Angelic Embodiment in The Christian Kabbalah of Johann Kemper-Libre PDF
Angelic Embodiment in The Christian Kabbalah of Johann Kemper-Libre PDF
E R. W
When we were Hebrews we were
orphans and had only our mother,
but when we became Christians we
had both father and mother.
Gospel of Philip
In the long and variegated history of Judaism, ideas expressed regarding the nature of the body have been reflective of both internal and
external considerations and perspectives. It should come as no surprise
that the issue of embodiment has occupied a major role in the delineation of boundaries that stubbornly separate and bridges that flexibly connect Judaism and other liturgical-faith communities. Especially,
though not exclusively, the complex and often acrimonious relationship
between Judaism and Christianity has revolved about perceptions of the
body. The Early Modern Period is no exception to this rule, but there
is something unique that was underfoot at this time given the increased
loosening of the borders between Jews and Christians and the consequent challenge to maintain assertions of separateness and inassimilability.1 Conversion, in particular, is a phenomenon that can shed much
light on the prevailing understanding of the body and the role the latter
plays in shaping the identity of ones self and the other.2
One of the most fascinating Jewish converts to Christianity in the
Early Modern Period was Moses ben Aaron ha-Kohen of Cracow
(), who received the name Johannes Christianus Jacobi when
1
(New York: Crossroad, ), ; idem, Women, Men, and the Bible, revised edition
(New York: Crossroad, ), ; Elaine Guillemin, Jesus/Holy Mother Wisdom (Mt.
:), in The Lost Coin: Parables of Women, Work and Wisdom, ed. Mary Ann Beavis
(London and New York: Sheffield Academic Press, ), .
10 Numerous scholars have written on this dimension of Gnostic literature, and here
I will make reference to two relevant studies: James M. Robinson, Very Goddess and
Very Man: Jesus Better Self, in Images of the Feminine in Gnosticism, ed. Karen L. King
(Philadelphia: Fortress Press, ), , and in the same volume, Karen L. King,
Sophia and Christ in the Apocryphon of John, .
11 On this theme in the late middle ages, especially among Cistercian monks in the
twelfth century, see Caroline Walker Bynum, Jesus as Mother: Studies in the Spirituality
of the High Middle Ages (Berkeley: University of California Press, ), ; idem,
Holy Feast and Holy Fast: The Religious Significance of Food to Medieval Women (Berkeley:
University of California Press, ), ; Jean Leclercq, Women and St Bernard of
Clairvaux, trans. Marie-Bernard Sad OSB (Kalamazoo: Cistercian Publications, ),
. See also Joan Gibson, Could Christ Have Been Born a Woman? A Medieval
Debate, Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion (): . This theme continued to
flower in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, as is attested, for example, in the
theological imagination of Julian of Norwich, who depicted Jesus as the generative
mother, as well as in the sermons of Meister Eckhart, who applied the expression a
motherly name (ein meterlich name) to the Father to designate the pure potentiality of
the divine to conceive the Son, the Nothingness of the natural power (ntiurlchen
kraft) for generation, as opposed to fatherhood (vaterlicheit), which is the primordial
fullness of the personal power (persnlichen kraft), the active source of bearing. See
Julian of Norwichs Showings, translated from the critical text with an introduction by
Edmund Colledge, O.S.A. and James Walsh, S.J., Preface by Jean Leclercq (New York:
Paulist Press, ), , , ; Bynum, Jesus as Mother, , ,
note , , note , , ; Sarah McNamer, The Exploratory Image:
God as Mother in Julian of Norwichs Revelations of Divine Love, Mystics Quarterly
(): ; Denise Nowakowski Baker, Julian of Norwichs Showings: From Vision to
Book (Princeton: Princeton University Press, ), , ,, , ,
; Frederick Christian Bauerschmidt, Julian of Norwich and the Mystical Body Politic of
Christ (Notre Dame and London: University of Notre Dame Press, ), , ,
, , , ; Grace Jantzen, Julian of Norwich: Mystic and Theologian, new
edition (New York: Paulist Press, ), , , , , ; Barbara Newman,
God and the Goddesses: Vision, Poetry, and Belief in the Middle Ages (Philadelphia: University
of Pennsylvania Press, ), , , , ; Bernard McGinn, The Mystical
Thought of Meister Eckhart: The Man From Whom God Hid Nothing (New York: Crossroad,
), , .
Zohar :a. In the Lublin Zohar used by Kemper, which was published in ,
the reference is to the section on Genesis, .
24 Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fols. ba.
25 Robin Scroggs, The Last Adam: A Study in Pauline Anthropology (Philadelphia: Fortress
Press, ); William D. Davies, Paul and Rabbinic Judaism: Some Rabbinic Elements in
Pauline Theology (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, ), , , , .
26 Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. b.
27 Ibid., fol. b. See ibid., fol. a, where the attribution of the term hok to the
.
Messiah is explained by the fact that his image was engraved with the face of a human,
for he is the divine image (she-diyokno h. akukah bifnei adam she-hu zelem
elohim).
.
The view I am attributing to Kemper has an interesting parallel to the fourteenthcentury Rhenish Dominican mystic, Henry Suso. See Jeffrey F. Hamburger, Nuns As
Artists: The Visual Culture of a Medieval Convent (Berkeley: University of California Press,
), , and idem, The Visual and the Visionary: Art and Female Spirituality in Late
Medieval Germany (New York: Zone Books, ), , esp. .
29 See, for instance, Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fols. ba.
30 Ibid., fols. a, ba, ba.
31 Beriah ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. b.
.
32 For an elaboration of this methodological claim, see Elliot R. Wolfson, Martyrdom, Eroticism, and Asceticism in Twelfth-Century Ashkenazi Piety, in Jews and Christians in Twelfth-Century Europe, ed. Michael Signer and John Van Engen (Notre Dame:
University of Notre Dame Press, ), .
Support for my conjecture may be elicited from the following statement of Kemper in a section of the zoharic commentary called Beriah.
ha-Tikhon: The verse Through this Aaron shall enter into the shrine
[be-zo"t yavo aharon el ha-kodesh] (Lev :) also was a cause to mislead the Jews with respect to the Messiah for they took the word
be-zo"t numerically as [believing that] then Aaron, the anointed
high priest [mashiah. kohen gadol], would enter the holy of holies
but in their confusion is support for the Christians, since the Jews
themselves acknowledge that the Messiah is a high priest and this
accords with the New Testament.38 The messianic calculation to
which Kemper alludes is the widespread date of , which was
endorsed by Kabbalists from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
as the time of the eschaton based on a passage in the Zohar that
set this year as the time of the final resurrection.39 That was
a year of great massacres against the Jews in Poland only added to
the redemptive significance of this date, and it is thus not a surprise that some of the early Sabbatians linked the messianic calling
of Sabbatai Zevi
to this date.40 In another passage from the same
.
treatise, Kemper refers even more specifically to the murder of thousands of Jews in the Ukraine during /.41 While he does not
allude specifically to Sabbatian messianism tied to that date, the possibility for such an interpretation is enhanced by his further identification of the Messiah as the high priest, a theme that is implied
as well in the well-attested identification of Sabbatai Zevi
and Meta.
tron.
The messianic task that Kemper set for himself was to articulate
a religious philosophy that would simultaneously promote Christianity for Jews and Judaism for Christians. The execution of this charge
was facilitated primarily by his conviction that the secrets encoded by
the hidden language (lashon nistar) of the Zohar,42 as well as allusions
to esoteric knowledge found in other Jewish texts,43 are to be inter38
to erase the very context that offers one an opportunity to realize the
paradox of messianic spirituality by which one exceeds and extends the
boundary of law.53
enter into the chamber of chambers of the treatises of the ancient tradition [lavo we-likkanes be-h. adrei h. adarim be-sifrei kabbalah ha-yeshenah], which
is Sefer ha-Zohar, the most ancient of all books that are found today
amongst the community of Jews, who desire to be called by the name
assembly of Israel [keneset yisra"el].56 Kemper, no doubt, believed that
his Christian faith demanded that he provide the mystical justification
for Jews to recognize not only the validity of Christianity but to discern
that the roots for Christianity spring from the soil of Judaism, especially the garden of kabbalistic mysteries. Indeed, as Kemper argues,
the protracted exile for the Jewish people must be understood primarily as a pneumatic condition related to the fact that Satan closed the
opening to faith for them. Redemption from the diasporic state, therefore, consists of unlocking the gate that has been bolted so that Jews
will acknowledge the messianic standing of Jesus.57 Kemper doubtlessly
deemed the worth of his own existence in terms of this mission. His
gathering passages from the zoharic corpus that disclose the Judaic
basis for Christianity, therefore, has the same salvific power accorded
the rod of Moses, which could transform water from bitter to sweet, a
power that could facilitate the return of errant Jews who opposed Jesus
and his teaching. The fulfillment of this duty binds Kemper directly to
Moses, the first redeemer (go"el ri"shon) or the corporeal redeemer
(go"el gufani), the typological paradigm for Jesus, the final redeemer
(go"el ah. aron) or the spiritual redeemer (go"el ruh. ani).58 The centrality
of this exegetical pattern, which is reminiscent of the connection made
between Moses and Sabbatai Zevi
in Sabbatian texts,59 can be seen
.
in Kempers assertion that the angel of the Lord (mal"akh yhwh) that
appeared to Moses in the epiphany of the burning bush (Exod :)
was Jesus, the redeemer who was first and last (zeh ha-go"el ri"shon weah. aron).60 According to this text, it is not merely the symmetry between
Moses and Jesus that is vital,61 but that the latter, in virtue of his angelic
glory, was both the first and last redeemer, bringing about the physical
and spiritual liberation.
56
Ibid., fol. b.
Ibid., fols. ab.
58 See Beriah ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala Heb. , fols. b, a.
.
59 For references, see Wolfson, Messianism, note .
60 Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. b. See ibid., fol. b.
61 On occasion Kemper also notes the asymmetry between Moses and Jesus, and, in
fact the superiority of the latter vis--vis the former. See, for instance, Matteh Mosheh,
MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a.
57
This zoharic text, according to Kemper, proves clearly that the Messiah is divine [elohim] because he is comprised in the expression spirit
of God [ruah. elohim], and this Messiah will be the redeemer [go"el].64
We are told, moreover, that the redemption is spiritual (ruh. anit) and
not physical (gufanit),65 a point that Kemper contends was recognized
by the Jews themselves, for instance, in the midrashic interpretation
of the light mentioned in Genesis : as a reference to the luminosity stored away for the righteous in the eschatological future.66 Commenting on the zoharic authors assertion that the two cherubim mentioned in Genesis : can be decoded symbolically as alluding to the
two messianic figures, the Messiah son of David and the Messiah son
of Joseph, Kemper avers that our Messiah is the son of David, but
he also is called the son of Joseph, and he is the way to the Tree
62 The zoharic exegesis is based on earlier aggadic sources, for instance, Genesis
Rabbah :, ed. Julius Theodor and Chanoch Albeck (Jerusalem: Wahrmann Books,
), .
63 Zohar :a (Hashmatot). In the Lublin edition, the reference is to the section on
Genesis, .
64 Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. b.
65 On the distinction between the spiritual redemption (ge"ullah ruhanit) and physical
.
redemption (ge"ullah gufanit), see Beriah. ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. b.
66 Genesis Rabbah :, .
Zohar :a.
Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a.
See above, note .
Beriah. ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. b.
the talmudic sages, constitute the Oral Torah in its most precise sense.
More importantly for this particular analysis, the composition of bodiliness is directly related to this alternate conception of textuality. I hasten
to add, however, that just as, rabbinically, the distinction between oral
and written should not be treated in a dichotomous mannerthe Oral
Torah is itself written and the Written Torah must be read orallyso
for Kemper, we must be on guard against rigidly bifurcating the two.
Jesus is the Oral Torah, but he is also the embodiment of the inscripted
text of Scripture when the latter is understood in its kabbalistic sense as
being the name that is the Word. Commenting on a zoharic description of the Messiah as one who is sustained by the Written Torah
and Oral Torah, which are symbolized by milk and wine, that is, the
attributes of mercy and judgment,81 Kemper notes that the supernal
Logos (ma"amar ila"ah) comprises both kinds of Torah central to rabbinic lore, but the Oral Torah consists of the effort to understand the
new instruction [ha-torah h. adashah], that is, the proclamation of Jesus
[keri"at yeshu #a], which he uttered through the holy mouth, and he gladdened the heart of those who heeded him in perfect faith.82 Insofar as
the Logos contains both the Written Torah and Oral Torah, and the
latter is identified more specifically as the interpretative explications of
the formerthe new Torah83that issue directly from the mouth of
Jesus, there is no basis to bifurcate sharply between the logocentric and
grammatological. The Logos is not merely a text that is performatively
spoken in contrast to one that is written; it is rather, positioned between
and thus it is spoken as written, and written as spoken. The word of
Jesus declaimed phonologically is the voice of God inscripted orthographically. In the simpler terms that Kemper employs, Jesus is called
the finger of God on account of the fact that he writes on the tablet of
peoples hearts and instructs them in the way.84
81
82
83
84
b.
Jesus as Shekhinah
Perhaps one of the more innovative ways that Kemper expressed the
reinscription of the body is in terms of the identification of Jesus and
Shekhinah. To appreciate the originality of this approach, it would be
beneficial to review some of the basic tenets associated with Shekhinah in the symbolism of zoharic Kabbalah, as the latter served as the
basis for Kempers own blend of Jewish esotericism and Christian piety.
Shekhinah, the rabbinic term for the indwelling of Gods presence in
the world, is the designation of the last of the ten sefirot, the luminous emanations that collectively make up the pleroma of the divine. A
plethora of symbols are associated with Shekhinah, but for the purposes
of this analysis I would like to focus on the two-faced characterization
of Shekhinah, which is expressive of an ontological principle affirmed
by practitioners of the occult wisdom from the inception of Kabbalah
as a literary-historical phenomenon: The divine configuration, both in
its totality and in each of its constituent elements, displays the quality
of androgyny: masculinity is aligned with mercy, the act of bestowing,
and femininity with judgment, the act of constricting. Although it is
commonly believed that Shekhinah is singularly associated with feminine
images, sometimes even portrayed by scholarly enthusiasts and enthusiastic scholars alike as the kabbalistic analogue to the mythical goddess
or great mother, in fact, this gradation is no exception to the rule I
articulated; on the contrary, Shekhinah is emblematic of the androcentric conception of androgyny that informs the traditional Kabbalah.
Hence, in relation to the upper nine sefirot, Shekhinah is engendered as
feminine, as its function is to receive the overflow by way of the phallic Yesod, but, in relation to the realms of being outside the world of
emanation, Shekhinah is engendered as masculine, as its function is to
sustain existence below by channeling the overflow of blessings from
above. The point is illustrated in a poignant way in a zoharic passage
where the image of the redeeming angel, ha-mal"akh ha-go"el (Gen :),
is applied to Shekhinah, the angel that is sometimes male and sometimes female. When it bestows blessings on the world, it is male, and it
is called male, like a male that bestows blessings on a female, but when
it stands in judgment on the world, then it is called female like a female
that is pregnant.85 In the execution of judgment, Shekhinah restrains
85
Zohar :a.
the effluence pouring forth from above and she is thus compared to a
pregnant woman that holds the fetus within the womb where gestation
takes place. By contrast, in disseminating blessing to the worlds below,
Shekhinah assumes a masculine persona, for she is like the man that fills
the woman with seminal discharge.86
With this brief introduction, we can turn our attention back to Kemper. The first striking thing to note is Kempers repeated identification of Jesus with Shekhinah or with terms and/or images that are often
associated with this potency. The basic assumption undergirding this
equation is summed up in the following remark in Matteh Mosheh: The
Messiah and Shekhinah are one thing, that is, the efflux [ha-shefa] that
was in the earth prior to the incarnation of Jesus [hitgashmut yeshu#a],
which went with them in the desert, was called Shekhinah, but when he
was embodied and became human, then he was called Messiah, the
central pillar, the Son of the King, and the like.87 Secondly, in many
of the relevant passages, the association of Jesus and Shekhinah is related
to the question of androgyny. For instance, in Beriah. ha-Tikhon, Kemper
writes that all those who believe in Jesus are called Israel [yisra"el], the
just ones [ha-yesharim] who believe and have faith in the just God [el
yashar], and he brought these ones out from the iron furnace, the side
of impurity, and they ascended to the Son, which is the Shekhinah. This
is alluded to in the commandments of circumcision and the paschal
sacrifice.88 The reference to these commandments indicates that the
symbolic meaning of both biblical rites is that they are means to cleave
to the name of God, which is identified with Jesus.89 At play as well in
Kempers view is the rabbinic emphasis, based partially on some allusions in Scripture, on the sacrificial nature of circumcision. Both ritual
acts point to Jesus, for, in his embodied state, he is the sacrifice of the
entire world (ki yeshu #a hayah korban kol ha-olam)90 as well as the sign of
the holy inscription (ot reshima kaddisha).91 The blood of circumcision
(dam milah) and the blood of the paschal sacrifice (dam pesah. ) coalesce
in the figure of Jesus, two forms of the blood of the covenant (dam
berit) that are enacted symbolically in the four cups of red wine that
Jews must drink at the Passover seder, the feast that commemorates
86
87
88
89
90
91
Father, inasmuch as the latter engenders the former. The crucial point
is that Kemper deviates from the traditional kabbalistic symbolism by
applying this key symbol to the masculine hypostases.
In another passage from Beriah. ha-Tikhon, Kemper elaborates on the
identification of Jesus as Shekhinah by commenting on the zoharic passage from the Ra #aya Meheimna stratum where Shekhinah is designated the
sign of the covenant (ot berit) from the side of Yesod.96 Kemper similarly notes in that context that the term Shekhinah is a shem kollel that is
attributed to Jesus, for he dwells with and amidst humanity (shokhen
bein u-vetokh benei adam). At the same time, however, Jesus is also identified as the righteous one who is the foundation of the world (zaddik
.
yesod olam), for he is the foundation stone, the principle and the foundation, first and last.97 Insofar as Jesus is identified as the covenantberit
kodesh or berit shalom98and the covenant, according to the kabbalistic understanding, is androgynous, it follows that Jesus must bear this
quality. This is the import of Kempers observation that Jesus is both
Yesod, the phallic foundation, and Shekhinah, the indwelling presence.
The association of Jesus and Shekhinah is enhanced by the attribution
of other standard symbols of the latter culled from zoharic literature to
the former, to wit, kingship (malkhut) or heavenly kingship (malkhut
shamayim),99 angel of the presence (mal"akh ha-panim),100 or archon of
the presence (sar ha-panim), also identified as Metatron,101 angel of
the covenant (mal"akh ha-berit),102 redeeming angel (mal"akh ha-go"el),103
ark of the covenant, Lord of all the earth (aron ha-berit adon kol ha104
arez),
the bread of affliction (leh. em oni),105 wisdom (h. okhmah),106
.
96
Zohar :a.
Beriah. ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a.
98 Ibid., fol. b.
99 Ibid., fol. a; Me"irat Enayim, MS Uppsala Heb. , fols. a, b, b, a.
100 Me"irat Enayim, MS Uppsala Heb. , fols. b, a, a.
101 Ibid., fols. ba, b, b.
102 Ibid., fol. ab, a.
103 Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a. On the identification of Jesus as the
angel of God (as described especially in Exod :, the verses whence the letter
name is derived), see Avodat ha-Kodesh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fols. ba.
104 Beriah ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. b, based on Josh :.
.
105 Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. b.
106 Karsei ha-Mishkan, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a. In some passages, the sophianic
nature of Jesus is related to the second of the emanations rather than with the
tenth. See, for example, Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. b. And ibid.,
fol. b: The Messiah is called Hokhmah
in the ten sefirot, and to him alone belongs
.
the kingship. In line with this symbolic nuance, Jesus is on occasion designated by
97
Matrona (matronita),107 orchard of holy apples (h. akal tapuh. in kaddishin),108 opening (petah. ), or the opening of the tent (petah. ha-ohel),109
and the curtain (parokhet) or veil (yeri #ah) through which one must go to
enter before the holy of holies.110
Jesus as Mother
In addition to the identification of Jesus and Shekhinah, there is another
aspect of Kempers portrayal of Jesus that reflects an interesting appropriation and transformation of a standard zoharic symbol. I am referring to the ascription of the image of mother to Jesus.111 The matter
may be illumined from a passage in the introduction to Matteh Mosheh.
Kemper begins the discussion by mentioning the zoharic idea that the
four letters of the name YHWH correspond respectively to the quaternity of the divine persona, Father (Hokhmah),
Mother (Binah), Son
.
(Tiferet), and Daughter (Malkhut). Kemper insists, however, that there is
a hidden secret (sod nistar) in the passage of the Zohar.112 In the continuation, we learn that the secret of the secret entails the Christological
interpretation:
The Father refers to God the Father, the first gradation, the one to
whom they pray in the morning prayers Our Father in heaven [avinu
she-ba-shamayim] the Mother refers certainly to the Son. Why is he
called in the name of the mother? On account of the supernal Wisdom
[h. okhmah ila"ah] in the ten sefirot, which is the second of the sefirot, and
also on account of the fact that he produced [holid] everything that
was created in the heavens above and upon the earth below (Deut
:), for through him were they created, as in the [rendering of]
Targum Yerushalmi [on the word bere"shit] by wisdom [be-h. ukhma] and
[Targum] Jonathan referred to him several times as the saying of the
Lord [memra de-yhwh], and concerning him John said In the beginning
was the word (John :) Do not be concerned that the Holy Spirit
is also called on occasion mother because for the most part the
the zoharic locution h. okhmah ila"ah, the supernal wisdom. See Beriah. ha-Tikhon, MS
Uppsala Heb. , fols. a, a.
107 Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a; Beriah ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala Heb.
.
, fols. ab.
108 Beriah ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a.
.
109 Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fols. ba.
110 Ibid., fols. ba, a.
111 Wolfson, Messianism, . Some of the material analyzed there is repeated
here.
112 Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fols. ba.
.
name mother applies to the Son. Moreover, son and daughter are
said with respect to that supernal gradation. He is called son when
he sits to the right of his Father, [The Lord has established His throne
in heaven] and His sovereign rule is over all (Ps. :), and before
him every knee will bend down (Isa :). Then he is the son who
inherits the property of his father. And do not wonder that he is
contained in the names of both Mother and Son, for in the ten sefirot
he is also contained in the right and left sides, Hokhmah
to the right and
.
Binah to the left. He is called daughter when he descends to earth,
humbled and riding on an ass (Zech :)113 and then his power is
weakened like a female, and on account of this aspect he assumes the
name daughter. And he is also called daughter on account of
all the glory of the princess is inward (Ps. :), for all his glory was
by way of the inner and spiritual and not by the external, for externally
he appeared to others like one of them. His glory was inward for he
is the Father and he is in the Father. For that reason he is also called
Ze#eir Anpin, for he diminished and lowered himself to endure suffering
on account of humankind, to atone for their sins.114
lower Hokhmah,
the tenth emanation. For example, in Matteh Mosheh,
.
he writes: This Messiah is Hokhmah,
the second gradation of the ten
.
sefirot. And the spirit of the Lord rests upon him (Isa :), on
this lower opening [pith. a tata"ah], that is, the Messiah.118 For the most
part, however, Kemper deviates from the standard symbolism attested
in zoharic and other kabbalistic literature. Thus, in another passage
in Matteh Mosheh, the Trinity is described as consisting of Hokhmah,
the
.
Father, Binah, the Son (based on decoding the word as ben yah,119 the
son of yod he, the letters that signify Hokhmah
and Binah), and the Holy
.
Spirit is the vapor that comes out from their combination and overflows to the prophets.120 In short, the zoharic idea of the heterosexual union of Father and Mother, Hokhmah
and Binah, is transformed in
.
Kempers mind into the homoerotic (though, apparently, asexual) union
of Father and Son. I note, parenthetically, that a similar explanation
can be applied to the way Kemper appropriates the formula used by
Kabbalists, le-shem yih. ud kudsha berikh hu u-shekhinteih, For the sake of the
unification of the holy One, blessed be He, and his Shekhinah.121 In the
conventional understanding, the words are uttered to unify the masculine and feminine dimensions of the divine, Tiferet and Malkhut, the
King and the Matrona. However, since for Kemper the Shekhinah refers
to Jesus, the intent of the liturgical saying is to unify Father and Son,
and thus we can speak of a homoerotic reframing of the heterosexual
imagery.122
The designation son denotes the exalted rank of Jesus as synthronos,
a term used to mark the function of Jesus occupying a throne to the
right of the Father.123 By contrast, the designation daughter relates to
the mystery of the incarnation, the humbling of Jesus when he takes on
118
130
Kemper also attributes the zoharic expression Atika, which is a synonym for Arikh
Anpin, to the Father. See Beriah. ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. b. In Matteh
Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a, the zoharic expression head of the Infinite
(resha de-ein sof ) is applied to the Father, and the spirit (ruah. ) that comes out from there
to the Son. The expression Atik Yomin (based on Dan :, ) is attributed to the Father
in ibid., fol. a.
131 Matteh Mosheh, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a; Beriah ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala Heb.
.
, fol. a.
132 Beriah ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a.
.
133 Karsei ha-Mishkan, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a. On Jesus diminishing his power,
see also Me"irat Enayim, MS Uppsala Heb. , fol. a; Beriah. ha-Tikhon, MS Uppsala
Heb. , fol. b.
147
148
149