Isaac ben Solomon Luria
Isaac ben Solomon Luria, byname Ha-ari
(Hebrew: The Lion) (b. 1534, Jerusalem,
Palestine, Ottoman Empire—d. August 5,
1572, Safed, Syria [now Zefat, Israel]),
eponymous founder of the Lurianic school
of Kabbala (Jewish esoteric mysticism).
Luria’s youth was spent in Egypt,
where he became versed in rabbinic
studies, engaged in commerce, and
eventually concentrated on study of the
Zohar, the central work of Kabbala. In
1570 he went to Safed in Galilee, where
he studied under Moses ben Jacob
Cordovero, the greatest Kabbalist of the
time, and developed his own Kabbalistic
system. Although he wrote few works
beyond three famous hymns, Luria’s
doctrines were recorded by his pupil
Ḥayyim Vital, who presented them in a
voluminous posthumous collection.
Luria’s father was an Ashkenazi (a
German or Polish Jew), while his mother
was a Sephardi (of Iberian-North African
Jewish stock). Legend has it that the
prophet Elijah appeared to his father
and foretold the birth of the son, whose
name was to be Isaac. As a child, Luria
was described as a young genius, “a
Torah scholar who could silence all
opponents by the power of his
arguments,” and also as possessed of
divine inspiration.
The main source for his life story is
an anonymous biography, Toledot ha-Ari
(“Life of the Ari”), written or perhaps
edited some 20 years after his death, in
which factual and legendary elements are
indiscriminately mingled. According to
the Toledot, Luria’s father died while
Isaac was a child, and his mother took
him to Egypt to live with her well-to-do
family. While there, he became versed in
rabbinic studies, including Halakha
(Jewish law), and even wrote glosses on
a famous compendium of legal
discussions, the Sefer ha-Halakhot of
Isaac ben Jacob Alfasi. He also engaged
in commerce during this period.
While still a youth, Luria began the
study of Jewish mystical learning and
lived for nearly seven years in
seclusion at his uncle’s home on an
island in the Nile River. His studies
concentrated on the Zohar (late
13th–early 14th century), the central
and revered work of the Kabbala, but he
also studied the early Kabbalists
(12th–13th century). The greatest
Kabbalist of Luria’s time was Moses ben
Jacob Cordovero of Safed (modern Ẕefat),
in Palestine, whose work Luria studied
while still in Egypt. During this period
he wrote a commentary on the Sifra
di-tzeniʿuta (“Book of Concealment”), a
section of the Zohar. The commentary
still shows the influence of classical
Kabbala and contains nothing of what
would later be called Lurianic Kabbala.
Early in 1570 Luria journeyed to
Safed, the mountain town in the Galilee
that had become a centre of the
Kabbalistic movement, and he studied
there with Cordovero. At the same time,
he began to teach Kabbala according to a
new system and attracted many pupils.
The greatest of these was Ḥayyim Vital,
who later set Luria’s teachings down in
writing. Luria apparently expounded his
teachings only in esoteric circles; not
everyone was allowed to take part in
these studies. While he devoted most of
his time to the instruction of his
pupils, he probably made his living in
trade, which prospered at that time in
Safed, situated as it was at the
crossroads between Egypt and Damascus.
At the time of Luria’s arrival in
Safed, the group of Kabbalists gathered
there around Cordovero had already
developed a unique style of living and
observed special rituals, going out, for
instance, into the fields to welcome the
sabbath, personified as the Sabbath
Queen. With Luria’s arrival, new
elements were added to these excursions,
such as communion with the souls of the
zaddikim (men of outstanding piety) by
means of special kawwanot (ritual
meditations) and yiḥudim
(“unifications”) that were in essence a
kind of lesser redemption whereby the
souls were lifted up from the kelipot
(“shells”; i.e., the impure, evil forms)
into which they were banned until the
coming of the Messiah.
The strong influence of Luria’s
personality helped to bring about in
Safed an atmosphere of spiritual
intensity, messianic tension, and the
fever of creation that accompanies the
sense of a great revelation. Deep
devoutness, asceticism, and withdrawal
from the world marked the Kabbalists’
way of life. Luria apparently looked
upon himself as the Messiah ben Joseph,
the first of the two messiahs in Jewish
tradition, who is fated to be killed in
the wars (of Gog and Magog) that will
precede the final redemption. In Safed
there was an expectation (based on the
Zohar) that the Messiah would appear in
Galilee in the year 1575.
Even though he did not distinguish
himself as a writer, as is evident from
his own remarks about the difficulty of
writing, Luria composed three hymns that
became widely known and part of the
cultural heritage of the Jewish people.
These are hymns for the three sabbath
meals, which became part of the
Sephardic sabbath ritual and were
printed in many prayer books. The three
meals were linked by means of mystical
“intention” or meditation (kawwana) to
three partzufim (aspects of the
Godhead). The hymns are known as “Azamer
be-she-vaḥim” (“I Will Sing on the
Praises”), “Asader seʿudata” (“I Will
Order the Festive Meal”), and “Bene hekh-ala
de-khesifin” (“Sons of the Temple of
Silver”). They are mystical, erotic
songs about “the adornment (or fitting)
of the bride”—i.e., the sabbath, who was
identified with the community of
Israel—and on the other partzufim: arikh
anpin (the long-suffering: the
countenance of grace) and zeʿir anpin
(the impatient: the countenance of
judgment).
During his brief sojourn in Safed—a
scant two years before his death—Luria
managed to construct a many-faceted and
fertile Kabbalistic system from which
many new elements in Jewish mysticism
drew their nourishment. He set down
almost none of his doctrine in writing,
with the exception of a short text that
seems to be only a fragment: his
commentary on the first chapter of the
Zohar—“Be-resh hormanuta de-malka”—as
well as commentaries on isolated
passages of the Zohar that were
collected by Ḥayyim Vital, who attests
to their being in his teacher’s own
hand. Luria died in an epidemic that
struck Safed in August 1572.
What is called Lurianic Kabbala is a
voluminous collection of Luria’s
Kabbalistic doctrines, recorded after
his death by Ḥayyim Vital and appearing
in two versions under different
editorship. Because of this work,
Lurianic Kabbala became the new thought
that influenced all Jewish mysticism
after Luria, competing with the Kabbala
of Cordovero. Vital laboured much to
give Lurianic Kabbala its form as well
as to win legitimization for it.
Lurianic Kabbala propounds a theory
of the creation and subsequent
degeneration of the world and a
practical method of restoring the
original harmony. The theory is based on
three concepts: tzimtzum (“contraction,”
or “withdrawal”), shevirat ha-kelim
(“breaking of the vessels”), and tiqqun
(“restoration”). God as the Infinite (En
Sof) withdraws into himself in order to
make room for the creation, which occurs
by a beam of light from the Infinite
into the newly provided space. Later the
divine light is enclosed in finite
“vessels,” most of which break under the
strain, and the catastrophe of the
“breaking of the vessels” occurs,
whereby disharmony and evil enter the
world. Hence comes the struggle to rid
the world of evil and accomplish the
redemption of both the cosmos and
history. This event occurs in the stage
of tiqqun, in which the divine realm
itself is reconstructed, the divine
sparks returned to their source, and
Adam Qadmon, the symbolic “primordial
man,” who is the highest configuration
of the divine light, is rebuilt. Man
plays an important role in this process
through various kawwanot used during
prayer and through mystical intentions
involving secret combinations of words,
all of which is directed toward the
restoration of the primordial harmony
and the reunification of the divine
name.
The influence of Luria’s Kabbala was
far-reaching. It played an important
role in the movement of the false
messiah Shabbetai Tzevi in the 17th
century and in the popular Ḥasidic
(mystical-pietistic) movement a century
later.
Rivka Schatz-Uffenheimer