It’s a Holiday tonight!

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Tonight is the first night, the advent of the holiday of Passover.  Other than Rosh Hashana and Yom Kipur, this is the one holiday that most Jews celebrate.  Oh, Chanuka comes close, but most folks still don’t light the menora.

Seder Plate

For the past few years, our holiday celebrations were interrupted.  The Pandemic kept us all locked in our homes.  My family elected to have a full blown Seder using Zoom-with  a specially prepared hagada (the roster of prayers and songs of the holiday) to use, besides.

Hagada for Passover

It was our goal to have all our family celebrate together- in person this year.   Everyone was vaccinated, and we were all looking forward to celebrating the seders together in person.

But, alas and alack, that is not in our cards.   I am ensconced in a hospital bed, hoping to beat the recurrence of necrotizing fasciitis,  coupled with multiple organ failure.  (The organ failure is no longer a big issue; my kidneys, my lungs, my circulatory system are working properly.)  So, Zoom Seder it shall be.

Now, even those Jews that don’t keep kosher still gather with their families and friends to re-tell the story of our release from Egypt.  The English name for this holiday reminds one that the Supreme Being passed over the houses of those that had the courage to place the blood of the paschal lamb on their doorpost.  (This is the reason that Jewish homes have a mezuza on their doors- to remind us that we are willing to be counted, to ask Hashem to protect us from the vagaries of life.)

The lamb was one of the deities of the Egyptians.  So, slaying the lamb and using it’s blood as a marker on the door clearly defied the common beliefs.  Only those that were willing to do so were protected from the death of their first born.

It also should be obvious that the Pharoah must have killed his older brother to take control of the kingdom.  Because he was not among those killed that night.  (The power of the kingdom always transferred to the first-born, should they still be living.)

10 plagues

And, because of this tenth plague, the Egyptians allowed the Jews to leave, ostensibly on their three day holiday to praise Hashem.  But, the Jews knew they would never return- instead returning to their land, the land of milk and honey…

And, as all of us will say tonight as we sing, pray, and learn (some of us until the crow reminds it is already the next morning)…

Next year in Jerusalem…

May you all celebrate this holiday of Spring, this holiday of Freedom, this holiday that we build anew…

Due to the  holiday, there won’t be any posts until Monday…

 

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6 thoughts on “It’s a Holiday tonight!”

  1. Roy:
    Wishing you a speedy recovery and a Chag Pesach Sameach!
    I hope you get to go home soon!
    Warm regards,
    Lee

  2. Happy Passover. I am hoping for a recovery for you, Roy. I am sorry you can’t participate in an in person Seder this year.

  3. Wow! How do you find the time.
    Someone just sent me your site and I overviewed, subscribed, loved.
    I am in the process of becoming a first century Christian (grafted into Jesus’ faith). Am ex Baptist(30 year)after reading my Bible, word for word , without corporate indoctrination from the leadership.
    Jesus also had a hard time with religious leaders.
    Most people don’t realize that Jesus was/is/and will return a Jew, and only had the Old Testament to use.
    Can you shed light on why the Jewish year is stated as 5783….. and not closer to 5990 ?
    Religious and business models seem to be pointing to an event in about 10 years.
    I’m computer illiterate, forgive me.
    I’ll be praying for you. Sometimes GOD or Jesus is the answer to satanic attacks.
    Shalom
    Bob

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