35
Torah is the source of the life force of all the worlds, for His wisdom, blessed
be He, required that His will should be within time and space. This is how all
the worlds were revealed at the point at which [the divine will] entered time
and space.
35
The biblical verse with which Rashaz opens his exegesis bears several meanings.
Firstly, “words” are taken to be a reference to the Torah, whose descent from its
transcendent divine source to the people of Israel in the lower world is an effect of
the arbitrary divine will, expressed by the word “command.” Secondly, “this day”
[
ha-yom
] introduces a temporal perspective: the fact that God, supposedly
unbounded by time, is associated in the verse with such a short period of time as a
day, underscores the role of the Torah as the intermediary between supra- and infra-
temporal realities. In addition, the idea of the Torah as the link between God and the
world is reinforced elsewhere in Rashaz’s sermons, where the notion that the Torah
“binds two opposites: the aspect of [God] surrounding all worlds [
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