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Glossary›Chokhmah

Glossary

Chokhmah

The second sefirah in Kabbalah's Tree of Life, representing divine wisdom—the primordial point of creation where infinite potential sparks into conscious existence.

What is Chokhmah?

Chokhmah (Hebrew: חָכְמָה, ḥoḵmā) is the Biblical Hebrew word for “wisdom” and the second of the ten sefirot in Kabbalah, representing the first power of conscious intellect and subtle manifestation emerging from Keter’s pure potentiality. In Jewish mystical texts, Chokhmah is described as the primordial point of divine wisdom that shines forth from the will of God—a point that remains incomprehensible until differentiated and given form in Binah. The word itself can be divided into koach (“potential”) and ma (“that which is”), meaning “the potential of what is” or “the potential to be.”

Chokhmah is located at the top of the right column of the Tree of Life—the Pillar of Mercy—representing the initial active and expansive force in the Sefirotic structure, linked to concepts of expansion and giving. Unlike conceptual knowledge or accumulated learning, Chokhmah manifests as a flash of intuitive insight, the raw spark before analysis.

Origins & Lineage

Chokhmah holds a foundational role in Jewish mystical texts such as the Sefer Yetzirah and the Zohar, representing in early Kabbalah the initial divine wisdom emanating from Keter and playing a pivotal role in the unfolding of the universe. The Sefer Yetzirah, an enigmatic text dating to between the 2nd and 6th centuries CE and traditionally ascribed to the patriarch Abraham, explores the cosmological structure underlying creation through Hebrew letters and numbers.

The Zohar elaborates on Chokhmah as the source of all wisdom and insight, crucial for the creative process. In the Zohar, Chokhmah is described as the primordial point that shines from the will of God and is therefore the starting point of Creation. Composed primarily in the 13th century and attributed to Moses de León (though ascribed to the 2nd-century Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai), the Zohar became the central mystical commentary on Torah.

In the 16th century, Isaac Luria—a key figure in Kabbalistic thought—emphasized Chokhmah’s importance in the cosmic process of tzimtzum (divine contraction) and tikkun (repair), initiating the process of restoring fragmented divine light central to Lurianic Kabbalah’s understanding of creation and redemption. Moses Cordovero systematized Kabbalistic teaching in the same century, establishing working texts and defining the relationships between sefirot.

How It’s Practiced

Chokhmah is not “practiced” in the sense of a technique, but encountered through contemplative disciplines. The Zohar and the Arizal emphasize that Chokhmah is a light that cannot rest in a confused or self-seeking vessel, requiring cultivating humility, sincerity, and inner stillness, and living with spiritual openness according to Torah, free of rigid expectations, to be surprised and transformed by moments of true Chokhmah when granted from Above.

In practice, seekers engage Chokhmah through:

  • Meditation on the Tree of Life, focusing awareness on the upper sefirot and opening to flashes of insight rather than discursive thought
  • Textual study, particularly of Zoharic passages and commentaries that describe Chokhmah’s role in creation
  • Contemplative prayer, including Hebrew letter meditations associated with the divine name Yah (יה), which corresponds to Chokhmah
  • Hitbodedut (secluded meditation), as taught in Hasidic traditions, to cultivate inner quietude

In the human soul, Chokhmah is associated with the power of insight and the ability to perceive deeper truths intuitively, corresponding to the concept of Sanctified Consciousness.

Chokhmah Today

Contemporary seekers encounter Chokhmah primarily through Kabbalah study groups, Jewish Renewal communities, and interfaith mysticism circles. Chabad-Lubavitch centers worldwide teach accessible Kabbalistic concepts, including Chokhmah, through the lens of Hasidic thought. Online platforms and translations by scholars like Aryeh Kaplan, Daniel Matt (The Zohar: Pritzker Edition), and contemporary teachers have made classical texts available in English.

Chokhmah appears in modern Tarot correspondences (the four Twos in the minor arcana), Western ceremonial magic systems derived from Hermetic Qabalah, and psychological frameworks that map Kabbalistic structures onto developmental models. Jewish meditation retreats—such as those offered by the Institute for Jewish Spirituality—incorporate sefirot contemplation. Academic programs in Jewish mysticism at institutions like Hebrew University and Brandeis University study Chokhmah within historical and theological contexts.

Common Misconceptions

Chokhmah is not intellectual brilliance or accumulated knowledge. It precedes logic and analysis. It is not intellectual wisdom in the human sense but a flash of Divine illumination that precedes and transcends verbal comprehension, and therefore cannot be explained.

Chokhmah is not interchangeable with Sophia in Gnostic texts, though cross-pollination occurred in late antiquity. While both denote divine wisdom, their cosmological roles differ significantly.

Chokhmah does not function independently. Chokhmah provides the initial spark or idea, which is then structured and formed by Binah (Understanding), and this dynamic interplay between Chokhmah and Binah is crucial in the Kabbalistic understanding of the creative process.

It is not a deity or entity to petition, but a lens through which divine creative force flows.

How to Begin

Begin with Aryeh Kaplan’s Sefer Yetzirah: The Book of Creation (1997), which offers clear translation and commentary accessible to beginners. Follow with Daniel Matt’s The Essential Kabbalah (1995) for foundational concepts, then progress to Gershom Scholem’s Kabbalah (1974) for historical depth.

For experiential practice, seek teachers trained in authentic Jewish mystical lineages—Chabad, Breslov, or Jewish Renewal communities. Online, Rabbi Yitzchak Ginsburgh’s Gal Einai Institute and Rabbi DovBer Pinson’s IYYUN Center offer guided study.

Meditate on the Hebrew letter Yud (י), the smallest letter, which corresponds to Chokhmah as the condensed point of potential. Contemplate Job 28:12—“Wisdom comes from nothingness”—as a koan-like entry into the sefirah’s paradox.

Related terms

kabbalahtree of lifesefirotbinahketerhebrew prayer
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