Shattered Fragments

Descending SoulsWhen G-d sends the souls forth into the world, they include a male and female joined together…When they descend to the world…they are separated from each other. Sometimes one soul precedes the other in descending and entering a body of a human being. When their time to be married arrives, G-d, Who knows these souls, joins them as they were before [they descended to this world]…When they are joined together, they become one body and one soul.Zohar 1:91b

Some Pharisees came to him to test him. They asked, “Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any and every reason?” “Haven’t you read,” he replied, “that at the beginning the Creator ‘made them male and female,’ and said, ‘For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh’? So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.”Matthew 19:4-6

This is a continuation of my commentary on the JLI course Toward the Meaning of Life. See The Prophet and the Shade Plant for the previous commentary and links to earlier lessons.

As Christians, we are generally taught that we have no pre-existence prior to conception and birth. Somehow, our individual souls are all part of that process and we exist in isolation within the womb, physically and spiritually. We do not realize the joining of two souls as one until marriage so that we become “one flesh” (Genesis 2:24), but Kabbalah suggests another interpretation. We also see this viewpoint in the Chasidic writings as related by Rabbi Tzvi Freeman’s rendition of the Rebbe’s teaching on man and woman:

It is a mistake to consider man and woman two separate beings. They are no more than two halves of a single form, two converse hemispheres that fit tightly together to make a perfect whole. They are heaven and earth encapsulated in flesh and blood.

It is only that on its way to enter this world, this sphere was shattered apart. What was once the infinity of a perfect globe became two finite surfaces. What was once a duet of sublime harmony became two bizarre solos of unfinished motions, of unresolved discord.

So much so, that each one hears in itself only half a melody, and so too it hears in the other. Each sees the other and says, “That is broken.” Feigning wholeness, the two halves wander aimlessly in space alone.

Until each fragment allows itself to surrender, to admit that it too is broken. Only then can it search for the warmth it is missing. For the depth of its own self that was ripped away. For the harmony that will make sense of its song.

And in perfect union, two finite beings find in one another infinite beauty.

While there is a beauty in this interpretation; a poetic and romantic image that calls to anyone who has found their “soulmate” in their spouse or who is ernestly seeking their bashert, couldn’t all this just be considered some non-Biblical fantasy? After all, Adam, a man, was created first and then Eve was created from his rib. This is how we understand it in Christianity. They are two separate beings who were joined together by God spiritually. The only “unity” they shared originally is that Eve was made out of one of Adam’s body parts.

But is that how it really was? Genesis 2:18 says, “And the Lord God said, it is not good for the man (ha-adam) to be alone; I will make a fitting helper for him.” Let’s have closer look at some of the Hebrew words and concepts. Rabbi Pinchas Stolper in his article, “The Man-Woman Dynamic of Ha-Adam: A Jewish Paradigm of Marriage provides some important insights into Genesis that we miss when we read the English text:

Who is ha-adam? It is neither man (ish) nor the first man (adam). To identify ha-adam, we turn to Genesis 1:27. “And God created ha-adam in His image, in the image of God He created him (oto); make and female, He created them (otam).” The first part of the verse clearly indicates that ha-adam is a single being. The second half indicates that this single being, at the conclusion of the creation process, becomes “otam (them),” two individuals.

The key to decoding this mystery is to be found in Rashi, the Biblical commentator par excellence, who generally anchors the Biblical text in its plain meaning. Rashi explains: “They were created shenai partzufim [of two faces, androgynous] in the original creation; and only later did God divide them.” In other words, ha-adam, the first human being is a unique creation; both male and female simultaneously (see Ketuvot 8a).

This is an amazing revelation of the first human beings and has startling implications on what it is to be created in the “image of God” (since God is without gender) and on Paul’s teaching, “neither male nor female” (Galatians 3:28), but can we accept the interpretation of a 12th century Jewish sage over the actual Biblical text? If ha-adam was not the actual first “man” in Creation, where did the separate entities of Adam and Eve come from? Rabbi Stolper provides an answer:

Later, the Torah records that “the Lord God put ha-adam into a tardema (deep sleep) and took one of his tzela’ot.” Rashi indicates that “tzela’otav” does not mean “one of his ribs” but, “one of his sides,” as it is taught, “the side of the Tabernacle.” This follows the meaning of the Talmud “that they were created with two faces.” Ha-adam was originally a unified individual with two “sides,” two faces, two aspects, two sexes, subsequently divided into two.

A footnote on this commentary states:

Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch, notes (Genesis 2:21) that “tzela does not occur elsewhere in the Tanakh (OT) as a ‘rib’, but always as a ‘side,’ which is also why tzalua means to be inclined towards one side, to limp.”

One SoulBased on the actual Hebrew of the Genesis creation story, the common interpretation of Eve being “Adam’s rib” doesn’t hold an ounce of water. Man and woman were originally united as a single, unified entity that God deliberately separated into different and equal parts designed to perform different functions in the created world. However, like any single thing that is put into two parts, neither one is complete until they are joined back together. In fact, the Hebrew for “cling to” that we find in Genesis 2:24 is the Hebrew word “vedavak” which carries the sense that a man must “leave his father and his mother, and shall glue himself to his wife: and they shall be one flesh.”

But why didn’t God just let ha-adam stay as a single entity? I’m sure most married couples, who have had their fair share of marital disagreements must be asking the same question. You’d think that having an “unsplit” ha-adam would have avoided thousands of years of stormy marital discord and the proverbial “battle of the sexes”.

Interestingly enough, in Genesis 2:18, when God says, “It is not good (lo tov) for man to be alone (levado)”, the implication of the Hebrew is that “it is not yet good”. The ultimate “good” could not be achieved unless their were two of them. Animals were already created “male and female” without going through the “splitting” process described for ha-adam and thus only human beings are able to be joined together as a spiritual “one”. No other living beings in creation are capable of this level of total unity of essense, and it requires that the two must specifically be “male” and “female”, man and woman.

But that doesn’t answer the question.

Rabbi Stolper’s article quotes Rabbi Shlomo Wolbe and Rabbi Yeruchem Lovivitz on the matter and the answer in part states:

“It is clearly demonstrated to you that the Lord alone, levado, is God; there is none beside Him.” God is on the level of levado (citing Deut. 4:35).

Only God is One, a unique and radical unity (Deuteronomy 6:4) and there is no other “oneness” like God. In the Garden, part of the serpent’s temptation of Eve was that “when you eat of it, your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God…” (Genesis 3:5). This was the only sin possible for Adam and Eve to commit in Eden; to attempt to be like God. We are meant to be much more than the other creatures of Creation, but we were created to be “a little lower than the angels” (Psalm 8:5; Hebrews 2:7). Only God is One, levado; alone. Humans are unique in creation but we are still meant to be two, man and woman, and to become “one flesh”.

There’s an obvious problem with the Chasidic interpretation of God always joining the “split souls” of man and woman together again in marriage when you consider Jewish/Gentile intermarried couples such as me and my wife. When asked “Can a Jewish woman’s berheret (soul-mate) be a non-Jew”, Rabbi Shraga Simmons
replies in part:

The Talmud says that 40 days before the formation of a fetus, it is decreed in heaven which boy will marry which girl. Since God has forbidden a Jew from marrying a non- Jew (Deut. 7:3), it is obvious that the beshert is a Jew. There is of course the possibility that one’s beshert will be a convert, though this again would only apply to someone who converted in accordance with God’s laws.

Yet here we are, man and woman, married to each other, presumably by God’s decree and (though Rabbi Simmons wouldn’t consider this a factor) commanded by Jesus that “what God has joined together, let no one separate.”

I don’t know how it works or how it’s supposed to work. I only know that things are what they are and that God is here with us, helping us to try to do our best, just the way He made us, to repair our little bit of the broken world and prepare for the coming of the Moshiach. Our two halves don’t always make an agreeable whole and like any married person, I sometimes wonder why. The only answer I can find is in how Rabbi Freeman interprets the Rebbe on the topic of getting along:

When we can’t get along with someone, we like to blame it on that person’s faults: stupidity, incompetence, outrageous actions, aggression or some other evil.

The real reason is none of these. It is that the world is broken, and we are the shattered fragments.

And all that stops us from coming back together is that we each imagine ourselves to be whole.

We are shattered fragments trying to become whole again. We contain Divine sparks within us that are constantly striving to break free and return to the One Source of all things. We are prisoners, imaging ourselves as individuals sitting isolated in a jail cell of our own making, but we’re sitting on the keys.

The next part of this series, and a continuation of the discussion about marriage, is in the “morning meditation” Who Are We to God?.

8 thoughts on “Shattered Fragments”

  1. I struggle with this concept, having already been divorced twice. Does this mean that I have never married my “soulmate”? Or does this mean that I already married my soulmate once and lost it forever? Or does this mean I thought I was marrying my soulmate, and missed it twice already and so what does that mean if I ever fall in love and wish to get married again? I already have a bad track record. Or must I be alone the rest of my life?

    As far as a Jewish person marrying a non-Jew, I have an insight which may help. I believe that the God who creates our souls, has a different idea about what is a “Jew” than we do here on earth. I also believe that there are those who love Him and serve Him, and yet are not what we in our small minds consider either Jew or Christian. I think God’s heart and sight is larger than our own. I find it completely conceivable that one could marry a person and be completely compatible with them and yet according to our standards, they would not fit into the boxes that we have created for either Jew or Christian. So while it is absolutely true that God would not put two souls together who were not believers in Him, yet, He could put two souls together who did not appear to our eyes, to be the same.

    I hope that helps.

    Thanks for writing these Jim. I often don’t have time to read them all, but whenever I get a moment I try to read them, and I always find them to be insightful and thought provoking (a good thing).

  2. Thanks for the summary of the Jewish understanding of the original creation, an interpretation that I have found to be far more satisfying than the Christian alternative. But there’s a huge divide between biblical interpretation and the mystical imagination run amok. The Zoharic and Chassidic teachings about pre-existent pairs are an example of the second. Apart from the problem you point out (intermarriages), they produce problems with Torah law concerning marriage, in particular polygamy, divorce and remarriage, and the responsibility of a man to marry the wife of his deceased brother.

    Now, much of the Torah concerning marriage has been shaped by subsequent tradition (see the note at the end of this comment). But all Torah law remains “on the books,” so to speak. How does the Chassidic teaching about marriage lineup with the Torah? Here’s one example.

    The Torah permits polygamy (see note below). According to Chassidic teaching, this would produce marriages in which a man is united with his pre-existing mate AND ALSO with one or more women who were not joined with him in their pre-existence. With the Torah’s permission. At the same time, these additional wives are forbidden to the men who are THEIR pre-existent mates. Those men presumably marry yet OTHER women with whom they did not pre-exist as a pair. And so on. Every polygamous marriage (King David’s, for example), wrenches apart several pre-existent pairs. All with the express permission of the Torah.

    This is not a pretty picture and, IMO, makes no sense at all.

    It is important to know that halakhah does not oblige Jews to believe or follow these teachings. We are free to judge them on their own merits.

    NOTE: I’m not advocating that we practice polygamy. Long ago, our rabbis forbade polygamy in a process that is much too complex for me to explain here fully. The short (and perhaps easily misunderstood) version is that there are circumstances in which a mitzvah must be made inoperative in order to promote a greater mitzvah. Every mitzvah remains true, but component mitzvot must be balanced with one another.

  3. Thanks for commenting Dree and Carl. You both bring up some very important points. Before going on, I just want to say that I’m hardly an expert in this area and what I write is as much for my own exploration and education as anyone else’s. Also Carl, I realize this is probably very elementary information, given your background, but as I said, I’m also writing for myself and certainly for others who would find this all new.

    I agree, the concept of having a pre-ordained ‘soulmate’ or ‘bashert’ has a lot of problems attached to it. As you say Dree, if you’ve been married and divorced, how can you reconcile this philosophy with your experience? The Jewish Daily Forward published an article a few years back called “Forget Your ‘Bashert,’ God Has Made You Millions to Choose From”. Taking that point of view, it relieves a lot of pressure to find “the one” or to worry when marriage ends in divorce that either God made a mistake or you did.

    On the other hand, it can also be reassuring to believe that God does have a hand in our relationships, that it matters to Him who we marry, and that He desires relationships for us where husband and wife can fulfill not just each other’s physical and emotional needs, but form a “spiritual one” under God.

    Like I’ve said before, I don’t know how it all works out. In some sense, how we choose to interpret the Bible in the different areas of our lives can be a matter of choosing what “model” we want to use in order to understand spirituality, humanity, and God. Is the Christian model a better one or the Jewish model? Within those groups, are there better models for living out a holy life than others, or is it a matter of selecting the religious “infrastructure” that best fits our personalities?

    In my case, I’ve selected a “model” that is rather odd for a non-Jew, but having a Jewish wife makes my choice seem more reasonable than if I were married to a Christian woman. I don’t know if it’s just that, or if for some reason, God “wired” me to be attracted to Jewish religious and mystic perspectives. Sometimes a life of faith, at least for me, is like walking along a dimly illuminated path, feeling my way along one step at a time. I know I’ll get things wrong, but I just hope I don’t lose my way altogether.

    That’s where I depend on God and His mercy to help guide me.

  4. Good points, James. I agree with all my heart that God is very, very interested in whom we marry and even more interested in the how we live out our marriage.

    BTW, my wife converted years before we met in part because she knew that she would marry a Jew.

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