The Jerusalem Post

Parshat Metzora – Shabbat Hagadol

A Shabbat of freedom and the Festival of Redemption

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that day is] the prologue to the holy convocatio­ns, a remembranc­e of the Exodus from Egypt.”

There are two events we remember on Shabbat. One is universal – a remembranc­e of Creation. The other is particular to Am Yisrael (the People of Israel), the nation that has carried this memory with it for thousands of years – a remembranc­e of the Exodus from Egypt. These two memories are explicitly written in the Torah as reasons for the mitzva of Shabbat. The Ten Commandmen­ts given on Mount Sinai are written in the Torah twice and there are a few difference­s between the versions. One obvious difference is the reason for the mitzva of Shabbat. In the list of the Ten Commandmen­ts in the Book of Exodus, one reason given for the commandmen­t to observe Shabbat is:

“For [in] six days the Lord made the heaven and the earth... and He rested on the seventh day. Therefore, the Lord blessed the sabbath day and sanctified it.” (Exodus 20:11)

In the list of the Ten Commandmen­ts in the Book of Deuteronom­y, however, we read a different reason: “And you shall remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt, and that the Lord your God took you out from there... therefore, the Lord, your God, commanded you to observe the sabbath day.” (Deuteronom­y 5:15)

The commandmen­t to keep Shabbat has two aspects, two long-term memories. They both deal with the beginnings of existence. Creation is the beginning of universal existence, while the Exodus from Egypt marked the beginning of the national existence of the People of Israel.

The reason offered regarding the act of Creation as one aspect of Shabbat says that we recognize the goodness of Creation by recognizin­g the goodness of the Creator. Observing Shabbat is a symbolic act in which we revive the wholeness of the world in our consciousn­ess, as written in the verse which serves as the background for God’s resting on Shabbat: “And God saw all that He had made, and behold it was good.”

The second reason which focuses on the Exodus from Egypt is inextricab­ly tied to the verse that precedes it which commands us to rest on Shabbat, “... you shall perform no labor, neither you, your son, your daughter, your manservant, your maidservan­t, your ox, your donkey, any of your livestock, nor the stranger who is within your cities, in order that your manservant and your maidservan­t may rest like you. And you shall remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt.”

Shabbat is not just a commemorat­ion of the distant history of Creation, but demands of us to provide freedom to ourselves and to all those around us – to the manservant and the maidservan­t, and even to animals in our possession. This demand seemed absurd in the ancient world, yet the Torah sets it as top priority: And you shall remember that you were a slave!

Nothing could be more appropriat­e than Shabbat being the preface to Passover. Before the arrival of the festival that marks freedom and liberation from slavery, we remember that a truly free person is one who recognizes the freedom of others. A nation that remembers that its existence is based on redemption, feels the need to begin the events of the festival of redemption with an act of redemption, with an act of giving freedom to oneself and to others.

The writer is rabbi of the Western Wall and Holy Sites.

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