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  • July 12, 1862
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  • KABBALISM, OR THE RELIGIOUS PHILOSOPHY OF THE HEBREWS.
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Kabbalism, Or The Religious Philosophy Of The Hebrews.

tremities have also as emblems , tho different combinations of the four letters of the word Jehovah . These emanations , ifc appears , become more and more material the further they extend from the En-soph : apparently , in the end becoming actually matter . The nearer thoy are , the more spiritual they are : thus , the first , as we have seen , is the ' Voice' and the ' Word ;'

the second is the 'Breath of tho Spirit , ' attached to which are the letters of the alphabet ; in other words , the verbal inspiration of the Bible . This seems to be that trinity of which Philo speaks , the En-soph , the Adyos , the iivevij-a : still more remarkably manifested in -fche Targum of Onkelos , where the ' word' is so frequently used as a sort of mediator between God and

man . Besides this , there are notices of a belief in a male and female principle as pervading fche Deity ; the ' long face' was male , the ' short face' was female ; in some instances it seems that the Shekinah is spoken of as female : so also the three elements , water , air , and fire ( earth is included in water , being supposed to be water condensed ) , are called , in the formation of tho world , the Ocnctrices . There can be little doubt that the

idea of a male and female principle was borrowed from the Egyptian mysteries through the Alexandrian school ; though the system of emanation is Persian , or perhaps Indian . We have also somo curious speculations about being and non-being in the Deity . The latter is spoken of as having three heads , ' the one in the other , and the one above the other : above the first head is the Ancient

of Days ; then comes the head which rules all the others : what ifc incloses no one knows nor can know : for it is equally beyond our knowledge aud our ignorance . This is why the Ancient of Days is called the non-being . ' Thus there is a unity in the being , and a trinity in the intellectual manifestations . 'Thought is the begiuninoof all existence , but it is afc firsfc ignorant anel shut up in

itself : when thought begins to expand itself ifc arrives afc thafc point where it becomes spirit ; then it takes the name of intelligence , and is no longer shut up iu itself . The Spirit iu its turn developes ] itself in the midst of mysteries with which it is surrounded , and it utters a voice which is the combination of all the heavenly choirs . . . . This thought allies itself to the nonloeing , and is never separated ; such is the meaning of the words , ' Jeuovah is one , and His name is one . ' "

. . . The name which means " I am indicates to us tho union of all that exists . . . . When we intend to describe the Genetrix having in her bosom all things , and about to reveal tho great name , then God speaking of ifc , says , " I am that I am . " * Besides answering to the name of God , the Sephiroth answered likewise to tho hierarchies of angels , tho

heavens , and planets , the parts of tho human frame , and the Ten Commandments . To the nine hierarchies of angels is added that of the human soul , to make tho tenth . The heavens and the planets are as follows : — The empyrean , thejirimtirn mobile , the firmament , Saturn , Jupiter , Mars , the Sun , Venus , Mercury , the Moon ; The ten parts of the human frame are the brain , tho lungs , the heart ; the stomach , the liver , tho gall , tho spleen , the reins , the membrnm virile , the matrix

.-f-As there was an image of God , so also there was one , or rather two of man ; a macrocosm and a microcosm : the macrocosm , or Adam Kadmon , is an ideal image with the parts of a human frame , each containing some profound mystery . Thus : wisdom is the skull ; intelligence is the righfc ear ; prudence , the left ; on the diaphragm is a spot of condensed light , from which is communicated

the power of producing other worlds . Iu man there is a soi-fc of trinity : first , the spirit , the highest part ; secondly , the soul , the seat of good and evil , of desire , and of all the moral attributes of man ; thirdly , life , immediately connected with the body , tho seat of all animal instincts and actions . Sometimes these three are comprehended under one common name of the soulthis

; soul descends from heaven at the momonfc of conception to unite itself to the body . ' At the moment when is accomplished the union with the earthly body , fche Lord sends down a form which is the likeness of the man , and having fche stamp of the Divine seal . . . ; if the eye could see what then takes place , it would perceive above its head an image in every wa / resembling a human face ,

the image of that iu which we are afterwards formed . ' This is the ' image of God , ' and is the microcosm—a term often applied to man , even by Christian philosophers ; ifc is developed with us , aud grows with our growth . All souls are jare-cxisfcent , having been created ou the first day , immediately after tbe light ; they are sent down to earth for the purpose of being disciplined for a higher

state of existence . Metemphsychosis became a necessary doctrine , in order that this education might be complete : it was apparently the general doctrine of the Kabbalists , while at the same time some of them held that of the resurrection of the body ; two doctrines seemingly incompafcable . In each soul was the male and female principle , for , indeed , it is said , ' every form which contains not the male and female principle is not a form superior

and complete : . . . blessings do not descend when this union does not exist ; as wo learn from the words , " He blessed them , and called their name Adam , in the day when they were created . " Again : ' each soul and each spirit is composed of a man and a woman united in one being ; in descending on earth , these two halves are separated , and go to animate different bodies . ' Marriage

is the union of these two ; happy marriages are those in which these souls have found each other ; unha ] 3 ] jy , when they are united to others . There is much in this that reminds us of Plato ' s androgynes .- perhaps ifc was borrowed from him through the Alexandrian school . * By adopting' tho doctrine of metempsychosis , by which souls , passing through different bodies leted their

disci-, comp p line , and were at last joined to their proper halves , they solved the difficulty attending on the fact of divorce , separation , and unhappy unions . Afc night , during sleep , each soul went up to heaven to render an account of those things done during-the day . Opinions on the origin of matter , as well as that of evilarc various ; and they are frequentlconfounded .

, y According to the theory of emanations , matter is the extremity of the emanation of spirit ; the nearer to the En-soph ifc is the more purely spiritual , the further its extension the grosser it becomes , till at last it degenerates into matter . In following oufc this opinion , we can see how easily the parallel of sin would be imagined , so that while , in the one case , distance from pure spirit thickened

the emanation till ifc became matter , so , by the like process , would be produced sin , sin being extreme distance from God morally , as matter is physically ; sin becoming , as ifc were , an opposite magnetic pole . In accordance with this notion the worlds were created , or rather produced , by the immediate action of the Sephiroth ; thus , when it is written , ' The Lord by wisdom hath founded the earth ; by understanding He hath established the heavens ; by His knov . icd . gc the depths are broken up , ' & c , the Kab-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-07-12, Page 4” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 29 March 2023, www.masonicperiodicals.org/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_12071862/page/4/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE SUPREME GRAND COUNCIL OF FRANCE AND MARSHAL MAGNAN. Article 1
MASONIC FICTIONS. Article 2
KABBALISM, OR THE RELIGIOUS PHILOSOPHY OF THE HEBREWS. Article 3
AN ORATION, Article 5
MASONIC SAYINGS AND DOINGS ABROAD. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
EXHIBITION OF MEDLÆVAL ART AT THE SOUTH KENSINGTON MUSEUM. Article 10
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 12
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 12
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 12
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 13
METROPOLITAN. Article 13
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
SCOTLAND. Article 15
INDIA. Article 15
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 15
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 15
Obituary. Article 16
Poetry. Article 16
THE NYMPHS' LAMENT FOR THE TITANS. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Kabbalism, Or The Religious Philosophy Of The Hebrews.

tremities have also as emblems , tho different combinations of the four letters of the word Jehovah . These emanations , ifc appears , become more and more material the further they extend from the En-soph : apparently , in the end becoming actually matter . The nearer thoy are , the more spiritual they are : thus , the first , as we have seen , is the ' Voice' and the ' Word ;'

the second is the 'Breath of tho Spirit , ' attached to which are the letters of the alphabet ; in other words , the verbal inspiration of the Bible . This seems to be that trinity of which Philo speaks , the En-soph , the Adyos , the iivevij-a : still more remarkably manifested in -fche Targum of Onkelos , where the ' word' is so frequently used as a sort of mediator between God and

man . Besides this , there are notices of a belief in a male and female principle as pervading fche Deity ; the ' long face' was male , the ' short face' was female ; in some instances it seems that the Shekinah is spoken of as female : so also the three elements , water , air , and fire ( earth is included in water , being supposed to be water condensed ) , are called , in the formation of tho world , the Ocnctrices . There can be little doubt that the

idea of a male and female principle was borrowed from the Egyptian mysteries through the Alexandrian school ; though the system of emanation is Persian , or perhaps Indian . We have also somo curious speculations about being and non-being in the Deity . The latter is spoken of as having three heads , ' the one in the other , and the one above the other : above the first head is the Ancient

of Days ; then comes the head which rules all the others : what ifc incloses no one knows nor can know : for it is equally beyond our knowledge aud our ignorance . This is why the Ancient of Days is called the non-being . ' Thus there is a unity in the being , and a trinity in the intellectual manifestations . 'Thought is the begiuninoof all existence , but it is afc firsfc ignorant anel shut up in

itself : when thought begins to expand itself ifc arrives afc thafc point where it becomes spirit ; then it takes the name of intelligence , and is no longer shut up iu itself . The Spirit iu its turn developes ] itself in the midst of mysteries with which it is surrounded , and it utters a voice which is the combination of all the heavenly choirs . . . . This thought allies itself to the nonloeing , and is never separated ; such is the meaning of the words , ' Jeuovah is one , and His name is one . ' "

. . . The name which means " I am indicates to us tho union of all that exists . . . . When we intend to describe the Genetrix having in her bosom all things , and about to reveal tho great name , then God speaking of ifc , says , " I am that I am . " * Besides answering to the name of God , the Sephiroth answered likewise to tho hierarchies of angels , tho

heavens , and planets , the parts of tho human frame , and the Ten Commandments . To the nine hierarchies of angels is added that of the human soul , to make tho tenth . The heavens and the planets are as follows : — The empyrean , thejirimtirn mobile , the firmament , Saturn , Jupiter , Mars , the Sun , Venus , Mercury , the Moon ; The ten parts of the human frame are the brain , tho lungs , the heart ; the stomach , the liver , tho gall , tho spleen , the reins , the membrnm virile , the matrix

.-f-As there was an image of God , so also there was one , or rather two of man ; a macrocosm and a microcosm : the macrocosm , or Adam Kadmon , is an ideal image with the parts of a human frame , each containing some profound mystery . Thus : wisdom is the skull ; intelligence is the righfc ear ; prudence , the left ; on the diaphragm is a spot of condensed light , from which is communicated

the power of producing other worlds . Iu man there is a soi-fc of trinity : first , the spirit , the highest part ; secondly , the soul , the seat of good and evil , of desire , and of all the moral attributes of man ; thirdly , life , immediately connected with the body , tho seat of all animal instincts and actions . Sometimes these three are comprehended under one common name of the soulthis

; soul descends from heaven at the momonfc of conception to unite itself to the body . ' At the moment when is accomplished the union with the earthly body , fche Lord sends down a form which is the likeness of the man , and having fche stamp of the Divine seal . . . ; if the eye could see what then takes place , it would perceive above its head an image in every wa / resembling a human face ,

the image of that iu which we are afterwards formed . ' This is the ' image of God , ' and is the microcosm—a term often applied to man , even by Christian philosophers ; ifc is developed with us , aud grows with our growth . All souls are jare-cxisfcent , having been created ou the first day , immediately after tbe light ; they are sent down to earth for the purpose of being disciplined for a higher

state of existence . Metemphsychosis became a necessary doctrine , in order that this education might be complete : it was apparently the general doctrine of the Kabbalists , while at the same time some of them held that of the resurrection of the body ; two doctrines seemingly incompafcable . In each soul was the male and female principle , for , indeed , it is said , ' every form which contains not the male and female principle is not a form superior

and complete : . . . blessings do not descend when this union does not exist ; as wo learn from the words , " He blessed them , and called their name Adam , in the day when they were created . " Again : ' each soul and each spirit is composed of a man and a woman united in one being ; in descending on earth , these two halves are separated , and go to animate different bodies . ' Marriage

is the union of these two ; happy marriages are those in which these souls have found each other ; unha ] 3 ] jy , when they are united to others . There is much in this that reminds us of Plato ' s androgynes .- perhaps ifc was borrowed from him through the Alexandrian school . * By adopting' tho doctrine of metempsychosis , by which souls , passing through different bodies leted their

disci-, comp p line , and were at last joined to their proper halves , they solved the difficulty attending on the fact of divorce , separation , and unhappy unions . Afc night , during sleep , each soul went up to heaven to render an account of those things done during-the day . Opinions on the origin of matter , as well as that of evilarc various ; and they are frequentlconfounded .

, y According to the theory of emanations , matter is the extremity of the emanation of spirit ; the nearer to the En-soph ifc is the more purely spiritual , the further its extension the grosser it becomes , till at last it degenerates into matter . In following oufc this opinion , we can see how easily the parallel of sin would be imagined , so that while , in the one case , distance from pure spirit thickened

the emanation till ifc became matter , so , by the like process , would be produced sin , sin being extreme distance from God morally , as matter is physically ; sin becoming , as ifc were , an opposite magnetic pole . In accordance with this notion the worlds were created , or rather produced , by the immediate action of the Sephiroth ; thus , when it is written , ' The Lord by wisdom hath founded the earth ; by understanding He hath established the heavens ; by His knov . icd . gc the depths are broken up , ' & c , the Kab-

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