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시편 147:78의 Chasidut

Mareh Yechezkel on Torah

And that which appears to me is from that which we say in the prayer of Rosh Hashanah, “And every created being will know, etc. and Your rulership is over all of the dominion (mashalah). And [the last word] is the initials of (Psalms 92:1), “A psalm – a song for the day of Shabbat (Mizmor Shir Leyom HaShabbat).” And likewise is it said (in the Shabbat morning prayers}, “This is the song of praise of the Shabbat day… ‘It is good to praise the Lord (Tov hehodot laShem)’ (Psalms 92:2)” – the explanation of the matter is that these three words are the three names [represented by], “He scatters frost like ashes (kefor ke’effer yifazer)” (Psalms 147:16, see Mekor Mayim Chayim on Baal Shem Tov, Vayigash 6:4): And that is that tov [has a numerical equivalent of] seventeen, which is the name of aleph-hay-vay-hay], the initials of et hashamyim ve’et haaretz (the heavens and the earth), which indicates the past. And the [four-letter] name of the Lord indicates the present. And hodu [has a numerical equivalent of] twenty-one (the name, aleph-hay-yod-hay), which indicates the future, as I have explained about the verse, “I will be what I will be” (Exodus 3:14). And this name indicates the ‘sweetening of harsh judgements’ at their root. And that is that when we observe all of the Creator’s oversight over all of His creatures; such that even if we do not feel the good now, nevertheless, good will come out of it in the future. And one who considers this will take good counsel from it, to accept everything with love – as he will not concentrate on the apparent bad, but rather on the good in the future. And through this, he will ‘bless the bad just like the good,’ and bring the thing back to its root. As above (in its roots), everything is good, such that the matter will automatically be sweetened. And understand this. For, in my humble opinion, this is the intention of Nachum, the man of Gimzo (Taanit 21a; see further, Parashat Tzav, p. 162.). And hence this name is composed of the letters, hey-vav-dalet-vav, an expression of raising, such as “his hand he shall place above (hadah)” (Isaiah 11:8); “voices raised joyfully (hed) on the hills.” For the matter must be raised to its root; and it will automatically be sweetened.
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Mareh Yechezkel on Torah

And I have already explained the verse, “There is none holy like the Lord, since there is none besides Him” (I Samuel 2:2) – see there. And there it is explained that every physical thing of this world has the four letter name of God sustaining it from nothingness to being, such that it not be nullified in existence – and that is through the holy letters of the four letter name of God and their substitutes. For example, the word, even (stone), has three letters which come out of the four letter name, by way of many substitutions and combinations. Hence it is very physical – as is written in the Tanya (Tanya, Part Two, The Gateway of Unity and Belief 1) about the verse, “Great, etc. and full of power” (Psalms 147:5) – see there. And there is hence also internality and externality in all things – meaning the internality is the letters that make and sustain them from nothingness to being; whereas the externality is that which is seen by the eyes. And that is an illustration of the “holy and blessed” that was referred to.
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