Food for my Seder

Posted by admin on Mar 31 2010 in Uncategorized | 0 comments

You can’t have a dinner without food, and celebration dinners need several courses. Such is the case with a Passover seder.

There are six types of food on a traditional seder plate.

  • Maror and Chazeret: These are two types of bitter herbs. They represent the bitterness of the life of slavery that the Jews lived through in Egypt. I will use horseradish for my maror and maybe romain lettuce as my chazeret.
  • Charoset: This actually sounds super tasty. It’s a mixture of different fruits, nuts, and spices (depending on your tradition), usually held together with honey. It represents the mortar used by the Israelites to build for the Egyptians. I’m going to find a good recipe for this.
  • Karpas: Another bitter herb that is dipped in salt water. The salt water represents the tears shed by the Israelites during their captivity. I will use parsely.
  • Zeroh: A lamb bone to represent the Passover sacrifice. These days people use chicken sometimes, and since I probably won’t find lamb, I’ll use chicken.
  • Beitzah: This is a hard boiled egg meant to symbolize the festival sacrifice. I have read that this is also dipped in salt water.

There are two other elements at a seder. One is the matzoh, the unleavened bread. On the night of the original Passover, the Isrealites had to be ready at a moments notice to leave and therefore had no time to wait for bread to rise. On your matzoh plate, you will have three stacked wafers. At one point in the ceremony, the middle wafer is broken and the larger piece is hidden for later, representing the coming Messiah (for me, His second coming). The other two represent the two loaves of bread that were taken to the temple on festival days.

The other element is the wine. There are four cups which represent the four promises of God to his children. The first one, Kiddush, means “I will bring you out.” Number two is Maggid which means “I will save you from their work.” Birkat Hamazon, or “I will redeem you”, is number three. The fourth cup is Hallel – the Cup of Praise. These are spread out in the ceremony, and obviously I won’t be drinking more than a few sips each time!

I love the Christian symbolism that becomes very obvious when you begin to think about it. One of the preparations that in Jewish homes took place a while ago is getting rid of the chametz (yeast) in your home. The New Testament talks about purging the old leaven in many places. Cups three and four can be particularly meaningful to the Christian. Many of the foods can have Christian symbolism as well.

I’m looking forward to my “feast” tomorrow. And if I have time, tomorrow’s post will briefly outline the ceremony as a whole. Friday I’ll try to bring it back around for the Christian applications I found.

-j

My First Seder

Posted by admin on Mar 30 2010 in Uncategorized | 0 comments

For whatever reason, today (Tuesday) I decided I was going to observe Passover. Even though I’m by myself this time, I wanted to maybe do that with my family. I talked to Kathy about it, and she likes the idea. Let me tell you about my first one.

I didn’t know much, only that this week is Passover week. I did a lot of research on the Jewish holiday and found out a lot of great historical and symbolic information as well as several ideas for my own seder. Even just reading the Jewish literature, I realized that *this* is what Easter is really about. So many symbols in the Jewish seder have Christian applications as well. I’m convinced that Easter celebrations or observances aren’t complete without a seder with a Christian perspective.

If you think about it, this is exactly what Jesus was doing the night before he was delivered to Pilate. He was hosting a seder. Jesus took part in seders his whole life. Then when you learn about what each thing means, the fact that Jesus himself hosted one, and then told us to do it in remembrance of Him, you really can see how it totally could be part of an Easter service.

In a way, I wanted to celebrate Passover at the appropriate Jewish time, but I was a day late. After reading an article, I realized that Jesus would have done it on Thursday. It was the night before his crucifixion, which we observe on Friday, so He would have had the Last Supper on Thursday. So, Thursday it will be.

I found several readings (Haggadah) that I will choose from, and I will try to as closely as possible eat the food they would eat. I went to Kroger to find matzoh, but all of the boxes say “Not for Passover”, so I don’t know if I’ll be able to find what I should. Thank God for His grace. :)

From what I could find, there are four basic parts to the seder.

  1. Four cups of wine (to be spread out over the course of the seder)
  2. The Telling (of the first Passover – mine will not end with Moses, but Jesus)
  3. Meal
  4. Praise and Prayer

I probably am oversimplifying it here, but those are the things I know I can handle. I love how it ends in singing and prayer. A fitting end to a meaningful celebration. I suspect my next few blog posts will be about preparations or the execution of my first seder, so perhaps you will enjoy them.

If you’re remotely interested, here’s a real fancy wikipedia article on the Passover Seder.

-j

Throw Off The Sin

Posted by admin on Feb 7 2007 in Uncategorized | 0 comments

…Let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us. Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Consider him who endured such opposition from sinful men, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart. – Hebrews 12: 1b-3

I read this today in preparation for a Bible study at church and something stuck out to me in a way it never has before. Many Christians can rattle off at least most of these verses, and most of them know what is talked about previously. Tonight I’ve been hit by a brick.

I struggle with sin. Who doesn’t? That verse says it all – “sin that so easily entangles”. Have you ever let sin take a hold of you to the point that you don’t feel like you can adequately serve God? Maybe you don’t even sin like that anymore, but your guilt from past sins haunts you to the point where you’re nearly ineffective as a messenger of the Gospel. I’ve had moments where I felt like I had allowed sin to creep too far and that God shouldn’t even forgive me, though I know He does. I know at least one person who could probably be much more dynamic as a Christian if not for the grip of past sin.

May I use an ellipsis to make my point? “Throw Off…The Sin!” Throw it off! Get rid of it! The words may be out of context, but that’s exactly the point that God impressed on my heart tonight. I envisioned a guy about to run a race in layers of dark clothing, a backpack, ankle weights, a hat, just tons of stuff. One by one, he took each thing off. Threw off the backpack. Unstrapped the ankle weights. Let his coat fall to the ground. Removed the sweatpants and sweatshirt. Emptied his pockets of his wallet and loose change. Took his watch off. Took off the hat. Until there was nothing left but bright red shorts, a white tank top, and a race number.

I am currently training for a foot race at the end of March, so I paid a little more attention to these verses than before. My bi-daily runs last for about 40 minutes each, and I’m telling you by minute 30 I’m ready to be done. Running a race takes patience, endurance, and perseverance. Sometimes I tell myself “just put one foot in front of the other.” As long as I put one foot in front of the other, I’m making progress. Sometimes the putting is fast, and sometimes it’s slow. The slow times I use to rest so I can get ready to run fast again. At the end of my 40 minutes I’m fatigued and my legs are shaky, but I’m done. The run does have an end. Our Race has an end. Look at verse two again. It tells us to look “to Jesus…(who has already run and is sitting) at the right hand of the throne of God.” There is an end, and Jesus is there.

My charge is simple. Forget sins that have been forgiven, and get forgiveness for those that haven’t, and then forget them too. Toss your sins away (after all, God has), and don’t even look at them again. Just start running. And if you start to get tired, think about Jesus, who has already paved a trail for you.

-j