35
תָּא חֲזֵי, אִלּוּ אַפִּיק אָדָם תּוֹלְדוֹת מִגִּנְתָּא דְעֵדֶן, לָא יִשְׁתֵּצוּן לְדָרֵי דָרִין. וְלָא אִתְחַשַּׁךְ נְהוֹרָא דְסִיהֲרָא לְעָלְמִין. וְכֻלְהוּ הֲווּ קָיְימִין לְעָלְמִין. וְאֲפִילּוּ מַלְאֲכֵי עִלָּאִי לָא קָיְימֵי קָמַיְיהוּ בִּנְהוֹרָא וְזִיוָא וְחָכְמְתָא. כְּמָא דְאַתְּ אָמֵר בְּצֶלֶם אֱלהִים בָּרָא אוֹתוֹ. אֲבָל כֵּיוָן דְּגָרִים חֶטְאָה וְנָפַק אִיהוּ מִגִּנְתָּא דְעֵדֶן וְעֲבַד תּוֹלְדוֹת לְבַר. לָא אִתְקָיְימוּ בְּעָלְמָא וְלָא הֲוִי כְּדְקָא חָזֵי. For indeed, if Adam had brought offspring with him out of the Garden of Eden, these would never have been destroyed, the light of the moon would never have been darkened, and all would have lived for ever; and not even the angels would have equalled them in illumination and wisdom, as we read, “In the image of God he created him” (Gen. 1, 27). But since, through his sin, he left the Garden by himself and bore offspring outside it, these did not endure in the world, and this ideal was, therefore, not realised.’