Bringing God into - Passover
By Aryeh Ben David
If
I invited you to do a Jewish program for Passover - and asked you to please
bring a mattress, a bottle of wine, and some kind of aphrodisiac - you would
probably look at me askance. Maybe even consider having me investigated.
But
what do we do on Passover Seder night? We drink 4 glasses of wine, recline on
pillows, and eat everyone's favorite "aphrodisiac"- charoset - which is
made from apples, wine, and nuts - the ingredients mentioned in the Song of
Songs, the love song of the Bible.
What
were the Rabbis who compiled the Hagada thinking?!
It
would have been so easy to create a simple Hagada recounting the sudden and miraculous
exodus from Egypt
- quoting the appropriate verses and simply retelling the story. But those who invented
the Hagada apparently had something else in mind. They didn't want us to
present an historical recounting of what happened. And they didn't want us just
to "relive" it sensually - by eating the bread of affliction, tasting the
bitter herbs, and drinking to our redemption. There is something more going on
here.
More
than "re-live" the exodus, they wanted us to "re-love" it.
They
wanted us to focus less on what happened and focus more on how we feel
about what happened. They wanted us to dive into the "love relationship" of
thousands of years ago - when the love was new.
How
is this night really different from all other nights?
This
is the night for love - for feeling God's love for us. And it is easy to miss
the moment. So the writers of the Hagada tried creatively to help us recapture its
essence in the events of the Seder:
What
do people do when they fall in love? What do new lovers do?
- They are romantic: Four cups of wine,
reclining, and charoset set the mood.
- They are large in
spirit, generous: "Dinner on me tonight!" "Drinks on the house!" How do
we open the Seder? - "Let anyone who is hungry come and eat!"
- They exaggerate: "He is the most
loving, the most caring, the most giving." What do we read in the Hagada?
- "There weren't 10 plagues - but 50! Not 50 - but 250!"
- They stay up all
night talking:
What do we do at the Seder? Stay up talking late into the night.
- They talk about
their common visions, about starting a family, and about their ideal
future together: At the Seder we talk about visions of leaving Egypt and being led to the Land of Israel,
we talk about family - the 4 sons, and about our ideal future as a people
- 'Next year in rebuilt Jerusalem!'
- They write poetry to
each other: How
do we conclude the Seder? By reciting the love poetry of "Shir Hashirim"
- the Song of Songs.
What's
going on? It would have been so easy to simply recite the verses in the Torah about
the Jewish people leaving Egypt.
Why all this carrying on?
Love
evokes love. God's act of bringing us out of Egypt "on the wings of eagles" - was
an act of love. On Passover, we respond to God's love with love of our own. The
events of the Seder are meant to evoke our feelings of love.
God's
act of love for us evokes our love for God. So we respond by drinking
wine, reclining, and eating an aphrodisiac. By singing, exaggerating, and
reading poetry. This is the night we rekindle our love for God.
I've
been married for many years, but looking back at our wedding album and
reminiscing about those moments always rekindles the love I have for my wife.
The
Hagada is like the wedding album evoking love all over again. The Seder night
is the sensual reminiscing. It is easy to miss the moment. But if we don't miss
it - it can be a night unlike any other.
QUESTIONS
FOR REFLECTION
When have you ever felt loved by God?
What customs would you create to evoke loving God
on Seder night?
Which Passover custom is the most meaningful for
you?