July 2, 2004
Book Excerpt: The Kabbalah Tree: A Journey of Balance & Growth
By
Rachel Pollack
Introduction
Our world exists in time, in a history that does not just
stretch into the past but unfolds constantly, with ever more
surprises. A century ago, you could hardly find a subject more
abstruse or forgotten than the esoteric tradition known as
Kabbalah. Only a tiny handful of people had ever heard of it,
let alone studied it or tried to bring its wisdom into their
own lives. To many of those who did know of it, it seemed
overly complicated and medieval, hardly suitable for the new,
modern, twentieth century.
Kabbalah is a Jewish mystical tradition, with ideas first
developed two thousand years ago, and most elaborated from the
twelfth century onwards. The Hebrew word
Kabbalah means
received, as an oral teaching is received by a student
directly from a teacher, or perhaps in revelation, directly
from God. And yet it was not primarily Jews who kept the
tradition alive a hundred years ago, it was a small group of
occultists, Christians with great interest in Pagan as well as
Jewish traditions. Their main influence outside secret
initiatory groups seemed to be among artists and writers
seeking an underpinning of meaning to their creative impulses.
Growing up in an Orthodox Jewish home in the 1950s I did not
even hear the word
Kabbalah until, as an adult, I
discovered Tarot cards and began to learn their spiritual and
interpretive tradition.
And now, as we begin the twenty-first century, this
mysterious, ancient teaching has sprung up everywhere. Movie
stars go on talk shows to proudly proclaim that Kabbalah has
changed their lives. Books appear telling us how to use
Kabbalah to have good marriages and successful careers.
Kabbalahs most famous symbol, a diagram known as the Tree
of Life (in Hebrew
aytz chayim) now shows up on
greeting cards and silver necklaces. Such are the wonders of
history.
This book concerns that symbol, that marvelous tree. In
particular, it explores a special version of that symbol, a
lush painting by Hermann Haindl, a man who has dedicated his
life to art as a spiritual path. Haindl is probably best known
for the Tarot cards he painted some twenty years ago.
Brilliant and complex and filled with meaning, they became one
of the most popular Tarots of recent decades.
Even then, Haindl was interested in Kabbalah, for he painted a
Hebrew letter on each card, a tradition that goes back to
those occultists more than a hundred years ago (see chapter
two, on the history of the tree). Now he has given new life to
the tree image, with some of the same themes he developed in
the cardsthe sacredness of the earth; the power of very old
images; the holy wisdom of indigenous peoples, especially from
Native America; the way nothing in nature ever stays the same
but over time transforms, one thing into another, animals and
trees into stone, stone into life.
The tree symbol comes from a tradition that bases itself on
ecstatic awareness of the divine. At its heart its power is
not intellectual but revelatory. And yet so many teachers have
pondered it, and written about it in such complex ways, we can
all too easily let it become a purely abstract study of ideas,
with long lists of attributes the student tries to memorize.
The tree itself can appear a sort of geometric diagram rather
than a living image. What Hermann Haindl has done is make this
ancient symbol fully a Tree of
Life. His painting teems
with life, like some magnificent rain forest of the mind. We
see birds, and snakes, and animals, and faces. We can make out
ancient mythological beings, and Jesus, and faces made of
eroded stone. His tree is no less mystical for giving us such
richness of life. Instead, he reminds us that all knowledge of
the divine begins in naturenature and the human mind as it
looks with wonder at the glory of existence.
In its common form, the tree symbol looks like this.
These ten circles represent ten pulses, or emanations, of
divine energy, called in Hebrew sephiroth (sephiroth is
the plural form of sephirah), a word derived from sappir,
the Hebrew for sapphire. Kabbalah teaches us that God
did not create the world in one stroke but in stages, with the
sephiroth as the means and the pattern for existence. You can
see the Hebrew names for the sephiroth, with their usual
translations, on the painting, but here is a list, from the
top down:
1. KetherCrown
2. HokhmahWisdom
3. BinahUnderstanding
4. ChesedMercy
5. GevurahPower
6. TiferetBeauty
7. NetzachEternity
8. HodGlory
9.YesodFoundation
10. MalkuthKingdom
Some readers may know slightly different spellings for some
of the sephiroth; for example, Chokmah instead of Hokhmah. Do
not let this worry you. The Hebrew alphabet is different than
the Latin, and there simply is no precise rule for how to
transliterate words. The very word Kabbalah has many
variants, such as Qabalah and Cabala. Some of
these have actually become associated with different branches
of the tradition.
For example, Cabala is favored by Christians who have adapted
the tree and its symbols to Christian concepts (for example,
placing Christ in the center, at Tiferet). Qabalah, on the
other hand, often refers to the non-Jewish occult tradition
called Western, or Hermetic. For the sake of simplicity, I
will use Kabbalah as the standard spelling throughout, and try
to make clear when I am referring to the Jewish, Christian, or
Western Hermetic concepts and symbolism.
According to all these traditions, the divine Creator sent the
energy down in a specific pattern from Kether to Malkuth. At
the same time, that pattern is not the only way we can connect
the sephiroth. Because the Hebrew language has twenty-two
letters, Kabbalists long ago developed the idea of twenty-two
connecting lines, or pathways, between the ten sephiroth.
Below we see, on the left, the pattern of Creation, and on the
right, the most common version of the twenty-two pathways.
This version actually belongs to the Western tradition more
than the Jewish, but its the one most people know and, in
fact, its the one Hermann Haindl used as the basis for his
painting.
Because there are so many variations on Kabbalahwithin
the Jewish tradition alone the rabbis often went in different
directionswe can sometimes get lost in the contradictions
or, worse, take one version as absolute truth and ignore any
other approaches. I have tried here to draw from all these
approaches wherever useful (and within the limits of my
knowledge), and at the same time attempt to put them together
in a story readers can follow, hopefully without too much
confusion. Hermann Haindls painting will help ground us by
giving us a visual anchor.
The Kabbalah tree has its roots in Jewish mysticism, and
inevitably we will explore the points of view of the rabbis
who developed it. This does not mean that you need to be
Jewish to appreciate it. As the traditions of Western and
Christian Kabbalah clearly demonstrate, the tree operates very
well as a symbol for many systems of belief. It really has
grown into a kind of organizing principle for our human
efforts to understand the world.
Because the tree is not just a narrow religious concept, we
will draw on some unusual sources in our attempt to understand
its message. This will include tribal and shamanic traditions,
and also modern science. As well as the great rabbis we will
look to contemporary Kabbalists, Tarot interpreters, and even
a comic book writer who has explored the tree vividly and in
great depth in his stories.
We will encounter the word God very often in these
pages, as well as words and passages from the Bible. The tree
is, after all, a Western symbol, and Western traditions are
rooted in the Bible. At the same time, none of this is meant
to support narrow religious ideas. Kabbalah is a mysterious
journey of transformation, and one of the things it transforms
is what we mean when we say God. I ask, therefore, that
readers set aside their previous beliefs, and especially any
negative experiences they may have had in their own religious
upbringing. Sadly, there are far too many of these.
The symbol is a living tree. It continues to change, and
adapt, and accept new ideas. While it comes from a background
that is patriarchal, we do not need to accept the strict
separation of male and female qualities, or the implied
superiority of the masculine that sometimes seems to pervade
earlier centuries of mystical thought. Instead, we can allow
our own contemporary wisdom to add to the great store of
teachings over the centuries.
This does not mean we reject the dedication or brilliance of
earlier times. It would be worse than arrogant, it would be
simple ignorance to dismiss the great achievements of such
figures as the sixteenth-century Rabbi Isaac Luria, or the
mysterious author of the Book of Formation two thousand years
ago, or the vast synthesis created by the Hermetic Order of
the Golden Dawn in the late nineteenth century. But neither do
we have to sweep away our own insights in a blind worship of
the past.
In his Tarot deck, and now in his painting of the tree,
Hermann Haindl imbues these great traditions with his devotion
to the earth and his reverence for archaic goddesses and all
the worlds traditions. This gives his version of the Tree
of Life a slightly different character from the familiar
abstract diagram. It does not change the meaning of the tree,
but adds to it, helping to reinvigorate this centuries-old
symbol for a new century.
ONE - The Tree and the Ladder
Think of the image of a tree. Strong, graceful, its branches
reach up like long fingers into the sky. It is hundreds, maybe
thousands of years old. And now think of a tree older than
all, a tree whose trunk and branches connect heaven and earth,
whose roots reach down into the dark mysteries below our
normal consciousness, into the very origins of existence; a
tree of dreams, a tree of beauty, a tree of God. A tree of
life. Is our world, with all its complications, hopes, and
dangers, no more than a childs treehouse set in a vast tree
that stretches through worlds upon worlds?
Now play with this image. If the tree is the connection of all
life, does it begin in the dark underworld, stretch up through
the existence we narrowly think of as reality, and reach
beyond to the spiritual heaven we imagine as somewhere far
above our heads? But suppose all life, all existence beg ins
with the Creator. Shouldnt the tree begin in heaven?
And suppose our true home lies not in the world of pain and
sorrow but in the divine perfection, what the legendary Welsh
shaman/bard Taliesin called the region of the summer
stars. If the tree has its roots in heaven, and its
branches reach down
to us, does that mean that the tree grows upside down?
Maybe we are upside downthat is, confused and seeing
reality the wrong way around. If we could learn to see the
true way, from the point of view of the divine rather than our
ordinary common sense view (for that which is commonly
agreed on is not necessarily true), then maybe the Tree of
Life would stand revealed to us. And maybe we could learn to
climb the tree and return to our roots as divine creations,
made in the image of the Creator but ignorant of what that
really means.
People climb trees. They find their way, branch by branch,
into the higher regions. Before the invention of machines of
flightballoons, gliders, airplanesgiant trees were the
only way people could leave the surface of the earth. So a
tree becomes a ladder, and if the tree reaches high enough it
becomes a ladder to heaven itself.
Now this is a literal image, and we should not confuse
ourselves and believe there actually is a tree
somewhere, or a giant ladder, that climbs up into the sky
(why, in fact, should heaven be literally above us, in the
sky?).And we should not believe that people in ancient times
were much more simple-minded than our sophisticated selves,
and so believed in such concrete trees and ladders. Images are
metaphors, ways to make real in our minds what we understand
as intuition.
A tree that reaches into heaven, however, is a very vivid and
enticing metaphor, and so has proved useful to humans the
world over as a way to formulate our desire to encounter the
divine. In the set of traditions known as shamanism (the word
comes from a specific people in Siberia but describes
practices and religious approaches found wherever humans have
lived), healers and visionaries travel in trance to the spirit
world. To aid their journeys they use the literal image,
sometimes a pole or even a small tree, sometimes a ladder.
They will set this up in the ceremony, and when they enter
trance they will experience a climb up the tree or ladder into
the realm of the gods, where they may find some power object
or even battle the spirits for the captured soul of a sick
person.
Thirty years or so of books on shamanism and trance workshops
have made such visions and journeys sound almost ordinary to
modern people. At the same time, those of us who grew up in
mainstream Western religious traditions may assume that our
own culture contains no such trance climbs up a tree or a
ladder. In fact, the Bible contains several such images. Most
obviously, there is the Tree of Life itself, from the Garden
of Eden, and we will look closely at just what this story
tells us in a moment. But there also exists an image of a
ladder that reaches from heaven to earth.
In the book of Genesis, Jacob has fled his brothers anger
and is traveling in the wilderness. At night, in a place
called Luz, he sets some stones for a pillow and goes to
sleep. Now, stones set into a pile are themselves an image of
the heavenly ascent, which is one reason why we find sacred
pyramids in Egypt, Babylon, and Mexico, and why people in the
Stone Age created mounds and giant hills so large they seem
part of the natural landscape. Asleep, Jacob has a vision
in a dream. He sees a ladder set on the ground, reaching up
all the way to heaven. Angelsthe original Hebrew word means
messengers, for angels are messengers of the
divineascend and descend. The power of the world
abovethe kingdom of God, as a much later prophet,
Jesus of Nazareth, son of Mary, called itmoves freely
between the exalted existence of the divine and the difficult
world of mortals.
Notice that the angels do not just descend from their realm to
ours. Instead, they move in both directions, for if you have a
ladder it does not go in only one direction. This, in fact, is
a basic principle of esoteric ideas in general, and the Tree
of Life in particular, that existence goes in both directions,
from spirit down into physical matter, and from matter
up into spirit. Neither is actually superior, for a full
existence depends on both of them and the interchange between
them. To really understand who we are we need to recognize
that we, too, contain both spirit and matter, and that these
qualities actually move up and down each other. When Watson,
Crick, Wilkins, and Franklin discovered the double-spiral
structure of DNA, the genetic basis of life, occultists
recognized this as the same image found in spiritual
teachings.
We might understand this double-spiral movement a little
better if we think of the creative process in humans. And here
we have an excellent example in Hermann Haindl himself. Haindl
is the epitome of what we could call an intuitive artist. He
will often begin a work by letting paint splash on the canvas
and seeing what pictures seem to emerge. We should not make
the mistake, however, of thinking he acts without thought.
From this instinctive response he moves to a highly conceptual
work in which his life experiences, political beliefs, and
sacred knowledge all combine to form a coherent whole. We
might say, therefore, that an original image descends
down the tree or ladder into physical reality on the canvas.
The act of painting, and the thought that goes into it, then
ascends into a work of art that is as intellectual as it
is visual.
In the Genesis story, Jacob does not himself travel up the
ladder. Unlike the shamans, he does not ascend. In a sense,
there is really no need, for in the next moment, God actually
appears and speaks to Jacob directly, saying that Jacobs
sons will become a great nation. When Jacob wakes up he names
the place Beth-el, the house of God, and calls it
the gate of heaven for, he says, God was in this
place and I did not know it. These ideas, especially the
gate, are also part of the shamanic, and later Kabbalist, idea
of the tree, or ladder, that reaches to the realm of the
divine. The Tree of Life is the path by which we climb to the
sacred and then return to our true selves. Wherever and
whenever we perceive it we find the gate of heaven. Jacob then
marks the spot with yet another prehistoric image of the link
between heaven and earth, a stone pillar.
The shamans often climb the ladder or tree to struggle, even
battle, the gods for the sake of helpless humans. Jacob only
watches. But maybe he simply is not yet ready. Kabbalist
tradition suggests that a man must not begin the study of
Kabbalah until he has married and fathered children in
other words, until he has become mature and responsible. Only
then can he face the powerful forces hidden within the study
and practices of Kabbalah. (These traditions originated in a
patriarchal culture that only rarely recognized the
possibility for women to enter into them. As with so much
else, the introduction of womens points of view has
radically opened new ideas and approaches to the Tree of Life
and other aspects of Kabbalah.) Jacob, too, must become the
master of his own life before he can go further in his
knowledge of the divine.
Years after his dream vision, after he has married and begun
his family, Jacob must once again confront his twin brother,
with whom he has wrestled all his life, from their first
moments in their mothers womb. Once more he sleeps in the
wilderness, far from human civilization, with all its safety
nets of assumed reality. This, too, is a shamanic experience,
to find the sacred outside everyday life. Now, instead of a
vision of powers that travel up and down a ladder, Jacob
encounters a single figure, a stranger whose face he
cannot quite see. And all night the two wrestle, neither one
able to defeat the other.
Tradition identifies this figure as an angel but that is not
what the text actually says. When Jacob demands a blessing
from the mysterious figure, the stranger gives him a new name
(another common shamanic experience), Isra-el, one
who has wrestled with God. Jacob then names the place Peni-el,
the face of God, for he says, I have seen God face to
face and survived. And having done this, Jacob finds the
courage to go to his brother and seek peace.
As shamanic as this story is, it also is deeply Kabbalist.
Though the ultimate truth of God lies beyond even the Tree of
Life, the teachers identified aspects of the tree as a
greater and lesser face, and one goal of the study
and meditation on the ten sephiroth becomes the ability to see
those divine facesand, like Jacob, survive the experience
and then go on to seek peace. Jewish Kabbalists actually
identify the lesser face as the central sephirah,
Tiferet, which they also identify with Jacob, as the image of
the perfect man; Christian Kabbalists see this sephirah as
Christ.
With his two visions, the ladder and the struggle, Jacob
embodies the very qualities of those shamans who use poles,
ladders, pillars, and living trees as vehicles to ascend to
the heavenly world and claim humanitys place among the
divine. For this reason, another name for the Tree of Life,
with its ten lights and twenty-two pathways, is Jacobs
ladder.
The Tree of Life diagram developed over many centuries,
beginning in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance and
continuing to the late nineteenth century. Its originsthe
roots of the tree, we might saygo back to the beginning of
the Common Era (the term non-Christians use for the last two
thousand years to avoid anno domini, year of our
lord), with a remarkable work called the Sefer Yetsirah,
the Book of Formation. In this very short text the anonymous
writer first describes the sephiroth, the ten emanations of
divine light, and the mystical power of the twenty-two Hebrew
letters. The actual tree will be many centuries off, but this
is where it began.
We will look at the Sefer Yetsirah more closely, but it is
worth considering a religious mystical movement going on at
that time in ancient Judaea for what it tells us about the
origins of Kabbalah and its goals, and therefore for ways we
can approach the Tree of Life, both in its diagram form and in
Hermann Haindls remarkable painting. Two thousand y ears
ago, right around the time of the teachings of Jesus, Judaism
faced a great crisis. Rome was trying to crush the Jewish
desire to follow its own traditions, and in the year 70, in
response to Jewish rebellion, the Roman army destroyed the
vast Temple of Solomon that had stood as the center of Jewish
ritual and spiritual life for hundreds of years.
Without the temple, and its seasonal rituals and sacrifices,
how would people join themselves to God? The Sefer Yetsirah
was, in fact, one answer, and it began a strain in mystical
religion called the work of creation, that is, the
contemplation of the origins and structure of existence.
Through meditation on the wonders of the sephiroth and the
letters, and their place in the creation of the world, the
mystic comes to a sense of the divine power that fills all
existence, especially our own lives.
Another response was a kind of shamanic revival called the
work of the merkavah, or the work of the chariot. The
chariot refers to a mystic vision described in the book of
Ezekiel. Ezekiel lived during the Babylonian Exile, after the
destruction of the first temple (Rome actually destroyed a
second temple, rebuilt after the return from Babylon). His
experience was therefore meaningful to those going through the
pain of Roman attacks. The prophet described a highly detailed
vision he had of a heavenly chariot, wheels within wheels and
winged creatures with four faces. The merkavah mystics used
this vision as their own vehicle for trance journeys into the
seven hekhaloth (palaces) of heaven. The purpose of
these journeys was to see the divine face to face, the very
experience Jacob describes after his night of wrestling.
The great detail of the merkavah writings show that the
journeyers considered the hekhaloth real places and not just
hallucinations or subjective images. They warn of improper
responses one might make at certain points in the journey. At
the same time they recognized that all this took place on an
inner level, stimulated by meditation and magical practices,
for they described the experience as a descent to the
chariot, even as the traveler ascended to the palaces. The
chariot was inside the self as well as in the heavenly realms.
Because the tree uses the ten sephiroth and the twenty-two
pathways we naturally think of it as derived from the Sefer
Yetsirah and the work of creation. And of course it is, not
just because of its structure but because of its tradition of
contemplating the wonders of existence. But it also derives
from the work of the chariot, for the tree is a vehicle as
much as a thing of wonder. We use it not just to understand
how life exists, or even how to understand divine laws; we use
it to understand ourselves. And we use it to move ourselves
through the journey of the pathways, step by step, until we
discover our own vision, as much as we are able, of divine
truth. And it is the special wonder of Hermann Haindls
painting that he shows this vehicle to be one truly of life
and not just abstract thought.
When Haindl writes on his painting der baum ist der baum
ist der baum ist der baum (The tree is the tree is the
tree is the tree, reminiscent of Gertrude Steins
legendary poem A rose is a rose is a rose is a rose), he
returns the philosophical concept to its literal roots. Around
the world we find the Tree of Life seen as an actual tree,
alive in the world. In the West we have lost our connections
to nature as a divine revelation so that we tend to think of
spiritual ideas as apart from the living world. We even may
see the two as opposed, with anything physical being temporary
and ultimately empty, while the spiritual becomes the thought
that transcends nature. The Haindl tree, however, reminds us
that we exist in nature, and if we cannot find the divine in
living things then perhaps we will find it nowhere.
In Africa and many other places, trees with white sap have
signified the Mother Goddess, for they give milk yet,
unlike short-lived humans, they remain strong and graceful
over many decades, even centuries. Ancient Egypt identified
the sycamore with the goddesses Nut (of the night sky,
possibly the oldest goddess), Hathor (identified with the cow
goddess), and Isis, founder of civilization, bringer of Osiris
back from the dead.
Osiris himself becomes embedded in a tree at one point of his
story. His brother Set imprisons him in a jeweled coffin and
floats him away down the Nile. The coffin drifts out to sea
and lands at a place called Byblos, where a tree grows up
around it to become the base of the local kings palace.
Isis finds him and removes him from the tree. Osiriss
ceremonies included the raising of a wooden pole called the
Djed pillar, a symbol both of the male organ with its
generative power and the human backbone, the structure that
allows us to stand uprightlike a treeand move in the
world. The backbone contains the life energy people in India
call kundalini, sometimes thought of as a snake coiled
at the base of the spine.
The image of a snake wound around a tree recalls the Tree of
Life in the Garden of Eden, and also the common image of
healing from the Greek caduceus, two snakes wound around a
stick (now a symbol of the medical profession). And, further,
it may remind us of the brazen serpent that God tells
Moses to hold before the Israelites as they travel in the
wilderness. This, too, was said to heal the sick. The more we
delve into the symbolism and myths of different culturesin
this case, Egypt, India, Israel, and Greece, but we could cite
even morethe more we realize that myths and esoteric
teachings are not fantasies or even just psychological
insights, but are in fact ways to represent scientific
knowledge that the modern world has largely lost.
Even in ancient Israel, people saw the Tree of Life as a real
tree. Most often this was the almond, a tree whose white
flowers bloomed early in spring, before its first leaves. The
oil cups in sacred menorahs (candleholders) were often shaped
like almond flowers. The menorahs themselves took on the form
of a tree, with seven branches, one for each of the days of
creation, and ultimately for each of the seven moving bodies
in the skysun, moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and
Saturn. These seven bodies were the source of the seven
palaces of heaven, the hekhaloth.
Long before he learned of the Kabbalah Tree of Life, Hermann
Haindl witnessed a living ritual of this idea. For a number of
years, he and his wife Erica were privileged to attend the
annual Native American Sun Dance, in which various Indian
nations come together in a great ritual of sacrifice and
celebration. Young men, who have prepared themselves for an
entire year, pierce their bodies and dance about a tree,
offering their own blood, like sap from a tree, to strengthen
what the great visionary Black Elk called the sacred
hoop that connects all life. Interestingly, they perform
the ritual around a sapling, not some ancient tree older than
memory. The Tree of Life ultimately is all trees, and the
youngest shoot reaches into the roots of the very beginnings
of life.
To offer blood means to offer yourself, to break the barrier
of skin that seems to separate you from the universe outside
you. The blood is the life, says the Bible. The young
men in the ceremony do not die or injure themselves in any
permanent way. The blood sacrifice does not seek harm but a
union with the natural and spiritual worlds.
Black Elk described many sacred hoops for the many peoples of
the world. And yet they all form one great circle. Black Elk
also spoke of a single great tree, flowering and beautiful,
that shelters all the children of the earth. Similarly, the
Revelation of St. John describes a Tree of Life with twelve
fruits (for the twelve signs of the zodiac) that yields every
month, and branches whose leaves shelter and heal all the
nations of humanity.
Both these visions describe the trees nurturing powers,
compared to the Kabbalist or shamanic vision of a kind of
ladder that links heaven, earth, and the underworld. Because
Hermann Haindls painting shows the tree so vibrantly alive,
it combines both these qualities, the nurturance and the
vision of the laws of creation.
The Sun Dance brings to mind two mythological tree sacrifices
of great importance to European traditions. The first is Jesus
on the cross, the second is the Norse/Germanic god Odin, who
hangs from the world tree, Yggdrasil, to obtain the magical
alphabet, the runes.
Christian teachings specifically compare the cross to the Tree
of Life denied Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden (we will
look more closely at the Eden story in a moment). Just as some
stories say that Jesus himself made the cross in his work as a
carpenter, so others claim the wood literally came from the
original Tree of Life. The first humans disobeyed the Creator
and ate from the Tree of Knowledge, losing Paradise for all
humanity. Christ gives up his own life and then returns from
the dead to redeem humanity from sin. Christian myth not only
links the cross to the Tree of Life, it also links Christs
sacrifice to Abrahams willingness to sacrifice Isaac, for
Calgary, the hill where Christ died, is said to be the same
place where Abraham bound Isaac and prepared to offer him to
God, until an angel came and told him to sacrifice a ram
instead. Jewish Kabbalah considers Isaac the embodiment of the
fourth sephirah, Chesed, or mercy.
As we have seen, Christian (also Western) Kabbalah places
Christ in the center of the tree, at the sixth sephirah,
Tiferet. Just as we can think of the entire tree as a human
body, so we also can visualize Christ at the center, suspended
on the cross. (We should recognize here that the Haindl
painting actually shows Christ, with his crown of thorns, on
the right pillar of the tree. This is the pillar of mercy, and
so a fitting place for the image of a savior. The center
sephirah in the Haindl tree shows a bird. For Christians, this
suggests the Holy Spirit.)
Some scholars believe that the Romans did not actually use
crosses for execution but instead nailed people to simple
poles (the word crucifix comes from Latin and means
fixed to a cross, but crucifixion may not be the
original term). If so, Christianity adopted the image of
Christ as nailed to a cross for two reasons. First, the cross
allows the human body to open up, with the arms out
expansively, as if to embrace all humanity. Christs body
becomes more like a tree, a protective shelter.
Second, the cross forms a powerful symbol of the intersection
between eternity and history. In other words, the vertical
line of the cross represents the divine, which is ever
present, eternal, all powerful. The horizontal line signifies
the historical moment and chain of events that led to
Christs sacrifice. Another way to say this is that the
vertical line symbolizes Christs divinity, while the
horizontal line indicates Jesuss humanity.
We find the symbolism of the cross in other traditions beside
Christianity. In both ancient Greek religion and Haitian
Voudoun, divinities appear at crossroads that symbolize the
meeting place of different realities, especially that of gods
and humans.
Though Christian Kabbalah places Christ in the center of the
tree, the entire Tree of Life represents a meeting, or
junction, of human history and divinity. This is because it
begins with an image of eternity, in Kether, and reaches down
to what we think of as the real world in Malkuth.
This movement goes both ways. If we think of the tree as the
process of creation, then the energy moves from Kether,
sephirah one, down the Tree to Malkuth, sephirah ten. But we
also can think of the tree as a pathway for us to return to
divine awareness. We can imagine ourselves moving up the tree,
from Malkuth to Kether. And if we think of the tree as a model
for our own bodies, then we can allow energy to awaken in us
and rise upwards, from Malkuth at our feet to Kether at the
top of our heads. Such movement can transform our ordinary
view of existence, which we might call mortal, into an
awareness of our eternal true selves, at one with the
divine life energy that never dies.
The story of Odins sacrifice so recalls Christ that early
myth and folklore researchers assumed the Norse writers had
borrowed it from Christianity. Since then, most have agreed
that the story is much older than the Christian presence in
the north. It may go back to very ancient practices in Siberia
of sacrificing horses (similar to the sacrifice of bulls in
ancient Greece or, for that matter, rams in ancient Israel).
In the myth, Odin had a horse named Ygg, and the name of the
tree, Yggdrasil, may have meant steed of Odin.
The essence of the tree is renewal. Like serpents who shed
their skin and emerge rebornlike the moon, which grows
strong, then dies into darkness only to remerge once more into
light(deciduous) trees shed their leaves as the earth goes
cold in winter, then returns to life in spring. According to
Norse myth a great battle called Ragnarok will destroy the
gods and all life. Yggdrasil itself will shatter, breaking the
link between all the worlds. Onlythe tree secretly contains
a future man and woman, and when the old Tree of Life dies
these two will stand revealed to await the renewal of
creation, like a new Adam and Eve.
Odin seeks the knowledge and magical power hidden in the
runes, which lie in a dark well at the base of the World Tree.
To prepare himself, he wounds himself in the side and then
hangs on the tree for nine days and nights. Even this is not
enough, and so he gives up his right eye as an offering to
Mimir, the ruler of the well. Finally, Odin reaches down from
the tree and snatches up the runes. Because of Odins status
as father of the gods, Western Kabbalah places Odin at the
second sephirah, Hokhmah, identified with the supernal
father. Hokhmah means wisdom, and having
achieved the runes Odin became a master of true wisdom,
someone who can see into all the worlds.
The runes resemble the Hebrew alphabet, for they spell words
like any letters and yet they also contain special powers and
symbolic meanings. We can use both alphabets for divination,
and in very similar ways. The diviners would inscribe the
letters on small stones or pieces of wood, put these in a bag
and shake them, then reach inside for one or more letters to
answer a question. In both the Futhark (runes) and the
Aleph-Beth (Hebrew), every letter describes some creature or
quality. For example, the third Hebrew letter, Gimel, means
camel, while the rune Ur means aurochs, a European
bison (extinct since the Middle Ages). Both letters, Gimel
and Ur ,
appear on Hermann Haindls painting of the High Priestess
Tarot card.
The Sefer Yetsirah describes the Creation as the product of
the ten sephiroth and the twenty-two Hebrew letters. The
Kabbalah Tree of Life brilliantly combines these two in the
diagram of twenty-two pathways connecting the sephiroth.
Nineteenth-century Western Kabbalists then linked the letters
and pathways to the twenty-two letters of the Major Arcana of
the Tarot. In the Haindl tree painting we find the names of
these cards on the lines between the sephiroth, while the
actual Haindl Tarot cards also contain runes so that we could,
in fact, use them to place the runes on the tree.
Excerpt reprinted with permission.
The Kabbalah Tree: A Journey of Balance & Growth
by Rachel Pollack 2004. Llewellyn Worldwide, Ltd. PO Box
64383, St. Paul, MN 55164. All rights reserved.