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In every generation, say our sages, a person
is obligated to see himself as if he himself has come out
of Egypt.[1]
Mitzrayim, the Hebrew word for Egypt, means boundaries
and constrictions; yetziat mitzrayim, going
out of Egypt, is the endeavor to rise above all that
inhibits the soul of man, be it limitations imposed by an
outside force, or the physical, psychological or spiritual
limitations imposed by habit and nature.
One of the most constricting elements of the human condition
is the phenomenon of time. Time carries off the past and holds
off the future, confining our lives to a temporal sliver of
present. But on the first night of Passover we
break the bonds of time, having received a mandate to experience
the Exodus as if he himself has come out of Egypt.
We recall the Exodus in our minds, verbalize it in the telling
of the Haggadah, digest it in the form of matzah and wine.
As we passover the centuries, memorythose faded visages
of past that generally constitute our only answer to the tyranny
of timebecomes experience, and history is made current
and real.
Leap to the Future
Passover is an eight-day festival, with two opening and two
closing days of heightened observance and commemoration (Yom
Tov[2]). While the theme of redemption runs as
a current through the entire festival, the first days of Passover
focus primarily on the first redemptionour liberation
from Egypt thirty-three centuries agowhile the closing
days highlight the final Redemptionthe future era of
divine goodness and perfection heralded by Moshiach. On the
first two nights of Passover we conduct the seder,
reliving our redemption from Egypt in the telling of the Haggadah,
the eating of the matzah and the bitter herbs, and the drinking
of the four cups of wine. On the seventh day of Passover,
we read the Song at the Sea, which contains an
important allusion to the Messianic era;[3]
on the eighth day, the haftarah (reading from the Prophets)
is from Isaiah chapters 10-12one of the primary prophecies
on the future Redemption. Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov, founder
of the Chassidic movement, instituted the custom of partaking
of Moshiachs Feasta mirror seder
of sorts that includes matzah and (four cups[4] of) wineon the afternoon
of the eighth day of Passover.
Thus our transcendence of time enters a new, heightened phase:
it is one thing to vitalize memory to the point of actual
re-experience, but quite another to make real an event that
lies in the future, especially an event that has no parallel
in the history of man. Yet in the closing hours of Passover,
we enter into the world of Moshiach. Having vaulted over millennia
of past on the seder nights, we now surmount the blank
wall of future, to taste the matzah and wine of the ultimate
redemption.
Based on an address by the Rebbe, Passover 5732 (1972)[5]
. Adapted from the teachings of the Rebbe by Yanki Tauber
[1] Talmud, Pesachim 116b; Passover Haggadah
[2] In its original, biblical form, the festival of
Passover consists of seven days, with one opening and one
closing day of Yom Tov. This is also the form in
which it is observed today in the Holy Land. Outside of
the Land of Israel, we observe an additional festival-day
of the Diaspora, which makes for an eight-day festival
with two opening and two closing days of Yom Tov
[3] See Talmud, Sanhedrin 91b
[4] Instituted by Rabbi Sholom DovBer of Lubavitch.
[5] Likkutei Sichot, vol. VII, pp. 272-273.
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