תלמוד בבלי
תלמוד בבלי

Chasidut על ברכות 108:24

Kedushat Levi

Based on the considerations outlined, we will try and explain ‎why we have been commanded to eat Matzah on Passover ‎and to offer certain sacrifices in the Temple, and why on the ‎festival of Shavuot we have been commanded to present ‎two loaves of bread which had to consist of leavened dough, as ‎well as a thanksgiving offering consisting partly of unleavened ‎breads and partly of leavened breads.‎
Matzah alludes to creatures who serve the Lord due to ‎the impact upon them of G’d’s miracles; even the plain meaning ‎of the text in Exodus 12,15-17 alludes to this as it contains a ‎commandment to eat matzah as a reminder to future ‎generations of the speed, i.e. suddenness, with which the ‎Egyptians reversed their attitude as the masters of the Jews, to ‎driving them out with all possible speed as we know from Exodus ‎‎12,39 which tells us that the departure of the Jews from Egypt ‎occurred in such haste that they did not even have time to allow ‎the dough for next day’s bread to rise before baking. Consuming ‎the meat of the Passover took place in similar haste, the people ‎being dressed while eating it, ready to begin marching at any ‎moment. (ibid, i.e. ‎ויאפו את הבצק עגות מצות וגו'‏‎, “they baked the ‎dough into matzah cakes etc.,) The symbolic acts that we, ‎the descendants of the generation of Israelites leaving Egypt at ‎that time, perform on the anniversary of that event, all reflect ‎the suddenness and haste in which the redemption literally ‎overtook them. These acts mirror the impact that G’d’s miracles ‎had on the Jews at that time. In contrast to this, when the same ‎people arrived in the desert of Sinai, prior to receiving the Torah, ‎seven weeks later, they had time to prepare themselves for that ‎event for three days, i.e. the miracles that occurred in connection ‎with that event did not take them by surprise. By that time they ‎had come to realize that G’d’s performing miracles was something ‎‎“natural,” not supernatural, seeing that the source of these ‎‎“miracles” was the same Creator Who had performed the greatest ‎miracles by creating the universe. When they reflected that out ‎of all the phenomena in the universe that they were aware of it ‎was only G’d Who could have created them by merely uttering ‎the necessary words, they no longer needed “miracles” to ‎persuade them that there was such a power, [even though ‎it remained invisible. Ed.] To reflect their new found ‎insights, the offerings presented on the festival of Shavuot did ‎not require matzah as a symbol of the Israelites’ recognition ‎that their redemption had been a miracle, in the sense of ‎something supernatural performed by G’d.‎
The Talmud in B’rachot 54, when stating that 4 types of ‎individuals need to offer thanksgiving offerings (containing also ‎leavened breads) after they had been saved by means of a ‎miraculous event, reflects the sages’ recognition that for the ‎people concerned the miracle had been performed in order that ‎they serve G’d first of all because He demonstrated His ability to ‎transcend the laws of nature. Subsequently, the people who had ‎learned this lesson would become accustomed to serving the Lord ‎for the same reasons that the Jewish people served Him starting ‎with their experiences at Mount Sinai. This is reflected in the part ‎of the thanksgiving offering consisting of leavened breads. The ‎very fact that this offering consists of these apparently ‎contradictory ingredients, indicates that the person offering it is ‎aware of his own spiritual/philosophical progress.‎
Looking at the history of the Jewish people during their ‎march through the desert, the sin of the golden calf represented a ‎spiritual regression to the level of needing miracles to keep them ‎aware of the greatness of the Lord and the duty to serve Him. The ‎Jewish people only recaptured even the first level of serving the ‎Lord, i.e. through the help of miracles to remind them of Him and ‎His power at the time when the Tabernacle was inaugurated, ‎almost nine months after their having worshipped the golden ‎calf. According to Nachmanides, this is the reason why the ‎Tabernacle is referred to as ‎משכן העדות‎, “Tabernacle of ‎Testimony,” i.e. its consecration bore testimony to the fact that ‎the people had regained their spiritual level as it had been at the ‎time when they had been redeemed from slavery in ‎Egypt.
The word ‎פקודי‎ in our verse needs to be understood in ‎the sense of something being lacking, absent, as we know from ‎Numbers 31,49 ‎ולא נפקד ממנו איש‎, “not a single man from us is ‎missing.” [after the punitive expedition against the ‎Midianites) The word appears in a similar sense also repeatedly in ‎the Book of Samuel. Ed.] The Torah hints that even with ‎the completion of the Tabernacle, the former lofty spiritual level ‎of the Jewish people as it had been at the end of the revelation at ‎Mount Sinai had not been restored.‎
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