from the Hagaddah for the Passover Seder
Spill three drops of wine: 1-BLOOD; 2-FIRE; 3-PILLARS
OF SMOKE.
Another interpretation is as follows: ”With a
strong hand” refers to two plagues; “with
an outstretched arm” two; “with great terror”
two: “with signs” two; and “with wonders”
refers to two plagues. Thus we have the ten plagues
that the Holy One, blessed be He, brought upon the Egyptians
in Egypt; and they are as follows:
Spill a drop of wine for each of the ten plagues: 1.
Blood; 2. Frogs; 3. Vermin; 4. Beasts; 5. Cattle; 6.
Boils; 7. Hail; 8. Locusts; 9. Darkness; 10. Slaying
of the first-born.
Spill three drops of wine: D’Tzach Adash B’Achav.
Rabbi Jose the Galilean said: How can one show that
following the ten plagues in Egypt itself the Egyptians
were smitten with fifty plagues at the Red Sea? Of one
of the plagues in Egypt it is said, “the soothsayers
said to Pharaoh, the plague is the finger of God,”
While at the Red Sea it is said, “And Israel saw
the strong hand which the Eternal had shown against
Egypt, and the people revered the Eternal and believed
in the Eternal and His servant Moses.” If one
finger of God in Egypt caused ten plagues, we may assume
from this that the whole hand of God at the Red Sea
caused fifty plagues.
Rabbi Eliezer said: How can one show that every plague
which the Holy One, blessed be He, brought in Egypt
upon the Egyptians was fourfold in character? For it
is said: “He sent against the Egyptians in His
burning anger, Wrath, Indignation, Trouble, and the
Messengers of Evil.” This is to be interpreted
that each plague descended with Wrath (1), Indignation
(2), Trouble (3), and the sending of Messengers of Evil
(4). If, then, the Egyptians in Egypt were stricken
with ten fourfold plagues, making forty, then following
the earlier interpretation, at the Red Sea they suffered
two hundred plagues.
Rabbi Akiba said: In similar fashion you can show that
every plague which the Holy One, blessed be He, brought
in Egypt upon the Egyptians, was fivefold in character.
Interpret the same verse to say, “He sent against
the Egyptians His Burning Anger (1), Wrath (2), Indignation
(3), Trouble (4), and the Messengers of Evil (5).”
Thus, if the Egyptians in Egypt were stricken with ten
fivefold plagues, making fifty, then at the Red Sea
they suffered two hundred and fifty plagues.
How thankful must we be to God, the All-Present, for
all the good He did for us.
Had He brought us out from Egypt and not executed judgement
against them, It would have been enough for us!
Had He executed judgment against them and not destroyed
their idols, It would have been enough for us!
Had He destroyed their idols and not slain their first-born,
It would have been enough for us!
Had He slain their first-born and not given us their
belongings, It would have been enough for us!
Had He given us their belongings, and not divided the
sea for us,
It would have been enough for us!
Had He divided the sea for us and not brought us through
it dry-shod and not drowned our oppressors in it, It
would have been enough for us!
Had He drowned the oppressors in it and not helped us
forty years in the desert, It would have been enough
for us!
Had He helped us forty years in the desert and not fed
us manna,
It would have been enough for us!
Had He fed us manna and not given us the Sabbath, It
would have been enough for us!
Had He given us the Sabbath and not brought us to Mount
Sinai. It would have been enough for us!
Had He brought us to Mount Sinai and not given us the
Torah, It would have been enough for us!
Had He given us the Torah and not brought us into the
Land of Israel, It would have been enough for us!
Had He brought us to the Land of Israel and not built
for us the Holy Temple, It would have been enough for
us!
How much more so do we have to be thankful for the manifold
and unbounded blessings of the All- Present God: That
He brought us out from Egypt,
And executed judgment against them, And destroyed their
idols, And slew their first-born, And gave us their
belongings, And divided the sea for us, And brought
us through it dry-shod, And drowned our oppressors in
it, And helped us for forty years in the desert, And
fed us manna, And gave us the Sabbath, And brought us
to Mount Sinai, And gave us the Torah, and brought us
into the Land of Israel, And built for us the Holy Temple
where we could atone for all our sins.
Rabban Gamliel used to say: Whoever does not explain
the following three symbols at the Seder on Passover
has not fulfilled his duty.
The Passover Offering which our fathers ate in Temple
days—what was the reason for it? It was because
the Holy One, blessed be He, passed over the houses
of our forefathers in Egypt, as it is written in the
Bible: “And you shall say it is the Passover offering
for the Eternal Who passed over the houses of the children
of Israel in Egypt when He smote the Egyptians and spared
our houses. And the people bowed their heads and worshipped.”
Point to the matzah:
This matzah which we eat, what is the reason for it?
It is because there was not time for the dough of our
ancestors in Egypt to become leavened, before the Ruler
of all, the Holy One, blessed be He, revealed Himself
to them and redeemed them, as it is told in the Bible:
“And the dough which they had brought out from
Egypt they baked into cakes of unleavened bread, for
it had not leavened, because they were thrust out of
Egypt and they could not tarry, nor had they prepared
for themselves any provisions.”
Point to the bitter herbs:
These bitter herbs which we eat—what is their
meaning? They are eaten to recall that the Egyptians
embittered the lives of our forefathers in Egypt, as
it is written: “And they embittered their lives
with hard labor: with mortar and bricks, with every
kind of work which they made them do was rigorous.”
In every generation one must look upon himself as if
he personally had come out from Egypt, as the Bible
says: “And you shall tell your son on that day,
saying: “It is because of that which the Eternal
did to me when I went forth from Egypt.” For it
was not alone our forefathers whom the Holy One, blessed
be He, redeemed; He redeemed us too, with them, as it
is said: “He brought us out from there that He
might lead us to and give us the land which He pledged
to our forefathers.”
Raise the cup of wine and say:
Therefore, it is our duty to thank and to praise in
song and prayer, to glorify and extol Him Who performed
all these wonders for our forefathers and for us. He
brought us out from slavery to freedom, from anguish
to joy, from sorrow to festivity, from darkness to great
light. Let us therefore sing before Him a new song.
Hallelujah—Praise the Eternal!
Put down the cup and continue:
Hallelujah—Praise the Eternal. Praise, you servants
of the Eternal, praise the name of the Eternal. Blessed
be the name of the Eternal from now and for evermore;
from the rising of the sun to its going down, praised
be the name of the Eternal. Supreme above all nations
is the Eternal; His glory is above the heavens. Who
is like unto the Eternal our God, throne in exaltation,
Who looks down to both the heavens and the earth? He
raises up the poor from the dust, lifts up the needy
from the ash-heap, to seat them with princes, with princes
of His people; He makes the childless woman dwell in
her household as a joyful mother of children. Hallelujah—Praise
the Eternal.
Passover is from April 2 through 9 this year, concurrent
with Easter.
March Occur on March 15...)