{"id":2090,"date":"2019-04-08T07:47:37","date_gmt":"2019-04-08T11:47:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/?p=2090"},"modified":"2019-04-08T07:47:57","modified_gmt":"2019-04-08T11:47:57","slug":"prepare-for-passover-redemption","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/2019\/04\/prepare-for-passover-redemption\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Prepare for the Passover Redemption"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>On Purim, Diaspora Jewry enjoyed a temporary victory. The Esther Scroll begins with Ahasuerus on his throne lowering taxes in a rudderless regime, and the Scroll ends with the same King, still sitting precariously on his throne, now raising taxes.\u00a0 After all, paying for frequent alcoholic parties and maintaining an extensive monarchical harem is financially expensive, socially corrupt, and likely unpopular. After all, when Persia\u2019s Jewry is condemned to annihilation, the King and Haman sit down to do what they do best, imbibe until intoxication. Given the King\u2019s fears of a <em>coup<\/em> <em>d\u2019\u00e9tat,<\/em> especially after Bigtan and Teresh\u2019s abortive attempted <em>coup<\/em>, the social threat of Vashi\u2019s insubordinate refusal to show her feminine assets before a leering assembly, and his Queen\u2019s interest in Haman, whom Esther invited twice to drink with the King and her, the reader can appreciate why the red-nosed Persian emperor is unable to sleep.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Without Jewish sovereignty, the Jew, be he Joseph, Mordecai, or Daniel, might rise to the rank of viceroy, the second to the throne. But Jewry\u2019s political position is always precarious and dangerous in Diaspora.\u00a0 Jews do not like to be noticed; Mordecai advises Esther not reveal her identity. Until Mordecai made a scene, Persia\u2019s Jews did not respond as Jews. Esther and Mordecai were given personal names that refer to Ishtar and Marduk, important non-Israelite Near Eastern deities.\u00a0 Committed Jews do not name their Jewish children \u201cChristopher,\u201d \u201cPius,\u201d or \u201cMuhammed.\u201d\u00a0 The Purim narrative begins, and ends, in exile, where assimilation is an unavoidable threat.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>The Passover narrative is radically different.\u00a0 It opens with the Egyptian enslavement and was supposed to conclude with Israel redeemed living with the <em>Shechinah<\/em>\u2019s Presence in the Jerusalem Temple.\u00a0 Purim\u2019s four obligations, [1] reading the narrative of the Esther Scroll, [2] giving gifts to the poor, [3] food to friends, and [4] festive feasting are all direct ritual responses to the physical threats Jewry faced in the Diaspora. Passover\u2019s telling of the Exodus Narrative serves a different, and permeant, purpose, the nurturing of the free, confident, moral agent who is a proud member of the Jewish people.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>On <em>Seder<\/em> night, all types of Jews need to be addressed, informed, and nurtured: one who is wise, one who is wicked, one who is simple, and one who is unable to process information to even ask an intelligent question. Yet each son is called \u201cone,\u201d because each child is unique, special, indispensable, and irreplaceable. This assignment of personal worth and dignity contrasts sharply with the reality of ancient Egypt, the \u201chouse of slaves,\u201d where everyone is a slave. In Egypt, everyone is an object, a <em>heftsa<\/em>, to be possessed; in Israel, the individual is a <em>gavra<\/em>, a human person of infinite moral worth. According Jewish law, an important object may not be nullified even if it is not noticed in a mixture; how much more so the human being who may never be reduced to a nullity. Even the condemned convict must have his\/her dignity protected [b\u2019<em>Arachin <\/em>7b], the Jewish poor are entitled to food, <em>matsa<\/em>, and wine on Passover. A Jewry worthy of God\u2019s Presence in its Temple is a people who provides for its own weakest links.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>These four sons are not necessarily four distinct individuals; they also represent each and every Jew who is engaged in Jewish life. \u00a0An infant\u2019s world is waiting to be filled and, at birth, is unable to ask a question; the toddler cannot yet process the abstract information that is required to be able to ask a question. Parents and teachers provide the scaffolding of culture.\u00a0 Once reaching the threshold of cognitive competency, the child becomes a <em>tam<\/em>, a person who absorbs the world with wonder, naively, innocently, and asks as a discoverer, \u201cwhat is this?\u201d m<em>Pesahim <\/em>10:4 teaches that the father raises the so-called <em>four<\/em> questions <em>if<\/em> the child is as yet unable to ask appropriate questions.\u00a0 If the child asks, she or he ought to be answered directly, appropriately, and in a fashion that will enable the child to identify as a loyal member of the Jewish people. Ideally, the child\u2019s questions determine the conversation. The Mishnah, the first Oral Torah document to be canonized, which unlike Street Culture Orthodoxy, represents the <em>normative<\/em> Orthodox Tradition, is making two distinct claims. The Passover Seder should ideally begin with the child\u2019s questions; the father asks the four questions only as a default procedure, if the child does not or cannot ask. The Jewish tradition mandates a dialogue, not a dictation on <em>Seder<\/em> night.\u00a0 Today, the child is <em>told<\/em> what to ask and the \u201canswer\u201d given is a fixed, canned, quasi canonical text, which <em>must <\/em>be recited, and not <em>told<\/em>. \u00a0If the father teaches his child according to his\/her capacity [<em>da\u2019ato<\/em>], then one size, and one single text, cannot possibly be appropriate for every youngster, not to mention the four sons of the <em>Seder<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Here lies the problem of our own Jewish historical experience.\u00a0 We fear what Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel calls the \u201cInsecurity of Freedom.\u201d\u00a0 Our official and real religions do not always coincide. We speak of dialogue, but will not allow dialogue to take place. The innocent <em>Tam <\/em>may become a sage or a \u201cwicked\u201d son. Wicked is perhaps a misleading adjective. This person is rebelling, alienated, and disconnected.\u00a0 And the Jewish community must deal with the indifference that alienation generates. Orthodox Jewish leadership promises a higher moral standard, it claims that it alone is the incarnation of Torah in our time, and believes that its elite alone possesses the authority to make normative Jewish policies and judgments. For example, RCA rabbis voted not to \u201crecognize\u201d female rabbis because the elite rabbis it decided to canvas proclaimed, without addressing the claims of the dissidents it rejected, that this change in Jewish life violates an uncodified Jewish \u201cTradition.\u201d\u00a0 These rabbis suggest that in addition to the revealed law, which is open to all to review, there is an esoteric, unwritten Tradition that only its own select elite rabbis have the right and ability to parse.\u00a0 There was no conversation, discussion, or dialogue.\u00a0 Rabbis\u00a0 Joel bin Nun and Daniel Sperber\u00a0 disagree. Their arguments are public record but are not addressed by the RCA.\u00a0 Many Orthodox rabbis agree with these two sages but fear being blackballed by the Orthodox establishment for not deferring to the theologically correct elite.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>When some rabbis claim that there are indeed secret rules, knowable to rabbinic elites alone, they reify the ethos of the past into an ethic of submission in the present, they also violate the Jewish legal procedural rule that requires that all sides be heard and addressed. Authentic Torah law is revealed to everyone.\u00a0 The claim that unelected latter-day saintly rabbis indeed are empowered to rule the Orthodox community without being open to question, response, and assessment is not particularly Orthodox, either.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>According to Jewish Tradition, observing Torah Law does make Jewry free. Laws require, forbid, and when silent, permit and authorize innovation.\u00a0 So when some \u201cOrthodox\u201d rabbis declare that listing a woman\u2019s name on a wedding invitation or allowing a bride to beat a drum at her own wedding is immodest, the Modern Orthodox Jew will challenge [a] how do you, Mr. Authority Person, know that, [b] where in the Oral Torah library is it memorialized that\u00a0 women playing the drum or being mentioned by name, are immodest activities, and [c] how is men\u2019s fantasizing about women\u2019s modesty a modest endeavor?\u00a0 If we want to adopt a stringency, we ought to outlaw the married woman\u2019s wig, a practice forbidden at b<em>Shabbat<\/em> 64b, a source far more <em>Masoretic<\/em> than the undefended, apodictic claims of latter-day saintly rabbis.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Current practice of contemporary Jews is to <em>train<\/em> their children to mouth the four questions of the <em>Seder<\/em>. And our children dutifully recite what they are told and read the <em>Haggadah<\/em> text that appears in print.\u00a0 We correctly proclaim that Judaism endorses freedom under the Torah Law. But the few \u201cgood\u201d men who preside over Orthodox Jewish culture do not want Jews to be free; these presiding rabbis demand obedience, deference, subservience, compliance, and commitment to their intuitive, charismatic authority because the Jewish people cannot handle the truth.\u00a0 The Tradition of the Mishnah that prefers the child ask freely framed questions may no longer be tolerated, in spite of the Mishnah\u2019s undisputed canonicity.\u00a0 The answers given by the <em>Haggadah<\/em> are not direct answers to the questions being asked.\u00a0 Our contemporary <em>Seder<\/em> serves to socialize the Orthodox child into current Orthodox society, but not necessarily into the religion commanded or commended by the official religion, canonical Oral Torah.\u00a0 The former Orthodoxy conditions its adherents to conform to convention; the latter Orthodoxy empowers its followers to discover, dissect, and honestly determine what the Torah\u2019s Author actually requires of them.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>They for sure will not ask why we <em>read<\/em> the <em>Haggadah<\/em> as if it were an official, fixed, canonical text when we are supposed to <em>tell<\/em> a narrative which presents the Exodus as a paradigm of freedom, redemption, and self-starting moral agency, not merely as the passive commemoration of an event that happened in the distant past.\u00a0 Jewry cannot celebrate its identity by denying individuality and where the <em>tam, <\/em>the innocent, na\u00efve, pure child is allowed to become cynical, rebellious, and alienated. The <em>tam<\/em> is promised a dialogue, but is confronted with a catechistic litany.\u00a0 She or he is required to confess the communal narrative, daring not to ask questions that might call the accepted, popular religion narrative into question. The voice we hear from the Rabbinic establishment is the voice of empowerment, of a Torah law that nurtures independence, autonomy, and discovery, but we are confronted with the heavy pedagogic hand that demands that we submissively say the words, perform the rites, and be content to be unthinkingly compliant clones of our peers. For this version of Orthodoxy, this version of <em>Talmud <\/em>Torah is about being <em>trained<\/em> as if for war, programming the student with the skill set of behaviors that confirm a validating insider status of a communally compliant member.\u00a0 Since this version of Orthodoxy is not really about obeying Torah law but is rather about uncritically accepting social convention in order to \u201cfit in,\u201d there are many young people who are na\u00efve and innocent, at first <em>temimi<\/em><em>m<\/em>, who with time and disappointment become jaded, cynical, alienated, and rebellious. They sense that the Torah they are told is no more than a mythic narrative of social control, manipulated by an elite, whose personal authority is as unquestionable as God\u2019s revealed will.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>The religiously serious Modern Orthodox Jew resolves the tension that alienates the <em>tam <\/em>from the Torah by applying philology to Torah learning, liberating the Torah given to all Israel from those who would mediate its message by filtering and suppressing the attested Torah precedents with which it disagrees. \u00a0The <em>Seder<\/em> is supposed to be a personal quest for Torah truth, but for many it is an expression of Orthodox identity and habit. The wise son will be able to provide the rebellious son with good, honest, and reasonable answers.\u00a0 For instance, most Jews place three <em>matsot on the Seder<\/em> plate, ignoring the teaching that as \u201cpoor people\u2019s bread,\u201d we are required to choreograph this impoverishment by saying <em>ha-motsi<\/em> on a <em>matsa<\/em> wafer and a half, not the popular, but possibly incorrect, practice of using three wafers on the Seder plate [Maimonides, <em>Hamets u-Matsa<\/em> 8:6].<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Since we pretend we are eating the Paschal offering in purity, and since wet vegetables are susceptible to contracting impurity, we take the <em>karpos<\/em>, the Greek word for vegetable, wash our hands, and dip it in water. This is a requirement of Jewish law that has been forgotten because we no longer study the Oral Laws of Holy Things and Purities. According to the letter of the Law that some of us have forgotten, one should for <em>karpos<\/em> wash one\u2019s hands <em>with<\/em> a commandment blessing [present in the ancient haggadot and and consistent with Rashi and all of the early medieval rabbis (geonim) per <a href=\"https:\/\/amzn.to\/2UyPYu2\">Daniel Goldschmidt, Hagadah Shel Pesach<\/a>, p.7], eat an olive bulk of the <em>karpos<\/em> \u00a0and say the after snack<em> borei nefashot<\/em> blessing \u00a0[Goldschmidt notes that most of the ancient hagadot included a grace to be said after karpas, which would only be said if a person ate an olive\u2019s bulk.\u00a0 See also Maimonides Laws of Chametz and Matzah 8:2, compare Shulchan Aruch Orach Chayim 473:6].\u00a0 When teaching these rules, I am often challenged, \u201cwhy are you <em>changing<\/em> the Traditions, ignoring the practice of your anscestors, and deviating from standard Jewish practice?\u201d\u00a0 In point of fact Judaism <em>is<\/em> the nomos and narrative of the Torah canon, not what Jews happen to do; this is precisely the difference between Jewish Orthodoxy and Reconstructionism. Judaism is what the Law requires, not what uninformed Jews happened to do. See Lamentations 5:7. Is it possible that all Israel can be wrong? At Leviticus 4:13, God seemed to say so, that the Jewish people can make such an error, especially if and when the Orthodox rabbinic leadership claims that it may not be subject to review. A rabbinate that may not be held to account is a rabbinate whose errors will go uncorrected.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>In the Torah that God gave, God is always right.\u00a0 People can and do make mistakes.\u00a0 A Torah that is a map as well as a code empowers a dialogue between text, teacher, and student. Instead of superseding and silencing the canonical text, the student and teacher <em>discover<\/em> together the Divine message encoded in that text, in dedication, or <em>hinnuch.<\/em> While <em>limmud<\/em>, or training, conditions the student to culture compliance and expectation recovery, <em>hinnuch <\/em>and its philological methodology dedicates the student to discover God\u2019s will with the benchmarks by which the teacher\u2019s teaching may be assessed, joining teacher and student, the wise man who teaches the wise son, how to cure the alienation of\u00a0 the alienated rebel, the naivete of the <em>tam<\/em>, and the ignorance of the uninitiated.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>On Purim, we recall that special night when the King could not sleep. That is because the King is not supposed to sleep.\u00a0 In Persia, the Jews almost succumbed to assimilation and were threatened with genocide. Israel\u2019s real King is Israel\u2019s watcher, the <em>shomer Yisrael<\/em>, Who neither slumbers nor sleeps [Psalms 121:4].\u00a0 Torah Law does not require mere mechanical compliance, it is a behavior code, a moral map, and the insurer of human dignity. Authentic Torah commands us to be free, respectful to other people, but deferential only to God [Prov. 21:30].\u00a0 The wise son is not trained, he is educated.\u00a0 She or he learns how to think and act, not what to think and do. On <em>Seder<\/em> night, we observe a <em>lel shimmurim<\/em>, a night of vigil, for the Watcher of Israel Who neither slumbers nor sleeps.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Jewry survived those who arose to destroy it, from Pharaoh to Henry Ford, Tacitus to Torqemada, and Haman to Hitler. Israel endured because it possessed and applied the Torah, making Israel mentally free. We did not learn by rote, we learned to be moral agents, \u201cdoing what is right and good [Deut. 6:18].\u201d\u00a0 \u00a0When we are told to surrender our conscience, we say \u201cno.\u201d When pressured to bow down, Jewry defiantly stands up. \u00a0By insuring the poor that they have wine and <em>matsa <\/em>for the <em>Seder, <\/em>we preserve the Passover for others, and for ourselves.\u00a0 It is not enough that we behave by mechanical rote, with canned answers to programmed questions; the Mishnah of the Four Questions reminds us to ask real questions, because that is the only way we find truth and integrity and we seek the right answer as adults who have made the commitment to be free.<\/p>\n<!--CusAds0-->\n<div style=\"font-size: 0px; height: 0px; line-height: 0px; margin: 0; padding: 0; clear: both;\"><\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Without Jewish sovereignty, the Jew, be he Joseph, Mordecai, or Daniel, might rise to the rank of viceroy, the second to the throne. But Jewry\u2019s political position is always precarious and dangerous in Diaspora.\u00a0 &#8230; <\/p>\n<p>Yet each son is called \u201cone,\u201d because each child is unique, special, indispensable, and irreplaceable. This assignment of personal worth and dignity contrasts sharply with the reality of ancient Egypt, the \u201chouse of slaves,\u201d where everyone is a slave.  &#8230; <\/p>\n<p>According Jewish law, an important object may not be nullified even if it is not noticed in a mixture; how much more so the human being who may never be reduced to a nullity. Even the condemned convict must have his\/her dignity protected [b\u2019Arachin 7b], the Jewish poor are entitled to food, matsa, and wine on Passover.  &#8230;<\/p>\n<p>While limmud, or training, conditions the student to culture compliance and expectation recovery, hinnuch and its philological methodology dedicates the student to discover God\u2019s will with the benchmarks by which the teacher\u2019s teaching may be assessed, joining teacher and student, the wise man who teaches the wise son, how to cure the alienation of\u00a0 the alienated rebel, the naivete of the tam, and the ignorance of the uninitiated. &#8230; <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":17,"featured_media":2091,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[75,134,138],"tags":[],"coauthors":[86],"class_list":["post-2090","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-articles","category-holidays-2","category-passover"],"acf":[],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2090","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/17"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2090"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2090\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2092,"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2090\/revisions\/2092"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/2091"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2090"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2090"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2090"},{"taxonomy":"author","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/utj.org\/viewpoints\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/coauthors?post=2090"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}