he would see the soul of the person buried there standing on the grave. He
would tell us that so-and-so is buried in that grave, and he is undergoing
such-and-such a punishment for having committed such-and-such a sin. We would
inquire after this person, and always find it to be as my teacher said. We were
witness to many amazing things like this.
To return to our
discussion: After an individual dies, he is repaid for his sins in various
forms of reincarnation before he enters Purgatory. That is, he can be
reincarnated in an inanimate object, a plant, an animal, or in a person. Almost
no one can avoid being reincarnated, since a soul cannot experience the
suffering [required to cleanse him of the effects of his sin] unless he has
become re-materialized in a soul-body [combination]. Only then, having been
reincarnated, can he suffer and feel the pain and thus achieve atonement.
The degree and
extent of the reincarnation is a function of the seriousness of his sins.
The degree and extent
of the reincarnation - i.e., into which "kingdom" he is reincarnated
- is a function of the seriousness of his sins. This is why there are even some
tzadikim and Torah scholars that undergo reincarnation, as we have said,
on account of some sin that they stumbled over during their lifetimes.
We have explained
elsewhere that all the worlds were created from the ruins of the seven
primordial kings that ruled in the land of Edom and then died [i.e., the world
of Tohu that collapsed]. The purest remains of this world were absorbed
into the world of Atzilut; what was too coarse [to be absorbed into Atzilut]
was absorbed into the world of Beriya, then Yetzira, and finally Asiya.
The purest elements [that descended to Asiya] were absorbed into the
human kingdom, followed by the animal kingdom, the vegetable kingdom, and
finally the mineral kingdom. A righteous person, through his deeds and the mitzvot
he performs through eating and such, has the power to elevate [the sparks of holiness
in] the mineral kingdom to the level of the vegetable kingdom, and then to the
level of the animal kingdom, and finally to the level of the human kingdom.
The wicked person, in
contrast, through his deeds, causes the exact opposite to happen - he causes
[the sparks of holiness] to descend. Some sins cause the [sparks of holiness
in] man to descend to the level of the inanimate kingdom; others, to the level
of the vegetable kingdom or animal kingdom. Therefore, in correspondence to
their sin, some wicked people after their death are reincarnated into a stone,
while others are reincarnated into vegetables or animals.
When a person
commits a sin, he is betraying the divine within him.
When a person commits a sin, he is betraying the divine within him; he
is not acting like a human being, who is meant to rule over Creation and
elevate it to divinity. Rather, he is stooping to the level of the object he is
committing the sin with, and - at least for the duration of the sin -
subjecting himself to its rule over him.
For example, let's say a person has a sensual urge to eat chocolate
cake. It is not Shabbat or any other occasion in whose honor he can justify
eating the cake, and he has already eaten his meal, so he cannot justify the
indulgence with claims of real hunger. No, the sole motivation for this piece
of cake is pure, unadulterated sensual indulgence. Furthermore, this is glatt
kosher cake, and eating it entails no transgression of waiting between meat and
dairy foods, so the indulgence is not a sin per se, but just an
indulgence. If the person succumbs to his urge and eats the cake, he is
demonstrating that - at that moment, at least - he is subservient to the power
the cake has over him. He has taken his divine spark animating him at that
moment and brought it down to the level of the cake. He becomes, in effect, not
a human-person but a cake-person. Moreover, he has to a certain extent brought
the whole level of creation down to this level.
So long as this cakeness and cake-identity remains with him, this
individual cannot expect to be admitted to the chambers of paradise, where the
delights of this world are insignificant and the soul basks in the glow of the
Divine Presence. He has, on the contrary, demonstrated that he is
"into" much coarser delights. He must therefore be cleansed of this
cake-mentality. This is accomplished by being reincarnated into the vegetable
kingdom, where he can experience the pain of his soul - which is used to the
freedom of expression and movement of a human being - being trapped in
vegetable-identity. In other words, he must experience the same descent he put
his soul (and the world) through when he ate the cake.
There is a proper
time for each ascent to occur.
Those who undergo
these reincarnations remain there for a fixed amount of time, until the sin
that caused them to be incarnated into the vegetable kingdom is expunged. When
this time is over, they ascend into the animal kingdom; when this time is over
they ascend into the human kingdom.
To return to the verse from Torah with which we began the discussion:
Thus, the Torah says:
"If you will follow My laws and faithfully observe My commandments, I will
grant your rains in their season, so that the earth shall yield its produce and
the trees of the field their fruit." You will eat and be satisfied, and
the souls that are present within the food will ascend to your level.
The ascent of the souls incarnated in the food a person eats is
subject to him following G-d's laws and faithfully observing His commandments.
That is, he must preserve his level of holiness while engaged in eating.
Otherwise, as we said, he does not elevate the divine sparks or souls within
the food, but falls to its level.
This is the mystical
meaning of the verse: "And you shall eat your bread to satiation, and
dwell securely in your land." (Lev. 26:5)
Now, the souls
reincarnated [in lower forms of life] do not ascend at all times. Rather, there
is a proper time for each ascent to occur.
Specifically, someone
who has been reincarnated into the mineral kingdom only ascends into the
vegetable kingdom during the four months of Av, Elul, Tishrei, and Cheshvan.
Someone who has been reincarnated into the vegetable kingdom only ascends into
the animal kingdom during the four months of Nisan, Iyar, Sivan, and Tamuz.