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Glossary›Sefirot

Glossary

Sefirot

The ten emanations or creative attributes through which the infinite God (Ein Sof) reveals itself and structures creation in Jewish Kabbalah.

What is Sefirot?

Sefirot (Hebrew: סְפִירוֹת, səp̄īrōṯ; singular sĕfīrāh) are the ten emanations or creative attributes of God in Kabbalah. The sefirot are the modes through which the Ein Sof (אֵין־סוֹף, ‘Without-End’) reveals itself and continuously creates both the physical realm and the chain of descending metaphysical worlds. As revelations of God’s will, the sefirot are not understood as ten gods, but rather as ten different channels through which the one God reveals his will.

The sefirot function as a bridge between the utterly unknowable divine source and the created universe. For the kabbalists, God is the Ein Sof, a moniker which literally means “Without End”—this aspect of God has no physical form, no gender, no personality, and no means of interacting with the world. The sefirot resolve this theological paradox by serving as the instruments through which the infinite becomes manifest in finite reality.

The individual sefirot are keter ʿelyon (“supreme crown”), ḥokhma (“wisdom”), bina (“intelligence”), ḥesed (“love”), gevura (“might”), tif’eret (“beauty”), netzah (“eternity”), hod (“majesty”), yesod (“foundation”), and malkhut (“kingship”). The sefirot have also been called by other names, the most popular being “crowns,” “attributes,” “principles,” and “steps.”

Origins & Lineage

The original reference to the sefirot is found in the ancient Sefer Yetzirah (“The Book of Formation”), attributed to the first Jewish patriarch, Abraham. The concept first appeared in the Sefer Yetzira as the 10 ideal numbers. Scholars generally date this proto-Kabbalistic text to somewhere between the 2nd and 6th centuries CE, though the attribution to Abraham is traditional rather than historical.

The teaching of the ten sefirot grows from the Sefer Yetzirah and the Bahir and reaches its developed form in the Zohar in 13th-century Spain. The earliest reference to the Sefirot is in Sefer Yetzirah, where the ten Sefirot and the twenty letters of the Hebrew alphabet together comprise the “thirty-two wondrous paths of wisdom” through which God created the world—subsequently, the Sefirot symbolism became a predominant theme in Sefer ha-Bahir, the Zohar, and all later Kabbalistic texts.

Rabbi Moshe de Leon (c. 1240-1305) was the first to publish the Zohar. The Zohar, written in Aramaic and set in 2nd-century Palestine, became the foundational text of Kabbalistic theosophy. The real doctrine of Sefirot, which became the corner-stone of the Cabala, dates from the twelfth century—it is based upon the Neoplatonic conception of God and the theory of emanation.

In Lurianic Kabbalah (the Kabbalah of Isaac Luria), the sefirot are perceived as a constellation of forces in active dialogue with one another at every stage of evolution—Luria described the sefirot as complex and dynamically interacting entities known as partzufim (“faces”), each with its own symbolically human-like persona. Isaac Luria (1534–1572) taught in Safed, and his system revolutionized Kabbalistic thought in the 16th century.

How It’s Practiced

The sefirot function primarily as objects of contemplation and mystical meditation rather than as ritual practice. Kabbalists used them as one of their principal subjects of mystical contemplation, despite vigorous criticism that such speculations were implicitly heretical.

Contemporary practitioners engage with the sefirot through several approaches. Meditation techniques often involve visualizing the Tree of Life diagram and directing attention sequentially through each sefirah. As practitioners bring awareness to each Sefirah and its corresponding place in the body, they learn about what is happening inside them, physically and spiritually. Sefirot are energy centers, like chakras—Kaballah teaches that they are also gateways, through which the Infinite One (Ein Sof) radiates Divine energy into existence.

Some practitioners work with the sefirot during the Omer period (the 49 days between Passover and Shavuot), dedicating each week to contemplating a different sefirah and its combinations. Contemporary techniques involve focusing on the Alef Bet, the names of God and the ten Sefirot. The practice aims toward devekut—adhesion or communion with the divine.

Kabbalists warn that one should not pray to the sefirot. They are channels or instruments, not objects of worship themselves.

Sefirot Today

Seekers encounter the sefirot through multiple channels in contemporary spiritual culture. Jewish meditation centers and institutes offer structured courses on sefirotic contemplation, often integrated with mindfulness practices. Courses help practitioners take their daily meditation practice to the next level through the Kabbalah’s mystical sefirot—lenses to help cultivate consciousness and reveal the sublime Oneness of Being.

The Tree of Life diagram appears widely in sacred geometry, tattoo art, and New Age spirituality, though often stripped of its Jewish theological context. The diagram is also used in Christian Kabbalah, Hermetic Qabalah, and Theosophy. The path-to-Major-Arcana scheme is Golden Dawn, late 19th century—not part of classical Jewish Kabbalah.

Jewish communities engage the sefirot through study of classical texts—the Zohar, Moses Cordovero’s Pardes Rimonim, and Chaim Vital’s Etz Chaim remain standard references. Chabad and other Hasidic groups integrate sefirotic theology into daily prayer and ethical practice.

Common Misconceptions

The sefirot are not gods or deities. As revelations of God’s will, the sefirot are not understood as ten gods, but rather as ten different channels through which the one God reveals his will. This distinction was critical in defending Kabbalah against charges of polytheism or dualism.

The sefirot are not equivalent to chakras, despite surface similarities. Chakras derive from Indian yogic traditions with different metaphysical assumptions; the sefirot emerged from medieval Jewish Neoplatonism and function within a monotheistic framework focused on divine emanation rather than subtle body physiology.

The mystical nature of the sefirot and the precise way in which they function were often disputed. There is a divergence of opinion among the cabalists concerning the relation of the Sefirot to the En Sof. Kabbalists themselves debated whether the sefirot are identical with Ein Sof or distinct emanations—there is no single orthodox position.

The familiar Tree of Life diagram is not ancient. The iconic representation first appeared in print on the cover of the Latin translation of Gates of Light in the year 1516. While the conceptual framework is medieval, the standardized visual schematic is early modern.

How to Begin

For those new to the sefirot, begin with accessible scholarship before diving into practice. Daniel C. Matt’s The Essential Kabbalah provides clear English translations and commentary. Gershom Scholem’s Kabbalah remains the scholarly standard for understanding historical development. For practice-oriented learning, The Meditation Practice Within Kabbalah by Rabbi Steven Fisdel offers structured techniques.

Those with an existing meditation practice might explore courses specifically designed to integrate sefirotic contemplation with mindfulness techniques, such as those offered by the Institute for Jewish Spirituality or similar organizations. Working with a teacher grounded in Jewish tradition is advisable, as the material involves complex theological concepts easily misconstrued without proper guidance.

If approaching from a devotional perspective within Judaism, study the Zohar with commentary—the Pritzker Edition translated by Daniel C. Matt provides extensive annotation. Joseph Gikatilla’s Sha’arei Orah (Gates of Light) systematically explores each sefirah’s connection to biblical divine names and serves as a medieval primer still used today.

Related terms

kabbalahein softree of lifezohardevekutjewish meditation
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