Jewish mystical tradition, specifically the Kabbalah, grapples with a similar question when considering the emanations of the Divine.

How can different aspects of God, known as Partzufim (divine "faces" or "configurations"), have different attributes and statures if they all originate from the same infinite source, the undefined, blessed be He—the ultimate, unknowable essence of God?

This is where the concept of "garments" comes into play. The Kalach Pitchei Chokhmah, a Kabbalistic text, offers a beautiful analogy to explain this. Imagine a ray of light, a direct line emanating from undefined. This "line" is perfectly uniform, identical at every point. It’s pure, undifferentiated Divine energy. So, if this line is the same everywhere, shouldn't all the Partzufim be equal in their manifestation?

The answer, according to the Kalach Pitchei Chokhmah, lies not in the line itself, but in its "garb," which it identifies with the soul. Think of it like this: the same sunlight can warm a desert and nourish a forest, but the desert and the forest are vastly different. The difference isn't in the sunlight, but in the environment that receives it.

Each Partzuf, therefore, receives from the Line of undefined according to the nature of its own unique "garb"—its soul. The text explains that the Partzufim may be great or small (in terms of their capacity for divine expression) depending on the readiness of the soul of any given Partzuf to receive the divine light within it.

It's a profound idea, isn't it? The difference isn't in the source, which is always constant and unwavering. The difference lies in our capacity, our willingness, our preparedness to receive. We are all channels, conduits for the Divine light, but our individual souls act as filters, shaping and coloring that light in unique ways.

So, what does this mean for us? Perhaps it suggests that our spiritual work is not about changing the source – God is always there, radiating infinite love and potential. Instead, our work is about refining our own "garments," our own souls, so that we can more fully receive and express the Divine light within us. How can we become more receptive, more open, more ready to embrace the fullness of what is being offered? That, I think, is a question worth pondering.