Hekhalot Literature

7th to 12th Century

The mystical hekhalot texts describe heavenly ascents and visionary experiences of early rabbinic figures.

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The Hekhalot Corpus

In the same centuries that the geonim were interpreting, codifying, and enforcing rabbinic law, other segments of eastern Jewry were actively engaged in developing a distinctive corpus of mystical writing known as Hekhalot (palaces) texts, so named for the vivid descriptions of the seven heavenly palaces (hekhalot) that they prominently feature. 

Focusing on the heavenly ascents and visionary experiences of a small cast of early rabbinic figures including Rabbi Ishmael and Rabbi Akiba, Hekhalot literature emerged as a distinct body of material during the first Islamic centuries, evidently drawing upon and adapting earlier Jewish mystical and magical traditions. 

Closely related to these works is the seventh- or eighth-century Measure of the Divine Body (Shi‘ur komah), a text that provides a shockingly anthropomorphic description of God’s colossal body, limb by limb. We first hear of these works in the writings of the geonim, but they appear to have been transmitted primarily outside of the rabbinic yeshivot, in social contexts that are difficult to reconstruct.

Hekhalot texts continued to circulate in the Near East, as the many versions found in the Cairo Geniza demonstrate, but they were also brought to Europe, where, in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, they served as an important inspiration for the German Pietists (Hasidei Ashkenaz). Viewed with skepticism by the geonim despite featuring rabbinic heroes, the esoteric Hekhalot texts remind us of the diversity that existed even within early medieval Jewish communities oriented around rabbinic teachings.

Related Primary Sources

Primary Source

Greater Treatise on the Palaces of Heaven

Hekhalot rabbati, §81-82, 86, 163-164

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Text
(§81) Said Rabbi Ishmael: Which are the hymns recited by one who wishes to behold the vision of the Merkavah, to descend in peace and to ascend in peace? The greatest thing of all is [that they] are…

Primary Source

Measure of the Divine Body

Shi‘ur komah

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Text
Blessed art Thou, O Lord, our God, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob, the great, mighty and awesome God, the exalted God, the Creator of heaven and earth. You are He Who is the…

Primary Source

3 Enoch

3 Enoch 1:1-1:4; 3:1-4:5

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Text
Rabbi Ishmael said: When I ascended to the height to behold the vision of the chariot, I entered six palaces, one inside the other, and when I reached the door of the seventh palace I paused in prayer…

Primary Source

Prince of the Torah

Sar ha-Torah, §297-300, 303

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(§297) Rabbi Ishmael said: Thus said Rabbi Akiba to me in the name of Rabbi Eliezer the Great: Our fathers had not taken it upon themselves to put one stone on top of another in the Temple of YHWH [cf…

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Seal of the Chariot

Ḥotam ha-merkavah

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Text
. . . the stake, at the top of which the fabric of the world was tied. Then the top of the stake struck the weave of the web [on which the] world in its completeness stands. And it split it…

Primary Source

Greater Chariot

Merkavah rabbah, §675-676, 278-279, 281

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(§675) Rabbi Ishmael said: Happy is the man who repeats this mystery every morning. He acquires this world and the world to come and he merits greeting the return of the Shekhinah in the future…

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Work of the Chariot

Ma‘aseh merkavah, §544-546

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Text
(§544) Rabbi Ishmael said: I asked of Rabbi Akiba the prayer that one recites {when he ascends to the Merkavah,} {and I asked of him} the praise of RWZYY, Lord, God of Israel—who knows what it is? He…

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