Chapter
One
Explains
the
four
phases
in
the
coarseness,
which
are
the
four
vessels
and
their
root;
containing
eight
issues:
1.
The
Sefirot
of
all
the
worlds
have
self
and
vessels.
2.
The
light
of
Ein
Sof
first
expanded
as
vessels,
and
then
the
lights
clothed
them.
3.
The
expansion
of
the
light
implies
a
greater
coarseness
than
before,
meaning
the
light
grew
coarser
and
became
ten
vessels.
4.
A
screen
is
made
in
the
vessel
of
Malchut.
5.
This
screen
separates
the
world
of
Atzilut
and
the
world
of
Beria.
6.
The
coupling
by
striking
of
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
in
the
screen
that
raises
reflected
light
from
below
upward.
7.
To
the
place
that
the
light
Ein
Sof
reaches,
regarded
as
the
world
of
Atzilut.
8.
Four
phases
in
the
coarseness
of
the
upper
light:
a)
In
its
expansion
from
Keter
to
Hochma;
b)
In
its
expansion
to
Bina,
where
distancing
is
added
to
it;
c)
In
its
expansion
to
ZA,
where
a
window
and
a
narrow
foramen
were
made
in
it;
d)
In
its
expansion
to
Malchut,
where
a
narrow
foramen
and
a
distancing
were
made
in
it.
___
There
is
self
and
vessels.
The
light
of
Ein
Sof
expanded
first
as
vessels.
Afterward,
the
lights
clothed
them,
which
are
the
self.
1.
All
the
worlds
(1)
have
self
(2)
and
vessels
(3).
First
(4)
expanded
(5)
Ein
Sof
(6)
as
ten
Sefirot
of
Atzilut,
as
vessels.
That
is
because
expansion
(7)
indicates
a
greater
coarseness
of
light
than
before
(8).
It
turns
out
that
these
ten
Sefirot
are
ten
vessels
that
were
created
by
the
expansion
of
Ein
Sof
itself,
except
now
the
light
became
coarser,
and
vessels
were
made
through
the
expansion(9).
After
this
expansion,
by
which
ten
vessels
were
made,
the
self
of
Ein
Sof
clothed
inside
of
them(10).
This
is
the
meaning
of
self
and
vessels.
Inner
Light
1.
There
are
five
worlds,
called:
Adam
Kadmon,
Atzilut,
Beria,
Yetzira,
Assiya.
The
word
Olam
[world]
comes
from
the
word
He’elem
[concealment]
because
each
time,
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
becomes
more
concealed
in
them,
as
the
ARI
will
explain
henceforth.
2.
See
Table
of
Questions,
Part
2,
item
56.
3.
See
Table
of
Questions,
Part
1,
item
25.
4.
Meaning
the
very
beginning
of
every
single
world.
5.
See
Table
of
Questions,
Part
2,
item
14.
6.
Meaning
it
is
unattainable.
It
is
called
Ein
Sof
to
indicate
that
the
Sefira
of
Malchut
that
ends
and
stops
all
the
degrees
does
not
make
an
end
and
a
stop
here
on
the
upper
light
(See
Table
of
Questions,
Part
1,
item
40).
Quite
the
contrary,
the
bestowal
of
the
light
begins
in
it.
7.
Expansion
indicates
the
light
growing
coarser
than
it
was
in
the
Emanator.
Otherwise,
in
would
that
light
exit
the
Emanator
and
merit
the
name
“expansion
of
light”
from
it
outwards?
Growing
coarser
is
the
disparity
of
form
that
the
light
acquires
because
it
becomes
an
emanated
being
(see
Inner
Observation,
Part
2,
item
5).
8.
See
above
Inner
Observation
Part
2,
item
5.
9.
It
teaches
us
that
the
vessels
are
consequences
of
the
light
itself.
That
is
because
as
the
light
expands
to
the
emanated
being,
it
descends
by
four
phases
HB
ZON,
until
it
causes
the
will
to
receive
in
the
emanated
being,
and
it
is
this
desire
that
is
phase
four,
which
is
the
essence
of
the
vessel
of
the
emanated
being.
It
is
the
coarseness
that
the
light
acquired
during
its
expansion.
However,
the
first
three
phases
merely
cause
phase
four
to
appear.
The
inevitability
and
the
order
of
these
four
phases
were
explained
in
the
previous
parts
and
it
is
needless
to
elaborate
on
them
here,
too
(see
Part
1,
chapter
1,
item
50).
10.
Clothing
is
like
concealment.
That
is
because
the
clothes
hide
the
one
who
wears
them,
yet
it
is
done
because
of
his
desire
to
be
seen.
Without
the
correction
of
this
concealment,
it
is
impossible
for
him
to
become
revealed.
For
this
reason,
he
hides
himself
in
it
and
is
revealed
by
it.
Such
a
correction
is
always
called
clothing
or
garment.
Thus,
the
garment
is
used
for
two
things:
concealment
and
revelation.
It
is
the
same
with
our
matter
because
it
is
impossible
to
attain
the
light
in
the
lower
ones
without
a
vessel.
Hence,
the
light
clothes
and
becomes
concealed
in
a
vessel,
so
the
lower
one
may
attain
it
by
that
vessel
it
is
clothed
in,
and
examine
it
closely.
___
The
correction
of
the
screen
to
detain
the
upper
light
from
expanding
in
the
vessel
of
Malchut
separates
the
world
of
Atzilut
from
the
rest
of
the
worlds.
2.
When
the
above
expansion
reached
the
Malchut
of
Atzilut(20),
the
Upper
Emanator
saw
that
the
lower
ones
do
not
have
the
strength
to
receive
that
light(30)
should
it
expand
further.
Then,
when
the
tenth
vessel
of
Atzilut
was
completed(40),
one
screen
and
curtain
was
made
there(50),
separating
Atzilut
from
the
rest
of
the
worlds
below
it
(60).
Inner
Light
20.
This
means
that
after
the
light
had
expanded
in
the
first
three
phases,
called:
Hochma,
Bina,
ZA,
and
after
it
completed
its
expansion
in
ZA,
it
came
to
expand
in
phase
four,
called
Malchut.
The
light
cannot
expand
in
Malchut
before
it
expands
in
the
three
former
phases,
for
they
cause
one
another
by
way
of
cause
and
consequence.
30.
Because
the
force
of
the
restriction
rides
over
phase
four,
which
is
the
lowest
of
them
all,
phase
four
does
not
have
the
strength
to
receive
light
(see
Table
of
Topics,
Part
1,
item
81,
and
Part
1,
chapter
2,
item
2).
40.
That
refers
to
phase
four,
called
Malchut.
By
that
he
tells
us
that
we
should
note
that
the
vessel
of
Malchut
and
the
screen
in
it
are
two
separate
matters.
The
vessel
of
Malchut
is
a
light
that
grew
coarser
into
phase
four,
upon
which
rides
the
force
of
the
restriction.
The
screen
and
the
curtain
upon
her
were
erected
in
her
later
(see
Table
of
Questions,
Part
2,
item
43).
50.
The
screen
and
curtain
are
one
thing.
It
means
that
a
detaining
force
was
made
there,
like
a
protective
partition
above
Malchut,
so
that
the
upper
light
would
not
break
into
her
(see
Table
of
Questions,
Part
2,
item
43).
60.
It
means
that
this
screen
not
only
protects
Malchut,
as
mentioned
above,
but
also
separates
the
world
of
Atzilut
from
the
rest
of
the
worlds.
___
By
the
power
of
the
striking
of
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
in
the
screen,
the
light
returned
upward
as
reflected
light
that
clothes
the
upper
light.
Up
to
the
place
where
the
line
of
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
reaches,
it
is
called
the
world
of
Atzilut.
3.
Then
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
that
expands
up
to
there
struck
that
screen
(70).
By
the
power
of
the
striking
of
the
descent
(80),
it
struck
it
and
returned
upward
as
reflected
light
to
its
place
(90).
Then
the
world
of
Atzilut
was
completed
in
its
vessels
(100)
and
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
clothed
them
once
more
as
self
(200).
Thus,
(300)
up
to
the
place
where
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
reaches
by
this
manner,
it
is
called
the
world
of
Atzilut,
(400)
because
it
is
the
light
itself,
but
after
it
became
coarse.
Inner
Light
70.
The
encounter
of
the
upper
light
with
the
screen
is
likened
to
two
hard
objects
where
one
of
them
is
trying
to
break
the
other’s
boundary.
The
other
stands
firmly
against
the
first
and
prevents
the
first
from
trespassing.
Such
an
encounter
is
called
striking.
In
contrast,
when
two
liquids
meet,
they
do
not
prevent
each
other
from
trespassing
and
mixing;
hence
there
is
no
striking
between
them.
The
same
applies
to
two
supple
objects;
their
striking
is
not
really
felt
because
they
let
each
other
permeate
the
other’s
boundary
and
push
their
outer
shell
to
some
extent.
However,
with
hard
objects,
one
does
not
let
the
other
move
it
from
its
boundary
even
a
little.
Consequently,
their
encounter
is
perceived
as
striking.
Since
the
restriction
was
primarily
done
by
the
emanated
being
and
not
at
all
by
the
Emanator,
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
is
not
at
all
meticulous
about
that
restriction
in
Malchut.
Instead,
it
extends
and
descends
to
expand
in
Malchut,
too.
Moreover,
it
does
so
forcefully,
because
Ein
Sof
filled
phase
four,
too,
before
the
restriction
(see
Part
1,
chapter
1,
item
20
and
item
50).
For
that
reason
it
has
no
reason
to
change
its
way
and
it
always
descends
to
fill
the
vessel
of
Malchut
with
its
light.
However,
the
screen
and
curtain
erected
in
Malchut
detain
it
and
stop
the
light,
not
letting
it
expand
within
even
a
bit,
which
is
why
we
find
that
“the
light
of
Ein
Sof
that
expands
to
there
struck
that
screen
(see
Table
of
Questions,
Part
2,
item
43).”
80.
Has
been
explained
in
the
above
item.
90.
That
measure
of
light
that
should
have
been
received
in
Malchut,
which
she
did
not
receive
due
to
the
detainment
of
the
screen,
that
entire
measure
rose
back
up
and
clothed
all
three
phases
of
the
upper
light
up
to
Hochma.
This
is
regarded
as
the
“place”
of
that
reflected
light.
This
is
the
meaning
of
the
words
of
the
ARI
“returned
upward
as
reflected
light
to
its
place”
(see
Inner
Observation,
Part
2,
item
62).
100.
That
is
because
the
ascent
of
the
reflected
light
and
its
clothing
of
the
upper
light
from
above
downward
make
the
vessels
for
the
upper
light.
200.
After
the
reflected
light
rose
back
up,
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
clothed
this
reflected
light
as
self
that
is
clothed
in
the
vessels.
300.
Meaning
up
to
the
screen
in
the
vessel
of
Malchut,
because
the
screen
pushed
it
back
up
and
did
not
let
it
expand
further.
400.
He
wishes
to
say
that
the
force
of
detainment
in
the
screen
did
not
act
on
the
Sefirot
of
Atzilut
above
Malchut
at
all,
but
only
from
Malchut
downward.
This
is
why
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
expands
down
to
the
screen
in
Malchut
as
Atzilut,
without
any
detainment.
However,
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
that
sparkles
and
passes
through
the
screen
downward
is
greatly
diminished
because
of
this
and
is
no
longer
regarded
as
the
actual
light
of
Ein
Sof.
___
There
are
four
phases
in
the
coarseness
of
the
upper
light:
1)
Reception
from
the
upper
one,
which
is
Hochma.
2)
Distancing
from
Hochma,
which
is
Bina.
3)
Window
and
narrow
foramen,
which
is
ZA.
4)
Distancing
from
Hochma
and
a
narrow
foramen,
which
is
Malchut.
4.
The
matter
of
the
light
becoming
coarser
(1)
is
because
he
who
sees
a
very
great
light
cannot
tolerate
it,
unless
through
distancing
or
a
screen,
or
both.
However,
the
Ein
Sof
shines
in
the
Keter
of
Atzilut
(2)
without
any
screen
and
distancing
at
all.
This
is
why
Keter
is
called
Ein
Sof.
Hochma
receives
through
Keter
(3)
but
Bina
receives
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
through
distancing
(4),
since
now
the
Ein
Sof
is
far
from
her
and
she
can
receive
it
(5).
ZA
receives
the
light
only
through
a
window
and
a
narrow
foramen
(6).
The
self
of
the
light
passes
through
that
window
without
any
screen,
but
there
is
no
broad
passage,
only
a
very
narrow
one.
However,
he
is
near
(7)
because
there
isn’t
a
great
distance
between
Bina
and
ZA
(8).
Nevertheless,
Nukva
of
Zeir
Anpin
receives
her
light
through
the
foramen
and
window
as
does
ZA,
but
it
is
in
distancing
(9).
Inner
Light
1.
This
coarseness
has
already
been
explained.
It
does
not
appear
in
the
light
at
once,
since
it
is
opposite
from
the
light.
Instead,
it
cascades
down
from
the
refined
to
the
slightly
coarser
and
from
there
to
the
coarser
still,
until
it
completes
its
coarseness,
called
phase
four,
or
Malchut.
These
four
phases
are
called:
Hochma,
Bina,
ZA
and
Malchut
and
must
be
present
in
every
emanated
being.
The
reason
for
the
necessity
and
the
definition
of
these
four
phases
has
been
explained
thoroughly
above
(Part
1,
chapter
1,
item
50).
Study
there,
for
I
rely
on
it,
and
I
do
not
bring
it
here
due
to
its
length,
though
every
word
of
it
is
very
needed
here.
2.
Every
world
and
every
Partzuf,
wherever
it
is,
must
receive
its
abundance
from
Ein
Sof.
Hence,
the
induction
of
Ein
Sof
that
is
ascribed
to
a
certain
world
or
Partzuf
is
called
the
Keter
of
the
world
and
the
Keter
of
the
Partzuf.
It
is
also
called
the
Emanator
of
that
world.
It
is
written,
“the
Ein
Sof
shines
in
Keter
of
Atzilut.”
It
means
that
there
is
an
induction
of
Ein
Sof
there,
with
respect
to
the
world
of
Atzilut.
This
is
why
Keter
is
called
Ein
Sof
or
Emanator.
3.
The
expansion
of
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
that
extends
first
from
the
Keter
to
the
world
is
called
light
of
Hochma.
It
is
necessary
that
the
desire
to
receive
the
light
will
be
immediately
incorporated
in
that
light
of
Hochma,
for
otherwise
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
would
not
be
regarded
as
expanding.
However,
this
will
to
receive
is
not
really
regarded
as
disparity
of
form
and
coarseness
because
this
will
to
receive
came
to
her
from
the
upper
force,
meaning
from
Keter.
This
is
because
the
will
to
bestow
in
the
Keter
necessitates
the
will
to
receive
in
Hochma.
That
is
the
meaning
of
the
words
of
the
ARI
“Hochma
receives
through
Keter.”
It
means
that
the
reception
in
Hochma
came
to
her
from
Keter
and
by
its
power.
Thus,
the
coarseness
due
to
that
will
to
receive
is
very
faint,
and
it
is
called
phase
one.
4.
Hochma
becomes
coarser
as
it
expands
because
when
she
completes
her
expansion,
the
desire
in
her
intensifies
and
she
draws
light
of
Hassadim
from
Ein
Sof
and
distances
herself
from
the
light
of
Hochma
(see
Part
1,
chapter
1,
item
50).
Because
this
intensification
was
made
by
her
own
awakening
and
not
by
an
upper
force,
that
desire
is
regarded
as
little
coarseness,
but
more
than
the
coarseness
in
Hochma.
It
is
therefore
necessary
that
due
to
this
change,
she
became
a
separate
phase
from
Hochma,
called
Bina
or
phase
two.
This
is
the
meaning
of
the
ARI’s
words
“Bina
received
the
light
of
Ein
Sof
through
distancing,”
since
this
coarseness
of
phase
two
is
called
distancing,
for
she
distanced
herself
from
receiving
the
light
of
Hochma,
in
order
to
receive
the
light
of
Hassadim.
This
intensification
of
the
desire
is
still
not
regarded
as
complete
coarseness
because
it
comes
from
a
desire
to
bestow
and
equivalence
of
form
with
the
Emanator
(see
Part
1,
chapter
1,
item
50).
However,
it
is
coarser
than
phase
one
because
the
entire
desire
in
phase
one
is
not
hers
but
comes
from
Keter.
Phase
two
already
acts
out
of
her
own
intensification
of
desire,
and
that
is
why
phase
two
is
regarded
as
the
root
of
the
complete
will
to
receive,
for
by
that
she
is
regarded
as
coarser
than
phase
one.
5.
After
Bina
awakened
to
draw
light
of
Hassadim
from
the
Emanator,
she
grows
far
from
the
light
of
Hochma.
Otherwise
she
would
not
have
been
able
to
receive
the
light
of
Hassadim,
because
light
of
Hochma
is
drawn
by
the
will
to
receive,
and
light
of
Hassadim
is
drawn
by
the
will
to
bestow
(see
Part
1,
chapter
1,
item
50).
Thus,
phase
one
and
phase
two
are
opposite
to
one
another
from
the
beginning
of
their
emanation.
That
is
why
the
ARI
writes,
“now
the
Ein
Sof
is
far
from
her
and
she
can
receive
it.”
It
means
that
she
grew
far
and
became
a
third
degree
from
Ein
Sof,
which
is
the
medium
between
Bina
and
Ein
Sof.
She
left
it
because
now
that
she
distanced
the
light
of
Hochma
and
became
a
third
degree,
Hochma
being
phase
one,
second
to
Ein
Sof,
and
Bina
being
phase
two
and
third
from
Ein
Sof,
she
could
now
receive
the
light
of
Hassadim
that
she
drew.
Had
she
not
distanced
herself
to
a
third
degree,
she
would
not
have
been
able
to
receive.
We
must
know
that
the
word
“far”
is
a
term
that
indicates
diminution
of
obtainment
of
Hochma,
as
it
is
written,
“I
said:
‘I
will
get
wisdom’;
but
it
was
far
from
me.”
It
is
also
the
meaning
of
the
verse,
“And
his
sister
stood
afar,”
and
there
is
no
reason
to
discuss
it
any
further.
6.
Bina
also
becomes
coarser
at
the
end
of
her
expansion
because
she
distances
the
light
of
Hochma
from
her.
It
is
known
that
light
of
Hochma
is
the
primary
vitality
and
essence
of
the
emanated
being.
Thus,
at
the
end
of
her
expansion,
the
desire
to
receive
illumination
of
Hochma
into
the
light
of
Hassadim
intensified
in
her.
Because
all
the
difference
between
spirituals
is
due
to
the
disparity
of
form,
this
new
illumination
emerged,
meaning
the
light
of
Hassadim
within
which
there
is
an
illumination
of
Hochma,
and
acquired
a
separate
name,
being
Zeir
Anpin.
It
is
called
by
that
name
because
light
of
Hochma
is
called
light
of
the
face,
as
it
is
written,
“A
man’s
wisdom
makes
his
face
shine.”
Because
it
has
no
more
than
illumination
of
Hochma,
but
its
essence
is
only
the
light
of
Hassadim
of
Bina,
it
is
called
Zeir
Anpin,
meaning
“Small
Face,”
indicating
a
small
amount
of
light
of
Hochma.
It
is
also
called
phase
three.
Its
coarseness
is
called
“a
window
and
a
narrow
foramen”
because
it
has
explained
above
(Part
1,
chapter
2,
item
70)
that
a
screen
that
appears
in
the
upper
one
because
of
the
incorporation
of
the
lower
one
in
it
is
called
window.
That
is
because
it
has
no
judgments,
but
only
a
reason
for
the
illumination,
like
a
window.
Because
any
coarseness
and
screens
in
Atzilut
come
from
the
incorporation
of
BYA
in
it,
the
coarseness
of
ZA
is
called
a
window
for
the
illumination
of
the
light
of
Gadlut,
and
the
name
“narrow
foramen”
is
given
to
the
illumination
of
Katnut.
However,
phase
two
is
not
even
called
a
window,
but
a
distancing.
7.
Meaning,
it
does
not
have
the
same
distancing
of
Hochma
that
exists
in
Bina,
because
the
only
difference
between
him
and
Bina
is
that
he
has
an
illumination
from
the
light
of
Hochma.
That
is
why
the
ARI
writes,
“However,
he
is
near,”
meaning
there
is
no
distancing
in
him.
8.
The
expansion
of
light
of
Bina
to
phase
three,
which
is
ZA,
does
not
cause
distancing.
On
the
contrary,
it
causes
nearing
of
Hochma.
It
has
already
been
explained
that
“near”
and
“far”
are
definitions
of
Hochma.
9.
Meaning,
after
the
three
phases
of
coarseness
expanded
fully
to
the
point
that
ZA
expanded
fully,
the
complete
will
to
receive
that
is
fit
for
reception
had
awakened.
It
is
called
phase
four,
or
Malchut,
or
Nukva
of
ZA
(see
Part
1,
chapter
1,
item
30),
and
in
it
was
the
restriction.
Thus,
from
the
restriction
onward
this
phase
four
no
longer
receives
the
light
of
Ein
Sof.
Hence,
her
phase
of
coarseness
is
called
distancing.
She
too
has
two
degrees
called
window
and
narrow
foramen
as
in
ZA.
The
bestowal
of
Gadlut
is
called
a
window,
and
the
bestowal
of
Katnut
is
called
a
narrow
foramen.
There
is
a
big
difference
between
the
distancing
in
phase
two
and
the
distancing
in
phase
four:
The
distancing
of
phase
two
is
a
voluntary
distancing,
as
it
says,
“because
He
delights
in
mercy,”
meaning
she
wants
Hassadim
and
not
Hochma.
The
distancing
of
phase
four,
however,
is
a
forced
distancing,
due
to
the
screen
that
was
erected
in
phase
four.