Feb 8, 2016 By: mlebovic
On Tuesday, February 2nd, Rabbi Dr. Raphael Shuchat delivered a special guest lecture entitled "Was the World Created in Six Days? The Views of Medieval Kabbalists." Rabbi Dr. Raphael Shuchat has been a lecturer at the School for Basic Jewish Studies of Bar-Ilan University for over twenty years and headed the Beit Midrash for Giyur at the Bet El Synagogue in Tel Aviv for the past four years. He has published five books and close to forty academic articles in the areas of science and Judaism as well as the thought of the Vilna Gaon and his disciples. His book Jewish Faith in a Changing World was published by Academic Studies Press in 2012, and his latest book, Kabbalat Lita was published by Bar Ilan in 2015.
Dr. Shuchat discussed a number of kabbalistic sources鈥 from medieval and modern authorities鈥攖hat posit that the six-day period of creation depicted in Genesis 1 is not meant literally, and that the creation of the world actually occurred over a period of thousands of millennia. (See the source sheet below.) Dr. Shuchat argued that this position can help to alleviate seeming incompatibility of the Torah鈥檚 account of creation with the modern scientific view that the world was formed over billions of years.
Was the World Created in Six Days? The Views of Medieval Kabbalists - Source Sheet
Rabbi Dr. Raphael Shuchat
Shmot 20,11 鈥 "For six days did God make the heavens and the earth"
Bahir (1176 Provence) - (Margaliyot ed. Jerusalem 1978 siman 57)鈥 "His colleagues said and so I received since it says 'for six day God made' it means six vessels did God make." In six days is not stated, this teaches that each day had its own power(Bahir 87)
Zohar II 89B 鈥 "We learnt: It is written: 'for six days God made the heavens and the earth. 'Six days' for sure and not 'In six days". These refer to the holy transcendental days called God's days."
- Nahmanides (1194 Gerona- 1270 Jerusalem)鈥 the dualist approach
- Rabenu Bahya Ben Asher (1255-1340 Talmid of the Rashba) 鈥 time was created too
- R. Asher Ben David of Provence - (13th century) 鈥 The single metaphysical approach
- R. Isaac Ben Samuel of Acre (1250-1340): The Multiple worlds approach