The symbol of a divine spark encased in earthly matter is an ancient Gnostic symbol, which took on new life in the Kabbalah of seventeenth century Safed, as well as in 2015 in Rhode Island. An extraordinary story in today’s Providence Journal gives me more than a flicker of hope that even in the darkest of times, there are people who find ingenious and simple ways to hold us all in the light.
In the Gnostic version, a spark of divinity is entrapped in an alien and evil world, and imprisoned in the soul of man. According to the Gnostics, the individual’s knowledge of the spark within himself results in its being liberated from this world, and the Gnostic abandons both body and self to join the infinite pleroma.
In contradiction to the Gnostics, Rabbi Isaac Luria held that when the spark of divine light is freed, the world is reintegrated and restored, rather than escaped and discarded. According to the Hasidim it is the individual’s divinely appointed task to not only liberate those sparks that are entrapped in Kelippot within his own body and soul, but also those sparks in the world that he or she encounters along life’s way. Through proper ethical and spiritual conduct the individual is able to free the holy sparks from the Kelippot which contain them, enabling the exiled divine light to return to its source, thus promoting the completion of Tikkun ha-Olam.
The “raising of the sparks” implies that there is something of spiritual value in all things, and it is man’s daily task to discover and bring out the value in the material world, transforming it into a spiritual realm. Tikkun ha-Olam will only be complete when the last spark has been raised and the entire world informed with spiritual meaning and value.
My wish for this season is that we each begin, or continue, our ongoing dialogue with the Divine. If we freely acknowledge and collectively share our fragments of light, perhaps God will respond in kind.
“The message is: we know you are there and we are thinking about you, and goodnight.”
Shalom Amy: thank you for this message. My son Salem is on the Board of Phila Children’s Hospital and I am sending this to him . Thanks so much . I hear that you Like you new home in RhodeIsland and that you have a wonderful new job. Mazel tov. I would love to hear from you when you are in town. Hedvah
Thank you Hedvah! Will do, Amy
Beautiful post Amy!
Thank you Debra. Have a blessed holiday and new year.
MY GOOD FRIEND IN AVENTURA, FLORIDA. SHE IS CONNECTED TO ALLNSORTS OF ORGANIZATIONS. AND HER FRIEND SCHATZI IS A HAS HAD A CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL MIAMI NAMED FOR HER. THANKS FOR SENDING THE IDEA. LOVE HEDVAH
Lovely story – reminds me of this poem that I’ve always appreciated –
Gathering the Sparks by Howard Schwartz
Traces of the divine light adhered to the fragments of broken vessels like sparks. Therefore it should be the aim of everyone to raise these sparks from where they are imprisoned in the world and to elevate them to holiness by the power of their soul. –Israel Sarug, 1691
Long before the sun cast a shadow
Before the Word was spoken
That brought the heavens
And the earth
Into Being
A flame emerged
From a single
Unseen
Point
And from the center of this flame
Sparks of light sprang forth
Concealed in shells
That set sail everywhere
Above
And below
Like a fleet of ships
Each carrying its cargo
Of light.
Somehow
No one knows why
The frail vessels broke open
Split asunder
And all the sparks were scattered
Like sand
Like seeds
Like stars.
That is why we were created –
To search for the sparks
No matter where they have been
Hidden
And as each one is revealed
To be consumed
In our own fire
And reborn
Out of our own
Ashes.
Someday
When the sparks have been gathered
The vessels will be
Restored
And the fleet will set sail
Across another ocean
Of space
And the Word
Will be spoken
Again.
From: Voices Within The Ark, The Modern Jewish Poets,
H. Schwartz & A. Rudolf, Eds.
Avon Publishers 1980.
Beautiful–Thank you for sharing, Margaret!