Dear Rabbi Jacobson,
I would like you to know that I attended a Passover
Seder for the first time in my life last year as a result
of your workshop at the National Arts Club, The Soul of
the Seder: 15 Steps to Personal Freedom. A friend insisted
that I come to the workshop, and frankly I went along begrudgingly,
completely skeptical of any religious presentation.
But to your credit I had, against my inclination, an
illuminating and inspiring experience, which motivated me
to attend a Seder. I had never imagined that the Seder had
such a rich and profound spiritual structure.
So now, as we approach Passover, I would like to challenge
you to help me and others make the most of the Seder experience.
What mindset should one have at the Seder? How do we bridge
the traditional rituals – eating Matza, maror and
drinking the four cups of wine – with their spiritual
counterparts?
Thank you for opening up the inner world of Jewish
tradition to me and so many others.
Blessings for a healthy holiday,
[signed]
No body can function without
a soul. The body of the Passover Seder is well known and documented. We assemble
a Seder plate, go through fifteen steps, eat matzo and maror (bitter herbs),
drink four cups of wine, recite the Haggada, ask and answer questions. But
what is the soul of all these activities?
The objective of the entire
Passover Seder and holiday is to achieve one thing: Transcendence.
“Mitzrayim” (Hebrew for Egypt) means boundaries, constraints and limitations.
Exodus from mitzrayim is freedom from bondage to our fears, inhibitions and
addictions.
How can we use the Seder
rituals as tools to achieve personal transcendence; to experience emotional
and spiritual freedom?
To do so requires preparation
and thought – setting the tone for the entire Seder experience.
The entire Haggada is
structured in question and answer form: The children begin by asking the four
questions, and the adults respond by telling them the story in all its detail.
Indeed, the word “Haggada” itself means “to relate,” to tell the story.
Questions and answers
are one of the most powerful tools we have to explore and probe, to unearth
and discover the true nature of things. Often the right question is even more
important than the actual answer. “The wise question” – we are told – “is
half the answer.”
So asking the right questions
is crucial to accessing the powerful Seder experience and truly have a unique
experience on this night, which is “different than all other nights of the
year.”
Like buckets that allow
us to draw out precious fuel deeply embedded in the ground, good questions
help us burrow into our psyches and our traditions and draw out life transforming
experiences.
In this spirit, here is
a suggestion of some questions to ask yourself before and during the Seder
to help you tap into the rich resources of the Seder night.
The four questions asked
at the Seder capture the primary ingredients that distinguish Passover night
from all other nights of the year.
These four questions have
both a body and a soul.
The body of the questions:
“Why is this night different
from all other nights?”
1)
“On all
nights we need not dip even once, on this night we do so twice.”
2)
“On all
nights we eat chametz (leaven) or matzah, on this night [we eat] only matzah.”
3)
“On all
nights we eat any kind of vegetables, on this night maror (bitter herbs).”
4)
“On all
nights we eat either sitting upright or reclining, on this night we all recline.”
(This order of the questions
is based on the Arizal’s order and the one that I grew up with. There are
other equally legitimate orders).
These four elements –
Dipping, Matzah, Maror, Reclining – represent four fundamental soul searching
questions that each us must ask of ourselves.
Dipping is the sublimation
of our material lives (symbolized by the vegetable, the “fruit of the earth”)
to spiritual ends. Like immersion in a mikveh (a ritual bath), in which we
submerge our bodies in a higher state of being.
Matzo is the “food” of
humility.
Maror is empathy.
Reclining is symbolic
of comfort and freedom. Instead of the tightness of sitting upright, we let
go and relax.
Thus, the soul of the
four questions compels us to ask the following questions:
1)
Do I see
materialism as an end in itself, or “dipped” – as a means to spiritual goals?
2)
Do I have
humility?
3)
Do I have
empathy and compassion?
4)
Am I comfortable
with myself?
Obviously, each of these
questions is but a mere headline to a series of more comprehensive questions
that evaluate our psyches, and help us recognize what keeps us enslaved and
what we need to experience transcendence.
1) Dipping – Evaluation of the balance between the material and spiritual dimensions
of your life
a. Do I value the importance of “dipping”?
b. What are my spiritual goals?
c. How do I use my work or my other physical activities as a stepping-stone to higher
objectives?
d. How do I maintain this “dipping” all year round? For example: Giving charity daily.
e. Why is it difficult for me to sublimate my body needs and instant gratification?
2)
Matzah – Evaluation of your ego vs. your humility and modesty
a. Do I understand the importance of humility?
b. Do I appreciate that it is the single most important element in freeing myself from any fear
and emotional resistance?
c. Are there any areas in my life where I feel more humble? Why? And what areas need special
work to tame my ego?
d. What is the root of my arrogance? Is it due to my strengths or my weaknesses?
e. Is my arrogance just a smokescreen for my insecurity?
3) Maror – Evaluation of your level of empathy and compassion
a. How emphatic am I to others? To myself?
b. Does my compassion come with “strings attached,” i.e. my own personal gain?
c. When was the last time that I shed tears for another’s predicament?
d. Do I realize that empathy equals sensitivity – the very essence of being alive: feeling
and experiencing the heartbeat of all life? That when I have no compassion to strangers, it will also impact the kindness I show to myself and to close
ones?
4) Reclining – Evaluation of your self esteem
a. Why am I not always comfortable in my own skin?
b. Are there times or situations when I reach a deep calm? When I am sure of myself?
c. If yes, do I understand what brings that level of tranquility? And can I access it
at will?
d. Are my friends and associates adding to my tension or to my peace of mind? Do I put myself
in situations that feed my insecurity?
e. Can I for this one night lean back and recline, knowing that I put my trust in G-d?
The questions go on. These
are but a sampling of questions – a catalyst – that each of us can use to
enhance our Seder experience. Allow yourself to ask ourselves as few or as
many questions that help you personalize – really personalize – the
Passover Seder.
Remember, even if you
cannot answer all these questions or answer then satisfactorily, the mere
fact that you allow yourself to enter the arena of your soul and your emotions
is in itself the first step of freedom.
Also remember that every
experience is only as powerful as your preparation for it. For this reason
we begin the formal preparations to Passover (and all holidays) thirty day
before the holiday. We begin to study its laws, and above all – to prepare
ourselves spiritually to the special experience ahead of us.
Therefore, it may be wise
to prepare for the Seder with the following exercise:
Before Passover begins
– anytime this Friday before sundown – take a piece of paper and list:
1)
Three inhibitions
(chamatz; mitzrayim) you would like to rid yourself of. Make sure that these
are three internal impediments or fears, not people or situations outside
of yourself (like an intolerable parent or an obnoxious boss).
2)
Four aspirations
and dreams you would like to achieve. Four areas (like the four cups of wine)
in which you wish to celebrate freedom. Here too focus not on the means (like
making a lot of money) but on the ends.
3)
Three areas
in which you are especially egotistic, and three (like the three matzot) in
which you have a special dose of humility.
As you go through the
Seder, drinking the cups of wine and eating the matzo and maror, think about
these lists.
May we all be blessed
with a meaningful and transcendent Passover – one which allows us to “pass
over” our fears and limits (perceived or real) and experience true, sweet
and lasting freedom.
We must always know that
the ultimate secret to real emancipation lies in our sublimation, humility,
empathy and self-respect – all made possible when we recognize that we are
not self-made creatures, but part of a higher reality, as eloquently stated
in the first and foundation of the Ten Commandments: I am your G-d Who freed
you from Mitzrayim.
A very happy Passover
to you and yours,
Simon Jacobson and all of us at The Meaningful Life Center