Messianism in the Christian Kabbalah of Johann Kemper
Elliot R. Wolfson,
New York University
A number of scholars have duly noted the complex and fascinating spiritual
odyssey of Moses ben Aaron of Cracow who became Johann Kemper of Uppsala.
Kemper's conversion to Christianity from Judaism would have been interesting
enough, but what adds to this intrigue is the fact that all of his
compositions, which are written in Hebrew, demonstrate beyond any doubt that he
possessed complete mastery over traditional Jewish learning of both an exoteric
and an esoteric nature. Indeed, the primary goal of Kemper's treatises was to
establish the truths of Christianity on the basis of the Jewish sources,
including most importantly the classical work of kabbalah, the Zohar. With
respect to this effort Kemper shared the basic strategy that was adopted by the
Christian kabbalists of Renaissance Italy. Following the pioneering research of
Chaim Wirszubski, we may distinguish two patterns of Christian kabbalah: the
utilization of the older Jewish esoteric teachings to confirm the truths
articulated by Christianity, and the Christianizing application of kabbalistic
methods of interpretation to construct new ideas and symbols. It seems to me,
however, that, in the final analysis, the latter pattern is a species of the
former, and thus we can speak of the one overall agenda that informs the
Christian kabbalah. Indeed, it is necessary to contextualize the latter in the
larger development of the Christian attempt to appropriate Judaism, which can
be charted in three distinct stages: The first (evident already in the New
Testament and the Patristic writings) is restricted to the use of Hebrew
Scripture to prove the truths of Christianity; the second (which becomes
prominent in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries due to the increase in the
phenomenon of Jewish apostasy) is focused on the use of the Talmud to achieve
this end; and the third (which is a central component of the fifteenth and
sixteenth centuries, although it may have an earlier manifestation attested in
the High Middle Ages) relates to the use of the kabbalah as confirmation of the
Christological presuppositions. Response 1
In a fundamental way, however, Kemper is different from the notable
Christian Hebraists who availed themselves of the esoteric lore of the kabbalah
such as Johannes Reuchlin and Giovanni Pico della Mirandola. Kemper's rabbinic
background imposed upon him the need to preserve the nomian framework of the
kabbalah even as he sought to undermine that framework by proving the truths of
Christianity on the basis of the traditional texts. The literary works composed
by Kemper display an astonishing blend of rabbinic halakhah and Christian
spirituality, and the bridge that links the two spheres of religious discourse
is the kabbalistic symbolism derived primarily from the zoharic corpus. With
great exegetical ease and remarkable flights of speculative fancy, Kemper
reinterprets the halakhah through the lens of the kabbalah in a Christological
light. The intricate weaving of these different strands is reflected in
Kemper's somewhat unusual messianic stance as well. According to Kemper, the
esoteric import of Christian messianism cannot be fully appreciated unless one
has a grasp on the history of rabbinic culture as expressed particularly in the
mystical tradition. Beyond trying to persuade Jews of the truths of
Christianity, Kemper is implicitly privileging one whose religious path mirrors
his own. His works, therefore, can be seen not only as an ongoing attempt at
self-legitimization, but as a more subtle affirmation of the Jewish orientation
regarding the innate superiority of the Jew as the real Israel who possesses
the knowledge of the truth.
Many examples could be adduced to illustrate the claim that I have made, but
for the purposes of this study it will be sufficient to provide one that deals
with an issue that divided the religious orientation of Jews and Christians
from very early on in their complex mutual histories, the rite of bodily
circumcision. In a passage from Beriah ha-Tikhon, which is the second
part of the massive commentary on the Zohar that is called Matteh Mosheh
or
Maqqel Ya`aqov, Kemper interprets the zoharic explication of the rite of
circumcision. The thrust of the original passage in the Zohar is that
circumcision entails the inscription of the Tetragrammaton as the sign of the
covenant upon the flesh of the Jewish male, which corresponds to the phallic
gradation of the divine, the attribute of Yesod. The zoharic authorship
speaks as well of the supernal waters flowing down upon the sign of the
covenant, which justifies the attribution of the term living soul
(nefesh hayyah) to the baby who has been circumcised. Additionally, a
connection is made between that sign and the foreskin, on the one hand, and the
distinction between pure and impure animals that Israel can or cannot eat, on
the other. That is to say, the foreskin corresponds to the demonic potency,
which is related to the impure animals, and the sign that is manifest after the
removal of the foreskin corresponds to the divine potency, which is related to
the pure animals.
Kemper elaborates in a Christological manner on these themes and notes that
the supernal waters mentioned in the Zohar refer to the waters of baptism,
which are the primary means through which one gains access to God. Echoing an
archaic theme of Jewish esotericism, Kemper relates that circumcision is the
inscribed letter or sign (`ot rashum, which is the Hebrew translation of
the zoharic rendering of the biblical `ot berit, the sign of the
covenant, as `ot rashima'), which is related to the
Tetragrammaton. This inscription is characterized further as the sign of
truth (`ot `emet), an inner, spiritual sign (`ot
penimi ruhani) that replaces the circumcision of the flesh (milat
ha-basar). I note, parenthetically, that from other passages in his
compositions it is evident that Kemper identified the biblical notion of the
sign, such as the rainbow revealed to Noah or the head and arm phylacteries, as
the Messiah. Analogously, the sign of circumcision inscribed on the flesh
alludes symbolically to the messianic figure, an allusion that is transferred
to the rite of baptism, the circumcision of the spirit that displaces that of
the flesh. As a result of the baptismal immersion, therefore, the person is
truly called the living soul. Moreover, Kemper notes that when the
carnal sign of circumcision is removed, the distinction between Israel and the
nations with respect to prohibited and permitted animals will be abrogated
since that distinction first arose as a result of the sign of circumcision.
Needless to say, the notion that circumcision of the flesh will be nullified is
not apparent in the zoharic text, but Kemper presents this Christological
position as if it were the standard kabbalistic teaching.
What is so remarkable is that Kemper exegetically relates the overcoming of
Jewish ritual to the presentation of that ritual in the symbolic language of
the kabbalah. Thus, Kemper focuses on the custom mentioned in the Zohar
regarding the throne of Elijah that is set up at the ceremony of the rite of
circumcision. In spite of the fact that this was a widespread Jewish practice
in his day, Kemper laments that the deranged Jews (ha-yehudim
metorafei da`at) do not discern that by way of the secret
(`al derekh sod) Elijah alludes to the messiah, for he is the Lord
the righteous one, the archon of peace, the angel of
the covenant, who established and fulfilled the covenant that God made
with Adam regarding the seed of woman trampling the head of the serpent. The
force of Kemper's logic is that the Jewish ritual, particularly as it appears
in the kabbalistic tradition, reflects the Christological truth that the Jews
reject. The Jewish people, therefore, preserve a religious custom whose meaning
escapes them. The argument comes full circle when Kemper writes: Know
that Elijah numerically is fifty-two (bn), which refers to the son
(öb), that is, the son of God. But the Jews do not understand, and
they do not want to know such matters. In a similar vein in Matteh
Mosheh, Kemper interprets the nexus between the Tetragrammaton,
circumcision, and cleaving to the divine attribute called saddiq (the righteous
one) in the Zohar, as a clear indication that the kabbalah affirms that the
ultimate purpose of circumcision is to facilitate the act of conjunction with
God. Through a clever exegetical move, related especially to the verse
And your people, all of them righteous, shall possess the land for all
time; they are the shoot that I planted, my handiwork in which I glory
(Isa. 60:21), Kemper concludes that righteousness is linked to Christ (based on
the play of words between neser and nosri). Hence, the mystical
rationale for circumcision is to occasion the union of the soul with Jesus, the
everlasting sign of the covenant that bears the ineffable name.
The specific example of circumcision is illustrative of the more general
position that Kemper takes with regard to the status of normative Jewish law.
That is, Kemper offers a symbolic interpretation of biblical rituals, even
though he accepts the standard Christian critique of the law (traceable to
Paul) and urges his Jewish readers to recognize that it has been surpassed. In
his own language from another passage in the aforementioned composition:
Thus is the essence of the rationale for the ritual commandments that
have been abrogated and nullified in the New Testament inasmuch as all of them
were merely an image (defus) and a shadow (sel) of that which was
to come. Kemper's main effort is to remove the stumbling-block that
prevents Jews from believing in the truths of the New Testament, which he
thinks is related to the implicit antinomiamism of the Christian viewpoint. The
polemical strategy that he adopts to convince the Jews is to argue that the
commandments possess an enduring spiritual value but that their practical
application is limited to a specific time in history. The awareness that the
commandments are to be interpreted typologically would facilitate the
acceptance of the New Testament on the basis of the simple logic that if the
rituals are merely an image of the true form, then once one possesses the
latter the former is no longer necessary. In order to make this argument
cogently, however, it is necessary for Kemper to extol the symbolic virtue of
the commandments. Only one with intimate knowledge of the rabbinic tradition
could mount such an argument with rhetorical success.
Indeed, to the best of my knowledge, this form of argumentation is not
characteristic of the Christian kabbalists; it is distinctive to a figure like
Kemper who was capable of living with one foot in both worlds. Even other
Jewish apostates who utilized kabbalistic symbolism to advocate on behalf of
Christianity, such as Ludovico Carretto, do not exemplify this tendency. The
polemical tool employed by Kemper may be stated in the following way: the
subversion of the tradition was possible only by recapitulating the tradition.
This posture is exemplified, for instance, in Kemper's comment in another
passage in Beriah ha-Tikhon that all those who believe in Jesus are
called Israel (yisra'el), the just ones (ha-yesharim) who believe
and have faith in the just God (`el yashar), and He brought these ones
out from the iron furnace, the side of impurity, and they ascended to the Son,
which is the Shekhinah. This is alluded to in the commandments of circumcision
and the paschal sacrifice. The true nature of Israel -- what it means
to be a Jew in the spiritual as opposed to carnal sense -- is linked to the
belief in the just God, that is, Jesus, who is also identified with the
kabbalistic symbol of the Shekhinah, for the letters of the word larcy
are transposed into the expression rvy la. Appropriating the Johannine
tradition, moreover, Kemper explicitly identifies the Messiah as the Torah or
the Word, the mystery of the bread of the New Testament. Kemper
extends this older notion and links Jesus symbolically to the holiday of
Pentecost, the fiftieth day after Passover, which in the rabbinic imagination
celebrates the giving of Torah at Sinai. Having identified Jesus in this
manner, Kemper is able to apply the kabbalistic interpretation of Pentecost to
the Messiah. That is, according to the standard symbolism affirmed in works of
theosophic kabbalah, Pentecost is identified with the third of the ten
gradations, which is called most frequently Binah, the attribute of
God's understanding. This gradation, moreover, is depicted by the symbol of the
mother. The identification of Jesus and the Torah, and the further linkage of
the Torah and Pentecost, facilitates the correlation of Jesus and Pentecost,
which is interpreted in light of the kabbalistic association of Pentecost and
Binah, which is characterized as the divine mother. The merging of the
kabbalistic and the Christological symbols thus leads Kemper to a fascinating
application of the female image of motherhood to Jesus. Response 2
In several contexts, Kemper reiterates and explains this symbolism in
slightly different terms: Jesus is identified as Wisdom or the Word, which is
related to the second rather than the third of the ten sefirot, and by
virtue of this function Jesus produces and sustains everything that is created
in the manner of a mother that gives birth and nourishes the infant. For our
purposes it is not necessary to attempt a resolution of these ostensibly
conflicting explanations. What is far more important to the discussion of
Kemper's hybrid of kabbalistic and Christological messianism is the fact that
the adaptation of the kabbalistic symbolism facilitates the application of
feminine images to Jesus, a position that is reflected as well in the
identification of Jesus as the Shekhinah, as we have already noted in passing.
For Kemper the ascription of the feminine symbols to Jesus is of supreme
theological significance insofar as it articulates in a metaphorical way the
foundational tenet of Christian faith, the belief in the incarnation of the
divine in the flesh of a mortal human being. The point is underscored in the
following passage in Matteh Mosheh wherein Kemper remarks that the
characterization of Jesus as the son must be complemented by that of the
daughter:
Son and daughter are mentioned with respect to that
supernal gradation. He is called son when he sits to the right of
the Father. [The Lord established his throne in heaven,] and his
sovereign rule is over all (Ps. 103:19), before him every knee
shall bow down (Isa. 45:23), and then he is the son that inherits the
property of his father. ... Do not be astonished by the fact that he is
contained in the name mother and that of the son, for
with respect to the ten sefirot as well he is comprised in the right
side and that of the left, Hokhmah on the right and Binah on the
left. He is called daughter when he descends to the earth,
impoverished and riding a donkey (Zech. 9:9)... then his power is
weakened like a female, and with regard to this aspect it is possible to apply
to him the name daughter, that is, the daughter does not inherit in
the place of the son. ... For that very reason he is called as well Ze`eir
`Anpin, for he diminished and lowered himself to bear the sufferings on
behalf of human beings to atone for their sins.
The key to this unique turn in the path of Kemper's thought is the awareness
that the kabbalah preserves a foundational truth about the Christian faith. The
appropriation of the archetypal symbols of mother and daughter from the
language of the kabbalah to depict Jesus is based ultimately on the ancient
belief regarding the nature of the Messiah as the incarnation of the Torah. The
mystery of Jesus assuming bodily form for the sake of atoning for human
transgressions is framed more specifically in terms of the technical
terminology of the kabbalah that is related to the feminine attributes of the
divine. Most interestingly, Kemper interprets the zoharic idiom, Ze`eir
`Anpin, literally, the small face (qesar `appayim), as
referring to the feminine aspect of Jesus, for in his view this expression
denotes the diminishing of his stature by entering the corporeal world, which
is set against the exalted state when he is enthroned to the right of God in
the heavenly abode. The upper status of divine wisdom, therefore, is related to
the metaphorical image of the son occupying a throne alongside the throne of
glory, whereas the lower status is expressed by the image of the daughter.
Elsewhere in Matteh Mosheh Kemper attributes the title Ze`eir
`Anpin to Metatron on account of the fact that he diminished
himself. Response 3
To appreciate this comment it is necessary to bear in mind that Kemper
repeatedly notes in his compositions that Metatron is identified as Jesus
(indeed, the third part of Matteh Mosheh is called sha`ar
metatron). This identification stems from the fact that in the kabbalistic
texts themselves Metatron is characterized both as the glory of God and as the
highest angel. This dual role is appropriated by Kemper to express an ancient
belief in Christianity regarding the status of Jesus as the glorified angel,
that is, the angel that is the divine glory. From the Christological vantage
point this implies that the glory is embodied in the form of an angel that is
manifest in the physical world. The technical designation of God as Ze`eir
`Anpin is another way of conveying this basic idea. What is of most
interest to point out is that in recent years it has been suggested that
originally the symbol of Ze`eir `Anpin in kabbalistic sources from the
period of the Zohar (late-thirteenth and early-fourteenth centuries) did indeed
refer to the feminine Shekhinah, which was contrasted with the masculine
potency designated as `Arikh `Anpin, the long face. It
appears that Kemper's Christological orientation led him to recover what may
have been the original intent of this symbolic locution.
The specifically rabbinic character of the tradition regarding the
incarnation of Jesus is highlighted in another passage wherein Kemper
demonstrates his astonishing exegetical prowess by interpreting the biblical
notion of the two loaves of bread connected to sacrifices as a reference to the
rabbinic dual Torah: the Written Torah refers to the Old Testament and the Oral
Torah to the New Testament. Such a symbolic interpretation would have been
unthinkable for the standard exponents of the Christian kabbalah. Only one who
had lived within the nomian framework of halakhah could identify the
foundational text of rabbinic law, the Oral Torah, as the New Testament, which,
in Kemper's own view, espouses a decidedly antimonian perspective. The
dialectical relationship that pertains between the two poles is such that one
cannot speak meaningfully of the one without the other. The New Testament
represents the departure from the law of the Old Testament, but this departure
is itself encoded in the symbolic identification of the New Testament as the
Oral Torah of the rabbinic tradition. The paradox of this identification
entails the recognition that breaking away from the law in the most complete
sense is the means to fulfill it.
The antinomianism is related more specifically to his understanding of the
universal and spiritual nature of the messianic redemption, which he also
deduces on the basis of an intimate knowledge of rabbinic and kabbalistic
sources. Thus, for example, in Beriah ha-Tikhon, Kemper interprets the
zoharic claim that on the feast of Tabernacles the Messiah will come, alluded
to in the biblical name hag ha-'asif, the festival of
gathering, in terms of the rabbinic tradition that during this festival
the goodness of God overflows to all the nations. Kemper links this notion to
the baptismal formula adopted by Paul, There is neither Jew nor Greek,
there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are
all one in Christ Jesus (Gal. 3:28). Kemper interprets the zoharic
reworking of the rabbinic motif as an allusion to the eschatological
soteriology of Paul, the universal application of messianic salvation to the
point that there is a breakdown of cultural, socioeconomic, and gender
binaries. Again we see the complex exegetical strategy that marks his way of
thinking: the nomian impulse of the rabbinic tradition, which ostensibly is at
odds with the antimonian tendency of Christological messianism, is turned
against itself to yield its very opposite. The key to this hermeneutical
inversion is the reading of the rabbinic texts through the filter of the
hypernomianism of the kabbalistic symbolism. The symbolic explanation of the
Jewish liturgical cycle that Kemper deduces from the Zohar allows him to assert
that the Sabbath and all of the festivals allude to Jesus. The complexity of
his position should be readily apparent: the messianic truth of Jesus is
encoded typologically in Jewish law. Kemper's kabbalistic understanding of
Christian typology is such, however, that it is not necessary for one to
abrogate the law in order to express that truth. By fulfilling the halakhah
with the proper kabbalistic intention one can live a faithful Christian
life.
The point is well illustrated in another passage wherein Kemper sets out to
interpret the custom recorded in the Zohar, which can be traced to the German
Pietists, regarding gazing at one's shadow on leil ha-hotam, the eve of
Hoshanah Rabbah on which one's fate for the upcoming year is sealed. Kemper
relates that in his time there were Jews who mistakenly interpreted the meaning
of the zoharic text in terms of a folkloristic practice of looking at one's
shadow by the light of the moon. The correct explanation of the custom recorded
in the Zohar involves the recognition that the shadow refers to Jesus, who is
the image of the Father. The superstition that Kemper attributes to the Jews,
which is the historically and philologically correct explanation of the custom,
is rejected in favor of the Christological interpretation, which is presented
as the true meaning of the zoharic passage.
The extent to which Kemper reinterpreted the kabbalistic tradition in light
of his Christian messianism is evident from his remark in Matteh Mosheh
concerning the custom to say for the sake of the unification of the
Qadosh barukh hu' and his Shekhinah, which was instituted by
kabbalists in the sixteenth century. According to Kemper, this formula
comprises all of the threefold unity (shilush ha-yihud) ... the
Qadosh barukh hu' refers to the Father ... and in the expression `his
Shekhinah' they comprehended the Son and the Holy Spirit, for both of them are
comprised in the word Shekhinah. It would be ludicrous, of course, to
assume that Kemper imagined that the Jews who utilized this liturgical formula
actually understood it in the Christological way that he proposes. What is
essential is his opinion that the symbolic meaning of this formula relates to
the Christian belief in the unity of the threefold hypostases of the divine.
Unwittingly, therefore, the Jews affirm the fundamental dogma of the Christian
faith each time they utter this kabbalistic introduction prior to saying a
blessing or performing a ritual action. Halakhic observance is thereby
transformed into an act of giving witness to the truth of the Trinity.
Needless to say, according to Kemper, the Jews are ignorant of the
Christological essence of their ritual practices. On occasion Kemper even
employs a rabbinic text in his effort to discredit the Jews of his time, as we
find, for example, in the following passage that concludes a discussion of the
essential connection between the Shekhinah and the community of Israel, which
is clearly based on the kabbalistic perspective: However, the Shekhinah
has departed from the Jews in this time in accordance with their dictum in the
Talmud, The Shekhinah journeyed ten times, and hence neither the
name Israel nor the community of Israel applies to
them, and they `are like the beasts that perish' (Ps. 49:13), they have
eyes, but cannot see (ibid., 115:5), and they do not pay heed to discern
words of the tradition (divrei qabbalah) like these with a balanced mind
and on a just scale (lishqol be-shiqqul ha-da`at u-ve-kaf mo`znei
sedeq), but rather they grope like a blind person in a chimney. In
the course of his writings, Kemper provides specific examples of Jewish ritual
that demonstrates both the implict mystical (i.e., Christological) meaning of
the rituals and the ignorance of Jews regarding the spiritual intent of their
own tradition. Thus, in the section on the trinity (sha`ar ha-shilush)
in his Matteh Mosheh, Kemper elaborates on a number of Jewish customs
that allude symbolically to the trinitarian belief. In that context, he
addresses the larger hermeneutical question that we have been pondering:
The matter is that their mentioning of the three patriarchs [in
the standing prayer of eighteen benedictions] instructs about the Trinity
(shilush), and the fact that they end [the blessing magen
`avraham] by referring to one [patriarch, i.e., Abraham] instructs about
the unity (yihud). Do not wonder at the fact that I presented to you in
this place that one may find in their prayers many secrets. ... He who has a
brain in his head will conclude that the patriarchs point to the Trinity, and
by way of this deception they denied and contradicted all belief in the
Trinity, and Satan assisted them in this matter, until the point that the
wisdom of kabbalah was also lost. But know that even today they have very
ancient and just customs that instruct about the Trinity, but they cover their
faces with a mask. Rabbinic ritual, especially when it is
refracted through the prism of kabbalah, attests to the elemental truths of
Christianity. Thus, in another passage from Beriah ha-Tikhon, Kemper
relates that the Jews have an ancient custom of eating a meal on Saturday
night, which they call the melawweh malkkah, that is, to escort
the Sabbath that is departing from them. Kemper then relates that the
eating of this meal alludes to the rabbinic tradition regarding the bone that
will survive whence the body will be reconstructed in the eschatological
future. From his perspective the Jewish practice of eating this meal is indeed
precious, for it alludes to the bread that is the body of the
Messiah, which is the just Sabbath in which all of the believers shall take
rest. He is the master of Sabbath and when it departs he shall give bread to
those who believe in him, for they are his bride and he is the bridegroom, the
bridegroom of blood (Exod. 4:25-26), for he gave his blood on
behalf of his bride. ... You can find this custom in a book that is called
Tiqqun Shabbat Malkhata', but the Jews presently destroy the custom and
this tradition (qabbalah) as is their destructive way. The Jewish
ritual symbolically comprises the Christological truth and thus it points
beyond itself. The Jews are unaware of the spiritual depth of their own
actions, but there is always the potential that they shall discern the
messianic impulse that lies beneath the external layer of their tradition. Response 4
Kemper's theoretical position naturally reflects the split consciousness of
his own existential situation. He cannot divest himself completely of his
rabbinic upbringing even though he is a fully committed Christian. On the
contrary, the veracity of his Christian affiliation is confirmed most precisely
by the rabbinic and kabbalistic sources. Another fascinating example of the
spiritual pull inside Kemper's heart is found in his explanation in Matteh
Mosheh of the custom mentioned in the Zohar of shortening the letter
`alef in the utterance of the word `ehad, one, in the
recitation of the liturgical affirmation of the monotheistic faith, shema`
yisra'el yhwh `elohenu yhwh `ehad, Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God
the Lord is one (Deut. 6:4). The Pharasaic/rabbinic tradition
(transmitted in the name of Aqiva) to elongate the word `ehad is
presented by Kemper as a response to a Jewish-Christian practice, which alludes
to the mystery of the diminution of Jesus. Even in this case where the rabbinic
custom is set in opposition to an alleged Christian practice, Kemper relies on
Jewish texts to establish the facticity of the latter. The zoharic text serves
as the pretext to establish a supposedly original context to account for this
liturgical gesture. When viewed from that vantage point it is clear that this
example, like countless others that could have been provided, illustrates the
point that, according to Kemper, the halakhah itself contains symbolic
references to the basic tenets of the Christian faith, although it often takes
the spiritualized reading of the Zohar to cast light on the messianic potential
of Jewish ritual. The dissemination of this belief represents the distinctive
element of Kemper's messianic teaching.
It is with respect to this orientation, moreover, that Kemper's Sabbatian
background becomes crucial. Various scholars have noted this connection and,
most recently, Kemper has been described as a disciple of the Sabbatian
prophet, Zadoq of Grodno who appeared between 1694-1696. The precise historical
and literary connections are of less importance to me than the general impact
that this relationship had on Kemper's attitude toward the messianic
potentiality of traditional Jewish law when interpreted kabbalistically. On an
historical note, however, it is important to remark that in Matteh
Mosheh Kemper relates that in 1695 there was a messianic upheaval in the
Jewish community. He writes: What a great confusion there was amongst the
Jews. They emptied their homes and sold everything... they prepared and
established the way to go up by foot with the Messiah to Jerusalem with
security and trust. There was one particular person in Vilna whose name was R.
Zadoq, and he was the principal and chief cause for this confusion.
Although Kemper does not make this connection explicitly, one may conjecture
that the messianic disappointment occasioned by this event in 1695 may have
served as a catalyst for his conversion to Christianity one year later. The
path of Sabbatian messianism apparently led to a dead-end for Kemper -- yet
another false start, but it did open up a new path for him expressed in his
embrace of the Christian faith. One may conjecture that the decision to convert
allowed Kemper to preserve the religious impulse of Sabbatianism while still
moving beyond the spiritual gridlock that he may have felt by remaining an
observant Jew. Response 5
Contrary to the general attitude adopted by many scholars, antinomianism of
an absolute and unqualified sense is not characteristic of either Sabbatai Sevi
or most of his followers. Even those who accepted the breaking of normative
halakhah as an expression of their messianic belief, the break with tradition
was not viewed as unconditional and permanent. The example of the
Dšnmeh is the exception to the rule, although the portrait
offered by scholars turns the exception into the rule. The antinomianism
exemplified by the pseudo-Messiah and his adherents is a form of
hypernomianism, which should be contrasted with the metanomianism that
characterized the attitude of St. Paul in relation to Pharisaic Judaism. To be
sure, in the writings of the Sabbatians themselves there is much debate
concerning the question of the temporary or permanent abolition of traditional
religious laws and customs. One thing, however, that the extreme and moderate
Sabbatians shared in common was the view that antinomian acts, the ma`asim
zarim, are endowed with religious significance, for they are dialectically
related to the halakhic tradition. That is, breaking the law is for the sake of
fulfilling it. Indeed, the literary evidence suggests that even after the
apostasy Sabbatai Sevi himself continued to live a conflicted life,
manifesting, as Scholem put it, double-faced behavior as a Jew and a
Muslim. One is here reminded of what may be called the Marrano
complex, a spiritual affinity that was already noted by Abraham Cardoso,
who wrote in one of his letters: In the future the King messiah will don
the garments of a Marrano, and on account of that the Jews will not recognize
him. In short, in the future he will be a Marrano like me. Indeed, the
dissemination of the paradoxical ideology of Sabbatianism can only be
understood in light of a widespread spiritual disposition in communities of the
Sephardi Diaspora brought on by the duplicity that was essential to the Marrano
existence, Jew on the inside and Christian on the outside.
Notwithstanding the logical and historical reasonableness of this claim, it
must be pointed out that the dialectical relationship of antinomianism and
traditional observance in Sabbatian ideology strikes an even more paradoxical
chord than the Marrano situation as well as the general antagonism toward
Jewish law that lies at the heart of Pauline Christianity. For Sabbatai Sevi
and his supporters, acts of breaking the law were considered themselves
religious rites. The point was well understood and succinctly expressed by
Scholem whose words unfortunately have not been well heeded by subsequent
scholars: And this and nothing else is the true heritage of Sabbatai
Zevi: the quasi-sacramental character of antinomian actions, which here always
take the form of a ritual, remained a shibboleth of the movement, not least in
its more radical offshoots. ... The performance of such acts is a rite, a
festive action of an individual or a whole group, something out of the
ordinary, greatly disturbing and born from the deep stirring of emotional
forces. Perhaps even more paradoxical than the notion of the holy sinner
is the idea of cultic sinning, which in some cases even involved uttering a
blessing or a liturgical formula before a transgression was committed. In
Sabbatian ideology, the overturning of Jewish ritual is itself a ritualistic
performance, and thus transgressing the Torah yielded the invention of new
forms of ceremonial behavior. From the perspective of Sabbatian messianism,
then, redemption does not imply the complete abrogation of the halakhah. On the
contrary, redemption is predicated on keeping the faith, which involves
fulfilling the will of God through the commandments, even if that may entail an
action that ostensibly appears to be an abolition of the law. To put the matter
somewhat differently, the dialectic of Sabbatian spirituality is based a
reversal of the Aristotelian principle of non-contradiction, that is, a thing
is both itself and its opposite. This logic of the paradox is highlighted by
the identification of the holy messiah with the impure serpent, which is
expressed through the numerical equivalence of the two relevant Hebrew terms
jyvm and vjn (both equal 358). How could the identity of
opposites be expressed more powerfully? When this is applied to the question of
ritual action, then we can conclude that transgression is the ultimate
fulfillment of the law. The acceptance of this dialectic should mitigate
against the notion of the definitive abrogation of the law and the unqualified
departure from the nomian framework. To obliterate the halakhic world entirely
would be to erase the very context that affords one an opportunity to realize
the paradox of messianic spirituality.
It is precisely this dialectic that best captures Kemper's approach. On the
surface his goal was to convince both Jews and Christians that classical
rabbinic and kabbalistic literature contain allusions to the secrets of
Christianity, the recognition of which necessitates on the part of Jews the
acceptance of the messianic claims of Christianity and the concomitant
rejection of the legalism and ceremonial formalism of the Jewish traditions.
Beyond this aim, however, is another one that is somewhat more subtle and
daring: the nomian tradition itself preserves hints that point toward the
truths of the Christian faith. Ostensibly, the latter surpasses the former, but
from the esoteric perspective, which is provided by the kabbalah in particular,
even the halakhah comprises the mysteries of Christianity. Kemper's messianic
calling is related to the task of exposing these elements of Judaism. Response 6
Kemper expressed his messianic role particularly through a commentary on the
Zohar by rendering explicit the Christological secrets he thought were encoded
in that text. Indeed, from Kemper's vantage point, since the Zohar was written
several years after the crucifixion of Jesus, for political reasons it was
necessary for Christological matters to be written in that work in an esoteric
manner (be-lashon nistar). In another context, Kemper cites and analyzes
one of the more overt messianic passages in the Zohar, which offers a detailed
account of the advent of the Messiah in the Galilee. In the course of his
analysis, which includes a comparison of the zoharic text to parallel accounts
in the New Testament, Kemper notes that this section was undoubtedly one of the
ancient writings that made its way into the zoharic text, which he
describes as a book assembled from the manuscripts of R. Simeon ben
Yohai. Even before the incarnation of the Messiah (hitgashmut
ha-mashiah), therefore, the Jews had a tradition about the messianic age
related to astrological phenomena and the sign of the covenant in the form of
the rainbow. On several occasions wherein he discerns references to Jesus,
Kemper states that had the Pharisees read the words of the Zohar they would not
have persecuted Jesus. The essential point from my perspective is that these
examples (and others that I could have cited) demonstrate that Kemper viewed
the zoharic anthology as a repository of messianic secrets that were
deliberately concealed on account of their Christological orientation. On
occasion he extends this viewpoint to the unusual legends (haggadot
meshunot) in the Talmud: the intention of the rabbis in these seemingly
bizarre aggadic passages was to relate in a concealed manner truths about
Jesus. If one does not embrace this hermeneutical principle, then the language
of these texts would appear to be ridiculous. Kemper's own messianic role was
to expose these very secrets, to reverse the code of esotericism, as it were,
by uncovering what he considered to be the true messianic intent of the aggadic
and kabbalistic symbolism. The exegetical process itself, therefore, is imbued
with messianic significance. In spite of his conversion to Christianity and the
apparent repudiation of Judaism, in his mode of argumentation, Kemper remained
faithful to his rabbinic training, for the most meaningful way that he
expressed his Christian faith was through textual interpretation. In
particular, the hermeneutical act of disclosing the mysteries hidden beneath
the surface of the Zohar is for him the true sign of messianic conviction and
the primary means by which one attains the ultimate salvation of mind and body.
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