Haggadah:Four Cups/2
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Four Cups
Exegetical Approaches
Four Statements of Praise
There are four instances in the Haggadah where we sing Hashem's praises, in Kaddesh, Maggid, Birkat HaMazon, and Hallel. Since praise is normally accompanied by wine, these, too, are said over a cup of wine.
Sources:Tosafot
Why four? According to this approach, there is no special significance to the number four. It so happens that there are four places where we "toast" Hashem's miracles and thus there are four cups of wine.
One obligation or four? This approach would view each cup as its own individual obligation, unconnected to the other three.
Can you drink all four at once? Since the liturgy is what is important, drinking all four at once defeats the purpose.
Who needs to drink? Tosafot suggests that the head of the household can fulfill the obligation for all those around him,1 just as he does during kiddush on Shabbat. The Gri"z explains that according to Tosafot, since the primary obligation is the recital of words of praise rather than the actual drinking, only one person must drink. This is no different than kiddush on Shabbat where there is a similarly an obligation of "אמירה על הכוס" where the drinking is secondary.2
Necessary shiur (רוב כוס)?
Status of undiluted wine
Women's obligation – Since women also participated in the miracle, they must also sing Hashem's praises, and are thus obligated to drink the Four Cups.
How does this relate to reclining?
Expression of Freedom or Happiness
Drinking four cups of wine is a demonstration of our status as free people.
Why four? According to this approach, wine must be drunken in abundance to be an expression of freedom or happiness. The number four was probably chosen because it is a round number and allowed for associations with other relevant groupings of four:
- Four expressions of redemption – R. Yochanan connects the four cups to the four verbs in Shemot 6 which speak of Hashem's salvation (ארבע לשונות גאולה).
- Four cups of Paroh – R. Yehoshua b. Levi relates them to the four mentions of Paroh's cup in the dream of the Butler, in Bereshit 40.3
- Four kingdoms – According to R. Levi they match the four kingdoms that oppress Israel.4
- Four cups of wrath and consolation – The opinion of the Rabbis in the Yerushalmi suggests that the four cups correlate to the four cups of calamity that are to be given to the enemies of Israel in the future, which themselves correspond to four cups of consolation that Hashem is to give to Israel to drink.5
Why are they drunk where they are?
Halakhic ramifications
Combination
Sources:Rambam