CHAPTER IX
THE corporeal element in man is a large screen and partition that
prevents him from perfectly perceiving abstract ideals: this would be the case even
if the corporeal element were as pure and superior as the substance of the spheres;
how much more must this be the case with our dark and opaque body. However great
the exertion of our mind may be to comprehend the Divine Being or any of the ideals,
we find a screen and partition between Him and ourselves. Thus the prophets frequently
hint at the existence of a partition between God and us. They say He is concealed
from us in vapours, in darkness, in mist, or in a thick cloud; or use similar figures
to express that on account of our bodies we are unable to comprehend His essence.
This is the meaning of the words, “Clouds and darkness are round about Him” (Ps.
xcvii. 2). The prophets tell us that the difficulty consists in the grossness of
our substance: they do not imply, as might be gathered from the literal meaning
of their words, that God is corporeal, and is invisible because He is surrounded
by thick clouds, vapours, darkness, or mist. This figure is also expressed in the
passage, “He made darkness His secret place” (Ps. xviii. 12). The object of God
revealing Himself in thick clouds, darkness, vapours, and mist was to teach this
lesson; for every prophetic vision contains some lesson by means of allegory; that
mighty vision, therefore, though the greatest of all visions, and above all comparison,
viz., His revelation in a thick cloud, did not take place without any purpose, it
was intended to indicate that we cannot comprehend Him on account of the dark body
that surrounds us. It does not surround God, because He is incorporeal. A tradition
is current among our people that the day of the revelation on Mount Sinai was misty,
cloudy, and a little rainy. Comp. “Lord, when thou wentest forth from Seir, when
thou marchedst out of the field of Edom, the earth trembled, and the heavens dropped
water” (Judges v. 4). The same idea is expressed by the words “darkness, clouds,
and thick darkness” (Deut. iv. 11). The phrase does not denote that darkness surrounds
God, for with Him there is no darkness, but the great, strong, and permanent light,
which, emanating from Him, illuminates all darkness, as is expressed by the prophetic
simile, “And the earth shined with His glory” (Ezek. xliii. 2).