Self-Kenosis and the Hermeneutic Clinician
This essay develops the mystical category of self-kenosis — the radical emptying of the egoic or created self — into a working clinical discipline for the practising physician. Taking Simone Weil’s doctrine of decreation as its point of departure, and reading it alongside Meister Eckhart’s detachment, the Lurianic dialectic of tzimtzum and bittul, the scholarly interpretations of Elliot R. Wolfson and Moshe Idel, and the pragmatic surrender encoded in the first three steps of Alcoholics Anonymous, the paper argues that the same movement of voluntary contraction that mystics describe as the condition for divine presence is also the precondition for genuine therapeutic presence. I propose that the clinician who would truly receive the patient must perform a hermeneutic and ontological self-emptying analogous to the divine tzimtzum: a disciplined withdrawal of the diagnostic ego that opens a space — a makom — within which the patient may appear as a sacred text rather than as an object of mastery. Drawing on my own published corpus on therapeutic tzimtzum, sacred listening, the dissolving self, divine concealment, and the sacred space of surrender, the essay translates an apparently abstract mystical paradox into concrete clinical postures: attention as decreation, silence as contraction, not-knowing as epistemic humility, and surrender as the paradoxical ground of healing power. The clinical risks of the move — dissolution without containment, abdication of responsibility, false humility — are examined, and an ethically bounded model of therapeutic self-kenosis is offered. The paper concludes that self-emptying is not the loss of the physician but the purification of presence: the paradoxical path by which the practitioner becomes a transparent medium for a healing that does not originate in the ego.