Zohar 1:1 - Rabbi Hizkiah opened his discourse with the text: As
a lily among thorns, etc. (Song of Songs 2:2). What, he said, does the
lily symbolise? It symbolises the Community of Israel. As the lily among thorns is tinged
with red and white, so the Community of Israel is visited now with justice and now with
mercy; as the lily possesses thirteen leaves, so the Community of Israel is vouchsafed
thirteen categories of mercy which surround it on every side. For this reason, the term
Elohim (God) mentioned here (in the first verse of Genesis) is separated by thirteen words
from the next mention of Elohim, symbolising the thirteen categories of mercy which
surround the Community of Israel to protect it. The second mention of Elohim is separated
from the third by five words, representing the five strong leaves that surround the lily,
symbolic of the five ways of salvation which are the five gates. This is
alluded to in the verse I will lift up the cup of salvation (Psalms 116:13).
This is the cup of benediction,which has to be raised by five fingers and no
more, after the model of the lily, which rests on five strong leaves in the shape of five
fingers. Thus the lily is a symbol of the cup of benediction. Immediately after the third
mention of Elohim appears the light which, so soon as created, was treasured up and
enclosed in that b'rith (covenant) which entered the lily and fructified it, and this is
what is called tree bearing fruit wherein is the seed thereof: and this seed
is preserved in the very sign of the covenant. And as the ideal covenant was formed
through forty-two copulations, so the engraven ineffable name is formed of the forty-two
letters of the work of creation. |