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"All of Israel have a portion in the World to Come, as it is stated (Isaiah 60:21), 'And your people are all righteous; they shall inherit the land forever..."—Mishnah, Sanhedrin 10:1.
Our service of G‑d in this world is rewarded in two ways: a) After a soul departs its body it is rewarded for all the good it did in Gan Eden ("Paradise"), the supernal world wherein souls are treated to spiritual delights that the physical mind cannot begin to comprehend or appreciate. b) The ultimate reward, the Messianic Era, the "World to Come," when all souls will descend once again into the bodies they once inhabited, and all mankind will live together in harmony in a utopian age.
The soul of every Jew is a "veritable portion of G‑d," and as such is eternal and indestructibleNot all souls have an equal share in Gan Eden; the more righteous the person was in this world, the more sublime its soul's abode and the greater its reward in the next world. In rare instances, certain souls do not earn any share in Gan Eden at all. The World to Come, however, is different. Every Jewish soul that ever lived will be resurrected.
The two reasons why every soul will be resurrected:
- "Even the empty ones amongst you [Israel] are filled with mitzvot as a pomegranate [is filled with seeds]"—Talmud, Berachot 57a.
- The soul of every Jew is a "veritable portion of G‑d," and as such is eternal and indestructible.
Our Sages, in fact, have enumerated several egregious sins which can cause a person to lose their portion in the World to Come (in the final chapter of Tractate Sanhedrin), yet, the Rebbe explains, this does not contradict the aforementioned principle that all will be resurrected:
- An individual who does teshuvah (repentance) reclaims his portion in the World to Come, no matter the gravity of the sins he may have committed. This is true even if the individual only did teshuvah in his heart and the regret did not impact his future behavior.
- The prayers, charity, and mitzvot performed by progeny have the ability to earn for the undeserving antecedents a portion in the World to Come. To a lesser degree, the good deeds of non-relatives done on behalf of a deceased individual can also benefit the soul.
- If the person suffers indignities after his death, this too, can atone for his sins, and gain him a share in the World to Come. For example, the Talmud says that King Jeroboam, a brazen idolater who incited the population to follow his G‑dless ways, and certainly deserved to be excluded from the World to Come, will nevertheless arise when the time of resurrection arrives. Why? Because many years after he died his remains were ignominiously burned in fire.
- Those few (if any) whom are not covered by any of these possibilities will still arise—but in a different body.
Reincarnated Souls
According to mystical tradition, a soul can be reincarnated in many bodies. In fact, nowadays it is exceptionally rare for a "new" soul to be born. This raises the obvious question: which of its bodies will the soul occupy when it is resurrected?
Which of its bodies will the soul occupy when it is resurrected?First, though, we need to explain why souls are reincarnated.
Every soul has to complete all of the 613 commandments in order to elevate and rectify all its 613 spiritual components. A soul is reincarnated when it did not accomplish all of its obligations during its stay in a specific body. The soul must descend once again to finish the task.
Every body which was inhabited by the soul assisted the soul in the fulfillment of its mission. Those components of the soul which were rectified through the mitzvot fulfilled by a particular body always maintain a connection with that body, and will return to that body to revive it with the Resurrection of the Dead. In short, this means that souls will be divided into different bodies.
Every individual soul is a reflection of its infinite source, G‑d Himself, and thus has the ability to vivify any number of bodies.
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There are indeed ancient sources that teach that non-Jews will be resurrected as well.
For example, Abarbanel, writes that resurrection will apply to all of mankind. He notes two purposes in this: (1) It would be unfair to all the others if only those who had the good fortune to be alive at that time would be privileged to enjoy the benefits of the Redemption. Therefore all the dead will be resurrected - the righteous to enjoy the benefits they merited, and others in order to witness their own ultimate downfall. (2) The nations then to be resurrected will realize the folly of their beliefs and will acknowledge G-d's sovereignty, in the spirit of the prophecy that appears in Zephaniah 3:9: "For I shall then make the nations pure of speech, so that they will all call upon the Name of G-d and serve Him with one purpose."
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I did not see any mention about the non-Jews. They will not resurrect too?
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Indeed, the Talmud (Sanhedrin 108a) cites an opinion regarding the generation that perished in the Desert that they have no portion in the World to Come. Yet, the Talmud immediately follows that with another opinion, that of Rabbi Eliezer, that that generation will indeed arise at the time of the resurrection, in fact, he applies to then the verse in Psalms (50:5), "Gather to Me My devoted ones, who made a covenant with Me over a sacrifice”!
And the Midrash Rabbah (Deuteronomy 2:9) relates the following: G-d told Moses: "I can forgive you [for the sin of striking the rock] and allow you to enter the Promised Land now, but if I do, the generation which you led, upon whom it has been decreed that they will die in the desert before entering the Land, will not merit to the Resurrection and the World to Come. If you stay here with them, they too will be ingathered along with their leader."
Faced with this decision, Moses, who while alive dedicated his entire being to his people, chose to dedicate himself to the people in his death as well.
This is with regards to that particular generation. It is true, however, that there are other statements of our Sages that imply regarding certain specific individuals, or types of people, that they will not merit being resurrected. The Rebbe, in a lengthy and scholarly letter (published in the first volume of Igrot Kodesh, letter 85), quotes many other sources from where it is clear that every Jew that ever lived will, indeed be resurrected—and brilliantly explains all the other sources that imply otherwise.
I advise you to study that letter—it is a real treat. For an English translation of the letter, go to http://www.sichosinenglish.org/books/letters-rebbe-1/46.htm.
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doesn't the talmud mention certain generations, like the generation of the desert, which will not have a portion in the world to come??
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If each soul is divided up into different bodies, what happens to my soul as it is invested in the body I am liing in at this moment. I think of all that as "me" so will i be divided up into different parts ? So does what I think of as "me" disappear? Or am I in this body already divided up with just part of my soul in this body? If so will all of us ever be "one" again? If so, will "I" be just a toenail on a body with the whole soul or will I still be myself with my own thoughts and abilities to move around at my own direction and my own will? Or will I be subsumed into a larger soul?
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For the source, see Igros Kodesh of the Rebbe, vol. 2 pg. 92-93.
The distribution is not even, it depends on how much that particular body accomplished.
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What is the source for this paragraph: "Every body which was inhabited by the soul assisted the soul in the fulfillment of its mission. Those components of the soul which were rectified through the mitzvot fulfilled by a particular body always maintain a connection with that body, and will return to that body to revive it with the Resurrection of the Dead. In short, this means that souls will be divided into different bodies." Specifically the sentence saying that the souls will be divided into different bodies. Also, is it an even distribution of the soul or does it depend on which body fulfilled the most obligations and therefore gets more soul?
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How do souls return to bodies that have returned to dust?????
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"Just as a person goes, so he will return. If he died blind, deaf or mute, he will return blind, deaf or mute. As he goes clothed, he will return clothed.1 G‑d said, 'let them rise as they went—and afterwards I will heal them'"—Midrash Rabbah, Genesis 95.
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Rabbi Naftali Silberberg resides in Brooklyn, NY, with his wife Chaya Mushka and their three children.
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