On Wednesdays We Reflect: Week 6 Reflections

This past weekend, I hosted a Seder dinner. Like Lent, Passover and Seders have not traditionally been a part of my experience, so exploring the meaning and symbolism in each of them now opens up a bigger picture of God for me and a deeper understanding of faith. 

Passover, and the Seder dinner, rehearse and celebrate the story of God’s deliverance of the Israelites from their slavery in Egypt. Over and over, throughout the ceremony, participants are invited to insert themselves in the story. It is deeply symbolic and overwhelmingly sensory.

For our Seder, I purchased a new Haggadah, the order of service providing a framework for the Seder, and spent time studying traditional and contemporary interpretations of the celebration. The Haggadah I purchased includes a number of tips, background information, and reflections to help hosts prepare for, and lead, the evening.

In preparation for Passover, people spend days, even weeks, readying themselves for the Seder meal, removing every crumb of chametz (forbidden foods containing leavening agents) from their homes.

My new Haggadah reflected on those preparations:

“In this postmodern age, Passover is, in part, about doing something hard – not eating what you’re used to and what you sometimes desperately crave – perhaps to prepare us for the difficult work that liberation unfortunately requires. And while Passover is not formally the holiday during which we do the big accounting of our souls, many a rabbi urges us to ‘search for the meaning behind the mitzvah’ of ridding our homes of chametz. Removing it ‘from our homes, our lives, our families, is a struggle between who we really are now and who we can be once we strip away all the trappings of self-importance,’ according to one source…In this moment, what we are asked to do by our tradition is to enact and in a small way reexperience a communal decision to leave enslavement behind.”

As I studied the Haggadah, I realized this is exactly the process I’ve been engaging in over the last few weeks – 

The evaluation of the things in my home and my life

The struggle between who I really am now and who I can be

The journey from enslavement to freedom

The process of uncovering real. 

Over the next several days I’ll continue to process through Passover, and the remaining days of Holy Week here, exploring the concepts of enslavement and freedom. I hope you’ll join me.