54. The Purpose of the Work – 1
What I heard on Shevat 16, February 13, 1941
It is known that the servitude is mainly to bestow contentment upon his Maker. Yet, one must know the meaning of bestowing, as this is used by everyone, and it is known that habit wears off the taste. Therefore, we must thoroughly clarify the meaning of the word to bestow.
The thing is that the will to receive is also incorporated in the desire to bestow of the lower one (but the will to receive can be used with corrections), or else there is no connection between the giver and the receiver. This is because it is impossible that one will give and the other will give nothing in return, yet there will be a state of partnership.
Only when both show love to one another is there a connection and friendship between them. But if one shows love and the other shows no response, such a love is unreal and has no right to exist. Our sages stated about the verse, “and say unto Zion: ‘You are My people’” (Isaiah 51), do not say Ami [My people], but Imi [with Me], “to be My partner” (Zohar Beresheet p 5), meaning that the creatures are in partnership with the Creator.
It follows that when the lower one wants to bestow upon the Creator, the lower one, too, should receive from the Creator. This is called partnership, when the lower one gives, and the upper one gives, too.
However, the will to receive should crave to adhere to Him and receive His abundance, sustenance, and goodness; and that was the purpose of creation, to do good to His creations.
However, because of the breaking that occurred in the world of Nekudim, the will to receive fell into the domain of the Klipot [shells], by which two discernments were made in the Kli [vessel]. 1) It developed a relation to the separated pleasures, and the work of exiting the authority of the Klipot is called “the work of purification.” 2) The second discernment that occurred due to the breaking is the detachment from spiritual pleasures.
In other words, one becomes distant from spirituality and has no desire for spirituality. The correction for this is called Kedusha [holiness], where the order of the work is to crave His exaltedness. In that state, the Creator shines for him in these vessels. However, we must know that to the extent that he has Kelim [pl. of Kli] of purity, called “hate evil,” to that extent he can work in Kedusha, as it is written, “you who love the Lord, hate evil.”
It follows that there are two discernments: 1) purity, 2) Kedusha. Kedusha is called the Kli, the preparation to receive His goodness, by way of to do good to His creations. However, this Kli is attributed to the lower one, meaning that it is for us to repair. In other words, it is for us to crave the good, and this means engaging extensively in His exaltedness and his own lowliness.
Yet, the abundance that should appear in the Kli of Kedusha is in the hands of the Creator; He is the One who imparts the lower one with abundance. At that time, the lower one cannot help in that in any way, and this is called “The secret things belong to the Lord our God.”
The thought of creation, called “to do good to His creations,” begins from Ein Sof [no end]. For this reason, we pray to Ein Sof, meaning to the connection that exists between the Creator and the creatures. This is the meaning of what is written in the writings of the ARI, that we must pray to Ein Sof.
It is so because Atzmuto [His Self] has no connection with the creatures, since the beginning of the connection starts in Ein Sof, where His name is, which is the root of creation. This is the meaning of what is written in the Jerusalem [Talmud], that one who prays will pray in the Name, meaning that there is His name, and His name and Ein Sof are called in the words of the legend, “A tower filled with abundance.” This is why we pray to the name, to receive the benefit that has been prepared for us in advance.
This is why Keter is called “His desire to do good to His creations,” and the benefit itself is called Hochma [wisdom], which is the abundance itself. This is why Keter is called Ein Sof and “Emanator.” However, Hochma is not called “emanated” yet, since there is still no Kli in Hochma, and it is considered a light without a Kli.
For this reason, Hochma, too, is discerned as the Emanator because there is no attainment in the light without a Kli, and the whole difference between Keter and Hochma is that there, the root of the emanated is more disclosed.