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Can Someone Be Cut Off From G‑d?


Question:

I’m wondering about the punishment called karet—spiritual excision from G‑d. If G‑d is everywhere, how can someone be completely cut off from Him? Can you repent after getting karet? Where can I learn more about this?

Answer:

A soul functions on several planes: one that is affected by karet, and another that is not. Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, author of Tanya, describes the makeup of the soul (and karet) in his work, Igeret HaTeshuvah, chapters 5 and 6. You can read his explanation in the original text here.

Rabbi Schneur Zalman draws on a biblical verse for an analogy for the soul: “Jacob is the portion of His inheritance” (Deuteronomy 32:9). The Hebrew word used here for “portion,” chevel, literally means “rope.” Our souls are like ropes made of 613 strands. As a rope connects the two objects at each end, the higher end of our souls are bound to G‑d and the lower end to our physical bodies, thus connecting them.

Each strand on the rope that is your soul corresponds to one of the 613 mitzvahs. When you fulfill that commandment, that aspect of your soul and its G‑dly connection are strengthened. When you transgress, that strand is severed. But you’re still connected to G‑d by 612 other strands, and when you repent of that sin, that particular thread is retied to form a new, stronger connection.

Have you ever taken a trip in a hot-air balloon? Imagine you’re high in the air in a basket kept peacefully afloat by an inflated balloon. Your balloon is fastened to your basket with 613 cords. Even if a cord comes undone, you’ve still got the other ropes holding things together while you repair the knot. But your calm coasting is rudely cut short by a chopper moving straight at your balloon. He misses the basket by an inch, and snaps every cord in one stroke. Your basket is cut off and hurtles towards the ground.

That’s karet. Certain transgressions cut not only one strand, but all 613 at once. The rope is severed; the soul is cut off from G‑d. The story should end there, because once that basket is detached from the balloon, there’s no recovery.

But here the metaphor breaks down. The basket and balloon can be permanently detached, because they’re two distinct objects connected by an external force, the ropes that bind them. When the ropes snap, nothing else holds the balloon and basket together. Souls, though, are not separate entities from G‑d; they are sparks of His own Being. G‑d and the soul are intrinsically one, with a unity deeper and more profound than actions can ever touch. Our innate bond with G‑d exists where the mitzvahs you do or don’t do don’t matter, so karet—the result of a sin—can’t affect it either.

That's why a person who incurs karet can still repent, even though his link to G‑d is broken. Because at a more intrinsic level, he still is connected. He’s always been connected.

When the Redemption arrives, our G‑dly connection will become apparent. We are promised that no Jew will be permanently estranged from G‑d. One way or another, we will all return, and the ropes will be retied.

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By Malkie Janowski   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Nov 22, 2011
How deep, this LOVE! my answer:
My answer is, NO. It is NOT possible. We may feel deeply estranged, may not recognize the Divine Force within and without, but we CANNOT ever be separate. Why? Because we are all of us part of that greater WHOLE, and the WHOLE is GREATER than the sum of its parts. We are all of us connected just as connective tissue binds parts of our bodies. It's all about deep echoic connectivity. Echod. Within the ECHOD, that echo of ONE.

My deepest, most fervent wish, is to be allowed to LOVE G_d totally independently, with all my heart, with all my soul, and with all my might. I know this cannot be, and yet, I wish for it. Why cannot be? Because I am part of what is Divine. You are part of what is, Divine. Don't you know? It's ALL G_d.

To "divine this" is to go to another place, yet never leave this place. All aspects of PARDES are about truth, about a deep beauty of such apperception of what is Divine, within us all. To travel through inner space is as deep a journey as outer space.
Posted By ruth housman, marshfield hills, ma

Posted: Nov 22, 2011
Continuation of Metaphor
B"H
Much like how when it's severed, the basket (our body) may fall (die) but the balloon (soul) will keep rising to its source (Hash-m) By the soul returning it goes through an incredible "cleansing process" in purgatory which only lasts 12 months (Why we say Kaddish) although it may seem longer to that soul, it is this cleansing that will always restore our connection with Hash-m in order that it can be sent down again to fulfill all 613 mitzvot to speedily bring Moshiach's Arrival!
Posted By Devorah M.

Posted: Nov 21, 2011
What does then KARET really mean?
According to your explanation Karet is meaningless. ..
Could you cite examples in The Text of the Tanach, or Talmud where this would be further clarified?
Posted By rivka , NYC, USA

Posted: Nov 21, 2011
"...permanently estranged from G‑d..."
Concerning: "When the Redemption arrives, our G‑dly connection will become apparent. We are promised that no Jew will be permanently estranged from G‑d. One way or another, we will all return, and the ropes will be retied."...what about the Gentiles?
Posted By Mr. Jeff Huddleston

Posted: Nov 21, 2011
where is it written?
Other readers have commented on the comment "We are promised that no Jew will be permanently estranged from G‑d"
However I know of no such passage in Torah? and what of gentiles? or netzarims? or conversions?
I see no moderator comments, this would be a useful feature!
Shalom
Posted By phoenixeagle, Munich, Germany

Posted: Sep 2, 2011
Where is this written?
"We are promised that no Jew will be permanently estranged from G‑d. One way or another, we will all return, and the ropes will be retied."
I had wondered about the gatherer of fire wood on Shabbot in Numbers; and the midrash that he is Zelophehad. Good, if that were so, because it is established that because he died in his own sin (and therefore presumably not with the Korach rebellion), his name would be carried into ha'aretz Yisrael, through his daughters. But, alas, I went back and carefully read the wood gatherer's story, and it says "kerat"! Is CUT OFF being CUT OFF, or not? Who among us has not committed innumerable keratable offenses? Perhaps our hope is that either we die the instant after Yom Kippur, or more likely, the fact that sin will be punished in the second and third generations BUT goodness unto the thousandth. ?
Posted By Brian S, Simsbury, CT

Posted: Dec 12, 2010
karet
wow....that's so awesome.....I am again so grateful for my faith!!!
Posted By chanah, jersey city, nj

Posted: Nov 12, 2010
I don't think everyone who feels distant from G-d is suffering karet. Sometimes other things bring us away from Him.
Posted By Anonymous, Brooklyn, ny

Posted: Nov 12, 2010
In G-d's eyes we're never cut off. But in our eyes, sometimes we are.
Posted By andy, slc, ut

Posted: Nov 12, 2010
Nice article, good metahpors - I'm still confused.
What are the certain transgressions that go too far?

Does the basket represent the Animal Soul part of which has a spiritual aspect/component or does the basket represent the G-dly Soul? What aspect or attribute of the Animal or G-dly Soul are being um 'metaphored'? Hey, I think I just created a new word.
Posted By Anonymous, Portland



 


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