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While preserving our traditional songs and prayers, The Historical
Haggadah invites participants to become voices of the ancient
past. As they do, remarkable insights are shared with all. An abbreviated
example helps illustrate.
Matzah -- unleavened bread -- is one of the foods eaten the evening
of the escape (Exodus 12), a meal planned four days in advance!
With four days of planning, wasn't there time to bake bread and
let it rise? The haste of our escape cannot have created a problem
with baking normal bread. And certainly it wasn't eaten to commemorate
a hasty escape which had not yet occurred! Then why the commandment
to eat matzah the night of the departure? Based on analysis of varied
Torah passages, Epstein offers this explanation: Matzah had long
been a special bread--pure enough to offer to Adonay at an annual
festival preceding the era of slavery -- an offering consecrating
the firstborn males as Adonay's ritual leaders.
In fact, the firstborn acted as priests before there was a formal
priesthood. When many of them were taken away as slaves, the family
members remaining behind moved the festival indoors, and matzah
was eaten to consecrate all the People as a Firstborn Nation --
a nation of priests.
After the Exodus, matzah continued to be used as the bread of consecration
of the Levite priests -- a ceremony making no reference to Egypt.
Perhaps ritually more important than we have ever understood in
our time, matzah is the bread consecrating us as members of a Priestly
Nation. It did not rise in Egypt because we would not let it. Epstein
explains: "It could not be allowed to rise. If it did it would not
be suitable as an offering or serve its ritual purpose of consecration."
Today we may also ascribe to matzah a symbolism of our haste to
escape oppression and follow Adonay's commandments.
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"Matzah,
bitter herbs, the Ten Plagues -- just to name a few of the things
that will feel more real from now on -- this haggadah isn't just
good -- it's important!" - A
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