Each year at the Passover Seder, we read
these words:
This year we are slaves, next year, free
people.”[i]
We
navigate the entire Seder through this dichotomy, as if dancing back and forth between the imprisoning
constriction of Mitzrayim and the boundless
openness that true freedom seemingly provides.
We engage in story-telling, observe and consume edible symbols, and
physically mimic different postures evoking these same themes of slavery and
freedom, disgrace and glory, degradation
and praise, departure and arrival. And
ultimately, we culminate the Passover Seder with the same hopeful words every
year:
“L’shanah haba’ah b’Yirushalyim
– Next year in Jerusalem!”
Which can lead one to wonder: will we
ever actually get there? To that state of shalom/peace and shaleim/wholeness that Jerusalem represents? Will we ever actually arrive at the freedom, liberation, openness,
and fulfillment that is the yearning and promise of every previous Seder’s beginning
and end? What’s the point of telling
the same story with the same unfinished ending over and over again if we never really get anywhere?
Because ultimately, there is only one story to tell, and it is the Truth of our lives. How often do we find ourselves in our
relationships, our work, our education, our bodies, thinking “I’ll be satisfied
when:”
*my partner understands or does what I need him/her to
*I get that next promotion or title
*I attain my degree
*I lose that last 5 pounds...
- only to arrive at that milestone to discover another "I'll be satisfied when" destination marker somewhere yet to be attained in the future?
*my partner understands or does what I need him/her to
*I get that next promotion or title
*I attain my degree
*I lose that last 5 pounds...
- only to arrive at that milestone to discover another "I'll be satisfied when" destination marker somewhere yet to be attained in the future?
An
interesting insight comes from what is generally perceived as our ancestors’ culminating moment of true freedom from the grips of Egypt: the
Crossing of the Sea. In a
section detailing the various occasions upon which a person should utter a
blessing of gratitude, the Talmudic sages point out, “One who sees the abrot/crossings of the Sea [of Reeds]…must
give thanks and praise to God.”[ii] But what does it mean to see the abrot/ crossings of the Sea? When exactly should one utter gratitude at
such an occasion: once safely across when the miracle is complete and finish
line crossed or somewhere along the way when the fullness of the miracle is not
yet realized? Nineteenth century scholar
Rabbi Naftali Zvi Berlin notes Exodus 14:29, “The Israelites went on
dry land into the midst of the sea.”
Picking up on the past-tense phrase “the Israelites went,” Berlin asserts what most tend to think: that it would only
make sense to offer praise once completely across the parted
sea, safely on the other side. We cannot, after all, offer gratitude for something that is yet to be done, can we? But Twentieth Century commentator RabbiBaruch HaLevi Epstein,
Berlin’s nephew, disagrees. Noting Rashi’s
definition of abrot/ crossings as “the
place through which they traversed the sea,”[iii] Epstein asserts that our
ancestors offered thanksgiving while walking the entire length of the crossing.
As Avivah Gottlieb Zornberg so masterfully
surmises in her book The Particulars of Rapture: “…the Talmud is urging praise and thanksgiving while one is in the midst of the narrative. Before the tension is resolved, before one
has emerged from the undetermined, ominous passage - that is the time for
gratitude and song.”[iv]
I don't know from crossing the sea, but I do know that charting the
course of our lives can often feel as if we are climbing a mountain, taking
each step higher and higher in the hopes of one day reaching the very top. Which is a noble goal, but that’s just not
how mountain climbing works. When
climbing a large mountain, we work to ascend what seems like the
tallest peak, only to arrive at that top to gaze on to the vision of a yet
taller and grander peak in the distance.
And once we arrive at the tallest point, we don’t get to stay up there
forever; the journey back down awaits.
Mountain ranges don’t provide one steady, evenly paced ascent or descent. They are full of small and large elevations
and depths that go on and on, from the smallest
foothills to the most majestic highlands, and back down the range again. Think
about where a mountain range ends? It’s
not at the height of the tallest peak.
It’s once the larger slopes merge into foothills that merge into flat
ground again, back on the road, back on the journey, until arriving at the place where foothills emerge from flatland again.
Why do we repeat the same story over and over again? Why do we never
actually "get there?” Because every place we stand is “there,” if we only allow ourselves to be there. Every place,
every moment has the potential for constriction and release, for fear and hope, for degradation and praise, for brokenness and wholeness. Our lives are not black and white; our souls are complicated amalgams of all these qualities, sometimes leaning one way, sometimes another; we live somewhere in the middle. This is the Seder's ultimate lesson: we don’t have to wait until the height of achievement or the perfect moment to express gratitude, to change our own lives or make an impact in the world. Every place, every moment is the
perfect and best time from which to be grateful and catalyze repair. Indeed, this year we are slaves, next year, free people.
This is beautiful. Thank you for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteThanks Rachel!
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