While the Halachic world was evolving its definition of "Hashchatat Zera" and eventually codifying it as law, the parrallel world of Kabballah was coming into its own as a major force in Jewish religious life. We have already discussed the Chasidei Ashkenaz in France and Germany who were an important influence in the early "pre-Zohar" development of Jewish mysticism or Kabbalah. However, as great as the influence of the Chasidei Ashkenaz was, it is nothing compared to the influence of the Spanish Kabbalistic masters. This movement reached its apex with the publication of the Zohar by Rabbi Moshe de Leon in the late 13th century. It would be impossible to overstate the sea change in Judaism that the Zohar was going to cause.
The
subject of the true author and origins of the Zohar is not one I plan on dealing
with here. For our purposes, it is simply important to note that it was
publicized in the late 13th century. For more on this subject,
Rabbi Natan Slifkin has a few citations here that might help you begin to research the topic.
Today's post will be devoted to pre-Zohar Kabbalistic writings. These
were mostly works that began to appear in the 12th and 13th century Spain and
were the milieu within which the Zohar appeared at the end of the 13th
century. The famous Kabbalistic scholars of this time in Spain that I
will mention (or already have mentioned) in this blog include:
- Rabbi Isaac the Blind
(1160-1235) while he was a Rabbi in Provence, Southern France, he was very much
in the Spanish "camp" being the son of the famous Ra'avad (yes, the same ra'avad who wrote the glosses on Maimonides' Mishna Torah), and
Provence was close to Spain, geographically, culturally, and religiously
- Rabbi Ezra ben Solomon of
Gerona (mid-12th century to 1245?) Student of Rabbi Isaac the
Blind, possible author for many Kabbalistic texts of the period that are
unattributed.
- Rabbi Joseph ben Avraham
Gikatilla (1248-1305?) (author of Sefer Ginat Egoz and others)
- Rabbi Moshe ben Nachman
(1194-1270), also known as Nachmanides, or the "Ramban" who was
clearly the most famous of all of the Spanish kabbalists. He was probably the
most important scholar that legitimized the study of Kabballah and brought it
into the mainstream. He flourished during the years immediately prior to
the publication of the Zohar. There is no evidence that he ever saw the
Zohar, though there are certainly parallels between his writings and the
Zohar. While various traditions and stories abound about his possible involvement
with the Zohar, there is no way to prove any of them correct.
- Rabbi Joseph of Shushan
(1260's? - 1340's?) who was a Castilian Kabbalist who almost certainly did not
come from Shushan (in Persia) at all, and generally assumed to be one of the
scholars involved in writing of or editing of the Zohar along with Rabbi Moshe
de Leon
- Rabbi Moshe de Leon
(RMDL) (1240-1305) Most famous as the one who publicized the Zohar. Many
scholars attribute the authorship of the Zohar to him, and to the group of
kabbalists who gathered around him. However, it was presented by RMDL as an
ancient work written in the Tannaitic period by Rabbi Shimon bar
Yochai.
I am
going to reference several Kabbalistic works of this period which have
significant bearing on this subject.
Sefer
HaBahir
This work is traditionally attributed to Rabbi Nehunia ben Hakaneh, a venerable sage from the Mishnaic period
in the first century, hence it is also known as the Midrash Rabbi Nehunya ben
Hakaneh. The Ramban accepted this identification of authorship of the Sefer Habahir. However, it first appeared in public in the Provence school of Kabbalists (remember how I told you before that the Provence school and the Spanish schools were closely related) sometime late in the 12 th century. Some scholars
have attributed its’ authorship to Rabbi Isaac the Blind, while others claim
that it is based on pieces of earlier Kabbalistic works that go back at least
to the time of the Geonim.
The
Sefer Habahir does not discuss masturbation. However, it is nonetheless
extremely important to understanding how the Kabbalah deals with the issue of
ejaculation, insemination, and procreation. The Sefer HaBahir, as you shall see, lays the foundation upon which almost all of “Zoharic” and “Lurianic” Kabbalah
is built when it comes to the issue of the “male seed”.
In
Kabbalistic thought, the acts of human beings reflect the spiritual realms
above, and the most important manifestation of this is in the act of creation
of a human being. When a man has intercourse with his wife, he is engaged in an
act of creation. While the soul comes from above, his acts are what
brings that soul from God into this world. The man is the giver, and the
woman is the acceptor.
The Sefer haBahir (In Piska 46, Abrams edition
1994) describes the semen as a product of the entire human body. This directly
reflects the contemporaneous medical understandings of the origins of the
sperm. His entire body produces seed, which is then coalesced in the brain, and
then after it is all gathered into a seed and the soul is attached to the seed through his holy thoughts and intentions, it travels through the spinal cord,
into the penis, and then into the receptacle, which is the woman’s vagina. This is kabbalistic science of reproduction 101.
If he
has holy and proper thoughts, than when the seed coalesces in his brain, it
will be given a new holy soul by God, and that soul will be implanted into the
woman to grow. If he does not have holy thoughts that soul may be a
reincarnation of someone who needs punishment, or an evil soul or something
else.
This
concept is very important to understand, as it is going to seriously affect how
the “spilling of seed” is going to be dealt with in all subsequent Kabbalistic
literature. It is also fascinating how what as essentially a secular
concept of understanding became a mystical concept with such power and
influence over the Halacha. The ideas expressed above have their
origins in Hippocrates, Aristotle, Plato, Democritus, Galen, and other medieval
scholars/philosophers/physicians who followed in their footsteps.
Iggeret
HaKodesh
The
Iggeret Hakodesh (IH) was an extremely important document that almost certainly
arose sometime during this period in Spain, probably sometime during the
12 th century. Its authorship has been variously
attributed to the Ramban, Rabbi Joseph ben Avraham Gikatilla, Rabbi Ezra ben
Solomon of Gerona, and others. This letter was heavily influenced by the
Kabbalistic beliefs about sexual relationships, and had a significant impact
for many centuries to come.
Partly
as a consequence of the understanding of sex that we described above from the
Sefer HaBahir, the holiness of the sex act is obvious. The author of the
IH did not appreciate the austere and scientific attitude of the philosophers
like Maimonides who felt that the act of sex was somehow a base and lowly act
that may even have negative health impacts. For a kabbalist, the act of
intimate relations between husband and wife was purely holy and special, and
should be treated as such.
However,
as the seed coalesced in the brain, and was endowed with the soul from God
Himself, it was considered crucial that only proper thoughts of holiness and
love were present. If one’s mind was full of bad thoughts and intentions,
or if the relationship was improper, bad things would result. The IH
then makes a claim which doesn’t fit well with the Talmud, but fits very well
with this understanding of the IH.
… (after
explaining the holiness of a proper sexual act and the resulting seed with a
holy soul) ... But when a person does not have proper heavenly intentions, that
seed which is drawn from him is a putrid drop, and it is called destroying seed
upon the land (as stated by the generation of the flood), and the entire
resulting seed is for naught and it plants an asheira (an idol-tree) … because
it is a deficient seed … and God has no part of this … (IH, in Kitvei HaRamban,
Chavel edition page 326
This really changes the concept of “wasting seed’ as it understands that even in normal intercourse, with the wrong intentions, it would be considered “wasting seed” as well. But more importantly, we can really start to understand why the later kabbalists were so against wasting seed. If this seed was truly a product of the entire body endowed with a soul by God, it makes sense that they would consider “destroying” the seed to be a grave sin. Furthermore, although most scholars don’t believe that the Ramban was the author of the IH, it is not surprising that both the IH and the Ramban understood that the was the sin of the generation of the flood. If any improper sexual behavior is in the category of “wasting seed”, then when the Torah says that the generation of the flood was “hishchitu darkam” (corrupt ways) that this was in the Ramban’s Kabbalistic mind the same as saying that they wasted seed.
Furthermore,
when the IH mentions the “putrid drop” he is clearly referring to the Mishna in
Avot as follows:
Akavyah ben
Mahalalel said: mark well three things and you will not come into the power of
sin: Know from where you come, and where you are going, and before whom you are
destined to give an account and reckoning. From where do you come? From a
putrid drop … (Avot 3:1)
While this is a not specifically a halachic statement, it certainly does not sound like Akavyah ben Mahalalel had this lofty view of the holiness of semen like the Kabbalists were describing. In order to answer this seeming contradiction, the IH tells us that it depends on your thoughts. If your thoughts are holy, the seed is holy, if your thoughts are impure, then it is a “putrid drop”
Rabbi Joseph
Gikatilla (RJG) and “Pegam HaBrit”
While RJG does not speak directly about the specific
prohibition of “wasting seed”, he is the origin of another Kabbalistic concept
which had much influence on the later Kabbalistic ideas regarding this subject.
In his work Sha’arei orah 24a-b, he introduces the Kabbalistic
concept that eventually became called “Pogem Be’brit” or defiling the
covenant. This is the idea that when one
commits a sexual sin, he is defiling the covenant which is represented by his
circumcision. This idea had huge influence on later Chassidic thought, especially
in that of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov. RJG applies this idea even to improperly
touching oneself when urinating and more.
Rabbi Moshe
de Leon (RMDL) and Rabbi Joseph of Shushan (RJS)
Both RJS and RMDL were involved in the group of
Kabbalists from whom the Zohar emerged.
Obviously it was RMDL who ultimately brought the Zohar to the attention
of the general public. In their own personal writings, both of them addressed the topic of
wasting seed and RMDL devoted quite an extensive amount of writing to the
subject. The take home message from their writings is that the topic of wasting
seed in their writings went from being a side note regarding proper sexual
behavior to being a full blown major subject whose importance and severity
expanded into areas completely unimaginable in the corpus of Jewish literature
in previous times. RJS for examples
lumped bestiality and masturbation in the same category of corruption, while
RMDL devoted chapters of thought on all of the terrible consequences of the
sin.
Ultimately though, it was the book that these scholars
revealed to the world that was going to change everything, the Zohar. We will
deal with this in the upcoming post.