Overview: Passover Themes and Theology
Passover is one of the most important Jewish festivals of
the year, and its high point is the seder. Experiencing this wonderful Jewish
meal and interactive "happening" is to live through all the varied
themes of the Passover festival.
The most obvious theme of the festival is redemption. In the
Exodus story, which Jews are commanded to tell their children every year on
Passover, the Jews were redeemed physically from slavery. While Pesach is
"z'man heyruteinu," the season
of our freedom, it is also a festival that speaks of spiritual redemption. Jews
were freed from mental as well as physical slavery. It was as a physically and
spiritually free people that the Jewish nation prepared to receive the Torah on
Mt. Sinai.
The notion of spiritual redemption is in part demonstrated
by the fundamental Jewish idea that in every generation every individual is
obliged to view him or herself as though he or she had actually gone forth from
Egypt. Egypt is "Mitzraim"
in Hebrew. It stems from the root "tzar,"
which means narrow or constrained. In order to leave Egypt, each individual
must break out of personal narrowness, becoming free to achieve his full
spiritual potential. Another explanation of the root "tzar" is calamity. In this view, "Mitzraim" represents the country of calamities that befall the
Jews.
The seder includes many allusions to a future messianic
redemption. One of the clearest symbols of the presence and hope of future
redemption is the Cup of Elijah that is placed on every seder table. Contained
within the salvation from Egypt are the seeds of future redemption, as the
Torah states, "This same night is a night of Watching unto the Lord for
all the children of Israel throughout their generations" (Exodus 12:42).
An illustration of the coexistence of past and future
redemption at the Seder is the unusual way of reciting Hallel (Psalms of
praise). The Haggadah splits
Hallel into two parts, so that from kiddush
at the beginning of the seder until the meal in the middle, the seder
emphasizes past redemption, such as the Exodus, and from the meal to the end it
looks to the future redemption.
Passover also contains a strong connection to the theme of
creation. It is one of the four new years of the Jewish calendar. Nisan, the
time the festival occurs, was traditionally seen as the first month of the
Jewish year. Pesach celebrates spring, rebirth, and renewal, symbolized by the
green "karpas" and the egg
on the seder plate. It is also a time of "beginning," as exemplified
by the first grain harvest and the birth or creation of Israel as a nation. As
a newborn nation, the Jews began their journey to receive Torah on Mt. Sinai.
Meticulous preparation is the theme of the weeks and days
leading up to Pesach. Every speck of hametz (yeast or leaven) must be
removed from the house in the days before sitting down to the seder table. On
Passover, we also rid ourselves of spiritual "hametz"--any type of
arrogance, indulgence, or self-assertion. As slaves, Jews had no choice but to
be self-denying. After liberation, they had to freely choose to humble
themselves and subject themselves to God's sovereignty. Traditional Judaism
interprets hametz as a metaphor for the "yetzer ha-rah"--the evil inclination. The absence of leaven is
epitomized by matzah, the flat bread
Jews eat during Passover. Matzah is also a link between exile and redemption.
It is the bread of affliction, eaten by slaves who did not have decent food. It
is also a symbol of freedom, because when the Jews left Egypt, they rushed away
with unleavened bread.
Another notable theme of the Pesach seder is the repetition
of patterns of four. This is based on the verse in Exodus that states, "I
am the Lord, and I will bring you
out from under the burdens of the Egyptians, and I will deliver you from their bondage, and I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and with great judgments, and I
will take you to Me for a people,
and I will be to you a God…" (Exodus 6:6-7). Among many other patterns of
four at the seder, we drink four cups of wine, ask four questions, and speak
about four types of children.
In telling the story of the escape from Egypt and the
plagues that preceded it, Jews also highlight God's role in the redemption.
Moses is not mentioned in the traditional Haggadah lest too much focus center on him and his role rather
than on God, the Sovereign of the Universe. The Haggadah emphasizes that it was
not a messenger or angel, but the almighty God who redeemed the Jews. The
events and circumstances of the Exodus, from the calling of Moses at the
burning bush to the plagues brought against the Egyptians, proved beyond any
doubt to Pharaoh and all humankind that the one God is Sovereign over all the
earth. Beyond that, the Exodus is a formative experience for the Jewish people.
What was once a group of slaves gains an identity as a nation. This event
laying the foundation for a covenantal relationship with God.