Rachel Elior
The Foundations of Early Jewish Mysticism:
The Lost Calendar and the Transformed Heavenly
Chariot
The milestones marking the historical development of Jewish mysticism were delineated in the fourth decade of the 20th century by Gershom Scholem. In the
chapter "Merkabah Mysticism and Jewish Gnosticism" of his groundbreaking
book Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism (New York 1941), Scholem outlined the
first stage of these literary phenomena pertaining to the early centuries of the first
millennium of the Common Era. Twenty years later, in a book devoted to the
Merkabah tradition entitled Jewish Gnosticism, Merkabah Mysticism, and Talmudic Tradition (New York 1960), Scholem explored the historical connections
between the second century Sages R. Akiva and R. Ishmael, who were alleged to
have authored the Merkabah and Heikhalot literature1, and their contemporary
counterparts who appeared in the Mishnah and the Talmud. Until this point,
Scholem considered the Heikhalot and Merkabah literatures, texts pertaining to
the heavenly sanctuaries and the angelic world that were written in the period of
the Mishnah and the Talmud, to be the first stage in the history of Jewish mysticism. However, in the second edition of Jewish Gnosticism, Merkabah Mysticism
and Talmudic Tradition, published in 1965, Scholem added a perceptive remark
relating to the newly discovered ancient Hebrew and Aramaic scrolls, written on
parchment and stored in clay jars, that had been found between 1947 and 1956 in
caves of the Judean Desert. These texts, which were part of a huge ancient library
that included only sacred literature, later became known as the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Scholem was referring to the previously unknown Merkabah texts found among
1 The early printed editions of the Hebrew and Aramaic texts of the Heikhalot (Heavenly
Sanctuaries) and Merkabah (Chariot, as in Ezekiel's Chariot Vision in the first chapter of
Ezekiel) literature were discussed in the chapter mentioned above in: G. Scholem,
Major
Trends in Jewish Mysticism (New York 1941) 40-75, 426-427 and in the introductory
chapter of: idem, Jewish Gnosticism, Merkabah Mysticism, and Talmudic Tradition (Jewish
Theological Seminary of America, New York 1960). The texts of the Heikhalot and Merkabah tradition were edited synoptically forty years later in: P. Schäfer, M. Schlüter
and H. G.
von Mutius (eds.), Synopse zur Hekhalot-Literatur (TSAJ 2, Tiibingen 1981); P.
Schäfer,
Geniza-Fragmente zur Hekhalot-Literatur (TSAJ 6, Tübingen 1984).
2
Rachel Elior
the Dead Sea Scrolls, which were published in 1960 by John Strugnell as "The Angelic Liturgy at Qumran-4Q Serek Shirot Olat haShabat"2 and which later were
identified by Carol Newsom as Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice in the first critical
edition of the angelic liturgy 3 . Scholem stated: "These fragments [of Serek Shirot
Olat haShabat] leave no doubt that there is a connection between the oldest Hebrew Merkabah texts preserved in Qumran and the subsequent development of
Merkabah mysticism as preserved in the Hekhalot texts." 4 Notably, Scholem, in
this short sentence, did not elaborate on the identity of the writers, or on their
provenance, but referred only to the writings and their historical and literary context.
Now, forty years later, with the publication of an entire library of these finds
from the Judean Desert and with a more comprehensive context of these writings
available, I would like to reflect on the historical implications of Scholem's remark. Furthermore, I will attempt to elaborate on the connection between the earliest Merkabah traditions and the angelic liturgy that were set down before the
Common Era as found in Qumran and the later Merkabah tradition and angelic
hymns that have been deemed to form the early stages of Jewish Mysticism after
the Common Era. Naturally, the diversity of the Qumran discoveries and the
great number of writings of various kinds that constitute this library and the textual and editorial diversity of Heikhalot literature challenge any simple overview
and raise many questions with no simple answers. However, that being noted, I
would argue that there are notable conceptual connections between these two
literary corpuses that reflect a common world-view mirrored in various expressions.
There are four Hebrew concepts pertaining to the early stages of Jewish mystical writings: Merkabah (Chariot of the Cherubim) 5 , Heikhalot (Heavenly Sanctu-
2 ]. Strugnell,
The Angelic Liturgy at Qumran-4Q Serek Sirot Olat Hassabat, in: Congress
Volume: Oxford, 1959 (Vetus Testamentum Supplements 7, Leiden 1959-60) 318-345.
3 C. Newsom,
Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice: A Critical Edition (Harvard Semitic Studies 27,
Atlanta 1985).
4 G. Scholem,
Jewish Gnosticism, Merkabah Mysticism, and Talmudic Tradition (JTS, New
York 2 1965) 128.
5 See: I Chronicles 28:18; cf. Exodus 25:18-20, 37:7-8; I Kings 6:23-28, 8:7; II Chronicles
3:10-14, 5:7-8; Ezekiel 10:2-19. The spelling of this word is variable and it is written in English transliteration as merkabah
or merkavah.
On the transformation of the Biblical concept
in Heikhalot literature see G. Scholem, Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism (New York 1967)
40-79; J. Maier, Vom Kultus zur Gnosis (Kairos Religionswissenschaftliche Studien 1,
Salzburg 1964); D. ]. Halperin, The Faces of the Chariot: Early Jewish Responses to Ezekiel's
Vision (TSAJ 16, Tübingen 1988); P. Schäfer, The Hidden and Manifest God: Some Major
Themes in Early Jewish Mysticism (Albany 1992) 193, Index, entry Merkavah; R. Elior,
From Earthly Temple to Heavenly Shrines: Prayer and Sacred Song in the Hekhalot Literature and Its Relation to Temple Traditions, in: JSQ 4 (1997) 217-67; eadem, The Three
Temples: On the Emergence of Jewish Mysticism (Oxford 2004) Index, entry Merkavah.
The Foundations of Early Jewish Mysticism
aries) 6 , Sabbath Sacrifice (Olat haShabbat)7,
3
and Songs (Shir-Shirot) 8 . T h e most
striking c o m m o n denominator which can be formulated between these concepts
is constituted by their appearance in the Biblical literature wherein they are all
connected to the sacred space and t o the cycles of the sacred ritual: to the Tabernacle (Lev. 2 5 : 1 8 - 2 7 ) , to the Temple, heikhal,
where the cherubim stood (I Kings
6 : 2 4 - 2 7 ; I Chr. 28:18), to the heavenly paradigms of the cherubim in the earthly
sanctuary ( E x . 25:9, 1 7 - 2 2 , 40; I Chr. 2 8 : 1 8 - 1 9 ) , to their mystical transformation
(Ezek. 1, 10), and to the cycles of divine worship and sacred song that were performed in the Temple by priests and Levites (Ps. 92:1; I Chr. 6:17; II Chr. 7:6). N o tably, the majority of the references to these concepts in Biblical literature are to
be found in priestly sources, in those chapters which refer directly to Temple w o r ship o r to the mystical prophetic m e m o r y of the First Temple after its destruction
(e.g. E z e k . 1, 10). Mysticism in the present context refers t o literary traditions
which assume the everlasting existence of transcendental heavenly counterparts of
the ritual world of the Temple and the Levitical priesthood. Scholars have discussed the transformations of Heikhal,
Merkabah,
Cherubim,
Shir and Shirot into
the mystical tradition after the destruction of the Second Temple in different perspectives with regard to the Heikhalot literature 9 , but their conceptual origins in
6 See the singular form of the holy Sanctuary, Heikhal,
as the common name of the Jerusalem
Temple: I Samuel 3:3; I Kings 6:5, 33; I Kings 7:50; Isaiah 6:1; Jeremiah 7:4; Ezekiel 41:1, 21,
25; Zechariah 8:9; Nehemiah 6:10; Ezra 4:1; Psalms 5:8, 1:4,138:2, 144:12; II Chronicles 4:22;
Daniel 5:2-3; Ezra 5:14, 6:5. The English transliteration of the Biblical word in singular and
plural forms could be hekhal/hekhalot
or heikha/heikhalot.
On its mystical transformation
in the plural form see P. Schäfer, Synopse zur Hekhalot-Literatur (note 1 above); idem, Konkordanz zur Hekhalot-Literatur, 2 vols. (TSAJ 12, 13, Tübingen 1986-88), see entries heikhal, heikhalot; cf. R. Elior, From Earthly Temple to Heavenly Shrines (note 5 above).
7 Ola is translated as holocaust or sacrifice offered in the Temple in permanent cycle; see
Numbers 28:10; II Chronicles 31:3. On the mystical transformation of the Sabbath sacrifice
see Newsom, Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice (note 3 above) 23-58; eadem, He Has Established
for Himself Priests: Human and Angelic Priesthood in the Qumran Sabbath Shirot, in: L. H.
Schiffman (ed.), Archeology and History in the Dead Sea Scrolls (JSP Supplement Series 8,
Sheffield 1990) 100-120;/. Maier, Shîrê 'Olat hash-Shabbat: some Observations on their Calendric Implications and on their Style, in: J. Trebola- Barrera and L. Vegas-Montaner (eds.),
The Madrid Qumran Congress, vol. II (Leiden 1992) 543-560;/. Davila, The Macrocosmic
Temple, Scriptural Exegesis and the Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice, in: Dead Sea Discoveries
9, 1 (2002) 1-19.
8 See Psalms 30:1, 46:1, 68:1, 92:1; I Chronicles 6:16, 25:6; II Chronicles 23:13. On the mystical transformation of the Songs, see C. Newsom, Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice (note 3
above) 23-39; R. Elior, From Earthly Temple to Heavenly Shrines (note 5 above);
C. Newsom, Merkabah Exegesis in the Qumran Sabbath Shirot, in: Journal of Jewish Studies
38, 1 (1987) 11-30; D. Dimant, Men as Angels: The Self Image of the Qumran Community,
in: Adele Berlin (ed.), Religion and Politics in the Ancient Near East (Bethesda 1996) 93-103.
9 I. Gruenwald,
The Place of Priestly Traditions in Consolidating Merkavah Mysticism, in:
Jerusalem Studies in Jewish Thought 6 (1987) 65-119 (Hebrew); R. Elior, The Priestly Nature
of the Mystical Heritage in Heykalot Literature, in: R. B. Fenton and R. Goetschel (eds.) Expérience et écriture mystiques dans les religions du livre: Actes d'un colloque international
tenu par le Centre d'études juives, Université de Paris IV-Sorbonne 1994 (Leiden 2000) 4 1 54.
4
Rachel Elior
the mystical literature written in the last centuries before the Common Era and the
overwhelming common concern on angelic priests, angelic liturgy and heavenly
sanctuaries, divine chariot and ritual calendar, were not sufficiently recognized.
In the following discussion I will argue that the mystical priestly literature before the Common Era was written as part of a bitter dispute concerning the legitimate priestly hierarchy and the conduct of the Temple service that took place in
the second century B C E , in the period of the Hellenized High Priests Jason,
Menelaus and Alkimos (175-159 B C E ) and throughout the Hasmonean period
(152-37 BCE). The dispute between the deposed priests from the House of Zadok
(those who had served exclusively in the Temple until 175 B C E ) and the illegitimate priests who took their place (the Hellenized priests and the Hasmonean
dynasty) is of primal importance among the factors that generated the writing of
the Merkabah literature that was found in Qumran. This priestly mystical literature of the last few centuries before the Common Era, mostly unknown until
1947, was found in many of the 950 scrolls of the Qumran library. The huge library which was concerned with an eternal angelic order pertaining to a ritual calendar and concentrated on eternal time cycles preserved by angelic liturgy, focused upon angelic ritual in seven heavenly sanctuaries and on the fourfold world
of the Divine Chariot. It affected later stages of early Jewish mysticism that became known as the tradition of Heikhalot and Merkabah in unknown ways.
Merkabah texts that were preserved in Qumran 10 are marked by three distinct
characteristics:
I.) The significant place this literature gives to texts which relate to the heavenly
chariot of the cherubim known from the vision of the Zadokite priest and prophet
Ezekiel is immediately apparent 11 . The different components of the priestlyprophetic vision that were defined in the Septuagint translation of Ezekiel in the
middle of the third or second century B C E as "the Vision of the Chariot" (Ezekiel
43:3) and described by the priest Yehoshua ben Sira as "Vision of the Chariot" in
his book that was written in the beginning of the second century B C E are all present 12 . The Qumran text of the vision of Ezekiel (chapter 1:4) relates a version that
reads: "nogah merkabah" 13 ("the radiance of the Chariot") whereas the traditional
Biblical reading has only "nogah" ("the radiance"), without the priestly keyword
1 0 See C. Newsom, B. Nitzan, E. Schuller et al. (eds.), Discoveries of the Judaean Desert XI:
Qumran Cave 4. VI: Poetical and Liturgical Texts (Oxford 1998), hereafter DJD; and note 13
below. Cf. F. Garcia Martinez and E.J. C. Tigchelaar (e ds.), The Dead Sea Scrolls Study Edition, 2 vols. (Leiden, New York, Koln 1997) 644-671,804-836,1016-1030,1212-1218. Other
Merkabah texts are found in DJD I - X X X I X (Oxford 1964-2002), now indexed in vol. 39.
11 See especially Ezekiel chapters 1,10 and 43:3 and D. J. Halperin, The Faces of the Chariot:
Early Jewish Responses to Ezekiel's Vision (note 5 above) 38-60.
12 On the Septuagint version for Ezekiel 43:3 see Halperin, The Faces of the Chariot 56-57.
On Ben Sira 49:11 see M. Z Segal, Sefer ben Sira ha-Shalem (The Complete Book of Ben Sira)
(Jerusalem 2 1958); Halperin, The Faces of the Chariot 48.
1 3 4Q385, frag. 4:5-6; DJD X X X , D. Dimant and J. Strugnell (eds.), Qumran Cave 4: Parabiblical texts, part 4; Pseudo-Prophetic Texts (Oxford 2001) 42.
The Foundations of Early Jewish Mysticism
5
Chariot that connects it to the Cherubim in the holy of holies in the Temple (I Chr.
28:18).
II.) The Merkabah texts are replete with angels and cherubim who are depicted
as primarily fulfilling a liturgical role in the heavenly sanctuaries. The angels are
blessing, singing, counting and serving in the seven heavenly sanctuaries in a perpetual manner of seven days cycle that strongly evokes the cycles of priestly ritual
responsibilities and liturgical tasks in the Temple 1 4 . A famous example from the
Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice that has been published and translated a number of
times in the last 45 years may illustrate the angelic ritual in the heavenly sanctuary:
" B y the Maskil (the Instructor): Song of the Sacrifice of the twelfth Sabbath
[on the twenty-first of the third month.
Praise the God o f . . . ] wondrous [appointed times?] and exalt him... the Glory in
the tabernacle of the G o d of knowledge.
The Cherubim fall before Him and bless.
They give blessing as they raise themselves:
The sound of divine stillness [is heard].
[ ] and there is a tumult of jubilation as they lift their wings.
A sound of divine stillness.
The pattern of the chariot-throne do they bless
Above the firmament of the Cherubim.
The splendor of the luminous firmament do they sing
Beneath His glorious seat.
When the ofanim (wheels) go, the angels of the holy place return
The spirits of the H o l y of Holies go forth
Like appearance of fire
From beneath his Glorious wheels [...]
The spirits of the living God that walks about perpetually
With the Glory of the wondrous chariots
There is a still sound of blessing in the tumult of their movement
And they praise the holy place as they turn back.
When they raise themselves, they raise wondrously
And when they return they stand still.
The joyful sound of singing falls silent
And there is a stillness of divine blessing
In all the camps of Godlike beings
And the sound of praises... from between all their divisions on thefir] si[des
And all their mastered troops rejoice
Each o[n]e in [his] stat[ion]." 1 5
14 C. Newsom, Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice (note 3 above) 23-39; R. Elior, The Three
Temples: On the Emergence of Jewish Mysticism (Oxford 2004) 165-200.
15 4Q405 20-21-22, lines 6-14, see Newsom, Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifices (note 3 above)
303-321 for the Hebrew text, discussion and translation. A later edition of the Songs was
published in volumes 11 of the DJD. I consulted the translations of D. J. Halperin, The Faces
of the Chariot 52, 524-525, as well as the translations of J. Strugnell (note 2 above) and L. H.
6
Rachel Elior
The details of this exceptional liturgical mystical text are far from being clear as
the syntax is most unusual and the vocabulary is unique. Scholars have debated on
the exact translation of different words since its first publication in 1960, but there
is common agreement that the text is concerned with angelic ritual in the heavenly
sanctuary which is described in relation to the tradition of the Chariot. It seems
that it is reflecting an angelic transformation or angelic paradigm of the twentyfour priestly courses that were in charge of guarding the sevenfold ritual cycles of
time and the fourfold cosmic divisions of eternal temporal order and the corresponding liturgical cycles in the H o l y of Holies in the Temple where the chariot of
the cherubim stood. The angelic watches are responsible for guarding and preserving all the eternal cosmic cycles and ritual divisions of time in the heavenly
sanctuaries and the world of the chariot, where the cherubim are eternal living
beings 16 .
III.) The Merkabah texts possess a marked calendrical structure: each one of the
thirteen Sabbath Songs that were found in the Dead Sea scrolls was designated to
be sung on one of the 13 Sabbaths that fall upon undeviating dates and position
within one of the four seasons according to the established priestly annual calendar of 52 Sabbaths 17 .
The priestly solar calendar of 364 days was brought from heaven by the seventh
patriarch Enoch. Enoch, son of Jared, the seventh antediluvian patriarch, is described in Gen. 5: 21-24 as being taken to heaven 18 , and in priestly literature as the
founder of the priesthood according to I Enoch and Jubilees 4:17-19 (that were
found in Qumran), and II Enoch (that was not found in Qumran but was known
from the Pseudepigrapha as pertaining to First Century Egyptian provenance of
Schiffman, Merkavah Speculation at Qumran: The 4QSerekh Shirot Olat Ha-Shabbat, in:
A J. Reinharz et al. (eds.), Mystics, Philosophers and Politics: Essays in Jewish Intellectual
History in H o n o r of Alexander Altmann (Durham 1982) 15—47 and J. Mayers, Shire Olat
hash-Shabbat: Some Observation on their Calendric Implications and on their Style (note 7
above) and amended the translation. The unique poetic Hebrew syntax of The Songs of the
Sabbath Sacrifice which has no textual precedence makes this text particularly hard for translation; other readings should be consulted as well.
16
The traditions of the calendar are reflected in I Enoch 82:13-152, Jubilees 6; DJD XI
4Q287 2:7-8 (note 10 above); and the opening of each one of the Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice offer many examples for this contention.
17
O n the central role of the 364 day calendar that is attested to in the angelic liturgy see
J. Maier, Shire Olat hash-Shabbat: Some Observation on their Calendric Implications and on
their Style (note 7 above); Newsom, Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice (note 3 above) 1-21. O n
this priestly calendar see: J. C. VanderKam, The Origin, Character and Early History of the
364 Day Calendar: A Reassessment of Jaubert's Hypotheses, in: Catholic Biblical Quarterly
41 (1979) 390-411; S. Talmon, The World of Qumran from Within: Collected Studies (Jerusalem 1989) 147-150, 273-300; R. Elior, The Three Temples (note 5 above) 44-62, 82-110.
18
O n Enoch son of Jared see ]. C. Greenfield and M. E. Stone, The Books of Enoch and the
Traditions of Enoch, in: N u m e n 26 (1979) 89-103; M. Knibb, The Ethiopic Book of Enoch:
A N e w Edition in the Light of the Aramaic Dead Sea Fragments, 2 vols. (Oxford 1978);
G. Nickelsburg, The Book of Enoch or 1 Enoch (Leiden 1985); J. C. VanderKam, Enoch:
A Man for All Generations (Columbia 1995); R. Elior, The Three Temples (note 5 above)
82-110.
The Foundations of Early Jewish Mysticism
7
priestly circles) 19 . The calendar was described in various methods. The calendar
was divided symmetrically into a year of four seasons, each possessing 91 days.
These were divided into 13 Sabbaths for each season. This calendar of fourfold
and sevenfold divisions (91x4 = 364; 1 3 x 7 x 4 = 364; 364:7 = 52) is described in
detail through various documents that were found among the Dead Sea Scrolls,
and while some had been known previously within the pseudepigraphic literature,
their priestly context went unrecognized. The details of the annually recurring
fourfold divisions of the seasons known as merkabot hashamaim "heavenly chariots" (I Enoch 75:3) and sevenfold calculations of the Sabbaths of weeks and Sabbaths of years known as Moadei Dror (appointed times of freedom) 20 are detailed
and explained in eight different texts found among the Dead Sea Scrolls. Some of
these texts were known previously and appeared in the Pseudepigraphic literature
as noted above while some are unique to the Qumran library. The calendar and its
different ritual and cosmic components are explained in I Enoch, chapters
72-82 21 ; in the Book of Jubilees, chapter 6 22 ; in the Temple Scroll 23 ; in the Scroll of
the Priestly Watches 24 ; at the conclusion of the Psalm Scroll that was found in
Qumran 25 ; in the Qumran version of Noah and the flood story 26 ; in the openings
of each one of the Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice and in the calendar appearing in
the opening verses of the priestly epistle Miqsat Maase
haTora27.
The great number and diversity of texts which reflect the priestly interest in the
364 day solar calendar or the 52 Sabbaths calendar points to the centrality of this
issue in the priestly consciousness. The calendar is probably the single most important component of the priestly tradition that was endangered and threatened
after 175 BCE; and it was the central issue of dispute that caused all this literature
to be dismissed and censured by later generations who changed the solar calendar
into a lunar calendar and challenged the priestly order. Most likely the huge Qumran library was destined to oblivion on account of its devotion to the ancient
On Enoch's priestly role see Jubilees 4:25; I Enoch 108:1; II Enoch chapters 13-14; 16,18,
19-23. (J.H. Cbarlesworth
[ed.], The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, 2 vols. [New York
1983-1985] vol. 1, 91-222).
20 4Q286 frag. 1, ii:8—12; DJD XI (note 10 above) 12.
21 J. H. Cbarlesworth,
Pseudepigrapha, vol. 1 (note 19 above) 50-61. The versions of the
book of Enoch in Qumran 4Q208-209 are edited in DJD XXXVI, Qumran Cave 4 V 26,
Cryptic Texts and Miscellanea, Part 1 (Oxford 2000) 3-191.
22 J. C. VanderKam,
The Book of Jubilees, 2 vols. (CSCO 510-11, Scriptores Aethiopici 8788, Lovanii 1989) chapter 6; J. H. Cbarlesworth
(ed.), The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha
(note 19 above) vol. II, 67-69.
23 Y. Yadirt (ed.), The Temple Scroll (Jerusalem 1983).
24 S. Talmon, J. Ben Dov and U. Glessmer
(eds.), DJD XXI: Qumran Cave 4, XVI: Calendrical Texts (Oxford 2001).
25 J.A. Sanders (ed.), DJDIV: The Psalms Scroll of Qumran Cave 11 (llQPs) (Oxford 1965)
48.
26 G. Brook et al. (eds.), 4Q252, col. II frags. 1, 3:1-5; 3: 1-3, DJD XXII: Qumran Cave 4,
XVII: Parabiblical Texts, part 3 (Oxford 1996) 198, 235.
27 E. Qimron, ]. Strugnell
et al. (eds.), DJD X: Qumran Cave 4, V: Miqsat Maase Ha-Torah
(Oxford 1994) 6-7.
19
8
Rachel Elior
priestly calendar that was a nonnegotiable issue for its founders who maintained
that time is holy and its sacred divisions, which were revealed and imparted from
heaven and entrusted to angels and priests, could not be changed by humans. The
impressions of this dispute on the structure of the calendar and the appointed
times of the Lord would be addressed later in history as part of the controversies
on hegemony between bnei zadok (zdokim) and the Sages (prushim) or between
Sadducees and Pharisees. However, the various sources that portray this dispute
rarely reflect the priestly point of view expressed so strongly in the Dead Sea
Scrolls. The priestly solar calendar was founded on the assumption that time is divine and its sacred eternal divisions had been decreed in heaven. Its heavenly seasonal divisions (4) and weekly Sabbath divisions (52) were eternal, predetermined,
pre-calculated, and preserved by angelic watches (Jubilees 2:17-29; 6). These divisions and calculations were considered to have been conferred from heaven by the
angels to Enoch. The calendar was taught again after the course of 49 Jubilees
(after 49 reoccurrences of the passage of 49 years) to Moses, son of Amram from
the tribe of Levi, who was instructed in all the details of its calculations on Mount
Sinai by the Angel of the Presence 28 . The calendar was taught to Moses as Torah
veteu 'da (angelic testimony on the calendar) after he had received the Torah vehamitzva (Divine testimony on the law) 29 . The holy annual divisions of the calendar
formed the very foundation of the worship 30 . Its cycles were kept eternally in
heaven by the angels, and were maintained on earth in the Temple by the priests
and the High Priests from the tribe of Levi and the family of Zadok 31 . The
heavenly time integrated a fourfold annual division based on solar observations,
seasonal changes pertaining to the vernal and autumnal equinoxes, the summer
and winter solstices (four seasons tekufot) and a sevenfold division of the appointed times specified by God: moadim, the 7 appointed holidays of the Lord
(Lev. 23); the 52 Sabbaths as well as the seventh year Shemitab (year of fallow) and
Cf. J. C. VanderKam, The Angel of the Presence in the Book of Jubilees, in: Dead Sea
Discoveries 7, 3 (2000) 378-393.
2 9 The revelation to Moses is described in the opening of Jubilees, see/. C. VanderKam,
The
Book of Jubilees (note 22 above) 87-88; O. S. Wintermute,
Jubilees, in: J. H.
Charlesworth,
Pseudepigrapha vol. II (note 19 above) 35-53.
3 0 See:]. A. Sanders
(ed.), DJD IV: The Psalms Scroll of Qumran Cave 11 (llQPs) (Oxford
1965) 48; Elior, The Three Temples (note 5 above) 34-62.
31 According to priestly historiography the divine worship was directed by one priestly
dynasty for more than a thousand years (between the days of Aaron and his direct descendents Elazar, Pinhas, and Avishua who served in the desert tabernacle, their descendent
Zadok son of Ahituv the High Priest who officiated in the days of David and Solomon in the
time of the foundation of the First Temple, his direct descendents Bnei Zadok who served
until the destruction of the First Temple and members of his direct dynasty who served until
the year 175 BCE in the middle of the Second Temple period). One may argue about the
precision of the historical fact as far as chronology and genealogy, however, one can not deny
the importance and centrality of the consciousness of continuity of the dynasty of the high
priesthood in the Bible and in the Scrolls. For a critical appraisal see C. Werman, The Sons of
Zadok, in: The Dead Sea Scrolls: Fifty Years After their Discovery (Jerusalem 2000) 623-630
and cf. Elior, The Three Temples (note 5 above) 24-29, 165-200.
28
The Foundations of Early Jewish Mysticism
9
the seventh of seven of years or Jubilee. According to this calendar, as noted
above, each year possessed an unchanging and fixed n u m b e r of 364 days. The year
was divided into f o u r parallel seasons of 91 days, each one of the seasons included
13 Sabbaths spread over three months which were calculated mathematically as
counting consecutively 30, 30 and 31 days, each m o n t h starting respectively on
Wednesday, Friday or Sunday according to their order. Each one of the 13 Sabbaths in a quarter fell on a predetermined date, the first being the fourth day of the
first m o n t h (that starts always on Wednesday), the second Sabbath on the eleventh, the third Sabbath on the eighteenth, and the last one, the thirteenth Sabbath,
would always be on the twenty-eighth day of the third m o n t h (that will start always on Sunday). In this order each holiday has a permanent pre-calculated day
and date in the first seven months of the year that will never overlap with a Sabbath. The synchronization of the dates between the f o u r seasons (4x91), the
twelve months of thirty days and four intercalary days (12x30 + 4) and the fifty
two Sabbaths ( 4 x 1 3 x 7 ) in cycles of seven years, six years of service and one
Sabbatical year (shemitah) was vested in the hands of the 24 priestly Courses
(I C h r o n . 24) which were serving in the Temple in weekly cycles of watches
k n o w n as mishmeret hakodesh (holy watch). In a period of six years, each course
would serve thirteen times in a weekly order nominated according to the names of
the priestly course, as is demonstrated in the scrolls of the priestly courses found
in Q u m r a n 3 2 .
This eternal divine calendar formed the background and structure for the
priestly service in the Temple and was maintained by the 24 priestly watches or
priestly courses as recorded in the priestly historiography and mystical literature
found in Q u m r a n , ascribed by its authors to "the priests, the sons of Zadok, and
their allies" 33 . N u m e r o u s documents in the Q u m r a n library focus on the priestly
leadership of the community in relation to the Biblical order of religious leadership.
The Biblical tradition reserved the rights of the H i g h Priesthood for the
children of Moses' brother, Aaron (Lev. 10:12-13; I Chr. 23:13), and his descendants are the sole members of the 24 priestly courses responsible for the order of
the eternal calendar of divine worship. The priestly dynasty imparted f r o m Aaron
to his son Elazar, f r o m Elazar to his son Pinchas and continued, consecrated by
divine decree, f r o m father to a chosen son t h r o u g h o u t the course of the Biblical
32
See S. Talmon,J. Ben Dov, and U. Glessmer (eds.), DJD XXI: Qumran Cave 4, XVI: Calendrical Texts (Oxford 2001); S. Talmort, The World of Qumran from Within (note 17 above)
147-150, 273-300; S. Talmort and I. Knohl, A Calendrical Scroll from a Qumran Cave, in:
Pomegranates and Golden Bells: Studies in Biblical Jewish and Near Eastern Ritual, Law, and
Literature in Honor of Jacob Milgrom, David Wright, David Freedman, and Avi Hurvitz
(eds.) (Wynona Lake 1995) 267-302; Elior, The Three Temples (note 5 above) 42-43.
33
On the priests the sons of Zadok in the scrolls see Community Rule V, 2, 9; G. Vermes
(ed.), The Complete Dead Sea Scrolls in English (hereafter CDSSIE) (London 1997) 103-104;
Messianic Rule (lQ28a) I, 23-5, CDSSIE 158; Damascus Document III, 21-IV, 1; IV, 3-4,
CDSSIE 130; Florilegium (4Q174 116-18), CDSSIE 404.
10
Rachel Elior
collection 34 . The consecrated dynastic continuity relates to the genealogy of the
High Priesthood which was limited to one branch of the priestly dynasty, the direct descendants of Aaron. Since the days of David and Solomon, Zadok, son of
Ahituv (a direct descendant of Aaron), was the high priest, and his children, generation after generation, were described and identified as sons of Zadok who
served as High Priests in the Temple 35 . This dynastic line of priests, the sons of
Zadok, served exclusively according to the Biblical tradition and Ben Sira's testimony until the year 175 B C E when Antiochus IV, the Selucian emperor, conquered the Land of Israel and imposed a new calendar on his empire, the Selucian
lunar calendar 36 .
Onias III, serving as high priest at this time (II Mac. 3:1), rejected the royal imposition pertaining to the new lunar calendar order while his brother Jason conceded, deposed his brother, purchased the high priesthood from Antiochus 37 , and
instituted a new royal-priestly order. From this moment, the unity of holy time,
holy place, and holy service ended, the Biblical order and the priestly solar calendar ceased to exist. In the course of the second century B C E , various differing calendars were imposed and accepted in a defiled temple by the Hellenized priests
Alkimos and Menelaus, and the Hasmonean priests Jonathan, Simon, and John
Hyrkanus, and in the first century B C E by Alexander Janeus and his descendants.
The former ruling priestly circles of Bnei Zadok, those who perceived themselves
as keepers of the holy heritage, were deposed and abandoned the Jerusalem
Temple, taking with them the Temple library. The remains of the vast priestly library, which most probably had originated in the Jerusalem Temple, were found
in Qumran. The 950 Dead Sea Scrolls which include only sacred literature associated in various ways to the Biblical priestly tradition, can be divided into four sections: I. 250 copies of Biblical scrolls; II. Rewritten bible or Para-Biblical texts
which represent various traditions of combined Biblical texts explicitly connected
to the Biblical tradition but retaining different versions and different divisions;
III. Liturgical scrolls and mystical traditions concerning angels and priests,
heavenly chariot and celestial sanctuaries, and legal traditions pertaining to the
Temple; IV. Polemic scrolls that were written against the Hasmonean priests,
those who had unlawfully deposed the priests, the Sons of Zadok. Most of this
vast literature was entirely unknown until 1947 38 .
This oblivion was not entirely accidental as the library legitimized the old
group who served in the Temple for centuries and was the source of threat for the
new usurping group who nominated itself against the Biblical order and the
Ex. 28-30, 40:13-16; Lev. 8:21-22; Num. 17-18, 25; I Chr. 6:34-38, 23:13, 28-32, 24:1-5.
On the priests sons of Zadok see I Kgs. 1:32, 35, 38-9, 2:35; I Chr. 5:29-41, 9:11, 24:3-6,
29:22; Ezra 7:2-5; Neh. 11:11.
3 6 Cf. Daniel 7:25; I Mac. 1 : 4 1 ^ 7 ; II Mac. 6:6-7. See O. Morkholm, Antiochus IV of Syria
(Copenhagen 1966).
37 Cf. I Mac. 1:11-15; II Mac. 4:7-14.
3 8 See E. Tov (ed.), DJD X X X I X . The Texts from the Judaen Desert: Indices and Introduction to the Discoveries in the Judaean Desert Series (Oxford 2002).
34
35
The Foundations of Early Jewish Mysticism
11
priestly heritage. The deposed priests had every reason to rescue the Temple library and to keep and guard it as best as they could from the hands of the new regime since their entire authoritative-historical claim to a sacred position, as well as
their rights to exclusive consecrated legitimacy according to a divine decree, were
attested and preserved in the sacred writings. The deposed priests copied the holy
documents of the Pentateuch and the Prophets, the priestly historiography and
the entire Biblical library (with the exception of Esther that does not have sacred
value) and they copied many other sacred texts that did not find their way to the
canon that was edited by the Sages after the destruction of the Second Temple.
They continued to create new compositions which corroborated their ancient
status by linking it to the angelic world and to the beginning of history as reflected
in Genesis and in the parallel traditions of Jubilees, Enoch, The book of Giants
and The Testaments of the Twelve Tribes. For the same reasons that the old priesthood (beit zadok veanshei britam) defended the library and continued to extend
it, their opponents (beit bashmonai) most likely wanted to leave this library in oblivion since it casted a shadow on their legitimacy and unsubstantiated authority.
The deposed priests wrote legal literature that addressed the new ruling priesthood and urged the reinstitution of the old priestly order and the ancient divine
calendar (Miqsat Maase Hatorah; The Temple Scroll; Scrolls of Priestly Courses).
At the same time, they also copied old texts and composed new mystical literature
in order to demonstrate the divine paradigm of the priestly calendar (The Book of
Enoch; The Book of Jubilees; The Qumran Psalm Scroll; Blessings) and the divine
origins of the priesthood (Testimony of Levi; Enoch; Jubilees 30-32); and they copied in many versions the angelic paradigm of the divine worship according to the
solar calendar (Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice; Scroll of Blessings). The angelic
world where the solar calendar is kept eternally through holy liturgical cycles was
described in close relation to the ancient priestly calendar and its liturgical divisions. Different traditions pertaining to the heavenly chariot as a counterpart of
the holy place were written as well. They wrote further scrolls aggressively attacking those who had dethroned them; the new priests who changed the calendar into
a lunar calendar obeying the Antiochian order of the Selucian calendar were identified as "sons of darkness" and "sons of evil" as opposed to the Zadokite priests,
the keepers of the solar-angelic calendar, who are called "sons of light" and "sons
of justice" (Rule of the Community; Scroll of the War of the Sons of Light against
the Sons of Darkness; Pesher Habakuk)39.
In the year 45 BCE, on the first of January, the Roman Julian solar calendar of
365 days replaced the old lunar Selucian calendar then standard in Judea, which
had been conquered by the Romans two decades earlier. In the period when the
Sages began to consolidate their hegemony under Roman rule and particularly
after the destruction of the Temple by the Romans, the Sages established defiantly
a new lunar calendar, free from calculations and pre-computations and of the
priestly angelic liturgical calendar on one side and free from the Roman solar cal39
See G. Vermes, The Complete Dead Sea Scrolls in English (London 1997).
12
Rachel Elior
endar on the other. This new calendar of the Sages did not relate explicitly to the
number of days in a year, neither to the number of days of each month, nor to the
specific day upon which a year should commence or a month should start. The
calendar of the Sages was founded on human sovereignty since the calculations
were based on human testimony concerning the rising of the moon and therefore
not upon a predetermined division of time springing from a divine source comprised of eternal dates and seasons reckoned by angels and priests. The Sages
started the year in the seventh month Tishrei while the Biblical priestly calendar
states explicitly that the first month in the spring (Nisan) is the beginning of the
year (Ex. 12: 1-3) and thus formed the basis of annual counting. The ancient calendar of the deposed priests of the house of Zadok had not been maintained in the
Temple since 175 BCE. However, it was preserved in multifold writings, notably
the mystical and liturgical literatures, which were believed to have been based on
testimonies from those angels and mystical heroes who transcended heavenly and
mundane boundaries. These mystical traditions may vary but they always elaborate upon the sacred numbers of the solar calendar: seven (days) and thirteen (Sabbaths in a season); four (seasons) and twelve (pre-calculated months), the divine
source and angelic framework (Enoch the seventh patriarch learned the calendar
of four seasons, twelve months and fifty two Sabbaths from the angels), its liturgical cycles (13 Sabbath Songs, four times a year; a year of 52 weeks/Sabbaths maintained by 24 priestly watches changing weekly) and its ritual preservation (24
Priestly courses monitored the sevenfold divisions of time shabatot, shivaa moadim, shemitot, yovlim; Sabbath, seven appointed times of the Lord, fallow years,
Jubilees) alongside the angels in their seven heavenly sanctuaries in the world of
the chariot.
This priestly mystical literature relating to holy time was concerned both with
the seven heavenly sanctuaries that were associated as spatial dimensions with the
sevenfold divisions of time (Lev. 23) as well as with the four spatial dimensions of
the heavenly chariot that pertained to the fourfold division of the seasons and cosmic directions. This mystical literature which delineated holy time and holy place
in relation to the priestly solar calendar, as well as its authors and keepers, in a first
stage was suppressed by the Hasmoneans, as suggested from Pesber
Habakuk,
and in a second stage was constrained by the Sages who held to the lunar calendar.
The Sages defined the priestly writings on holy time and holy place as "books that
should remain outside of the canonic literature", books which became known as
Sefarim Hitzonim, Pseudepigrapha or Apocrypha. The Sages constrained and
prohibited "expounding on the deeds of the chariot" (Mishnah Hagigah 2:1; BT
Hagigah 13b) without explaining the background of this ruling and its connection
to ancient priestly perceptions of holy time and holy place.
The protagonist of the priestly literature found in the Judean desert is Enoch
son of Jared, the seventh patriarch (Gen. 5: 21-24), he who had brought the calendar from heaven to earth and who is considered the founder of the priestly order
and the source of the priestly dynasty of written knowledge derived from an angelic source. Enoch was the first human being w h o learned to read from the an-
The Foundations of Early Jewish Mysticism
13
gels, to write and to calculate heavenly divisions of holy time (Jubilees. 4; I Enoch
72-82) and was further granted the vision of the heavenly holy place, the vision of
the chariot of the cherubim (I Enoch 14:8-25). The heavenly paradigm of the holy
place later would be depicted in the Holy of Holies in the Temple (I Chronicles
28:18). Enoch, the founder of the priestly library that was imparted to him by the
angels (Jubilees 4), was the first man to be taught the complexities of the astronomic divisions of the calendar, known as merkabot hashamayim [heavenly chariots] (I Enoch 75:3). He is described as enjoying direct contact with the heavenly
retinue, notably with the angel Uriel or with the Angel of the Presence, who revealed the heavenly knowledge on holy place and holy time first to him, and later
to Moses on Mount Sinai (Jubilees 1, 8:19). The library and the divine knowledge
of reading, writing and calculating was transmitted directly and indirectly to a
priestly line according to Jubilees, The Testament of the Twelve Tribes, 5Q13 and
II Enoch, starting with Enoch, and continuing with his descendants Methuselah,
Lemech, Noah, Shet/Malkizedek, Abraham, Yitzhak, Jacob, Levi, Kehat, Amram
and Moshe. It seems that the myth of the priestly library transmitted from heaven
to earth and kept by the children of Enoch, the children of Abraham and the
children of Levi, written mainly in the second and first century BCE, had to do
with the fact that the actual Temple library was severely endangered in the second
century BCE. It was in this period that the Hellenized priests and the Hasmonean
priests were serving against the Biblical order and the ancient priestly authority.
The unique role of the priestly protagonist Enoch is described in detail in the Aramaic Book of Enoch that was found in Qumran 4 0 and in its Ethiopic translations
and various recensions that were known in the Pseudepigraphic literature before
their original Aramaic and Hebrew versions were found in Qumran 4 1 . Enoch's
heavenly position as an eternal dweller of paradise is described in Genesis Apocryphon 4 2 , in The Book of Giants 43 and in chapters of Jubilees that were found
among the Dead Sea Scrolls 44 . Enoch, who is described as a heavenly scribe dwelling in paradise after he brought the calendar and as a witness to the angelic liturgy
and the divine chariot that he saw and heard in heaven is also described in II
Enoch, a Slavonic translation of a version from the first century, as well as in other
ancient sources 45 . In this literature, we cannot overemphasize Enoch's mystical
ascents, the heavenly knowledge acquired in relation to calendar and chariot, the
40
See J. T. Milik, The Books of Enoch: Aramaic Fragments from Qumran Cave 4 (Oxford
1976); and DJD XXXVI , Qumran Cave 4 XXV: Cryptic Texts and Miscellanea (note 21
above) 3-191.
41
I Enoch in: J. Charlesworth, The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, vol. 1 (note 19 above)
5-90.
42
See N. Avigad and Y. Yadin, Genesis Apocryphon: A Scroll from the Wilderness of Judaea
(Jerusalem 1956).
43
See D J D XXXVI (note 21 above) 8-94.
44
See Jubilees, D J D XIII.
45
O n II (Slavonic) Enoch see F. Andersen, in: J. Charlesworth, The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, vol. 1 (note 19 above) 91-222.
14
Rachel Elior
priestly role assumed, as well as the cardinal role of angels in regard to priestly
worship, priestly calendar, and priestly chariot tradition. Major parts of this literature were written by deposed Zadokite priests who argued for the sanctity of their
own perception of holy time (calendar of the angels) and holy place (chariot of the
cherubim) and the exclusive legitimacy of their priestly service as descendants of
the ancient priestly line at a time when other priests were serving in the temple
under false pretenses, according to an erroneous calendar with illegitimate claims
to sovereignty.
As mentioned above, Jason, who supported the demands Antiochus IV imposed on his empire which included a change of the calendar as part of the hellenization, deposed his brother, Onias, the legitimately appointed high priest in 175
B C E . Jason himself was deposed shortly thereafter by Menelaus in 172 and in turn
was replaced by Alkimos in 169. The Hasmonean dynasty assumed the position of
high priests from the year 152 B C E until 37 B C E ; however, their first appointments were nominated by the Selucian kings Alexander Balas and Demetrius II.
The Hasmoneans who belonged to mishmeret Yehoyariv (the priestly course of
Yehoyariv) were not members of the high priestly family that belonged exclusively to mishmeret Yedayah (the priestly watch of Yedayah). The Hasmoneans
were nominated and appointed by the Selucian kings who imposed a lunar calendar on their empire, and thus the Hasmoneans did not or could not maintain the
ancient priestly solar calendar. The deposed priests, the sons of Zadok, distinguished themselves as "Sons of Light" and "Sons of Righteousness" while defaming their opponents who were serving in the temple as "Sons of Darkness" and
"Sons of Evil". From 175 B C E onward, in the long period during which this illegitimate priestly dynasty served in the Temple and functioned under a spurious
calendar, the deposed priests, the sons of Zadok and those who accepted their exclusive authority, continued to write and contend with the establishment of the
priestly legitimacy about the sanctity of priestly knowledge as expressed as well in
the priestly library that originated in divine and angelic knowledge, as in the
priestly solar calendar. Central in their writings were Enoch's heavenly knowledge
on holy time and holy place, the angelic source of knowledge and paradigm for divine worship, calendars of 364 days and 52 Sabbaths as the foundation for holy
time, and the heavenly chariot of the Cherubim as the origin for holy place. The
heavenly sevenfold divisions (Sabbath; seven Heikhalot) and fourfold divisions
(four seasons; fourfold Merkabah) pertaining to holy time and holy place, as well
as sevenfold groups of angels and fourfold divisions of the living creatures of the
Merkabah were elaborated in diverse ways in their written tradition.
In the Merkabah literature which appeared in poetry and narrative centuries
later, after the destruction of the Second Temple, that became known as the Heikhalot literature (or the seven sanctuaries mystical tradition), the angels hold a central position as well. Here, too, Enoch is a major protagonist appearing in some of
its traditions, though he is re-named Enoch-Metatron (most likely in relation to
the number four, tetra in Greek). The sevenfold division of the heavenly world to
seven Heikhalot is a noticeable characteristic of Heikhalot literature as well as the
The Foundations of Early Jewish Mysticism
15
fourfold structure of the chariot, and the sevenfold angelic liturgy is a distinct feature of the Heikhalot and Merkabah tradition 46 .
N o direct connection may be ascertained between traditions which were
written in the last few centuries before the Common Era and between those
emerging in the early centuries of the Common Era or in the Byzantine Era.
However, it is interesting to note that the ancient priestly mystical traditions are
revived in the latter tradition through both confirmation and struggle. Enoch, the
protagonist of the priestly literature of the calendar and the chariot before the
Common Era - also described as an eternal scribe residing eternally in paradise is the heavenly angelic hero of the third book of Enoch known as Sefer Heikhalot.
In this book the number of the days of a solar year (365) is mentioned time and
again in various mystical connections as well as the seven heavenly sanctuaries, the
angelic retinue and the four-fold divisions of the seasons and the Merkabah 47 .
Of great interest as well, Enoch-Metatron, the admired hero of the priestly calendar, appears in the rabbinic literature as a subject of punishment and an object
for denunciation. Enoch who is depicted in the Bible as a unique individual, one
who was taken to heaven alive (Gen. 5:24) is now described in the Aramaic translation of this verse as a person who was executed by heavenly decree (Onkelos
translation Gen. 5:24). Noticeably, the older Enoch traditions relate that he was
taken to heaven while still alive for an eternal life in paradise on the first day of the
Biblical reckoning of the year, the beginning of the solar priestly calendar (the first
I will not discuss here the question of the dating of Heikhalot Literature and the identity
of its authors as opinions are far from being unanimous or utterly convincing and the literature was not necessarily composed in one single period. Scholars argued that Heikhalot literature has been written in the second and third century (Scholem) or in the fifth and sixth
century of the Common Era (Alexander, Schäfer, Abush). This issue is treated extensively in
the scholarly literature of the last fifty years and the reader can find references to it in the bibliography below. On seven Heikhalot, angels and sevenfold angelic liturgy, on Chariot and
on Enoch-Metatron in Heikhalot and Merkabah Literature see sources mentioned in notes 1,
4, 5 above as well as in D. ]. Halperin, The Merkabah in Rabbinic Literature (American
Oriental Society, New Haven 1980); idem, The Faces of the Chariot: Early Jewish Responses
to Ezekiel's Vision (TSAJ 16, Tübingen 1988);/. Davila, Descenders to the Chariot: The
People Behind the Hekhalot Literature (JSJ Sup 70, Leiden 2001);/. Dan, The Ancient Jewish Mysticism (Tel-Aviv 1993); idem, Jewish Mysticism: Late Antiquity, 2 vols. (Northvale
1998); N. Deutsch, Guardians of the Gate. Angelic Vice Regency in Late Antiquity (Brill's
Series in Jewish Studies 22, Leiden, Boston 1999); I. Chernm, Mysticism in Rabbinic Judaism
(Studia Judaica 11, Berlin, New York 1982); P. Schäfer et al., Übersetzung der Hekhalot-Literatur, 4 vols. (TSAJ 17,22,29,46, Tübingen 1987-1995); R. Abusch, Sevenfold Hymns in the
Songs of the Sabbath Sacrifice and the Hekhalot Literature: Formalism Hierarchy and the
Limits of Human Participation, in: /. Davila (ed.), The Dead Sea Scrolls As Background to
Postbiblical Judaism and Early Christianity: Papers from an International Conference at
St. Andrews in 2001 (Leiden, Boston 2003) 220-247; R. Elior, Sifrut haHeikhalot uMasoret
haMerkavah (Tel Aviv 2004) (Hebrew).
4 7 The annual number of days mentioned in Third Enoch, 365, is mentioned also in II
Enoch. No sufficient explanation to the change from 364 to 365 days is known to me. On
Third Enoch see R Alexander, Hebrew Apocalypse of Enoch, in: J. H. Charlesworth, The
Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, vol. I (note 19 above) 223-316.
46
16
Rachel Elior
day of the Nisan month according to Ex. 12:2-3) 48 , the same day that the Tabernacle was set forth (Ex. 40:1) and the day that Levi, the father of the priesthood,
was born 4 9 . In opposition to this priestly tradition before the C o m m o n Era, the
rabbinic alternative tradition after the C o m m o n Era relates that Enoch was
executed on the first day of the seventh month (Tishrei), the day that was chosen
to be nominated as Rosh ha.Sha.na, - the celebration of the new year - according to
the new rabbinic calendar, a date that has no substantiation in the Biblical narrative of the holidays (although this date does appear as a day of memorial in the
seventh month) 5 0 .
Many of the principal features of the Heikhalot mystical literature show significant precedents from the priestly literature that was written before the Common
Era in historical circumstances marked by dispute and despair, when ancient perceptions of holy place and holy time, divine chariot and angelic calendar were
challenged, the ancient priestly order was changed, when Bnei Zadok were replaced by Bnei Hashmonai, and written law based on sacred library of numerous
scrolls was gradually replaced by oral law that related to a canonized version of
the written law. This oral law excluded the canon of priestly writings that related
to calendar and holy time, chariot and holy place, angels and holy service and
traditions on the origin of the priestly dynasty from Enoch to Amram. The Masoretic version started the priesthood with Aaron son of Amram, while the priestly
tradition found in Qumran and in parallel texts in the books that remained outside
of the Masoretic Canon and came to be known as Pseudepigrapha claim a dynasty
that has started with Enoch and his descendants until N o a h and Malkizedek and
culminates with Levi and his descendants.
These historical processes of changing hegemony took place under the Selucian-Greek rule that imposed the Greek Lunar calendar on the Empire (175-66
BCE) and the Roman Rule that imposed a Solar Calendar on the Roman Empire
(from 66 BCE). They excluded the previous orders, deliberately forgot priestly
traditions, and, through later canonization and censorship, generated complicated
spiritual responses which were reflected in the mystical "war of the Sons of Light
against the Sons of Darkness" (Bnei Zadok against Bnei Hashmonai). The first
stage (175-37 BCE) of this war of the solar calendar against the lunar calendar is
well reflected in the Dead Sea Scrolls. Its later stage is reflected in the dispute
between Sadducees ( T z a d o k i m , Bnei Zadok), who held to the ancient angelicpriestly solar calendar of 364 days (relating to a year commencing in Nisan according to the Biblical calendar according to Ex. 12: 2-3), and the Pharisees (Prushim, the Sages) that chose the human lunar calendar of a variable number of days
(a year could be 354-358 or 384 days), a year which started in Tishrei, the seventh
month, and which required the addition of a leap year (something which has no
48
II Enoch 19:2 Hebrew version; cf. F. I. Andersen, (note 45 above) 196, chapter 68:1.
Jubilees 28:14. cf. Charlesworth,
The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, vol. II (note 19
above) 110.
50
Lev. 23:23-25; cf. Jubilees 6:23; cf. Charlesworth,
The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha,
vol. II (note 19 above) 68.
49
The Foundations of Early Jewish Mysticism
17
foundation in the Bible). This dispute between priests (364 days) and Sages
(354 + 30) is also well reflected in the different instances in the Mishnah whenever
a dispute over the dates of the holidays confronts Sadducees with Pharisees. Those
who held to the lunar calendar and the new leap year censured out texts that related to the ancient priestly solar calendar and the priestly history of its divine origin and nominated these texts as sefarim hitzonim or books that should remain
outside of the Canon. They further wrote negative and derogatory accounts concerning the messenger of the priestly solar calendar, Enoch (Bereshit Raba 25).
These stories distorted the priestly traditions concerning his ascent to heaven as
well as his instruction from the angels regarding the details of this priestly calendar. The new stories further replaced the ancient admiring narratives with new
plots relating to Enoch's humiliation, punishment and death (B.T. Hagiga 15a).
These supporters of the lunar calendar also replaced the priestly orientation of the
stories relating to the origin of the solar calendar with an alternative story connecting Enoch with the greatest calendric prohibition, changing the number of
days in a year (Jubilees 6:30-38) which is required by sod halbur (the secret of the
leap year required by lunar calendar, cf. Pirkei de-Rabbi Eliezer chapter 8). The
fact that these pro-Enoch and anti-Enoch traditions were being debated centuries
after the Temple was destroyed and the priestly calendar or priestly service was
abolished allows for speculations concerning our historical perspective and the
role of mystical memory. Mystical literature reflects much more than heavenly
perspectives, devotional experience and transcendental spiritual yearning, it also
reveals very interesting historical dimensions often biased by earthly disputes and
competing human interests.
In light of all the above I suggest that there were two chapters of Jewish Mysticism in late antiquity.
The traditions centered on Enoch and the priestly library that have commenced
in angelic teaching of divine knowledge and concentrated on the priestly solar calendar, the angels, the chariot and the sevenfold angelic liturgy which were written
before the Common Era should be reconsidered as its first chapter. The Heikhalot
and Merkabah literature, written after the destruction of the Temple and incorporating similar topics, should be reconsidered as the second chapter of Jewish Mysticism that reflects the dialectical continuity with its priestly sources.
The Qumran priestly library of "the Sons of Zadok and their allies" originated
in the Temple library that was created and guarded for centuries by priests and
prophets and was taken by the deposed priests when they were forced to leave the
defiled sanctuary. The deposed priests that guarded the endangered temple library
took it most likely in the commencement of the Hasmonean era and developed
from it new traditions that were clad with ancient origins that centered on holy
time, holy place, holy service and holy dynasty, holy tablets and holy books. The
Qumran documents in general and the rule of the community in particular discuss
the centrality of study in books in the daily life of its members. The community
was keeping the books in high degree of sanctity as the foundation of all their historical claims and demanded high degree of purity in relation to the angelic pres-
18
Rachel Elior
ence that was attested in the books. Remnants of these traditions on angels and
chariots, sanctuaries and holy books and divine tablets, sacred calendars and
sevenfold divine liturgy that were found in Qumran and were known from the
Pseudepigrapha found their way centuries later to the circles who took upon
themselves to keep the priestly memory after the destruction of the Temple in
hymns and narratives that commemorated the ideal service in the Temple in relation to its heavenly paradigm. It is interesting to note that the new mystical
traditions abandoned the direct polemical framework of the old tradition (Sons of
Light against Sons of Darkness, Sons ofJustice against Sons of Evil) while adopting
old themes such as Chariot-Merkabah, sevenfold sanctuaries and sevenfold angelic ritual, knowledge from angels and Enoch as a central hero pertaining to issues which were debatable in rabbinical circles. The new writers of the Chariot
tradition who are focusing on the heavenly world are integrating important elements from the world of the Sages, notably the names of the earthly protagonists
R. Akiva and R. Ishmael as the new partners of the ancient priestly and heavenly
protagonist Enoch-Metatron. The relationship between the priestly tradition and
the rabbinic tradition are dialectical and complicated and pertain to developments
in the synagogue tradition and the liturgical tradition, but this relationship certainly informs in various ways the new stages of Merkabah Mysticism which continued the ancient tradition and developed new directions in the first millennium
after the destruction of the Temple.