Steven,Steven wrote: Doron,
This passage is rich in mystical/kabbalistic imagery. The gates he is referring to,
are those beyond most conceptions of conventional religious practice. They are
entre' into depths of experience that aren't ordinarily sought or acknowledged as
desirable or God-given. The yetzer hora (evil inclination) and yetzer tov (good
inclination) are mystically both valid pathways towards holiness and Leonard
reveals knowledge of this with the light/dark contrasts that are pervasive in
this verse. This is esoteric ground and I don't feel competent to expand much
on it and misunderstandings that can arise could be disadvantageous/dangerous
to anyone that might want to incorporate this stuff into personal religious practice.
So, I'll maybe just leave this observation at the level of acknowledgement.
I very much appreciate your observation that this piece has to do with the double inclination that human beings are blessed – or cursed – with. Lines like “… where even my sins fall short of the mark” seem very much to the point. However, I’m not sure that you must regard it on the mystical level, because the idea first came from the very rational deliberations of the Talmudic sages. I’ve mentioned this concept very early in our discussion, apropos the ape in #2 (BoM #1-5 thread, p. 3), and I’ll quote from there:
Still, I don’t deny that a mystical subtext can also be found here (and certainly in Kabbalistic thinking the word is divided between good and evil), and you are right about it being a delicate and perhaps even dangerous concept, but I don’t think we should be too intimidated to discuss it. Please go ahead and say whatever else you have in mind which may be relevant to this prayer.In traditional Judaism any person is thought to have two impulses or inclinations: a good inclination (yetzer hatov) and an evil inclination (yetzer har’a). Both are necessary for human existence, because ambition, sexual drive and even the creative drive are parts of the evil inclination, and without it there will be no human life. However the evil inclination constantly pushes us towards sin, and our duty is to use the good inclination to subdue the evil one, and not allow it to go out of control (this is somewhat similar to Freud’s concepts of the “id” versus the “super-ego”, with the "ego" mediating between them). It seems to me that this ape can be the yetzer har’a running wild.