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Synopsis
Miryams Circle Dance
R. Rav Kalonymous Kalman HaLevi Epstein (The Meor VShemesh)
R. Epstein comments on a brief passage from the Torah that transpires
after the miraculous parting of the Red Sea. With everyone safely secured
on the other side, Moshe led the people in a hymn of thanksgiving. Immediately
afterwards the Torah describes Miryam gathering the women for a celebration
of music, song, and dance.
And Miryam the prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took the timbrel in her
hand; and all the women went out after her with tambourines and with circle
dances. And Miryam answered them: "Sing to the Lord, for he has triumphed
gloriously; the horse and his rider has He thrown into the sea."
R. Epstein builds his commentary on two hints in that passage. First he
observes that the Torah presents information about the particular type
of dance performed, that it was a circle dance. Second, he notes that
Miryam sang her thanksgiving song in the present tense while Moshe formulated
his nearly identical praise in the future. Based on these clues, R. Epstein
demonstrates that Miryam, in her dance, accessed a higher state of consciousness
than did Moshe through his song. R. Epstein bases his argument on kaballistic
teachings about the unfolding of worlds.
It is known that creation passed through several eras before settling
into the stable and familiar form that is our world. The stage immediately
preceding ours is called the circle universe, while ours is the linear
world of straight lines and hierarchy. These terms are both technical
and metaphorical. They describe their arrangement of sefirot (the former
as concentric circles the latter as three parallel lines) , and the divergent
nature of their worldviews.
Kaballa explains that just as creation emerged from the depths of Divinity,
so will it return there in a single cycle of extension and retraction.
Its worlds will unfold downward till their endpoint of emanation and then
begin a reverse course back toward their roots (and beyond). Yet, unlike
a yo-yo whose motion is similar, the universe undergoes profound transformations
at each stage. The creation that returns has metamorphosed by its experience.
It has been fixed, actualized, cleansed, and transfigured along the way.
Nevertheless, its return route is the exact reverse of its original emanation.
We are still approaching the maximum point of extension, which will be
unmistakably marked by the messianic age, and then we will begin our journey
back up to our roots. The first stop will be the world of circles, the
stage that immediately preceded ours on the way down.
Looking toward the future, the circle world is a more evolved and rectified
state of consciousness than our present linear reality. Its lights are
just becoming visible on the horizon signaling our approaching transition
from this era to that. R. Epstein explores the worldviews of these two
realities and the divergent psychologies that characterize each.
In the linear world everything occupies a unique position along a continuum
extending from above to below. Each value imposes a hierarchy that orders
the world according to its preferences. The Torah also ranks its members
by the standards that it holds dear. A higher soul is one that is awake,
in continuous communion, and always chooses the most spiritually productive
option; a lower soul is ignorant of spiritual truths and wallows in the
entangling repercussions of wrong action. This hierarchy of spiritual
status marks a descending flow of enlightenment. Each person receives
teachings from the level above and passes them on to the level below.
Everyone is a student to those above, and a teacher to those below.
This linear world, with its multitude of intersecting hierarchies creates
an encompassing network of incentives (both positive and negative) that
motivate the resource demanding labor of self-improvement. Hierarchy of
status defines a pecking order that keeps everyone striving to keep up
with the Jones. People occupying higher ranks become role models
that inspire others to invest the effort required to obtain similar success.
The whole point of the era of hierarchy is to create a context of values,
inducements, constraints, and coercions that press out the full potential
of each soul down to its last drop. Its straight line presents a clear
direction of growth and compelling enforcements to assure forward motion.
Eventually, and hopefully quite soon, we will complete this consuming
labor of self-development. All potential will be actualized, all impurities
cleansed, all deprivations enriched, and all ignorance eliminated. At
that point hierarchy will cease for it will have grown obsolete. Its whole
point was to instigate the grueling work of self-actualization and to
establish clear lines of authority to facilitate the downward flow of
teachings. Its worldview, though built on a shaky foundation of relative
truths, was (and is) remarkably successful in achieving its goals. But,
explains R. Epstein, its days are numbered, its truths will pass, and
a new and more rectified order of consciousness will reign, called the
circle world.
Just as a circle has no beginning or end and every point is equidistant
from its center, so is this true for souls. Truly, it is impossible to
rank them, for each is the most beloved in the scale of values that is
its perfected virtue.
Each creature will eventually attain its full potential and shine with
the unique revelation of Divine beauty that only it can manifest. The
spiritual bliss of the world to come is the intensely abiding joy of finally
becoming who you are. When that happens the distorting veneer of hierarchy
will melt away and, behold, we will find ourselves standing in a circle
with HaShem at its center, and we will dance together in holy celebration.
In the future the Holy One will make a circle dance for the tsadikim.
He will seat Himself among them in the Garden of Eden and each one of
the tsadikim will point with his finger and say, "This is our G-d
for whom we have waited, that He might save us. This is the Lord for whom
we hoped, we will be glad and rejoice in His salvation ."
In the circle world, it will be gloriously clear that every soul is equally
precious and singularly beautiful in a way that cannot be ranked. Similarly,
it will not anymore be possible to look to ones neighbors for guidance
in serving G-d, for each person has a unique soul-specialty, and in that
area they are the worlds foremost expert. There is nowhere to look
for instruction except straight from HaShem, who metaphorically sits at
the circles center, equidistant from all its holy points.
On that eternal day, everyone will be satiated with knowledge of G-d to
the fullest capacity of their joy and all hierarchies of status will dissolve.
In wonderment they will discover that on the scale of enlightenment all
have become equal.
The paradigm shift goes deeper still, for R. Epstein explains that the
conventions of gender in kabbala echo the physical differences between
men and women. Bestowal is a masculine role; receiving is a feminine one.
Consequently, in the linear scheme, the teacher is masculine in relation
to the student who is influenced by him. In the circle world these hierarchical
rankings between human beings will end, for no one will receive spiritual
guidance from neighbors, spouses or even teachers. All will turn straight
to the Holy One for inspiration, and on that day, says R. Epstein, all
power disparities will cease, including the archetypal source of them
all, the hierarchy of gender, with its asymmetrical distribution of authority
and dependency.
All this Miryam knew and intended when she led the women in their circle
dance. Miryam drew the future into the present, initiating the Jewish
nation into the secret truth, promise, and yearning of the circle world:
The day will come, blessed and welcomed by all, when power disparities
will cease and perfect equality reign, when every soul will shine with
its glory, and all will become the most dearly beloved of their Creator....
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