Mikhael at Mcgill writes:
Dear Rabbi,
In the Bible we are told that man was created in G-d's image, but in the prayer "Yigdal" we sing: "He has no semblance of a body nor is He corporeal". Which one is right?
Dear Mikhael,
Let's start with the second idea, that G-d is not physical. The prayer Yigdal is actually a poetic rendering of Maimonides' Thirteen Principles of Faith. In principle number three, Maimonides states:
"The third principle is the negation of any physical characteristics from Him. We are to believe that this above mentioned one being is neither a body nor potentially of a body and cannot be conceived of as having the attributes of a body such as movement, resting,..anything mentioned in scriptures that describes him in physical terms such as walking, standing,..all of these are metaphors..."
That means that when the Bible tells us that G-d took us out of Egypt with an outstretched arm there wasn't really an outstretched arm, but the sensation of G-d's might and protection as we watched him deal with our enemies. So if that's the case what do we mean when we say that man was created in G-d's image?
In the first creation chapter we read: "G-d said, 'Let us make man with our image and likeness.'" The Hebrew words used are "Tzelem" and "Dmut." Both of these words are carefully scrutinized by the commentaries. Essentially they all agree that these terms describe a metaphysical similarity. Some point to man's Free Will as the specific xlikeness. The kabbalists have mapped out a spiritual mechanism for G-d's interaction with the physical creation using man as the archetype. One thing is clear after even a cursory study of what the commentaries have to say, Man does not have a physical counterpart in G-d.
Sources:
Questions are welcomed from ALL readers at ALL levels for inclusion in the Ask the Rabbi column. Questions of interest to our general readership may be answered in this column; for those of a more personal nature, we will try to answer personally via e-mail.
To submit a question, address it to:
ohr@jer1.co.il
to insure correct handling, set the subject to "ASK THE RABBI"
To subscribe to ASK THE RABBI, send the message:
sub ask {firstname} {lastname}
to listproc@jer1.co.il
Ohr Somayach Institutions is proud to present:
THE SEARCH FOR TRUTH
by Rabbi Dr. Dovid Gottlieb
These files are available on the Jerualem1 Gopher under the heading "Religious Institutions" and the sub-heading "Ohr Somayach"
CompuServe users can also download these lectures from the CIS Religion Forum, Judaism Library (3, under the file name TRUTH.ZIP, and under the names TRUTH1.txt through TRUTH8.txt
Ohr Somayach produces three lists:
weekly summary of the parshas hashavua
parasha-qa questions and answers to the parshas hashavua
ask Ask the Rabbi Column
To subscribe to any of these lists, send the message:
subscribe {listname} {firstname} {lastname}
to: listproc@jer1.co.il
To unsubscribe, send the same message, but with the word "unsubscribe"
This address is only for SUBSCRIPTIONS. If you have any comments, questions and suggestions, we'd love to hear them. Send them to:
ohr@jer1.co.il
Compuserve Members: You MUST preface all addresses with INTERNET:
The Jewish Learning Exchange (JLE) of Ohr Somayach offers summer and winter programs in Israel that attract hundreds of university students from around the world for 3 to 8 weeks of study and touring.
Ohr Somayach's Web site is hosted by Virtual Jerusalem