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The Seven Days of
Creation
During the first thousand
years, from the creation of Adam and Eve until the Flood, according
to Kabbalah, everything in this world was immense - Adam lived to be
930 years old, people were taller than trees and animals were
gigantic. Everything was immense. After the Flood, G-d said, from
now on, hundred and twenty years will be a human life span,
everything else was reduced down to what we now call normal size.
So for a thousand years,
everything was out of proportion. And that’s because the first day
of Creation G-d was exercising the attribute of kindness. The second
day of Creation, G-d exercised the attribute of restraint, or
severity.
The first day of Creation,
G-d said, Let there be light, and the light was too much, too
intense, and it was withdrawn, and hidden away for the times of
Moshiach. Which tells you right away that the attribute that was
active or functioning on that first day was the attribute of
kindness and kindness in its pure state is indiscriminate, give
everything to everyone endlessly. And it’s exactly what happened -
too much of a good thing. Kindness is the first of the attributes.
So the six days of Creation are really the six attributes, the six
emotions.
Now the first thousand years
of history corresponds to the first day of Creation. So, we see in
the first thousand years of history, from the year 1 to the year
1000, the same was true. The world was immense, everything was
overabundant, and there was no judgment. People did whatever they
wanted, and got away with it.
Now the second day of
Creation was the attribute of severity. The attribute of severity is
judgment. You don’t get, if you don’t deserve, and nobody deserves.
That’s the instinct of judgment - in other words, guilty till
proven innocent. On the second day, G-d separated the waters, and
the dry earth came to the surface, so there was a separation, some
of the water went up, some of the water stayed down - there was a
judgment - the second day of Creation.
The second thousand years
was the same attribute. Severity, judgment. And that’s why the
second thousand years was marked, highlighted by the Flood, in
other words, the accumulated thousand years of sinning was finally
punished, and that’s why it had to be such a severe punishment,
because it was such an accumulation of a thousand years of getting
away with murder literally, it finally caught up and, and exploded
in the Flood. Interesting that the attribute of judgment on the
second day of Creation, was also expressed by water, by separating
the water. And here it was by a flood. And maybe that’s why it was a
flood - it could have been an earthquake, but it was a flood because
the judgment came in water.
The second event of that
millennium was the Tower of Babel, where all people of that time
were building to rebel against G-d and G-d divided them - separated
them, broke them apart, by giving them each a different language. So
that was the judgment of the second thousand years, in the second
millennium.
The third millennium, the
third day of Creation, is the third attribute, the attribute of
compassion, or beauty. Compassion is a harmony of kindness and
severity, and harmony is beauty. It’s also called Truth, because
kindness and severity are extremes, and they are mutually exclusive.
Truth is everywhere and everything - so that which is in harmony is
closer to truth than the extremes. So the third attribute was beauty
or truth and on that day, G-d said, Let the earth give forth
vegetation - in other words the beauty of the earth, not a barren
earth. Or in different words, the earth began to produce fruit. To
be fruitful.
Kindness is the right arm.
And severity is the left arm. And beauty is the body, the torso. So
on the third day, the attribute of beauty was expressed, and so the
world became beautiful. The third millennium was marked by the
appearance of Avraham, who served G-d, and the Giving of the Torah,
and the fulfillment of mitzvas, which means that the world was
beginning to produce its fruits, it was starting to get nice. The
beauty and the truth of the world.
The fourth day of creation
is the attribute of netzach which in English is translated as
victory or perseverance. Netzach, in the emotion, is the
maintaining of kindness when the feeling is not there, staying loyal
in kindness when the emotion is not there - you were once great
friends - you don’t really feel close anymore, but for old time
sake…you’re going to be kind, you’re going to continue with the
kindness, because it was once there. So it’s like persevering in
kindness, or where the kindness is blocked - you want to do
something kind, but there are obstacles, so do you let it go or do
you persevere in kindness. This attribute called netzach, which is
victory or perseverance, but it’s the perseverance of kindness.
Physiologically, that’s the
right leg, which is the support for the right arm, and it’s stronger
than the arm, the arm is more talented, more delicate, but leg is
stronger. In the same way, the perseverance of kindness is not the
same as the feeling of kindness, which is nicer and more delicate
and so on, but it is stronger because it will go on when the emotion
is no longer there. So it’s almost like real kindness involves love,
and netzach means kindness where there is no love, where the love is
gone but the kindness remains.
The fourth day of creation
was the perseverance of kindness and so on the fourth day of
creation, G-d put the sun, the moon and stars into their orbit.
Which is similar to the first day, similar to kindness, light, but
not infinite light, not incredible light, pieces of light. The
fourth millennium was marked by the sun, which is the First Temple,
the moon, which is the Second Temple and the stars, which were the
thousands of prophets that roamed the earth at that time. Spots of
G-dliness, that was the fourth millennium.
The fifth day of creation
is the left leg physiologically, and that is the attribute of again
victory and glory but this time it’s the victory of severity. It’s
when severity perseveres, when you need to be strict, you need to be
judging, discriminating, and it’s hard - so do you persevere or do
you give up? So if you really need to, to discipline your kid, but
you’re in a good mood and you don’t want to ruin it, are you not
going to discipline him when he needs to be disciplined, or will you
persevere and do it, because it has to be done. That’s the attribute
of hod or glory, - this is a lower form of severity, it’s not as
refined as judgment itself, it’s just the perseverance, the
stubbornness behind judgment.
The fifth day of Creation,
G-d created all the creepy, crawly , nasty little things .The fifth
millennium was, marked by the feudal system, petty dictators, an
ugly period of time that is what we call the dark ages, where every
other guy was a dictator and was enslaving somebody, or was
persecuting somebody, or was killing somebody, it was a horrible
time.
The sixth millennium, the
sixth day of Creation, was the attribute of yesod, and yesod means
foundation. Foundation means simply, the essential commitment,
connection, to another person. Before you get to kindness, before
you get to severity, before you get to beauty, before you get to
anything, there has to be just the fundamental statement that
there’s a connection between people, and that’s called yesod, which
physiologically are the reproductive organs. The connection that is
fundamental even when there is no emotion behind it: the act itself
is a very powerful joining and will result in pregnancy, whether you
feel like it or not. So it’s a very powerful interaction even when
there is no emotion.
The sixth day of Creation
was different than the other days. Because on the sixth day of
creation, G-d divided the day. The first part of the day is the
twelve hours of nighttime. The second part of the day is the twelve
hours of daylight. So, on Friday, during the night hours, which
means Thursday night, G-d created the large animals, the beasts. And
during the daylight hours, G-d created man.
Now Adam was a tzaddik, and
tzaddik is called foundation, tzaddik is the foundation of the
world. Because the sixth attribute is called foundation, in other
words, the fundamental connection between people. So the tzaddik is
called foundation, he is the foundation of the world, the
fundamental connection which G-d has with His Creation. So that even
when G-d is angry with His Creation, He remains loyal because with
the tzaddik, He still has a bond.
The sixth millennium which
begins in the year 5001, was marked by two contrasting, opposite
events. One, it introduced the greatest beasts in history, while the
fifth millennium was the petty dictators, the real beasts came in
the sixth millennium - Genghis Khan, the Inquisition, and Hitler,
the real monsters.
At the same time, in this
millennium, the world was introduced to the tzaddik - just like Adam
was created a tzaddik, in the sixth millennium, we were introduced
to this phenomenon called the tzaddik.
Now here’s the interesting
thing, if you take any given millennium, as a day, which means that
a thousand years is a day, twenty four hours, then a half a day
would be five hundred years. So if we say, the first twelve hours of
Friday is when the beast were created, and the second twelve hours,
the daylight hours, is when Adam was created, so you take the
millennium, which begins in the year 5001, and break it into half,
so that in the year 5500, that’s when the day began. The dawn of
Friday is cosmically the year 5500.
So the year 5500 is dawn of
Friday - the Baal Shem Tov who started the Chassidic movement was
born in the year 5550, which means fifty years into the day of
Friday - 5550. If you take the daytime, the daylight hours of Friday
and break that into half, to get the afternoon, a quarter of a day
would be 250 years. So midday on Friday would be the year 5750. When
you reach midday on Friday, you can halachally begin your Shabbos .
So when the Rebbe started
saying “ We want Moshiach now, now is the time for Moshiach, it was
because now we can halachally start Shabbos, it does not have to be
Friday anymore, it can be Shabbos.
So when the Baal Shem Tov
came along, it was the year 5550, and that’s when the idea of
tzaddik was introduced into the world. And that also became the
preparation for Moshiach., because that’s what all of Chassidus is -
basically a preparation for Moshiach, which is the same as saying
preparation for Shabbos, because when Moshiach comes, it will be a
permanent Shabbos of sorts.
That’s the idea of Shabbos,
that during the six days of the week things need fixing. So the six
days of the week are masculine. They’re time - six days of the week
- and time is masculine. Shabbos is not time, it is space. It’s a
holy space. Was the world created in six days or seven? We keep
saying the world was created in six days.So what is this seventh
day, how does it get added on?
The reason why it is not
quite one of the days of the week is because it’s not really time,
it’s a space, not a time.
During the six days of the
week we should be fixing things and improving things, mastering ,
harnessing nature, so for six days, when G-d said, for six days you
should work, and on the seventh you should rest, there are two
commandments here: that you should work for the six days, and you
should not work on Shabbos. So whatever you are meant to do in the
six days, that’s what you’re not to do on Shabbos. What are you
meant to do in the six days? Fix things, rearrange things, improve
things, transform things. So certainly turning on a light and, and
getting the electricity…. that’s, that’s transforming. I mean that’s
real creative work. Because it was dark, you made it light, it was
cold, you made it hot, you’re mastering…
On Shabbos, G-d says, leave
everything alone. It’s fine the way it is. On Shabbos we are
content. That’s the bottom line. That’s what Shabbos is all about.
And so Shabbos means,
instead of looking to what you can fix, enjoy what is. If the light
is on, enjoy it. If the light is off, enjoy it. The food is cooked,
enjoy it. The food is not cooked, enjoy it. Leave it alone. It’s
fine. G-d’s world is fine.
When you leave everything
alone, then what happens? Then your soul takes over. One day out of
the week, pay attention to your soul, and don’t help Me, G-d says,
don’t make the world better, I like it the way it is, for one day of
the week, I like the G-dliness that already exists. Pay attention to
your soul.
In terms of the week,
Shabbos is our intimate space. So G-d says don’t lug weekday
activities into My intimate space. That’s Shabbos. And that’s what
Moshiach is. When Moshiach comes, the world will be celebrating its
own holiness, not working towards holiness. So that’s why the time
of Moshiach is called Shabbos.
So the seventh day of
creation is the seventh attribute, which we haven’t talked about
yet, and the seventh attribute is called royalty. Malchus. Now
physiologically, malchus is related to speech. It’s not actually a
part of the body, it’s speech, and that’s because malchus, royalty
means, the influence of your words. The guy who gets to be king, he
gets to be king, not because he’s big and strong, but because his
words have an effect.
And that’s not necessarily
because he’s smart - because there have been some very stupid kings
- but for some reason, he has the attribute called royalty. And that
attribute means that his words…when he speaks people listen..
So the thing with a king is
that his words are effective. And that’s why we refer to G-d as
King, because when G-d says, Let there be light, there’s light.
That’s the royalty aspect of G-d. The thing with speech is that it’s
not a part of the body, it is the expression of the body. It’s what
comes out. And that’s what royalty is also. Royalty is the effect
you have on others. Not what’s going on inside of you.
So kindness is what you’re
feeling, severity is what you’re feeling - speech is what you’re
sharing with the outside, what comes out. So royalty is not a
personal thing, royalty is the effect you have on others. So it’s
the externalizing of what proceeds it.
Moshiach is not going to
introduce a whole new Torah, or a whole new G-dliness, he is simply
going to bring it to the surface. But the G-dliness is what we
accomplished in three thousand three hundred years of doing mitzvas,
all that accumulated holiness that we’ve planted, the seeds that
we’ve planted in the earth, will finally produce their fruit and
come out, will finally express itself. Moshiach’s main contribution
is that he brings to the surface that which we have been planting
for three thousand years.
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