Exodus 13:17-15:26 –
Numbers 28:19-25 –
2 Samuel 22:1-51 –
Revelation 5:1-14
This week's edition of The Set Table contains:
Questions and Commentary on Shabbat Pesach
Chayyei Yeshua - A Devotional Commentary on the Besora Reading
In Summary
Looking Ahead
Questions & Commentary on Shabbat Pesach
1. Why
did God command all leaven be removed from Jewish homes? What is the spiritual
significance of this commandment?
Rabbi Jason Sobel
In the Torah, the Lord
not only commands the Jewish people to eat matza
but goes as far as to command us to remove every trace of leaven from our
dwellings (Exodus 13:7). Anyone who has
ever kashered their home for Passover knows that this is an arduous task that
often takes several days to complete. Why does God want us to expend so much
time and energy removing the leaven from our homes? Wouldn't it have been
sufficient enough to just prohibit us from eating any leaven?
In order to understand
why we must not eat or be in possession of any leaven we must first know why we
eat matza (unleavened bread). The
basic answer to this question is found in Exodus 12:39 and Deuteronomy 16:3
which say,
And they baked unleavened cakes of the dough which they had
brought out of Egypt; for it was not leavened, because they were driven out of Egypt and could not wait, nor had they prepared provisions for
themselves.
You shall eat no
leavened bread with it; seven days you shall eat unleavened bread with it, that
is, the bread of affliction (for you came out of the land of Egypt in haste),
that you may remember the day in which you came out of the land of Egypt all
the days of your life.
Thus, the primary reason that we do not eat leaven is
to remind us that when the Lord redeemed us from Egypt,
we left in such great haste that our bread did not have time to rise.
Therefore, we eat matza on Pesach so
that we never forget the great redemption that God wrought for our people.
But, why is it important to remember the speed with
which our ancestors were freed from Egypt?
Our Sages tell us that at the time of our redemption, Israel
had reached the 49th level of spiritual impurity. And if they had stayed in Egypt
any longer, Israel
would have become too corrupt to be delivered. This is underscored by a midrash
that says one out of every four Jews died during the ninth plague of darkness. Why?
Because they loved Egypt
so much that they did not want to leave and be redeemed. The Lord honored their
request and allowed them to die and remain there. The point is that if God had
waited any longer, the leaven of Israel's
spiritual corruption would have lead to their destruction instead of their
deliverance. By removing and not eating any leaven, we remember that God did
not allow this to happen but rather was faithful to fulfill the promise of
redemption that he made before it was too late.
Secondly, since leaven is a symbol of sin in the Bible
and Jewish tradition, we are also reminded of the need to rid ourselves and our
communities of all traces of sin and wrong doing. The laborious process of
removing leaven from the home in preparation for Pesach is used as an
illustration of this spiritual cleansing process by Shaul when he writes,
Your boasting is not good. Do you not know that
a little leaven leavens the whole lump? Therefore purge out the old leaven,
that you may be a new lump, since you truly are unleavened. For indeed Messiah,
our Passover, was sacrificed for us. Therefore let us keep the feast, not with
old leaven, nor with the leaven of malice and wickedness, but with the
unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.
1 Corinthians 5:6-8
As we remove from our home and refrain from eating any
leaven this Passover, let us take the time to remember the great redemption God
has performed for our ancestors and us. Let us also examine our lives and
relationships in order to remove any destructive chometz (leaven).
2. How is it
possible that Israel would complain at the Shur desert immediately after
witnessing one of the most fantastic miracles in Israel's history - the
splitting of the Red Sea? Additionally how are we to understand God's cryptic
instructions to Moses (Exod. 15:22-25)?
Nick Amic
It's unfathomable to us upon reading a few verses
after the splitting of the sea that Israel
had lost faith so soon after witnessing such great miracles. What happened? Let's
back up a step and ask: What's the purpose of miracles? Are they intended to
inspire and maintain faith? Or is there some other end in mind? The Ramban
(Nachmanides) comments in his work Torat
Hashem Temima:
From the great and public miracles, one recognizes
the hidden miracles, which are the foundation of the entire Torah, for one has
no part in the Torah of Moses our teacher unless one believes that all our
things and occurrences are all miracles.
The Ramban points out that in fact everything we experience
is a miracle in that it originates from the Divine. There are times when God's
actions are obvious, such as the splitting of the sea, and times when God's
actions are hidden in times of discipline for example (see Deuteronomy 31:17-20). Israel's
state of oppression and idolatry required the most obvious and open miracles in
order to literally save them from plunging into total depravity and despair.
The miracle of the splitting of the sea was meant to jolt them out of their
spiritual darkness and awaken their sense that God runs the world. However, as
spiritual infants, they expected God to perform miracles in the face of all
their challenges. Instead of doing the hard work of dealing with life on life's
terms, they complained to Moses in the desert at Mara. What was God's response?
God used this challenge to further educate his children.
Moses is instructed to throw a tree branch into the
bitter water - symbolizing what Proverbs 3:18
calls "the tree of life" (i.e. the Torah) - followed by teaching Israel
a choq umishpat "an ordinance and a
judgment". God here gives us the prescription for true maturity. Step one is to
realize that the whole of nature is intimately controlled and sustained by our
Creator, prompting us to ask what God is teaching us by way of any test or
challenge (Ephesians 2:13). After this realization, we are prepared to begin to
learn that we serve a transcendent God - symbolized by the choq (or supra-natural commandment) which we follow not based on
its logic, but simply because it's the directive of a God whose "ways are not
our ways." Lastly, we are prepared to live interpersonally within a community -
symbolized by the "mishpat" (or civil ordinance, e.g. not stealing) - without
motive of manipulation or ego, but only to treat others morally and decently to
please our Creator.
Life is not meant to be lived on an endless chase of
"spiritual highs" fed off a spiritual experience. God desires of us a process
of personal growth (Ephesians 4:13-15) ridding ourselves of our destructive
habits (1 Peter 2:1-3) by doing the work of renewing our thought patterns
(Romans 12:1) through Torah learning (Proverbs 3:1-2). God did miracles for Israel
to free them from bondage and does so for us today. However, Israel's
freedom was to lead them to receive the Torah on Mount Sinai.
As the late Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach commented on the Passover story: "Freedom
without direction is still slavery".
Sean Emslie
Revelation 5:1-14 - The Lamb that was
Slaughtered
In this week's besora
reading we come to a timely reading that fits well with Passover, a story of a
sacrificed lamb or as Dr. David Stern translated it a "slaughtered lamb".
Though the use of "slaughtered" is much more graphic
than sacrificied, I think it is fitting, especially as we have considered the
redemption from Egypt
and the sparing of the firstborn because of the blood of the slaughtered lambs
whose blood placed on the doorposts marked out a home of those who took hold of
God's provision.
In this week's reading we come to a vision from the
book of Revelation, as Yochanan tells of an event where the unfolding of his
story and the events of his book are on hold being that there is a sealed
scroll that needs to be opened to continue the events of the story and the
unfolding of his "revelation of Messiah Yeshua". Yochanan says that an angel called out
asking if anyone was worthy to open the scroll and was greeted with no answer,
which caused Yochanan to weep. Then we
read:
One of the elders said to me, "Don't cry. Look,
the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, has won the right to open
the scroll and its seven seals." Then I saw standing there with the throne and
the four living beings, in the circle of the elders, a Lamb that appeared to
have been slaughtered.
Revelation 5:5-6
The one who was worthy was the Lion of the tribe of Judah,
the Root of David, a reference to Yeshua, our righteous Messiah. We will see
that his worthiness to take the scroll was based on his being the Lamb that was
slain. It is the "slaughtered lamb" that has proven himself through his
suffering and death that can take his place as the one to keep the story going
and to continue the unfolding or revelation of the Messiah and his workings in
the world.
It is not easy for us, now separated for nearly 2000
years from the Temple sacrifices
and the annual killing of the Passover lamb, to take in fully the depth of what
"sacrifice" really means. Even at a
higher level is the self-sacrifice of our Messiah that took place during the
Passover, nearly two millennia ago.
Though we may not have experiential knowledge, it is important for us to
do the best we can to take in the great sacrifice and how the death of Yeshua
played a vital role in his future place where he will reign as King Messiah.
His worthiness to rule all the created order was confirmed by his willingness
to suffer and die to bring atonement for Israel
and the Nations.
As we conclude Pesach, the celebration of redemption
from Egypt may
we be mindful also of the second redemption, the redemption that was brought
about by Yeshua, who was the great Passover lamb.
May we honor him, who is worthy to play his role as
the Lion of the Tribe of Judah, because of his being the "slaughtered Lamb,"
and joyfully join the chorus with these words:
Worthy is the lamb that was slain, and has
redeemed us to God by his blood, to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and
strength, and honor, and glory, and blessing! Blessing, and honor, glory, and
power, be unto him who sits upon the throne, and unto the Lamb, forever and
ever.
Revelation 5:12-13
NEXT WEEK'S READINGS
- QEDOSHIM
Leviticus 19:1-20:27
Amos 9:7-15
Luke
16:19-31
UPCOMING YACHAD NETWORK EVENTS
7th Annual Young Messianic Jewish
Scholars Conference
Beverly
Hills, CA ● June 4-6, 2008
4th Annual Young Leaders Shabbaton
Beverly
Hills, CA ● June 6-7, 2008
|