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Glossary›Sefer Yetzirah

Glossary

Sefer Yetzirah

The earliest extant text of Jewish mysticism, describing how God created the universe through the 10 sefirot and 22 Hebrew letters comprising the 32 paths of wisdom.

What is Sefer Yetzirah?

Sefer Yetzirah (the “Book of Creation”) is the earliest extant book of Jewish esotericism, describing how God created the universe through “32 secret paths of wisdom,” composed of the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet plus the ten “sefirot”—a term that in this early period refers simply to “numbers” even as they allude to metaphysical principles. Written in Hebrew and composed of brief, cryptic, poetic passages that offer mythic images and directions for meditative practice, the text outlines a cosmology in which language, number, and divine intention form the building blocks of reality. The 22 letters are grouped into 3 mother letters (Alef, Mem, Shin), 7 double letters, and 12 elemental letters; the text explains how God engraved, weighed and arranged these letters to form the universe, space, time and living beings. Despite its brevity—existing today in editions up to 2,500 words long (about the size of a pamphlet)—this work had a greater influence on the development of the Jewish mind than almost any other book after the completion of the Talmud.

Origins & lineage

Scholars date the text to between the third and sixth centuries, with recent scholarship suggesting a date sometime in the 6th century CE. The origin of the text is unknown and debated. The book is traditionally ascribed to the patriarch Abraham, although others attribute its writing to Rabbi Akiva, the second-century Talmudic sage who, according to the Babylonian Talmud, engaged in mystical activities. The text is referenced in the Talmud (Sanhedrin 65b, 67b) itself: “On the eve of every Shabbat, Rav Hanina and Rav Hoshaiah would sit and engage in study of Sefer Yetzirah.” One theory is that the book was written in north Mesopotamia, though other locations (such as Israel or Egypt) are also possible. The editio princeps (Mantua, 1562) contains two recensions used by commentators as early as the middle of the 10th century; the shorter version was annotated by Dunash ibn Tamim or by Jacob ben Nissim, while Saadia Gaon and Shabbethai Donnolo wrote commentaries on the longer recension. There are three major versions: the Short Recension, the Long Recension, and the Saadyan Recension, named after the commentary written on it by Saadia Gaon. In the 18th century, the Vilna Gaon, known as “the Gra,” further redacted it; this text is called the Gra or ARI-Gra version.

How it’s practiced

Kabbalistic meditation techniques and practices derived from the Sefer Yetzirah include the use of divine names and the visualization of the sefirot. A 10-minute meditation contemplates the Ten Sefirot; this is one of the most ancient Jewish meditations and opens Sefer Yetzirah, where a person can contemplate the features of each Sefirot for a minute, or simply visualize their names. Letter meditation forms another practice: this comes from kabbalistic sources, particularly the Sefer Yetzirah, which describes how God created the universe through the 22 Hebrew letters. Permutation involves meditating on the letters in combination, taking the letters in a particular word (typically a name of God) and meditating on them in every possible order, which reveals the subtle and hidden nature of the word. The most intense meditation relayed in Sefer Yetzirah is to concentrate upon each of the 231 Gates, composed of all the possible two-letter combinations of Hebrew letters.

Sefer Yetzirah today

Contemporary seekers encounter Sefer Yetzirah through multiple channels. Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan’s 1990 translation remains the most widely studied English edition, presenting the Gra version alongside the short, long, and Saadia versions with extensive commentary on meditation practices. Rabbi Jill Hammer’s Return to the Place (2020) offers guided meditations drawn from the text. Classes explore the architecture of the cosmos as described in this ancient work, often working from both Hebrew and translation. Online Kabbalah study groups, Jewish Renewal communities, and mystical Judaism programs include Sefer Yetzirah in their curricula. The text has not been much studied by contemporary Jews, perhaps due to its cryptic brevity and its differences from better-known Jewish genres from midrash to medieval Kabbalah. Yet it has had a lasting impact on modern Jewish thought by shaping various spiritual practices and beliefs; its concepts have been incorporated into contemporary Kabbalistic teachings, influencing meditation techniques, prayer practices, and even ethical teachings within Judaism.

Common misconceptions

Sefer Yetzirah is not Kabbalah in the medieval sense. While there are older Jewish mystical traditions, Sefer Yetzirah is the first book of what might be called proto-Kabbalah, the school of Jewish mysticism that emerged in the 13th century; it has its own sacred structures and ways of understanding the world that differ in significant ways from the kabbalistic understanding. Early commentaries, such as the Kuzari, treated it as a treatise on mathematical and linguistic theory, as opposed to one about Kabbalah. Historian of Jewish mysticism Joseph Dan firmly maintains that Sefer Yetzirah is intended to be a rational philosophical work rather than a mystical gateway to God. The sefirot in Sefer Yetzirah are not the emanations of later Kabbalah; in Sefer Yetzirah, sefirot appears to mean something like “dimension”—fundamental dimensions of the physical universe, a kind of frame within which the concrete aspects of creation can unfold. The text contains no mention of prayer, life after death, the end of days or messianic redemption; even the people of Israel are not mentioned.

How to begin

Start with Aryeh Kaplan’s Sefer Yetzirah: The Book of Creation (Weiser, 1997), which includes the complete text in multiple versions with extensive notes, or Rabbi Jill Hammer’s Return to the Place (Ben Yehuda Press, 2020) for a meditation-focused approach. Read the text itself on Sefaria.org with parallel Hebrew and English. Seek out Kabbalah study groups or Jewish mysticism courses that include Sefer Yetzirah in their curriculum. For direct practice, begin with the ten-minute sefirot visualization described above, contemplating one sefirah per minute. Approach the text as both cosmological speculation and meditative manual—it functions as both simultaneously. Familiarity with Hebrew, while helpful, is not required; most modern editions provide transliteration and detailed explanation.

Related terms

kabbalahsefirothebrew lettersjewish meditationzohargematria
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