Tumah
Veteran Member
Ah, would it be logically impossible for me to believe in something logically impossible? If I understand you correctly that is an interesting challenge. I suppose what I'd say is that at the very least such a belief seems very strange. Can I believe in something I can't comprehend, or define at all? Something I can't assign any properties to? If I can, what am I really asserting belief in? It seems challenging at least.
It's not so hard, I do it every day! The Ramcha"l asserts that there are two things we can say about G-d. He is there and He is one, to the utmost possible concept of oneness. And I recall that Maimonides takes the apophatic approach as well.
But take the Israelites at Sinai. They were there and saw things comprehensible to their senses, demonstrations of power over nature, and so on. They could take away some properties about God, in this case, God has great power. God cares to communicate to them might be another. If those things are true, then those are comprehensible things about God. So if that is the case, were they genuinely understanding something about God's *intrinsic* properties?
Right, but what they saw, wasn't G-d Himself, but a higher degree of the Bridge that connects the Infinite with the finite. Moses had the highest state of prophecy called the "clear lens" (as opposed to the "unclear lens" of later prophets). Rashi explains, this means that when he looked through his prophetic lens, he understood that he wasn't seeing G-d Himself.