Torah.org Home Subscribe Services Support Us
 
Print Version

Email this article to a friend

The Way of G-d

Part 3: "The Soul, Inspiration, Prophecy, and the Supernatural"

Ch. 5: "Moses as a Prophet"

Paragraphs 3 & 4

Here's what would happen to an individual who'd fall into a prophetic trance. He'd suddenly find himself to be in a dreamlike state while not necessarily asleep (since one could experience a prophetic trance while awake). Perhaps the closest experience we have to it is the quiescent, semi-somnambulant state we ourselves drift off into right before actually falling asleep or coming awake, when we know who we are but aren't quite prepared to do anything about it.

The experience might be very short-lived or it might last a while, but the prophet would always be unconscious for the duration, since one couldn't be communicated with on a prophetic level while in a conscious state.

Once he'd be in that state he'd begin to sense something appearing before his eyes, but indirectly so. Things would appear to be filtered through a series of subtle or more blunt skeins of vapor, and the prophet would have the sense that he was looking through smudged lenses.

That's to say that he'd indeed be "seeing" something and would be aware of everything it was doing, but he wouldn't be able to quite catch the thing's outlines or many of its finer details.

Hence, prophets (other than Moses, as we'll see) could never quite clearly make out G-d's Glory outright because of all the "signal interference" as we'd put it. But that's what they'd be seeing, in its various manifestations. Throughout it all and despite the impediments the prophet would still and all be very aware of what he was seeing and confident in the veracity of his experience.

It's just that some prophets would be able to see more, and more clearly than others. Since the lenses varied with each one. Despite his level of prophecy, though, every true prophet was able to catch sight of the essence of what he was seeing and would know for certain that he was being communicated with by G-d Almighty.

The prophet would indeed understand that his perceptions were being affected by the number and depth of the lenses accompanying them, but he'd also be aware of the makeup of each lens and why it had to be there.

Another element entered into the picture as well. For not only was what he saw affected by the lenses, the images were also expressed metaphorically and where thus open to interpretation, much like dreams are (after all, as we said, a prophet was often communicated with in dreams).


Text Copyright © 2004 by Rabbi Yaakov Feldman and Torah.org.

Please Support TORAH.ORG
Print Version       Email this article to a friend

 

ARTICLES ON VAYEITZEI AND CHANUKAH:

View Complete List

Leaving Ya'akov for Yisroel
Rabbi Pinchas Winston - 5766

Just Five More Minutes of Sleep!
Rabbi Yisroel Ciner - 5759

Body and Soul
Rabbi Naftali Reich - 5768

The Everything Torah Book

Thanks a Lot!
Rabbi Raymond Beyda - 5764

My Brother, My Enemy
Rabbi Berel Wein - 5765

Days of Eight
Rabbi Label Lam - 5763

Email Sponsorship

Torah Study - - Doing It Our Way
Rabbi Eliyahu Hoffmann - 5766

In Every Generation
Shlomo Katz - 5766

A Torah Perspective
Shlomo Katz - 5766

ArtScroll

How to Affect Your Enviroment
Rabbi Yaakov Menken - 5755

The House of Yaakov
Rabbi Yissocher Frand - 5756

'Mehadrin' - An Understanding of the Concept
Rabbi Yehudah Prero - 5755

Sleep Soundly
Rabbi Yisroel Ciner - 5760

The World of Learning
Rabbi Label Lam - 5764

Designated Eater
Rabbi Mordechai Kamenetzky - 5760

Power To Choose
Rabbi Pinchas Avruch - 5765


Learning Events and Programs

Project Genesis

Torah.org Home


Torah Portion

Jewish Law

Ethics

Texts

Learn the Basics

Seasons

Features

TORAHAUDIO

Ask The Rabbi

Knowledge Base

Discussion Forum




Help

About Us

Contact Us


Enable popup menus


Download to my HandHeld


Torah.org Home
Torah.org HomeCapalon.com Copyright Information