Chametz and Matzah in Pesach Mitzrayim/2
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Chametz and Matzah in Pesach Mitzrayim
Exegetical Approaches
Seven Day Prohibition of Chametz
The Israelites celebrated a seven day holiday in Egypt, just as they did in future generations. Chametz was prohibited for the entire week.
Hashem's commands to Moshe: one holiday or two? According to this position, the Pesach offering and following seven day holiday of Chag HaMatzot comprise one integrated unit.1 Hashem commanded Moshe about both since both were to be observed in Egypt.
Which commands were relayed to the nation in Egypt? Ramban explains that even though the Torah only records Moshe relaying the commands regarding the Pesach offering (12:21-27), it can be assumed that he relayed all that Hashem had told him beforehand, including the laws of chametz and matzah.2 When verse 28 writes, "וַיַּעֲשׂוּ בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל כַּאֲשֶׁר צִוָּה י"י אֶת מֹשֶׁה" this indicates that the nation observed all that Hashem had commanded.
"וַיֹּאפוּ אֶת הַבָּצֵק... עֻגֹת מַצּוֹת כִּי לֹא חָמֵץ כִּי גֹרְשׁוּ מִמִּצְרַיִם" – Ramban explains that the real reason that the nation baked matzot was due to Hashem's command not to have leavened bread. This verse is only coming to explain that due to their hasty departure, they did not have time to bake matzah in Egypt proper, but were instead forced to do so en route.3
Institution of Chag HaMatzot - why? This position must explain what was the purpose of the original command:
- Future event – The Avudraham, quoting R. Yosef Kimchi, suggests that the command was given based on the future event of being chased out. Hashem knew in advance that they would be forced to flee, without time to bake matzot, and gave them a command which they would only understand later. This explanation, however, fails to account for the fact that if the nation were baking matzah due to the command, the fact that they were chased out would have had no practical consequences.
- Highlight haste – Abarbanel, thus, explains that Hashem wanted to highlight the speed in which the nation left, which they would not appreciate unless they had previously been commanded to bake matzah. He points out that even though they were never planning on baking anything other than matzah, they did not even have time to do that. Moreover, they moved so quickly that the bread had still not risen by the time they arrived in Sukkot and had time to bake it.4
- Poor mans' bread – In his comments on Devarim 16, Ramban explains that the matzah was supposed to commemorate the meager food that the people were given to eat as slaves in Egypt. It is not clear, however, why, at the time of the Exodus, it would be necessary for the Israelites to reenact what they lived daily.
Why seven days specifically? This position might suggest that there is no special significance to the length of the holiday. Many festivals were set to be seven days long. Abarbanel adds that had the holiday only been one day long, its significance would not be felt since often someone might go for a day without eating leavened bread. Moreover, Hashem wanted the nation to celebrate from the day of the Exodus until the drowning of Paroh (the final stage of the redemption).
"שִׁבְעַת יָמִים תֹּאכַל עָלָיו מַצּוֹת לֶחֶם עֹנִי כִּי בְחִפָּזוֹן יָצָאתָ "
- Two reasons – According to Ramban, the verse gives two reasons for the obligation to eat matzah, the haste of the redemption (as evidenced by the fact that there was no time to bake maztot before leaving Egpt) and the fact that matzah represents "לֶחֶם עֹנִי", the meager provisions eaten while in slavery. He might say that only the second reason applied to the Israelites in Egypt (as the first had yet to happen when they were commanded to eat matzah), but in Devarim, Moshe is speaking to future generations who are also commemorating the events that occurred while leaving.
- One reason – Abarbanel, in contrast, highlights only the explanation relating to the haste of the redemption "כִּי בְחִפָּזוֹן יָצָאתָ". He explains that "לֶחֶם עֹנִי" is a description of matzah and not a reason for its being eaten.
Matzah with the Pesach offering – These sources would explain that the command to eat matzah with the offering was part of the larger command to eat matzah and refrain from chametz the entire week long.
Which takes precedence – eating matzah or refraining from chametz? Both Ramban and Abarbanel asserts that throughout the week, one is permitted, but not obligated to eat matzah. Since they maintain that the commandment did not relate to commemorating a historical seven day event of eating matzah, this is logical. In fact, according to this approach it is possible that refraining from leavened bread is really the focus of the holiday5 while eating matzah is simply the alternative left if one wants a bread-like food.
Chag HaMatzot in the Wilderness – According to Ramban, just as the nation kept both Pesach and Chag HaMatzot while in Egypt, they continued to do so during their sojourn in the wilderness.6
Laws of Pesach in Shemot 43ff
- Applicable in Egypt – Ramban maintains that the laws in these verses also applied in Egypt, as proven form the summary statement which follows, " וַיַּעֲשׂוּ כׇּל בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל כַּאֲשֶׁר צִוָּה י"י".7 He explains that they are separated from the initial laws of Pesach for literary reasons.
- Laws for the future – Abarbanel disagrees, and maintains that these laws applied only to future generations, which is why they were commanded separately from the earlier ones.8 The summary statement only teaches that in the future the nation did as commanded.9
Commands of Shemot 13:3ff – This position must explain why, if Moshe had already relayed the laws of Chag HaMatzot to the nation, he does so again in Chapter 13:
- Ramban implies that these laws were relayed after the Exodus to teach the nation that they were to apply in the Wilderness.10
- Abarbanel, instead, suggests that Hashem introduced the new law regarding consecration of firstborns and wanted to juxtapose it with the laws of Pesach and Chag HaMaztot since the threesome together speak to the various aspects of the redemption. In addition, there is a new emphasis here on passing these teachings to the new generation.
No Prohibition of Chametz
In Egypt, the Children of Israel did not celebrate Chag HaMatzot. Though they ate the Pesach sacrifice with matzah, they were not prohibited from eating chametz, nor obligated to eat matzah the week afterwards.
Sources:Mishna Pesachim, Ibn Ezra, R. Yosef ibn Kaspi, Rashbaz, Shadal, Hoil Moshe, R. David Zvi Hoffmann
Hashem's command to Moshe: one holiday or two? According to these commentators, Hashem commanded Moshe about two distinct celebrations: Chag HaPesach (12:1-13) which refers to the Pesach sacrifice which was to be eaten on the fourteenth of Nissan at twilight, and Chag HaMatzot (12:14-20) which refers to the future seven day holiday in which the nation was supposed to eat matzah and refrain from eating chametz.11
Which commands were relayed to the nation in Egypt? Moshe relayed only those commands which were immediately relevant to the nation in Egypt: those regarding the Pesach offering (12:21-27). Since Chag HaMatzot was intended only for future generations (וְחַגֹּתֶם אֹתוֹ חַג לַי"י לְדֹרֹתֵיכֶם) and the people were not obligated to celebrate it in Egypt, the nation were first told it about it only after they left (in 13:3-8).12
Why no Chag HaMatzot? According to this position the act which Chag HaMatzot was instituted to commemorate had not yet happened,13 so there was nothing to mark. R. D"Z Hoffmann and the Hoil Moshe add that it would not make sense that as the nation was about to embark on a journey in the wilderness, that they would be commanded to celebrate a seven day holiday, especially when creative work was prohibited on the very day that they were supposed to leave.14
Why was Moshe told about the holiday earlier? These sources might suggest that Hashem commanded Moshe about both the laws for the present and the future together, since they are linked, and unlike the Israelites, Moshe would be able to handle such information.
"וַיֹּאפוּ אֶת הַבָּצֵק... עֻגֹת מַצּוֹת כִּי לֹא חָמֵץ כִּי גֹרְשׁוּ מִמִּצְרַיִם" – These sources point to this verse as proof that the nation was not prohibited from eating chametz, as it suggests that had they not been chased out, the people were planning on baking leavened bread.15 Only because they had no time were they not able to.
Institution of Chag HaMatzot – These sources explain that the seven day holiday was instituted to commemorate the fact that the nation did not even have time for their bread to rise before being chased out of Egypt, forcing them to eat matzah.
Why seven days specifically?
- Ibn Ezra explains that the people were on the run until Paroh drowned in Yam Suf seven days after the Exodus.16 As such, they subsisted on matzah for the entire week. In commemoration, future generations do the same.
- Ibn Kaspi, in contrast, asserts that the choice of seven days is unrelated to the original act which was being commemorated and it is possible that the people only ate matzot for a day or two. Hashem chose seven days since that is the norm for holiday length in the Torah.17
Which takes precedence – eating matzah or refraining from chametz?
- Obligation of matzah -– Ibn Ezra maintains that according to the simple sense of the verses, it is not just permissible to eat matzot for the seven days of the holiday, but there is an obligation to do so throughout. This works with his understanding that the point of the holiday is to commemorate the nation's similar eating of matzot. According to him, it is possible that the prohibition of chamtetz simply comes to highlight the eating of matzah.
- Prohibition of chametz – One might disagree, however, and claim that the point being remembered is the fact that the bread did not have time to rise. Eating matzah was simply the alternative left to the nation, but not important in its own right. Thus, throughout he holiday one is prohibited from eating chametz, but not obligated to eat matzah.
"שִׁבְעַת יָמִים תֹּאכַל עָלָיו מַצּוֹת לֶחֶם עֹנִי" – These sources might suggest that the phrase "לֶחֶם עֹנִי" is simply a description of the matzah,18 not the reason for eating it for seven days. Only the following words "כִּי בְחִפָּזוֹן יָצָאתָ מֵאֶרֶץ מִצְרַיִם" provide the reason for the holiday.
Eating matzah with the Pesach offering – According to this position the reason for eating matzah with the Pesach is unconnected to the eating of matzah throughout the week of Chag HaMatzot. A variety of reasons are given for the command:
- Haste – Ibn Kaspi19 suggests that this obligation is related to many other aspects of the Pesach offering, including its being roasted and eaten ready to go, which are symbolic of haste. He does not explain if this was related to the need to eat the sacrifice before the Plague of Firstborns or due to the speedy nature of the redemption. Either way this haste is distinct from the later haste of the actual exodus when there was no time for the bread to rise.
- Bread of Affliction – Orchot HaChayyim quotes Ibn Ezra as suggesting that the Egyptians fed the Israelites matzah when they were slaves since it takes a long time to digest., and implies that perhaps it was this aspect of the oppression that was being symbolized by the matzah that accompanied the Pesach. This, though, is difficult since there would have been no need to do commemorate the enslavement while they were still living it.
- Demonstration against idolatry – See Purpose of the Pesach that the offering might have been a demonstration against idolatry. The Rambam asserts that idolatrous sacrifices were normally accompanied by leavened bread and honey. It is possible, that to counter such practices, the Pesach was instead accompanied by matzah and maror.
- Accompaniment to a קרבן תודה – According to R. D"Z Hoffmann, the Pesach was in essence a thanksgiving offering (קרבן תודה).20 If so, like all such offerings, it was brought with matzot.21
Chag HaMatzot in the Wilderness – Ibn Ezra learns from 13:5, "כִי יְבִיאֲךָ י"י אֶל אֶרֶץ הַכְּנַעֲנִי" that not only did the nation not keep Chag HaMatzot in Egypt, but that they were not obligated to observe it until entry into the land.22 Only the new generation had to set aside time to remember the original events ("וְהָיָה הַיּוֹם הַזֶּה לָכֶם לְזִכָּרוֹן"); the earlier one had witnessed it by themselves.
Laws of Pesach in Shemot 43ff – Ibn Ezra posits that these laws relating to the Pesach offering were meant only for future generations and did not apply in Egypt. It is for this reason that they are written separately.23 This reading forces Ibn Ezra to understand the summary statement "וַיַּעֲשׂוּ כׇּל בְּנֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל כַּאֲשֶׁר צִוָּה י"י" to refer to the nation keeping these laws when they observed Peach in the Sinai desert the following year.24
One Day Prohibition of Chametz
The nation did not celebrate Chag HaMatzot in Egypt, but were prohibited from eating chametz at night with the Pesach offering and during the day of the Exodus itself.
Source for this opinion – R. Yose points to Shemot 13:3-4 as evidence that chametz was prohibited on the day of the Exodus. He combines the two verses reading, "וְלֹא יֵאָכֵל חָמֵץ הַיּוֹם". Though this is not the simple sense of the verses, the motivation to read it in this manner appears to be the fact that this command is separated from the other commands relating to the future holiday (13:5-10) and that the mention of the Exodus is otherwise extraneously doubled in verses 3 and 4.
When were the commands relayed to the nation? This position would read the verses similar to Ibn Ezra above, that only the commands regarding the Pesach (12:2-13) were given before the Exodus, while those regarding Chag HaMatzot (12:14-20) were given later. The prohibition to eat chametz at night with the Pesach was presumably given along with the other commands relating to the offering but It is not clear when the prohibition of eating chametz during the day was given:
- As R. Yose's source for the prohibition is Chapter 13, where it states "today you are leaving", he would likely posit that the command was first given where it appears, as the people were en route from Egypt. However, considering that there had been no time regardless to make leavened bread, the command would appear to be superfluous.
- The Ran, in contrast, suggests that the command was given on the day of the Exodus, but before leaving Egypt (sometime between the events of Shemot 13:30 and 33). According to him, Shemot 13:3-4 appear out of place so as not break up the narrative.25
"וַיֹּאפוּ אֶת הַבָּצֵק... עֻגֹת מַצּוֹת כִּי לֹא חָמֵץ כִּי גֹרְשׁוּ מִמִּצְרַיִם" – The Ran explains that since the prohibition was only for one day, and related only to eating, but not to not seeing, the people were originally planning on baking chametz for the next day when it would once again be permitted. The verse teaches that since they were chased out, there was no time for such preparations.
"וַיִּשָּׂא הָעָם אֶת בְּצֵקוֹ טֶרֶם יֶחְמָץ" – The Ran might explain that this verse does not refer to the same dough as verse 39, but instead to the nation's taking unleavened bread to eat on the fifteenth itself, as per the command of Hashem. This would resolve the otherwise superfluous doubling.
Reason for Prohibition – This approach has considerable difficulty explaining what the reason for the original prohibition would have been, especially considering that the reality prevented them from baking leavened bread regardless.
Institution of the seven day holiday of Chag HaMatzot – This position would explain, as does Ibn Ezra above, that the holiday was instituted to commemorate the fact that the nation did not have time to bake bread before leaving and were forced to eat matzah for the entire week. Had they not been chased out, there would have been only a one day holiday.
Variations on this approach – Maharam Chalava, Rid, Shibalei HaLEket undersatdn