Marc B. Shapiro Series: Principle 2

[This post has taken me longer than expected, however here is what I have done so far, its about 70% done]

Principle II. The Unity of G-d


Meaning to say to accept that this is the quintessential idea of Oneness. It is not like the oneness of a pair (i.e. pair of shoes – one group) or and not one like a species. And not like man that has many individuals nor like a body that divides into many different parts until no end (everything keeps on being divisible). Rather God is one and there is no other oneness like His. This is the second principle and is taught in what it says "Hear Israel, Hashem your God, Hashem is one."

Sources against the Kabbalists with regard to the sefirot

MS: opponents of the kabbalah viewed the mystical doctrine of the sefirot, the ten aspects, or powers, of the Godhead, in the same way as the Trinity, namely as a violation of God’s absolute unity and thus idolatrous.

R. Isaac ben Sheshet (1326 – 1407, the Rivash, Sh”T harivash no. 157)

quotes a philosopher who argued that, whereas the Christians believe in ‘three’, the kabbalists believe in ‘ten’

R. Abraham Abulafia

Agreed with the philosophers and saw the standard understanding of the Sefirot as even worse than the concept of the Trinity

Kabbalistsic works (going against a simplistic unity of the unity of God)

R. Moses Cordovero

At the start of the emanation, the Ein Sof, King of all kings, the Holy One, blessed be He, emanated ten Sefirot, which are from His essence, are one with Him and He and they are all one complete unity

R’ Jacob the Nazirite

the first three and the last three benedictions of the Amidah prayer are directed to the Sefirah Binah. The middle blessings are directed to Tiferet during the day and to Binah at night

Definite Heresy

Shabatean kabbalist Abraham Miguel Cardozo (1626 – 1706)

the hidden God, called the ‘First Cause’, it is the Demiurge, the ‘God of Israel’, who created the world and exercises providence. In other words, it wsa the Demiurge, not the First Cause, who appeared to the patriarchs, sent the plagues, and took the Israelites out of Egypt.

Supporters of Abraham Miguel Cardozo’s position

R’ Isaac Lopes of Aleppo

advocated this position quoting from Cardozo’s unpublished Boker avraham

R. Joseph Hayim ben Elijah Alhakam of Baghdad

rejected Lopes’s Cardozian position, nevertheless had a very high opinion of him

R Jacob Kassin (1900 – 1994, Late Chief Rabbi of Brooklyn’s Syrian Community)

Cited Lopes numerous times

Kabbalists who advocated similar idea to Cardoza

MS: Like Cardoza, they believed that that Ilat Ha’ilot has no involvement with human affairs, being completely impersonal and transcendent. Therefore no prayers are directed toward it. Instead one prays to the ‘God’ who is immanent, who created the word and exercises providence in it, that is, the God of Scripture, who is identified with either the Sefira (Keter) or the second Sefira (Hokhmah)

Ma’alekhet ha’elohut

Anonymously authored. Gershom Sholem believed written around 14th Century

R Isaac ibn Latif (thirteenth century)

The First Created Being, may he be blessed, knows everything by virtue of his essence, for he is everywhere and everything is in Him, as it written, the whole earth is full of his glory(Isa 10:3) and all beings exist through him by way of emanation and evolvement, and nothing exists outside of Him

Views at odds with Maimonidean Concepts

R Jacob the Nazirite (twelfth century)

the first three and the last three benedictions of the Amidah prayer are directed to the Sefirah Binah.

The middle blessings are directed to Tiferet during the day and to Binah at night

R. Abraham ben David of Posquieres (Rabad 1125 – 1198)

the first three and the last three blessings are directed to the Supreme Deity (Ilat Ha’ilot), but the middle blessings, which are more personal, are directed to the divine entity which is the manifestation of Ilat Ha’ilot, the Creator (Yestor Bereshit)

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