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Male and Female Halves
Adapted by Simhah H. Benyosef from "Reishit Chochmah" (Ktav Publishing
House, Inc.)
There is no doubt that the "compatible helper"
[paraphrasing Gen. 2:18] that G-d has intended for a man may assist him in his
task. Yet, there is much more to it than that. A single person is unable to
complete the rectification that he is to perform in this world. A soul's
heavenly source has male and female halves, which are incarnated into the world
as a man and a woman. The incarnation of the two does not necessarily occur
simultaneously. As a result, only when the man and woman are righteous do they
attain the privilege to meet and wed their real soulmate.  | | " By means of three steps of the marriage ceremony, the three main levels of a man's soul...become bound to those of his wife...." |  |  |
Until marriage, however, a man continues to be a half soul.
By means of three steps of the marriage ceremony, the three main levels of a
man's soul, the Nefesh, the Ruach and the Neshama, become
bound to those of his wife, and they both become one being, with one joint
spiritual structure.
Consequently, each spouse may only reach spiritual
fulfillment and perfection by means of their union, when their lives are
conducted with purity.
Even when the man and woman who get married are not real
soulmates - which is often the case in our time - they have to accomplish
together a rectification that was assigned to them in Heaven. Sometimes, per
divine decree, a person is unable to find a compatible mate. It is nevertheless
the unmarried person's duty to keep trying to find a spouse, for one may only
reach one's spiritual potential through marriage, and a decree may change at any
time that the person achieves whatever rectification is personally required
before he can find a mate.  | | " His soulmate is allowed to incarnate with him...in order to help him...." |  |  |
When a man comes into this world without a heavy debt to
rectify, he may meet his soulmate and marry her without much effort. The Ari
cites the case of a man who sins and has to reincarnate, whereas his soulmate
has completed her task in this world and has no further need of incarnation. (Shaar
HaGilgulim, 20) In special cases, his soulmate is allowed to incarnate with
him, and she will came back to this world with him in order to help him. When
the time comes for him to get married, however, he will not find her
effortlessly as in the first case, but after an intense search and struggle.
Since he reincarnated because of a sin he committed, the Accusers on high speak
against him; they want him to be prevented from meeting her, on the grounds that
he does not deserve it. So they spread animosity between the couple and they
later quarrel. That is why it is written that making couples is as difficult as
splitting the Red Sea!
Visitor Comments: 4
Anonymous, 6/4/2007
Great article and if people reAnonymous, 4/5/2006
Just writing to express thanks Elchonon Kranz, from USA, Philadephia, 3/30/2006
It states above:
"...they<
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