March 24, 2013
Once we leave the book
of Genesis we are involved with a story that stars Moses. Moses meets God face
to face. He communicates God’s will. He is the ultimate Jewish role model. He is
magnetic! Our eyes are on him.
As I prepare to lead
our Seder tomorrow, I am a little nervous that all eyes will be on me. I thumb
through the Hagaddah, with pen in hand, looking for places to engage different
people. Can we sprinkle some humor into the night (we have some finger puppets
for the plaques and jumping frogs)? Where can I invite commentary? So, like most Seder
leaders doing their stage direction notes, I am reminded that Moses is not
mentioned in the Hagaddah script. The curtain
is coming up on our Passover Seder drama and Moses has exited stage right.
We begin the final part of the magid ( story) by saying, "...In every generation a person is obligated to see himself as having himself come out of Egyptian bondage." The stage direction states that we all belong on this stage. Chancellor Arnie Eisen argues that Conservative Judaism moves vertically to connect us with our ancestors and horizontally to connect us to Jews around the world. The Haggadah talks about our ancestors, but leaves Moses out. I think it is because we are meant to see that we are all the inheritors of this tradition. We have parts in this drama - not just the larger than life actor, Moses.
Passover describes a redemption that is in the past. It ends with Elijah and the promise of a messianic future. What is sandwiched in between is “us”. Do we have the creativity to see ourselves as people who have the capacity to act as redeemers? Redeemers put the vision of the Jewish people into action. They seek to act out the change they seek.
In order to step up you need to believe in the future. Passover starts with karpas. Karpas are greens (like parsley) a symbol of spring, renewal and hope. Our hopes may be like fragile seedlings, but we can greenhouse them and protect their promise. The Seder is a greenhouse of Jewish souls. It also is tasked to nurture our sense of communal responsibility and justice. We dip the parsley into salt water. We need to understand that our leadership work will be challenging- there will be some disappointment and heartbreak (tears). Leaders, like Moses, understand the world is difficult, but they remain hopeful and forward looking. We call this courage.
Jewish communal observers have pointed to the trend for many younger American Jews to believe that they are the sole arbiters of their values and priorities. They want to be their own director. Observers call this a focus on the “sovereign self”. One middle aged synagogue membership chair complained that “they”( next generation) were not stepping up. Recently a young rabbi made the case to me that his generation was not inclined to support the traditional synagogue. His friends can go and find resources and people (like them) on their own terms. If synagogue leaders want his generation “they” should get donors to subsidize most of the costs of synagogue life.
Passover has been described by some as the holiday that focuses on our collective redemption. Conservative Judaism is horizontal. It connects our Seder to Seders across the United States, to Israel and the world. It welcomes Jews and non Jews of all ages, backgrounds and levels of knowledge. I believe it is about what “we” can do together…. not what some “they” can do for us.
The traditional Seder was big. We were commanded to eat a whole paschal lamb so we needed a big cast. Our Seder stage is large and generous to hold our regulars and welcome new guests each year. As a Seder leader, I am curious about how the cast’s personal stories will meld with the larger Passover story - a story of what “we “ can all do together.
I think Moses would applaud that story!
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