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One month after Passover, on the 14th of Iyar, comes Pesach
Sheni, the Second Passover. Today, we commemorate
the occasion by eating matzah on that day. When the Holy Temple
stood in Jerusalem, this day served as a second chance
for those who were unable to bring the Passover offering on
its appointed day on Nissan 14.
In the ninth chapter of Numbers, the Torah relates the circumstances
that led to the institution of the Second Passover:
G-d spoke to Moses in the Sinai desert, in the first month
of the second year following their Exodus from the land of
Egypt, saying:
The children of Israel shall prepare the Passover [offering]
at its appointed time. On the fourteenth of this month, in
the afternoon ... in accordance with all its decrees and laws....
There were, however, certain individuals who had become
ritually impure through contact with a dead body, and therefore
could not prepare the Passover offering on that day. They
approached Moses and Aaron ... and they said: ...Why
should we be deprived and not be able to present G-ds
offering in its time, amongst the children of Israel?
And Moses said to them: Wait here, and I will hear
what G-d will command concerning you.
And G-d spoke to Moses, saying... Any person who
is contaminated by death, or is on a distant road, whether
among you now or in future generations, shall prepare a Passover
offering to G-d. They shall prepare it on the afternoon of
the fourteenth day of the second month, and shall eat it with
matzahs and bitter herbs....[1]
The Talmud points out that the above verses appear in the
Torah out of chronological context. The events leading to
the establishment of the Second Passover took place in the
month of Nissan in the year 2449 from creation (1312 bce);
chronologically, this would place them in the very first chapter
of the book of Numbers. Instead, Numbers begins with an account
of the census taken of the Jewish people a month later,
in Iyar of that year. From this the Talmud derives the rule
that There is no earlier and later in the Torah.[2]
Why, indeed, arent these events transcribed in the
order in which they occurred? Our sages explain that the Torah
does not wish to begin the book of Numbers with something
that is a disgrace for Israel. For in the forty years
that the people of Israel were in the desert, this was the
only Passover offering they brought.[3]
But why should this be regarded as a disgrace?
The reason that the people of Israel brought no other Passover
offering until they entered the Holy Land was that G-d did
not allow them to. G-d had instructed that the annual Passover
offering should be observed only When you come into
the land that G-d shall give to you;[4] the first two Passoversthe one observed
in Egypt and the one held in the desert on the following yearwere
exceptions to this rule, specifically commanded by G-d. So
of what deficiency in Israels behavior are our sages
speaking?
The answer lies in the story of the Second Passover
itself. A group of Jews had found themselves in a state which,
by divine decree, absolved them from the duty to bring the
Passover offering. Yet they refused to reconcile themselves
to this. They refused to accept that this avenue of relationship
with G-d should be closed to them. And their impassioned plea
and demandWhy should we be deprived?swayed
G-d to establish a new institution, the Second Passover,
to enable them, and all who might find themselves in a similar
situation in future generations, to present G-ds
offering in its time, amongst the children of Israel.
Therein lies the disgrace in those thirty-eight
Passoverless years in the Sinai Desert. Why did the Jewish
people reconcile themselves to the divine decree? Why did
they accept this void in their relationship with G-d? Why
did they not clamor for the opportunity to serve Him in the
full and optimum manner that the mitzvot of the Torah describe?
The Lesson
For more than 1900 years now, our Passovers have been incomplete.
We eat the matzah and the bitter herbs, we drink the four
cups of wine, we ask and answer the four questions, but the
heart and essence of Passover, the Passover offering, is absent
from our seder table. For G-d has hidden His face from
us, has removed the Holy Temple, the seat of His manifest
presence on physical earth, from our midst.
The lesson of the displaced ninth chapter of
Numbers is clear: G-d desires and expects of us that we refuse
to reconcile ourselves to the decree of galut and its
diminution of His manifest involvement in our lives. He desires
and expects of us that we storm the gates of heaven with the
plea and demand: Why shall we be deprived?!
Based on an address by the Rebbe, Sivan 11, 5741 (June
13, 1981)[5]
Adapted from the teachings of the Rebbe by Yanki Tauber
[2]. Talmud, Pesachim 6b; Rashi on Numbers 9:1.
[3]. Sifri on Numbers, ibid.; Rashi, ibid.
[4]. Exodus 12:25; see Rashi on verse.
[5]. Likkutei Sichot, vol. XXIII, pp. 62-72
.
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