Chametz and Matzah in Pesach Mitzrayim/2

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Chametz and Matzah in Pesach Mitzrayim

Exegetical Approaches

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Seven Day Prohibition of Chamtez

The Israelites celebrated a seven day holiday in Egypt, just as they did in future generations.  Chametz was prohibited for the entire week.

No Prohibition of Chametz

In Egypt, the Children of Israel ate the Pesach sacrifice with matzah but were not prohibited from eating chamtez, nor obligated to eat matzah the week afterwards.

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.1
Which commands were relayed to the nation in Egypt? According to these sources, Moshe only relayed those commands which were relevant to the nation in Egypt, those regarding the Pesach (12:21-27).  Since the people were not obligated to celebrate Chag HaMatzot in Egypt,2 and moreover the act which it was to commemorate had not even occurred yet,3 the people were first told it about it after they left (in 13:3-8).4
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 unlike the Israelites, Moshe would be able to handle such information.
"וַיֹּאפוּ אֶת הַבָּצֵק... עֻגֹת מַצּוֹת כִּי לֹא חָמֵץ כִּי גֹרְשׁוּ מִמִּצְרַיִם" – According to this position, the nation was planning on baking leavened bread since they had no prohibition against doing so; however, due to being chased out they were not able to.5
Institution of Chag HaMatzot – Ibn Ezra, Shadal and R. D"Z Hoffmann all explain that the seven day holiday was instituted to commemorate the speed in which the redemption occurred, and the fact that the nation did not even have time for their bread to rise before being chased out of Egypt.
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.6  As such, they did not have time to make bread and subsisted on matzot 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 the original act which is 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.7 
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 that there is an obligation to do so throughout.  This is logical if the point is to commemorate the nation's similar eating of matzot.  According to him, it is possible that the prohibition of chamtetx 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.

One Day Prohibition of Chametz

In Egypt, the nation was only prohibited from eating chametz for one day.