Zohar, Sifra di-Tzeniuta -- The Balance and the Kings Who Died
ספרא דצניעותא
Sifra di-Tzeniuta (the matkela)
This chunk is the Targum-translated form of zohar.sifra-ditzniuta.matkela. It was drafted by the Hekhal Targum engine on 2026-05-29 using glossary revision kabbalah-v0.2 with the idra-theosophy, pardes frame controller(s). The current status is machine-assisted; readers should treat this as a draft pending editor review until the status flips to verified.
Every term in the controlled glossary surfaces a range card in the apparatus, every doctrinally-live ambiguity is preserved with both readings, and the audit trail records the model, the prompt hash, and the retrieval set used for this rendering. The translation is open to interrogation at every step.
Until the head of desire of all desires arrayed garments of glory and bestowed them.
This balance hangs in a place that was not. In it were weighed those who were not found. The balance stands in its own self; it is not grasped and it is not seen. In it they ascended, and in it ascend those who were not, and were, and will be.
The translation above was produced by the Targum engine against the kabbalah corpus’s controlled glossary. The active interpretive frame is idra-theosophy, pardes. Each frame controller injects the corpus’s interpretive grammar into the rendering as system context and validates the output against its own rules.
The terms surfaced as range cards in this chunk are: metkala (rendered as the-balance). For each, the apparatus carries the active sense set and the rationale for the selected rendering. Hover behavior on the published page exposes the sense alternatives so readers can interrogate the translation choice.
Audit trail: model claude-opus-4-8[session], glossary revision kabbalah-v0.2, frame controllers version 1.0, drafted at 2026-05-29T23:37:26Z, prompt hash sha256:d93db7c666f370c9. This information is queryable per chunk on the published site; the editorial discipline is that any rendering decision can be traced back to the model, the glossary state, and the prompt that produced it.