History - Pharaseeism - Passover #1
Adaptions and Adoptions
FESTIVALS OF THE JEWISH YEAR A Modern Interpretation by Theodor H. Gaster (Written 1952/53) You will see by the writing of the author he is a modern historic secular believer. He does not believe the Bible is the "inspired" word of God. But he does bring out some interesting facts of history, that most may not know - Keith Hunt PASSOVER The Festival of Freedom The festival of Passover is known in Jewish tradition as the "Season of Our Freedom." Its central theme is Release. On the seasonal plane, it marks the release of the earth from the grip of winter. On the historical plane, it commemorates the exodus of the Children of Israel from Egypt. On the broad human plane, it celebrates the emergence from bondage and idolatry. In each case, the release is accompanied by a positive achievement; it is not simply an escape. It is also a cooperative act between God and man. On the seasonal plane, Passover inaugurates the reaping of the new grain; man sows the seed, but God - or the cosmic power provides the rainfall and sunshine which quickens it. On the historical plane, it commemorates the birth of the Jewish nation: Israel was prepared to face the hazards of the wilderness, so God, in His providence, brought it to Sinai, gave it the Law, and concluded the Covenant. On the broad human plane, it celebrates the attainment of freedom and of the vision of God: man casts aside his idols and repudiates his ignorance and obscurantism, and in that very act God reveals His presence and imparts knowledge. The three aspects of the festival run parallel to one another: the dark and dreary winter corresponds at once to the dark era of bondage and to the black night of ignorance, while the burst of new life in spring corresponds, in turn, to the flowering of Israel and the burgeoning of freedom. Yet the freedom which is celebrated in the Passover festival is freedom of a special kind. Our own modern concept of freedom has developed through diverse channels and is today a fusion - or, perhaps, a confusion - of several originally distinct categories of thought. It is mixed up, for instance, with ideas of sovereign independence, personal liberty and democratic government; yet none of these ideas - however fervently Jews may today adhere to them - enters significantly into the Passover ideal. In Jewish tradition, freedom, in the modern sense, is scarcely a virtue; at best, it is an opportunity. What matters is volitional dedication, and it is this and this alone that forms the theme of the Passover story. If Israel had gone forth out of Egypt, but not accepted the Covenant at Sinai, it would have achieved liberation - that is, mere release from bondage - but it would not have achieved freedom, in the Jewish sense of the term. For the only freedom, says Judaism, is the yoke of the Torah; the only true independence is the apprehension of God. The complex of ideas which today make up the Passover festival is the result of a long process of development and, more especially, of Judaism's inspired transformation of a primitive seasonal ceremony. The nature of that ceremony is described in detail in the twelfth chapter of the Biblical Book of Exodus. At full moon in the first month of spring, we read, it was customary for every family to slaughter a lamb or goat at twilight and then, in the middle of the night, to eat it in common, along with unleavened bread and bitter herbs. The eating had to be done "in haste," and whatever portion of the meat remained unconsumed had to be burned ere break of dawn. Moreover, as soon as the slaughtering had been effected, a bunch of hyssop was dipped into the victim's blood, and a few drops were sprinkled with it on the doorposts and lintels of each house. The ceremony was known as "pesah," and was followed immediately by a six-day festival, called the Feast of Un-leavened Bread, during which no fermented food was allowed to be eaten, and the first and last days of which were regarded as especially sacred and marked by a total abstention from work. (The author, like many Jews, has it wrong: the Passover was one day, the feast of Unleavened Bread was 7 days in duration - Keith Hunt) Shorn of its later interpretations, this ceremony falls into a common pattern of seasonal festivals in many parts of the world. The essence of such festivals is to recement the bonds of kindred and community at the beginning of a new agricultural cycle. This is done by partaking of a meal in common--"breaking bread together"--for thereby a common substance is absorbed. The practice is well attested in antiquity. When, for example, persons or tribes entered into compacts with one another, as in the case of Abraham and Abimelech, or of Moses and Jethro, in the Bible, the agreement was usually sealed by eating together - a custom which underlies our own word companion (properly, "one who eats bread with another") and which survives also in the familiar usage of "having a drink on it." On such occasions, however, it is not only how one eats but also what one eats that is important, for the food consumed is believed itself to impart new life and vigor. Accordingly, special precautions have to be taken to ensure that it is pure and free of putrescence, and in a Near Eastern country this means that it has to be eaten at once and "in haste," and not lie around in the sun. It means also that no fermented food may be absorbed with it, since fermentation is the result of putrefaction, and that bitter herbs must be eaten at the same time as an effective cathartic against any impurity that may inadvertently have been consumed. Once the meal is finished, it becomes necessary to mark by some outward sign those who have participated in it and thereby entered into renewed ties with one another. The usual method of doing this is to sprinkle some of the animal's blood on the foreheads of all present or on the flaps of their tents or doorposts of their houses. This, for example, is the practice among the Amur Arabs of Palestine and at New Year ceremonies in Madagascar. Moreover, this sprinkling of blood serves a further purpose. In primitive societies, the family consists not only of its human members but also of its god. He, too, therefore is regarded as being present at the communal meal and as being bound by the bond which it cements. Accordingly, the mark of blood on the forehead or the doorpost affords a means whereby he may readily recognize those individuals or households with whom he has entered into a pact of friendship and protection. It thus becomes, in effect, a device for averting supernatural hurt. The Israelites took over this primitive rite and gave it a meaning all their own, thereby relating it to their own historic experience and justifying its continued observance. (Do you see now how the author goes into secularism to determine how the Israelites adopted this Spring feast - Keith Hunt) The Exodus from Egypt, they said, had coincided with the traditional pesah ceremony, and because their ancestors had so meticulously carried out the prescribed regulations and dashed the blood upon the doorposts of their houses, Jehovah had been able instantly to recognize His own proteges when He came to smite the firstborn in the land. All of the elements of the traditional ceremony were then fancifully explained as memorials of that momentous event. The unleavened bread recalled the fact that, in their hurried departure from bondage, there had been no time to wait for the dough to rise and the bread had therefore been baked without yeast, while the eating "in haste" commemorated the haste with which the departure had been made. Indeed, the very name of the festival (the original significance of which is obscure) was now connected ingeniously with the Hebrew word 'pasah,' "skip," and taken to imply that, on seeing the sign of blood, God had "skipped" or passed over the houses of the Israelites and spared them from the plague. Much of this explanation is, to be sure, historically frail. Modern scholarship has made it virtually certain that the Biblical narrative of the Exodus represents a foreshortened and anachronistic account of what really took place. In the light of historical and archaeological research, it has become increasingly improbable that all of the tribes of Israel, as they later existed, ever went down to Egypt or came out of it. It is now generally conceded that the confederation was of later origin and grew up gradually in the Holy Land after the Conquest, so that the story of a common ancestor who went down to Egypt with all his sons is as anachronistic as it would be to speak of "Uncle Sam" and his forty-eight children at the time of the Revolutionary War. Only a certain portion of what subsequently became the Children of Israel--according to some scholars, only the Joseph-tribes--ever went down to Goshen, and the conquest of Canaan was the result not of a single coordinated invasion but of the successive expeditions and gradual infiltration of various Hebrew tribes, which had begun before the Exodus and continued for some time after the arrival of the "redeemed" Holy Land. Then, too, it must be borne in mind that the Biblical narrative is a saga, not a factual report and therefore embellishes the record of events with all kinds of fantastic and legendary details drawn from the storehouse of popular lore. Moses' staff, for example, has parallels in the magical wands and weapons borne by heroes and deliverers in the folk tales of many nations; the miraculous parting of the Red Sea finds counterparts in the ancient Indian myth of Krishna's flight from the tyrannical King Kamsa and in the statement of various Greek writers that the Pamphylian Sea drew back and gave passage to the troops of Alexander the Great when they were marching against the Persian hosts of Darius III. (Well it is now very evident the author does not believe in the inspiration of the Holy Bible - Keith Hunt) Nevertheless, even though the story of the Exodus cannot yet be confirmed from any extra-Biblical source, and although we may readily detect in it several obviously legendary traits, in broad substance it is indeed consistent with everything that we now know about political conditions in the Near East at the period in question. Historical records have confirmed that there indeed existed at that period, in virtually all parts of the Near East, a special class of persons (not, however, an ethnic unit) known as Hebrews, who did not enjoy full civic rights and who lived largely as mercenaries and freebooters, and who on several occasions made marauding raids upon Palestinian and Syrian cities. History also confirms that the land of Goshen (modern Wadi Tumilat), on the eastern confines of Egypt proper, had long been recognized as a free grazing ground or reservation for neighboring nomads, and it establishes that in the fourteenth century B.C.E. there was indeed a change of regime in Egypt which was unfavorable to aliens, for at that date the Hyksos, or Foreign Princes, who had been in control of the country for some two hundred years, were finally expelled and replaced by a native Egyptian monarch. Furthermore, we know that the new Pharaoh's successor, Ramses II (1298-32 B.c.E.) did indeed renovate - for himself the abandoned Hyksos capital in the Delta and call it after his own name, and that he also built a storecity named Pithom, just as is described in the Bible. Lastly, an inscription of Pharaoh Merneptah (1232-2¢ B.C.E.), discovered in his mortuary chapel at Thebes, mentions the presence of the Israelites in the Holy Land in 1227 B.C.E. (Yes, the author has to admit certain truths, for extra-Biblical writings have been found to substantiate what the Bible records - Keith Hunt) Against this general background, it would seem not at all improbable that a particular group of Hebrews--what the Bible describes as the "family of Jacob" should have migrated from the Holy Land to Goshen, to settle under the more favorable regime of the Hyksos; that it should at first have thrived and prospered but subsequently, after the fall of that regime, have been viewed with suspicion and enslaved; and that it should eventually have sought freedom by linking up with other Hebrews in a concerted attack on the Holy Land. And that, when the legendary trimmings are stripped away, is substantially the story related in the Bible. Nor, indeed, is it in any way remarkable that these events do not find mention in Egyptian records, for it must be remembered that to the Egyptians of the period, the Children of Israel were in no sense a formidable or important power, but merely a motley crowd of gypsies on a relatively distant reservation. In Judaism, however, the story of the Exodus has long since been lifted out of a purely historical context. The Jewish attitude toward it stems from the premise that events transcend the moments of their occurrence - that anything which happens in history happens not only at a particular point in time but also as part of a continuous process and therefore involves as its participants not only a single generation but also - and more important - all who went before and all who follow after. Take, for example, the American Civil War. What was secured by this conflict was not simply the Union of that particular day and age, but the Union per se, so that, in a wider perspective, both the Founding Fathers on the one hand and we ourselves on the other were also actively involved in it and personally shared in the victory which ensued. In exactly the same way, the Exodus of the Children of Israel from Egypt involved also both the patriarchs of the past and their children's children of the future, for it validated the mission of the former and determined the destiny of the latter. It is this ideal Exodus - this Exodus detached from a mooring in time - that is really celebrated in the traditional Seder service on the first two evenings of the Passover festival. The Seder - the word means simply "order of service" or "formal procedure" - is at once a substitute for the ancient paschal sacrifice and a fulfillment of the Biblical injunction (Exod. 13:8) to retell the story of the Exodus to one's children. The principal feature of the ritual is the eating of various foods traditionally associated with the departure from Egypt. These are: matzah, or unleavened bread; bitter herbs (e.g. horse-radish), taken to commemorate the bitterness of servitude; and haroseth, a mixture of chopped apples, nuts, raisins and cinnamon, which symbolizes the mortar in which the Israelites labored while they built the store-cities of Pithom and Raamses (Exod. 1:11). Moreover, the meal is introduced by the consumption of parsley dipped in salted water. During the course of it, a minimum of four cups of wine must be drunk, recalling the four expressions used in Exodus 6:6-7 to describe God's deliverance of Israel, viz., "I will bring you out from under the burden of the Egyptians, and I will rid you of their bondage, and I will redeem you ... and I will take you to Me for a people." In addition, besides the food actually consumed, the shankbone of a lamb and a roasted egg have to be placed on the table. The former symbolizes the paschal offering, while the latter is, in all probability, a later importation from pagan custom and, like the corresponding Christian Easter egg, exemplifies the beginning of life in spring. (Ah, we begin to see the added Pharasaical adoptions for the "seder" - Keith Hunt) There is a strict religious protocol about the manner in which the ritual foods are to be eaten. The matzah, for example, consists of three cakes placed one above the other and popularly known as "the priest, the Levite, and the Israelite." At the beginning of the service, the celebrant breaks the middle cake in half and sets one of the halves aside, wrapping it in a napkin. This, known as 'afikomin,' is subsequently distributed among the company and constitutes the last thing eaten at the ceremony. The bitter herbs, in addition to being eaten separately, are also served in a "sandwich," between pieces of matzah, thereby carrying out to the letter the Biblical commandment (Exod.12:8) which enjoins that unleavened bread and bitter herbs be eaten together as an accompaniment of the paschal meal. At the conclusion of the supper, an extra cup of wine is filled for the prophet Elijah who, it is believed, will come on Passover night to herald the final redemption of Israel. The main door of the house or apartment is flung open for a few moments to permit his entrance. Those present at the Seder ceremony are expected to adopt a casual, reclining posture, symbolizing that of freemen at ancient banquets. In some parts of the world, however, everyone appears in hat and coat, with satchel on back and staff in hand, thus re-enacting the Departure from Egypt. The narrative portion of the ceremony is known as the 'Haggadah,' or 'Recital,' and consists in a repetition of the Scriptural story of the Exodus, embellished by rabbinic comments and elaborations and rounded out by the chanting of psalms, hymns and secular songs. The narrative is introduced by a series of questions (Mah Nishtanah), asked by the youngest member of the company: "Why is this night different from all other nights?" All that follows is regarded as the answer. High points of the Haggadah are: the "Section of the Four Sons," the "Litany of Wonders," and the chanting of "Hallel." The first of these is based on the fact that the Bible speaks four times of "thy son's" inquiring about the meaning of Passover, and each time poses his question in different terms. Once (Deut.6:20), he is represented as asking, "What mean these testimonies and statutes and judgments which the Lord our God hath commanded us?" Another time (Exod.12:26), he demands brusquely, "What means this service of yours?" A third time (Exod.13:14), he asks simply, "What is this?" And a fourth time (Exod.13:8), the question is not even framed, but merely implied. This variation, said the sages, is purposeful; in each case the form of the question typifies the character and attitude of the inquirer, who is respectively wise, wicked, simple and too young to ask. Each must be answered differently, in appropriate fashion. The "Litany of Wonders" is a cumulative poem reciting the benefits conferred by God on Israel at the time of the Exodus. Not only did He lead them out of Egypt, but He also punished the Egyptians; not only did He part the Red Sea, but He caused them to pass through it dryshod; not only did He lead them to Mount Sinai, but He gave them the Law; not only did He give them the Law, but He brought them to the Promised Land; not only did He bring them to the Promised Land, but He built the temple in Zion. As each of these benefits is recited, the company responds loudly with the word 'Dayyenu,' "Alone 'twould have sufficed us" In all, fifteen benefits are enumerated, alluding, so the rabbis said, to the numerical value of the Hebrew word Yah, one of the names of God (cf. Exod.15:2; Ps.68:4). The Hallel ("Praise") is the group of psalms, 113-118, which is recited at all new moons and at all festivals and which is introduced by the word 'Hallelujah,' "Praise ye the Lord." In the present instance, they are deemed especially appropriate, because one of the psalms (Ps.114) in fact describes events connected with the Exodus. (These psalms, it may be added, were very probably the hymns intoned by Jesus and his disciples at the Last Supper.) 1 (There is no such proof of that statement in the NT - Keith Hunt) Properly understood, the Seder ceremony is no mere act of pious recollection, but a unique and inspired device for blending the past, the present and the future into a single comprehensive and transcendental experience. The actors in the story are not merely the particular Israelites who happen to have been led out of bondage by Moses but all the generations of Israel throughout all of time. In an ideal sense, all Israel went forth out of Egypt, and all Israel stood before Sinai; and all Israel moved through darkness to the Presence of God, in the wake of a pillar of fire. Whenever the trumpets sound in history, they sound for all ages; and when the bell tolls, the echo lives on forever. This is not a rarefied piece of modern rationalization. The conception of the Seder as an experience rather than a recitation runs like a silver thread through the whole of Jewish tradition and finds expression on every page of the Haggadah. "Every man in every generation," says a familiar passage (quoting the Mishnah), "must look upon himself as if he personally had come forth out of Egypt. It was not our fathers alone that the Holy One redeemed, but ourselves also did He redeem with them." Similarly, in the Litany of Wonders, it is not "they" but we who are said to have wandered for forty years and to have been fed upon manna in the wilderness, and finally to have reached the Promised Land. Everywhere the emphasis is placed squarely on the durative and ideal sig ...... 1 'Matt. 26:30; Mark 14:26. The English Bible renders, "When they had sung a hymn," but the Greek original would also permit the rendering, "When they had sung hymns." ...... nificance of the Exodus rather than on its punctual and historic reality. The Haggadah is the script of a living drama, not the record of a dead event, and when the Jew recites it he is performing an act not of remembrance but of personal identification in the here and now. The Seder ceremony, said the sages, is valid only when the "bread of affliction" and the bitter herbs are actually before you. In a sense larger than they intended, these words epitomize its essential significance. Wer nie sein Brot mit Traenen ass ... It may be said, in fact, that the central theme of the Seder is not - as commonly supposed - the Exodus from Egypt. That is merely its highlight. The central theme is the entire process of which that particular event happens to have been the catalyst. In Jewish tradition, the deliverance from Egypt is important only because it paved the way to Sinai - that is, to Israel's voluntary acceptance of its special and distinctive mission; and what the Seder narrative relates is the whole story of how Israel moved progressively from darkness to light, from the ignorance and shame of idolatry to the consciousness and glory of its high adventure. All through the ages, the very structure of the narrative has evinced its purport. In ancient times it began, on a note of shamefaced humility, with the words, "At first our fathers were worshipers of idols," (or, in an alternative version: "A wandering Aramean was my father") and ended with the triumphant chanting of the Psalms of Praise. Today, even though later accretions have somewhat obscured this dramatic sequence, it still opens (in most parts of the world) with a reference to the "bread of affliction" and closes in a breathless and inspired climax with the defeat of the Angel of Death. Moreover, the very sentence which begins with the words, "At first our fathers were worshipers of idols," ends significantly with the proud affirmation: "But now the Presence of God has drawn us to His service." The several features of the ritual and the several elements of the narrative in turn reinforce this sense of continuousness. For neither ritual nor narrative is the product of a single age or environment--a mere heirloom or museum piece passed down intact and piously conserved. On the contrary, some parts of each go back to the days of the Second Temple, while others are no earlier than the fifteenth century. Ritual and narrative alike are therefore dynamic, not static creations - virtual kaleidoscopes of Jewish history - reflecting in their growth and development the various phases of Israel's career. (Yes, over time things were added and adopted to make up the present "seder" service for the religious Jews - Keith Hunt) The form of the meal, for example, with the reclining on cushions, the preliminary dipping of parsley in salted water, and the customary consumption of eggs as an 'hors d'oeuvre,' reproduces the typical pattern of a Roman banquet, and one may even suppose that the recital of the narrative and the conclusion of the repast with the chanting of psalms may have been modeled after the Roman practice of having literary works read aloud at meals and regaling oneself afterward with choral entertainment. Indeed, it is not at all impossible that the initial invitation to the hungry and needy, and the prescription that at least four (originally, three) cups of wine must be drunk, are likewise of Roman origin. For the fact is that it was common Roman practice for "clients" to wait upon their patrons during the day in order to pay their respects to them; and for this attention they were often rewarded by a formal invitation to join the company at supper (coena recta). Similarly, 'pace' the traditional explanations of the three or four glasses of wine, it is not without interest that a normal Roman dinner actually entailed a minimum of three cups--one for the preliminary libation to the gods, a second for the mutual toasting of the guests, and a third in honor of the hosts or, under the Caesars, of the emperor. (To be sure, this minimum was usually exceeded; but so, too, are the minimum three or four cups of the Seder!). On the other hand, the 'afikomin' is distinctly Greek, although the term now bears a meaning quite different from that which attached to it in Hellenic speech. The Talmud says that "men must not leave the paschal meal epikomin." This last word was really the Greek 'epi komon,' a popular expression for "gadding around on revels" - the common nightly pastime of the "gay blades" of Hellas. The term, however, was subsequently misunderstood, and the sentence wrongly rendered: "Men must not leave out the afikomin after the paschal meal." The curious, unintelligible expression was then taken to refer to some special condiment or "dessert" which had to be served at the conclusion of the repast, and thence arose the custom of distributing small pieces of unleavened bread and calling them 'afikomin!' Similarly, when the door is opened "for Elijah," we are plunged at once into the Middle Ages, for the real purpose of this act seems to have been to provide an effective rebuttal of the terrible 'Blood Libel' which asserted that Jews employ the blood of Christian children in the preparation of 'matzah.' The door was flung open so that all might have a chance of beholding the complete innocence of the proceedings. Lastly, the secular songs and ditties with which the service now concludes and which constitute its most recent - though most familiar - feature take us straight into Renaissance Europe. One of these songs, the famous 'Shad mi yodea' ("Who knows one?"), for example, has been traced by students of comparative literature to a popular and widespread "counting-out rhyme," the earliest specimen of which appears in Germany in the fifteenth century. (In that earlier version, incidentally, the successive numbers refer to God, Moses, and Aaron, the three Patriarchs, the four Evangelists, and the five wounds of Jesus!) Similarly, the 'Had Gadya' ("Only One Kid") finds its earliest prototype in a fifteenth-century German folk song, 'Der Herr der schickt das Jockli hinaus,' though here again, the wide popularity of the song is shown by the fact that early versions of it have turned up in most European countries. It should be observed also that, in Oriental lands, quite a different set of popular chants is appended to the 'Haggadah.' The 'Sephardim,' for instance, have many such chants written in the Ladino, or Judeo-Spanish, dialect current especially in the Levant, while elsewhere, Judeo-Arabic and Judeo-Persian songs are in use. The inclusion in it of those "native" compositions likewise bespeaks the true character of the Seder as an expression of the total, continuous experience of the Jewish people. (It adopted and adapted what it needed to do in various parts of the world, and with some outlandish albeit 're-made' sections for a tradition less vulgar and distasteful - Keith Hunt) Even the illustrations which adorn the older editions of the Haggadah conspire to create a picture of the entire stretch of Jewish history. The "wicked son" (who balances on one leg from one Seder to the next) is simply a Roman centurion; the one who is "too young to ask," and who holds up his hands like a questioning child, is taken directly from an earlier print of a slave in supplication before Hannibal; while the store-cities of Pithom and Raamses, which the Israelites were compelled to build for Pharaoh, are the walled towns of fifteenth-century Europe! All the centuries seem, as it were to blend and blur. (Yes, false Christianity of Rome, that adopted and adapted, the customs and ideas of paganism, baptizing them with so-called holy water, making them supposedly clean and pure before God, has also been done by the Pharasaical Rabbis of Judaism through the centuries - even at the time of Christ it was so in Judah, hence the words of Christ in Mark 7, denouncing them for following traditions that made void the commandments of God - Keith Hunt) ....................... To be continued |
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