Yotzer Bereshit, the Former of Creation, appears in Shi'ur Komah as a mystery at the edge of how the world began.
Yotzer Bereshit – it literally means "Creator of Genesis" or "Former of Creation." Who is this guy?
Well, some say he's the one sitting on the Divine Throne, which is part of God's Merkavah (the Divine Chariot), or Chariot. This Chariot, as Now, is the one on the throne God Himself? Or is it Yotzer Bereshit? The sources differ. What we do know, according to some traditions, is that all the secrets of Creation were revealed to him. That's quite a resume. That's why he gets the title "Creator of the World," because, well, he's the maker of Creation.
The Shi'ur Komah, a text that explores the dimensions of God's figure (specifically, the Primordial Man on the Merkavah), actually identifies this figure as Yotzer Bereshit. The Primordial Man is usually understood to be Adam Kadmon (more on that another time!), the archetypal, perfect human.
But here's where it gets even more interesting. Is Yotzer Bereshit an independent divine figure? A subordinate creator? Or is he just another name for God? The ambiguity is palpable. Think about the Aleinu prayer, where we praise "Him who formed the world in the beginning." Is that God? Or Yotzer Bereshit?
This ambiguity, as some suggest, hints at the idea of a subordinate creator – that this divine figure had some kind of independent existence from the unknowable aspect of God, the Ein Sof, as understood in Kabbalah. It suggests a more complex, nuanced picture of creation than we sometimes realize.
According to 3 Enoch 11:4-5, and other sources, the Primordial Man, Adam Kadmon, is understood as both a transitional phase of Creation and the first created being. And as such, some see in him a reflection of the mystical idea of a subordinate creator acting under divine authority.
So, what does it all mean? Was Yotzer Bereshit a separate entity? A divine architect working under God's direction? Or simply another facet of the Divine, a way for us to understand the process of creation? Maybe the point isn't to definitively answer the question, but to confront the mystery itself. To appreciate the depth and richness of Jewish thought, and the many different ways we can understand the creation of…well, everything.