Da'at Tevunot - The Knowing Heart
Section 3, Chapter 15
1.
We’re told a number of astounding things about Adam’s original stature.
First off, that his “heel could extinguish the sun” since it (and he) was so
huge and powerful when he was first created (Tanchuma, Acharei 2). And we
learn that among the other things that Adam lost when he sinned aside from
his stature was the mystic glow that emanated from his body (Bamidbar Rabbah
13:11) [1].
The point is that he was as great personally and inwardly as he was bodily,
and that his stature and gleam reflected that. After all, how could someone
created “in G-d’s image” who was the lone creature to have been crafted by
G-d Himself have been of lower stature? Yet he undid all that with his sin.
Ramchal’s underlying message is this, though. Consider how great we are
compared to lesser beings, thanks to our abilities to think and act in
well-ordered, purposeful, creative, and stunningly original ways, and
compare that with Adam’s greater stature than ours. Yet we lower ourselves
with our wrongful and unfair deeds just as he did. Yet contrast how limited
our movements are compared to angels and other supernal entities who whisk
from place to place effortlessly, and compare that with the even greater
stature that Adam could have attained had he not sinned. And extrapolate
from there what our stature could be if we were to only do good and just things.
2.
We can infer how great Adam was by virtue of the fact that he dwelt in the
Garden of Eden in his lifetime, whereas only the souls of the righteous
dwell there now. We can infer it also from the fact that the food that Adam
ate there was not of this world but was ethereal instead, and that he
ingested it in a far more lustrous way than we ingest food. In fact, we’re
told that his body then was on par with our souls today, so holy was he. And
yet he squandered all that, much the way we squander our opportunity for
greatness.
And if we need more illustrations for his greatness before his sin, we need
only see how the Zohar depicted Adam’s creation and makeup: “Come and see! …
(When) the Holy One blessed be He created the world, He also included the
first man, Adam…. The Holy One blessed be He crowned him with supernal
crowns and …. (formed him) from the six extremities of the world so that he
could be perfect in every way. The (other) creatures trembled before Adam
and feared him because he was created in the supernal form. They looked upon
his form and were awestruck and afraid. The Holy One blessed be He (then)
brought Adam into the Garden of Eden to enjoy its supernal delights, where
he was encircled by holy angels who served him and informed him of the
secrets of their Master…. In fact, when the Holy One blessed be He brought
Adam into the Garden of Eden, Adam saw and peered into all the arcane
mysteries and wisdom, and he was able to observe and grasp all the splendors
of his Master” (1 p. 38b) [2].
And yet, his being became coarser and fleshier after he sinned, unlike
Elijah and Enoch, who grew more and more angelic the greater they became
[3]. How much coarser and fleshier, then, does our being become each and
every day in our errors?
[1] We’re offering a foreshortened version of this part of Da’at Tevunot
here, as the original seems to be rather too complex and wordy for its
purposes. It also seems to take a number of pedantic stances that, while
brilliant, still and all seem to detract from the points at hand. We can’t
help but notice that the book’s commentators didn’t address whole swaths of
this section either, perhaps for the same reasons. The reader is advised to
see the original for him- or herself.
[2] Understand of course that the Zohar is depicting him in his original
state, rather than the state he could have reached had he not sinned. As
such, if G-d “crowned him with supernal crowns and …. (formed him) from the
six extremities of the world so that he could be perfect in every way” at
that point, then his eventual state would have earned him even more supernal
crowns, which would have contributed to actual perfection rather than to the
potential sort alluded to here.
If “the (other) creatures trembled before Adam and feared him because he was
created in the supernal form” and were “awestruck and afraid of him” at that
point, we must assume that they would have been simply undone by his perfect
presence in the end.
If Adam was brought “into the Garden of Eden to enjoy its supernal delights,
where he was encircled by holy angels who served him and informed him of the
secrets of their Master” at that point, we’d surmise that he’d have absorbed
G-d’s secrets in his perfected state.
And finally, if Adam “saw and peered into all the arcane mysteries and
wisdom, and he was able to observe and grasp all the splendors of his
Master” at that point, we’d offer that he would not only have “absorbed”
G-d’s splendors the way he absorbed His secrets as we indicated above, but
he would eventually be absorbed in G-d own presence once he reached perfection.
[3] Elijah the prophet was active in Israel in the reigns of Ahab and
Ahaziah. He was miraculously swept up to heaven in a "chariot of fire" drawn
by "horses of fire" (2 Kings 2:11). The prophet Malachi foretold that Elijah
would be sent by G-d "before the coming of the great and terrible day of the
L-rd" so as to "turn the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the
hearts of the children to their fathers" (see Malachi 3:23, etc.). And
several great and pious individuals have been said to have been visited by
Elijah and to have been guided by him in their studies (Tanna de-Bei Eliyahu).
And Enoch Son of Jared, father of Methuselah, seventh generation of the
human race (Genesis 5:18–24) mysteriously "walked with G-d; then he was no
more for G-d took him" (Genesis 5:23). He was among the nine righteous men
who entered the Garden of Eden without suffering the pangs of death, as it’s
said, "he ascended to heaven on G-d's command, and was given the name
Metatron the Great Scribe" (Targum Yerushalmi to Genesis 5:4). He figures
prominently in Kabbalistic works like the Zohar, and in Sepher Heichalot and
Heichalot Rabbati.
Thus while both Elijah and Enoch started off as mere mortals yet merited
ascending to become immortals, Adam started off as a celestial being and
descended into the pit in the end and failed further yet given that he could
have achieved the very highest rank.
Rabbi Yaakov Feldman has translated and commented upon "The Gates of Repentance", "The Path of the Just", and "The Duties of the Heart" (Jason
Aronson Publishers). His works are available in bookstores and in various
locations on the Web.