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FUNCTION The function of the ''Tzimtzum'' was "to conceal from created beings the activating force within them, enabling them to exist as tangible entities, instead of being utterly nullified within their source" {Link without Title} . The ''tzimtzum'' produced the required "vacated space" (''chalal panui'' חלל פנוי, ''chalal'' חלל), devoid of direct awareness of God's presence. Because the ''Tzimtzum'' results in the conceptual "space" in which the physical Universe and Free Will can exist, God is often referred to as " Ha-Makom " (המקום lit. "the place", "the omnipresent") in Rabbinic Literature . Relatedly, ''olam'' - the Hebrew word for "world" or universe - is derived from the Root Word עלם meaning "concealment". This Etymology is Complement ary with the concept of ''Tzimtzum'', in that the Physical universe conceals the Spiritual nature of creation. INHERENT PARADOX ? Some kabbalists have understood and taught that the concept of ''Tzimtzum'' contains a built-in Paradox , requiring that God be simultaneously Transcendent and Immanent .
In a well known articulation, Rabbi Nachman Of Breslav discusses the inherent paradox as follows: This paradox is strengthened by reference to the closely related doctrine of Divine Simplicity , which holds that God is absolutely simple, containing no element of form or structure whatever. This gives rise to two difficulties. Firstly, according to this doctrine, it is impossible for God to shrink or expand (physically or metaphorically) - an obvious contradiction to the above. Secondly, according to this doctrine, if God's creative will is present, then He must be present in total - whereas the ''Tzimtzum'', on the other hand, results in, and requires, a "partial Presence" as above. The paradox has an additional aspect, in that the ''Tzimtzum'' results in a perception of the world being imperfect despite God's omniperfect Presence being everywhere. As a result, some Kabbalists saw the ''Tzimtzum'' as a cosmic illusion. In Chabad Chassidism, however, the tzimtzum is not only seen as being a real process--and not an illusion--it is also seen as a doctrine that every person is able, and indeed required, to understand and meditate upon, as will be explained in the next paragraph. A CHASSIDIC EXPLANATION Chassidus offers the Analogy of a person and his speech to shed light on the concept of Tzimtzum. (The source of this analogy is essentially Genesis Chapter 1, where God "spoke" to create heaven and earth.) In order to communicate, a person must put aside all that he knows, all his experiences, and all that he is, and say only one thing ("the contraction"). This is especially the case when we speak of an educator, whose level of mind and understanding is almost completely removed and incomparable to his student, that has to "find" an idea that is simple enough to convey to the student. However, when he goes through this process and now is choosing to express himself through this particular utterance, he has not in any way lost or forgotten all the knowledge of who he really is ("thus the contraction is not a literal contraction"). (Furthermore, the one who hears his words also has the full revelation of who that person is when he hears those words, though he may not realize it. If the listener understood the language and was sensitive enough, he would be able to pull out from those words everything there is to know about the person (incidentally, this is the theory behind Handwriting Analysis ).) So too, God chose to express Himself through this world with all of its limitations. However, this does not mean, as Pantheism posits, that God is limited to this particular form, or that God has "forgotten" all He can do. He still "remembers what He really is", meaning that He remains always in His infinite essence, but is choosing to reveal only this particular aspect of Himself. The act of Tzimtzum is thus how God "puts aside" His infinite light, and allows for an "empty space", void of any indication of the Divine Presence. He then can reveal a limited finite aspect of his light (namely our imperfect, finite reality). (As clarified before, if man were spiritually sensitive enough, we would be able to see how God is truly giving us a full revelation of His infinite self through the medium of this world. To a listener who does not understand the language being spoken, the letters are "empty" of any revelation of the person. In the analogue this means that the world looks to us to be "empty" of Godly revelation. Kaballah and Chassidus, however, teaches one how to meditate in order to be able to understand God's "language" so that one can see the Godly revelation in every aspect of creation.) Therefore, no paradox exists. The finite Godly light that is immanent within the universe, constantly creating and vivifying it, is only a "faint glimmer of a glimmer of a glimmer" (''. ISBN 0-8266-5496-7.) SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS AND REFERENCES
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