- 200. THE TREASURY OF SOULS
- Tree of Souls: The Mythology of Judaism > 200. THE TREASURY OF SOULS
- The souls of all those who have not yet been born are kept in the Guf, the Treasury of
- Souls, also known as the Chamber of Creation. There each soul waits its turn to be born.
- When the time comes for it to descend into this world, an angel is issued along with it,
- who accompanies it. It is said that sparrows can see the souls descend, and that is the
- source of their song. As soon as the soul leaves the Guf, it divests itself of its heavenly
- garment, and is clothed in a garment of flesh and blood.
- Where is the Treasury of Souls? In the highest heaven, known as Aravot, where there
- are many treasuries, each of them guarded by angels, including the Treasury of Rain, the
- Treasury of Ice and Snow, the Treasury of Clouds, the Treasury of Peace, the Treasury of
- Blessing, and the Treasury of the Dew with which God will revive the dead. The Guf is
- found near the Throne of Glory, and a dazzling brilliant light emanates from the many
- souls in repose there. Those souls are in their pristine state, untainted by existence in this
- world. Some of them flicker like a small candle and some shine like a torch, and there are
- some whose radiance rivals the sun.
- When the time comes for the soul to leave this world, the Angel of Death strips off the
- worldly garment, and at the same instant the soul is clothed in the holy garment that was
- stripped away when it descended to this world. Then the soul delights in having been
- stripped of its worldly body and in having its original garment restored. And the souls
- who have departed from their earthly bodies return to that same treasury, and fly before
- the Throne of Glory in the presence of God. And when the time comes for a human to be
- born, the angel Gabriel puts his hand into the Treasury of Souls and takes out the first
- soul that comes into his hand. If the person is fortunate, a great soul comes into Gabriel’s
- hand; if not a spark of a soul inhabits the body.
- It is said about the soul of the Ba’al Shem Tov that its radiance shone from one end of
- the universe to the other. Each time the angel Gabriel sought to bring this soul down to
- this world, Satan would storm into heaven and protest. In this way, the brightest of souls
- remained in heaven for thousands of years, but at last it descended and the Ba’al Shem
- Tov was born.
- There are those who say that the Guf contains an infinite number of souls, while others
- insist there is only a finite number of souls in it, and that the Messiah will not come until
- theGuf has been emptied of every soul. Others say that from the day the Temple was
- destroyed, no more souls entered the Guf, and when it has been emptied of all the re-
- maining souls, the Messiah will come.
- And when the last soul has descended and the Guf is empty, the first infant to be born
- without a soul, born dead as such an infant must be, will herald the death of the world
- and so is called the final sign. Then all of the sparrows will grow silent, and the world, as
- we know it, will end, and the End of Days will begin.
- There is general agreement in rabbinic lore that the souls of the unborn are kept in
- a storehouse or Treasury of Souls. In B. Avodah Zarah 5a, Resh Lakish, an important
- talmudic sage, is quoted as saying, “The Messiah will only come when all the souls
- destined to inhabit earthly bodies have been exhausted.” Rashi, commenting on this,
- says that “There is a treasure house called the Guf, and at the time of Creation all souls
- destined to be born were formed and placed there.” This treasure house is said to
- contain souls created since the six days of Creation, which are being saved for bodies
- yet to be created. It is also described in B. Yevamot 63b as located behind the heavenly
- curtain known as the Pargod, where “there are spirits and souls created since the six
- days of Creation that are intended for bodies yet to be created.”
- A linkage is also made between the depletion of souls in this treasury and the End
- of Days. The Talmud (B. Yev. 62a) states, “The Son of David will not come before all
- the souls in the Guf have been disposed of, as it is said, “For the spirit that unwraps itself
- is from Meand the souls that I have made” (Isa 57:16). Guf literally means a “body,” thus
- the storehouse of souls is literally “a body of souls.” This enigmatic verse grew into
- the myth of the Guf, a treasury that provided souls for those still to be born. The myth
- describes the events that will take place when the treasury runs out of souls. In 3
- Enoch43 Rabbi Ishmael expands on this verse. He concludes that the first part of the
- verse“For the spirit that unwraps itself is from Me” refers to the souls of the righteous
- that have already been created in the Guf and have returned to the presence of God.
- The second part of the verse, “and the souls that I have made,” refers to the souls of the
- righteous that have not yet been created.
- In addition to the myth of the Guf, the concept of such a treasury is found in other
- forms in Jewish tradition. An alternate version of the origin of souls is found in Zohar
- Hadash,Bereshit 10b-10c, in which it is stated that God hewed from His Throne all
- souls that would be born, and stored them in the storehouse of souls. There is also
- said to be another storehouse of the souls of the righteous who have died. As long as
- a person is alive, his soul is entrusted to his Creator, as it is said, O keep my soul and
- deliver me (Ps. 25:20).Once a righteous person dies, his soul is placed in this other
- treasury, as it is said, The soul of my Lord will be bound up in the bundle of life in the care of
- the Lord (1 Sam. 25:29).
- A third explanation of the origin of souls is found in Nishmat Hayim 2:7, where holy
- souls are said to spring forth from God. In contrast, in Torat Moshe, Rabbi Moshe
- Alshekh describes the soul as a spiritual light that emanates from the Shekhinah. Thus
- in one version the soul comes forth from the male aspect of God; in the other, it shines
- forth from God’s Bride.
- There are alternate myths about other places where the souls of the unborn are kept.
- Some say that the highest abode of the soul is the pure place under the Throne of Glory,
- where all the souls of the unborn are kept close to their Creator. According to Ben Ish
- Hai in Derushim Bereshit, both the Torah and the souls of Israel come from the Throne of
- Glory, which he identifies with the World of Creation (Beriah), one of the four Kabbalistic
- “worlds.” Still other sources, including Sefer ha-Bahir and the Zohar,identify the Shekhinah
- with the soul, calling the Shekhinah the dwelling place of the soul. This teaches that the
- soul had its origin on high, and that the Shekhinahis the soul that dwells in everyone.
- This identification of Shekhinah with soul is also found in the myth of the neshamah yeterah,
- thesecond soul that arrives on the Sabbath at the same instant as the Shekhinah in the
- form of the Sabbath Queen. See “The Second Soul,” p. 310 and “ThePargod, p. 186.
- The Seventh Sign (1988), a popular film in the apocalyptic genre, is based on the
- theme of the Guf. Its plot takes place when the first infant without a soul is about to be
- born, a sign that the world is about to end. This is an accurate account of the prophecy
- about a child born after the last soul departs from the Guf, except that the film tries to
- turn a Jewish apocalyptic myth into a Christian one.
- For the related myth of the origin of souls, see “Tree of Souls,” p. 164. See also “The
- Creation of Souls,” p. 163.
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