15 Ways to Invigorate Your Seder

Passover, perhaps like no other holiday, captures the diverse spectrum of religious and spiritual experience, from one extreme to the next.

For the most observant, the Passover Seder is a solemn time, heavily filled with rules and regulations, rich with layers of customs and meanings, to be followed to the tee with all the stringency of Passover law.

For many the Seder is not quite as intense. Rather it is a nice, nostalgic experience. A time to get together with family and friends. A time to remember history and celebrate our heritage.

For others the Seder is at best a nuisance and at worst an imposition. Some wonder what are all these traditions all about; others are skeptical as to their contemporary relevance; yet others are apathetic to the whole demonstration, which doesn't carry much significance in their lives; finally, there are those for whom the entire holiday experience is an unhealthy facade concealing an otherwise dysfunctional family life.

For many others it's something in between: A night of tradition, which at times offers some inspiration, but at other times seems hollow and mechanical.

But is there anything more than all the above that makes "this night different than all other nights of the year?"

However you twist it, the Seder nowadays seems to be lacking a vitality that should make it indispensable to our lives. Even those that follow every nuance of the Seder tradition, can appear to be doing so by rote.

After 3319 years since the initial exodus from Egypt, our greatest challenge today is to make the Passover Seder relevant to our lives.

To address this compelling dilemma, this column has attempted to plumb the rich spiritual resources of Torah thought which personalize the Seder experience, rendering it into a powerful psychological/spiritual journey into our own hearts and souls – a Seder experience as it was always meant to be.

In previous years we have discussed the personal significance in The Seder Plate, The Four Questions and The Four Cups of Wine.

The heart of the Seder, from beginning to end, is comprised of fifteen steps – each another stage in the process of personal and global redemption which is the essence of Passover – as defined in detail in The Fifteen Steps of the Seder.

To make these 15 steps even more palatable, below is an exercise that can help bring the Passover Seder alive.

Remember: Passover in one word is transcendence – the power to free ourselves from all forms of constraints that inhibit and constrict our lives. The fifteen steps of the Seder – which recreates the Exodus from slavery to freedom – teaches us that transcendence is achieved through fifteen stages, each reflecting a “personality type” which imparts one piece of the Passover transcendence story. Together, all fifteen parts weave a beautiful tapestry, leading us to personal freedom and universal emancipation.

EXERCISE:

Before the Seder begins, each attendee should choose one of the “personality types” listed below corresponding to the fifteen Seder steps. When your respective stage in the Seder comes around, communicate to the group the “personality type” you have chosen to portray.
Be creative and find ways to express your “personality” – role-play, tell a story, or act out the part. Engage the group and invite them to comment – and together, personalize the fifteen steps and bring the Seder alive.

(If you have less than fifteen Seder attendees, each person can play more than one role. If you have more attendees, more than one person can play one personality type.)

1.      Kadesh: The Sanctifier: Distinguishes between the holy and the mundane.

2.      U'rchatz: The Cleaner: Cleanses the mind, body and heart of clutter and distractions in life.

3.      Karpas: The Dipper: Dips and sublimates the material (vegetable) in the saltwater/tears that come from remembering a more spiritual state.

4.      Yachatz: The Breaker: Breaks his subjective self to see a broader perspective.

5.      Maggid: The Storyteller: Relates the story of life, in dialogue form.

6.      Rachtzah: The Washer: Submerges the mind, body and soul, as a prelude to the next steps.

7.      Motzi: The Earthy One: Blesses and recognizes that even things earthy (bread) are heavenly.

8.      Matzah: The Selfless One: Does not allow the ego (dough) to rise and always remains selfless.

9.      Maror: The Empathizer: Feels another's bitterness and pain.

10.  Korech: The Binder: Sandwiches selflessness and empathy (steps 8-9) into one experience called life.

11.  Shulchan Orech: The Implementer: Sets the table and ensures that that we have all the tools to eat the "meal" of life.

12.  Tzafun: The Knower of Secrets: Reveals that which is hidden – the unconscious.

13.  Beirach: The Gracious One: Blesses and acknowledges life’s gifts.

14.  Hallel: The Praiser: Sings praise and places complete trust in G-d's hands.

15.  Nirtzah: The Acceptor: Not action – but complete surrender to being accepted and received by G-d.

For more information on these personality types, go to The_Original_Fifteen_Step_Program.


Agricultural Man
Ambition
Atmosphere
A Harvest of Love
A Moment's Harvest
A Speck of Flour
A Talmudic Mind
Birth
Bread of Faith
Community
Dealing with Adversity
Freedom
From Bondage to Servitude
My G-d
Passovering Time
Passover Greeting
Seder Personalities
Speed in Three Dimensions
Then & Now
There & Here
The Candlelit Search
The Coiled Spring
The Emancipation of G-d
The Festival of the Child
The Freedom to Passover
The Frog in the Oven
The Great Shabbat
The Journey
The Mountain & the Sea
The Muddy Path
The Original Fifteen Step Program
The Other Charity
The Question of Freedom
The Real G-d
The Taste of Matzah
The Third Seder
The Vegetarian Era
Vital Fluids
Walls of Water
Wet Matzah
Why Midnight?
Your Guide to Personal Freedom
Your Seven Emotions

 


Visitor Comments
Ros Koonin, 03/31/2007
How we celebrated Pesach - then as a child & now
Pesach as a child - my grandparents and parents and uncles and aunts, siblings and cousins all at the seder table.
As an adult - no grandparents, uncles or aunts, mother deceased, father with new wife in Israel and one sibling with nieces, nephews.

As a child - single of course.

As an adult - divorced, so what else is new!

Wishing you a Pesach Kasher V'Sameach! and thanks for the inspiring commentary.

Ronald Roth, 03/30/2007
My seder experiences as a child and today
As a child, I remember really enjoying the seder. We tooks turns reading from the Maxwell House haggada, which was kinf of dry and a little boring, but sooner or later we got to the meal, and that was fun. I remember the smell of chicken soup, matzah balls, the lamb or chicken, the honey cake, the chocolate covered marshmallow twists. My parents were loyal Jews, but they really didn't know or seem to care about any deep meaning to the holiday. I recenly stumbled on some old "super 8" movies of a seder which took place when I was about 14. I was having a great time. there was no sound, so I have to just judge by the pictures.

Today I always invite someone usually a gentile, or completely assimilated Jew who hasn't celebrated the Passover in recetn memory. I try to explain the meaning of each portion of the seder, which makes it more interesting for them. Last year we used children's hagaddas because my daughter is 7, and her cousins are 5 & 7. That made it easier and more fun all around, because the kids were much more involved, as opposed to being downright disruptive to a "real" seder. It's a tradition which I will never abandon. I start off each seder by telling the Jewish guests to imagine that every ancestor they ever had since the Exodus is gathered at our table with us. I don't know about them, but this is a powerful image for me.
  

Google
Web Meaningfullife.com