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Passover
חַג הַפֶּסַח
A table set up for a Passover Seder
Official namePesachHebrew: פסח, romanizedPesaḥ
TypeJewish (religious and cultural)
Significance
CelebrationsPassover Seder
Begins15 Nisan
Ends21 Nisan (22 Nisan in traditional Diaspora communities)
Date15 Nisan, 16 Nisan, 17 Nisan, 18 Nisan, 19 Nisan, 20 Nisan, 21 Nisan, 22 Nisan
2024 dateSunset, 22 April –
nightfall, 30 April (8 days)
2025 dateSunset, 12 April –
nightfall, 20 April (8 days)
2026 dateSunset, 1 April –
nightfall, 9 April (8 days)
2027 dateSunset, 21 April –
nightfall, 29 April (8 days)
Related toShavuot ("Festival of Weeks") which follows 49 days from the second night of Passover.

Passover, also called Pesach (/ˈpɛsɑːx, ˈp-/;[1] Biblical Hebrew: חַג הַפֶּסַח, romanized: Ḥag hapPesaḥ, lit.'Pilgrimage of the Passing Over'), is a major Jewish holiday and one of the Three Pilgrimage Festivals. It celebrates the Exodus of the Israelites from slavery in Egypt.[2]

According to the Book of Exodus, God commanded Moses to tell the Israelites to slaughter a lamb and mark their doorframes with its blood, in addition to instructions for consuming the lamb that night. For that night, God would send the Angel of Death to bring about the tenth plague, in which he would smite all the firstborn in Egypt. But when the angel saw the blood on the Israelites' doorframes, he would pass over their homes so that the plague should not enter (hence the name). The story is part of the broader Exodus narrative, in which the Israelites, while living in Egypt, are enslaved en masse by the Pharaoh to suppress them; when Pharaoh refuses God's demand to let them go, God sends ten plagues upon Egypt. After the tenth plague, Pharaoh permits the Israelites to leave.[3] Scholars widely believe that the origins of Passover predate the biblical Exodus, with theories suggesting it evolved from earlier semi-nomadic or pre-Israelite rituals and was later transformed through religious and cultic traditions.[4]

This story is recounted at the Passover Seder by reading the Haggadah. The Haggadah is a standardized ritual account of the Exodus story, in fulfillment of the command "And thou shalt tell [Higgadata] thy son in that day, saying: It is because of that which the LORD did for me when I came forth out of Egypt."[5] Jews are forbidden from possessing or eating leavened foods (chametz) during the holiday.

Pesach starts on the 15th day of the Hebrew month of Nisan, which is considered the first month of the Hebrew year. The Rabbinical Jewish calendar is adjusted to align with the solar calendar in such a way that 15 Nisan always coincides with Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday, or Saturday. The Hebrew day starts and ends at sunset, so the holiday starts at sunset the day before. For example, in 2025, 15 Nisan coincides with Sunday, April 13. Therefore, Pesach started at sundown on Saturday, April 12, 2025.

Etymology

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Biblical Hebrew: פֶּסַח is rendered as Tiberian [pɛsaħ] , and Modern Hebrew: [ˈpesaχ] Pesaḥ, Pesakh. The verb pāsaḥ (פָּסַח) is first mentioned in the Torah's account of the Exodus,[6] and there is some debate about its exact meaning. The commonly held assumption that it means "He passed over" (פסח), in reference to God "passing over" (or "skipping") the houses of the Hebrews during the final of the Ten Plagues of Egypt, stems from the translation provided in the Septuagint (Ancient Greek: παρελεύσεται, romanizedpareleusetai in Exodus 12:23,[6] and ἐσκέπασεν, eskepasen in Exodus 12:27.)[3] The Targum Onkelos, written in Jewish Babylonian Aramaic, translates pesach as Hebrew: וְיֵחוֹס, romanizedwəyēḥos, lit.'he had pity', coming from the Hebrew root חסה, meaning "to have pity".[7] Cognate languages yield similar terms with distinct meanings, such as "make soft, soothe, placate" (Akkadian passahu), "harvest, commemoration, blow" (Egyptian), or "separate" (Arabic fsh).[8]

Pesach may also refer to the lamb or goat which was designated as the Passover sacrifice. Four days before the Exodus, the Hebrews were commanded to set aside a lamb,[9] and inspect it daily for blemishes. During the day on 14th Nisan, they were to slaughter the animal and use its blood to mark their lintels and door posts. Before midnight on 15th Nisan, they were to consume the lamb.

The English term Passover is first known to be recorded in the English language in William Tyndale's translation of the Bible,[10] later appearing in the King James Version as well. It is a literal translation of the Hebrew term.[11] In the King James Version, Exodus 12:23 reads:

For the LORD will pass through to smite the Egyptians; and when he seeth the blood upon the lintel, and on the two side posts, the LORD will pass over the door, and will not suffer the destroyer to come in unto your houses to smite you.[12]

Origins and theories

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Illustration of the Exodus from Egypt, 1907

The Passover ritual is "a mitzvah commanded by Torah (rather than of rabbinic origin)."[13]

Apotropaic ritual

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The Passover ritual is thought by modern scholars to have its origins in an apotropaic rite unrelated to the Exodus to ensure the protection of a family home, a rite conducted wholly within a clan.[4] Ezov was employed to daub the blood of a slaughtered sheep on the lintels and door posts to ensure that demonic forces could not enter the home.[14]

Barley harvest plus Exodus narrative

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A further hypothesis maintains that once the Priestly Code was promulgated, the Exodus narrative took on a central function, as the apotropaic rite was, arguably, amalgamated with the Canaanite agricultural festival of spring which was a ceremony of unleavened bread, connected with the barley harvest. As the Exodus motif grew, the original function and symbolism of these double origins was lost.[15] Several motifs replicate the features associated with the Akitu spring festival of ancient Mesopotamian religion, which celebrates the sowing of barley.[16] Scholars John Van Seters, Judah Segal, and Tamara Prošić disagree with the merged two-festivals hypothesis.[17]

Biblical narrative

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In the Book of Exodus

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In the Book of Exodus, the Israelites are enslaved in ancient Egypt. Yahweh, the god of the Israelites, appears to Moses in a burning bush and commands Moses to confront the Pharaoh. To show his power, Yahweh inflicts a series of ten plagues on the Egyptians, culminating in the plague of the death of the firstborn.

Moses said, “Thus says יהוה: Toward midnight I will go forth among the Egyptians, and every [male] first-born in the land of Egypt shall die, from the first-born of Pharaoh who sits on his throne to the first-born of the slave girl who is behind the millstones; and all the first-born of the cattle. And there shall be a loud cry in all the land of Egypt, such as has never been or will ever be again;

Before this final plague, Yahweh commands Moses to tell the Israelites to mark a lamb's blood above their doors so God will pass over them and the plague of the death of the firstborn will not afflict them.

The biblical regulations for the observance of the festival require that all leavening be disposed of before the beginning of the 15th of Nisan according to Exodus 13:7 An unblemished lamb or goat, known as the Passover sacrifice or "Paschal Lamb", is to be set apart on 10th Nisan,[9] and slaughtered at dusk as 14th Nisan ends in preparation for the 15th of Nisan when it will be eaten after being roasted.[18] The literal meaning of the Hebrew is "between the two evenings".[19] It is then to be eaten "that night", 15th Nisan,[20] roasted, without the removal of its internal organs[21] with unleavened bread, known as matzah, and bitter herbs known as maror.[20] Nothing of the sacrifice on which the sun rises by the morning of the 15th of Nisan may be eaten, but must be burned.[22]

The biblical regulations of the original Passover at the time of the Exodus only also include how the meal was to be eaten: "your loins girded, your sandals on your feet, and your staff in your hand; and you shall eat it hurriedly: it is a passover offering to יהוה."[23]

The biblical requirements of slaying the Paschal lamb in the individual homes of the Hebrews and smearing the blood of the lamb on their doorways were celebrated in Egypt. However, once Israel was in the wilderness and the Tabernacle was in operation, a change was made in those two original requirements.[24] Passover lambs were to be sacrificed at the door of the Tabernacle and no longer in the homes of the Jews. No longer, therefore, could blood be smeared on doorways.

The Passover in other biblical passages

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Called the "festival [of] the unleavened bread" (Biblical Hebrew: חג המצות, romanized: ḥaḡ ham-maṣoṯ) in the Hebrew Bible, the commandment to keep Passover is recorded in the Book of Leviticus:

In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month at dusk is the LORD's Passover. And on the fifteenth day of the same month is the feast of unleavened bread unto the LORD; seven days ye shall eat unleavened bread. In the first day ye shall have a holy convocation; ye shall do no manner of servile work. And ye shall bring an offering made by fire unto the LORD seven days; in the seventh day is a holy convocation; ye shall do no manner of servile work.

The sacrifices may be performed only in a specific place prescribed by God. For Judaism, this is Jerusalem.[25]

The biblical commandments concerning the Passover (and the Feast of Unleavened Bread) stress the importance of remembering:

  • Exodus 12:14 commands about God's sparing of the firstborn from the Tenth Plague: "And this day shall be unto you for a memorial, and ye shall keep it a feast to the LORD; throughout your generations ye shall keep it a feast by an ordinance for ever."[26]
  • Exodus 13:3 repeats the command to remember: "Remember this day, in which you came out of Egypt, out of the house of bondage, for by strength the hand of the LORD brought you out from this place."[27]
  • Deuteronomy 16:12: "And thou shalt remember that thou wast a bondman in Egypt; and thou shalt observe and do these statutes".[28]

In 2 Kings 23:21–23 and 2 Chronicles 35:1–19, King Josiah of Judah restores the celebration of the Passover,[29] to a standard not seen since the days of the judges or the days of the prophet Samuel.[30]

Ezra 6:19–21 records the celebration of the passover by the Jews who had returned from exile in Babylon, after the temple had been rebuilt.[31]

In extra-biblical sources

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Some of these details can be corroborated, and to some extent amplified, in extrabiblical sources. The removal (or "sealing up") of the leaven is referred to in the Elephantine papyri and ostraca in an Imperial Aramaic papyrus letter from the 5th century BCE from Elephantine, Egypt.[32] The slaughter of the lambs on the 14th is mentioned in Jubilees, a Jewish work of the Ptolemaic period, and by the Herodian-era writers Josephus and Philo. These sources also indicate that "between the two evenings" was taken to mean the afternoon.[33] Jubilees states the sacrifice was eaten that night,[34] and together with Josephus states that nothing of the sacrifice was allowed to remain until morning.[35] Philo states that the banquet included hymns and prayers.[36]

Date and duration

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The Passover begins on the 15th day of the month of Nisan, which at present falls between March 26 and April 25 of the Gregorian calendar.[37] The 15th day begins in the evening, after the 14th day, and the seder meal is eaten that evening. Passover is a spring festival, so the 15th day of Nisan typically begins on the night of a full moon after the northern vernal equinox.[38] However, due to leap months falling after the vernal equinox, Passover sometimes starts on the second full moon after vernal equinox, as in 2016.

To ensure that Passover did not start before spring, the tradition in ancient Israel held that the lunar new year, the first day of Nisan, would not start until the barley was ripe, being the test for the onset of spring.[39] If the barley was not ripe, or various other phenomena[40] indicated that spring was not yet imminent, an intercalary month (Adar II) would be added. However, since at least the 4th century, the intercalation has been fixed mathematically according to the Metonic cycle.[41]

In Israel, Passover is the seven-day holiday of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, with the first and last days celebrated as legal holidays and as holy days involving holiday meals, special prayer services, and abstention from work; the intervening days are known as Chol HaMoed ("Weekdays [of] the Festival"). Jews outside of Israel celebrate the festival for eight days. Reform and Reconstructionist Jews usually celebrate the holiday over seven days.[42][43][44]

Karaites use a different calendar; they rely on visual identification of ripe barley and the date of Passover cannot be determined before this.[45] Some modern Karaites follow the Rabbinical calendar in modern Israel because of social pressure.[46]

The Samaritans use a calendrical system that uses a different method from that current in Rabbinic practice; it sometimes is the same date on the solar calendar, sometimes two days later, and sometimes an entire month later.[47] In 2024, Rabbinical Passover begins at sunset on 22 April. On the calendar used by the Samaritans, 22 April 2024 is also the day of the Passover sacrifice. Karaite and Samaritan Passovers are each one day long followed by the six-day Festival of Unleavened Bread, for a total of seven days.[48]

Prohibition of Chametz

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Removing all leaven (chametz)

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Washing dishes for passover (1657)
Burning chametz on the morning before Passover begins

Leaven, in Hebrew chametz (Hebrew: חמץ ḥamets, "leavening") is made from one of five types of grains[49] combined with water and left to stand for more than eighteen minutes. The consumption, keeping, and owning of chametz is forbidden during Passover. Yeast and fermentation are not themselves forbidden as seen for example by wine, which is required, rather than merely permitted. According to Halakha, the ownership of such chametz is also proscribed.[50]

Chametz does not include baking soda, baking powder or like products. Although these are defined in English as leavening agents, they leaven by chemical reaction, not by biological fermentation. Thus, bagels, waffles and pancakes made with baking soda and matzah meal are considered permissible, while bagels made with sourdough and pancakes and waffles made with yeast are prohibited.[51]

The Torah commandments regarding chametz are:

  • To remove all chametz from one's home, including things made with chametz, before the first day of Passover[52] It may be simply used up, thrown out (historically, destroyed by burning), or given or sold to non-Jews.
  • To refrain from eating chametz or mixtures containing chametz during Passover.[53]
  • Not to possess chametz in one's domain (i.e. home, office, car, etc.) during Passover.[54]

Observant Jews spend the weeks before Passover in the process of thorough housecleaning, to remove all chametz from every part of the home. Jewish law requires the elimination of olive-sized or larger quantities of leavening from one's possession, but most housekeeping goes beyond this. Even the seams of kitchen counters are thoroughly cleaned to remove traces of flour and yeast, however small. Any containers or implements that have touched chametz are stored and not used during Passover.[55]

Some hotels, resorts, and even cruise ships across America, Europe, and Israel also undergo a thorough housecleaning to make their premises "kosher for Pesach" to cater to observant Jews.[56]

Interpretations for abstinence from leaven or yeast

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Some scholars suggest that the command to abstain from leavened food or yeast suggests that sacrifices offered to God involve the offering of objects in "their least altered state", that would be nearest to the way in which they were initially made by God.[57][58] According to other scholars the absence of leaven or yeast means that leaven or yeast symbolizes corruption and spoiling.[57][59]

There are also variations with restrictions on eating matzah before Passover so that there will be an increased appetite for it during Passover itself. Primarily among Chabad Chassidim, there is a custom of not eating matzah (flat unleavened bread) in the 30 days before Passover begins.[60] Others have a custom to refrain from eating matzah from Rosh Chodesh Nissan, while the halacha merely restricts one from eating matzah on the day before Passover.[61]

Kitniyot

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Kitniyot (Hebrew: קִטְנִיּוֹת, qitniyyot; literally "small things") refers to legumes, rice, maize, and other foods that are similar to grains. Ashkenazi Jews historically refrain from eating kitniyot on Passover, despite there not being a clear commandment to include them in the category of chametz.[62] Since the 19th century, the Reform movement has permitted eating kitniyot, and in 2015 the Conservative movement followed suit.[63] Sephardi Jews have always permitted eating kitniyot on Passover.

Gebrochts

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Gebrochts (Yiddish: געבראקטס, lit.'broken', also known as Hebrew: מצה שרויה, romanized: matzah shruya, lit.'soaked matzah') refers to matzah that has absorbed liquid. Some Hasidic Jews avoid gebrochts as well, to avoid the possibility that a clump of flour that was never properly mixed with water (and thus is still susceptible to leavening) may come into contact with the liquid.[64]

Sale of leaven

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The former President of Israel Reuven Rivlin sells the leaven of the Beit HaNassi (the official residence of the president), to Shlomo Amar, the Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel and the Rishon LeZion, in order that Amar will later sell it to a non-Jew.
A narrow supermarket aisle, under strip fluorescent lighting, with sections blocked off by white plastic sheeting
Chametz foods blocked from purchase during Passover in a Jerusalem supermarket

Leaven or chametz may be sold rather than discarded, especially in the case of relatively valuable forms such as liquor distilled from wheat, with the products being repurchased afterward. In some cases, they may never leave the house, instead being formally sold while remaining in the original owner's possession in a locked cabinet until they can be repurchased after the holiday. Modern observance may also include sealing cabinets and drawers which contain "Chametz" shut by using adhesive tape, which serves a similar purpose to a lock but also shows evidence of tampering. Although the practice of selling "Chametz" dates back many years, some Reform rabbinical authorities have come to regard it with disdain – since the supposed "new owner" never takes actual possession of the goods.[65]

The sale of chametz may also be conducted communally via a rabbi, who becomes the "agent" for all the community's Jews through a halakhic procedure called a kinyan (acquisition). Each householder must put aside all the chametz he is selling into a box or cupboard, and the rabbi enters into a contract to sell all the chametz to a non-Jew (who is not obligated to celebrate the commandments) in exchange for a small down payment (e.g. $1.00), with the remainder due after Passover. This sale is considered completely binding according to Halakha, and at any time during the holiday, the buyer may come to take or partake of his property. The rabbi then re-purchases the goods for less than they were sold at the end of the holiday.[66]

Separate kosher for Passover utensils and dishes

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Passover glass, interwar period Poland

Due to the Torah injunction not to eat chametz (leaven) during Passover,[52] observant families typically own complete sets of serving dishes, glassware and silverware (and in some cases, even separate dishwashers and sinks) which have never come into contact with chametz, for use only during Passover. Under certain circumstances, some chametz utensils can be immersed in boiling water (hagalat keilim) to purge them of any traces of chametz that may have accumulated during the year. Many Sephardic families thoroughly wash their year-round glassware and then use it for Passover, as the Sephardic position is that glass does not absorb enough traces of food to present a problem. Similarly, ovens may be used for Passover either by setting the self-cleaning function to the highest degree for a certain period, or by applying a blow torch to the interior until the oven glows red hot (a process called libun gamur).[67]

Search for leaven

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On the night of the fourteenth of Nisan, the night before the Passover Seder (after nightfall on the evening before Passover eve), Jews do a formal search in their homes known as bedikat chametz for any possible remaining leaven (chametz). The Talmudic sages instructed that a search for chametz be made in every home, place of work, or any place where chametz may have been brought during the year.[68] When the first Seder is on a Saturday night, the search is conducted on the preceding Thursday night (thirteenth of Nisan) as chametz cannot be burned during Shabbat.

The Talmud in Pesahim (p. 2a) derives from the Torah that the search for chametz be conducted by the light of a candle and therefore is done at night, and although the final destruction of the chametz (usually by burning it in a small bonfire) is done on the next morning, the blessing is made at night because the search is both in preparation for and part of the commandments to remove and destroy all chametz from one's possession.[68]

Blessing for search and nullification of hametz

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Before the search is begun there is a special blessing. If several people or family members assist in the search then only one person, usually the head of that family recites the blessing having in mind to include everyone present:[68]

Blessed are You, Hashem our God, King of the universe, Who has sanctified us with his commandments and has commanded us concerning the removal of chametz.

Hebrew: ברוך אתה י-הוה א-להינו מלך העולם אשר קדשנו במצותיו וצונו על בעור חמץ, romanizedbāruḵ attā aḏonāy Elohēnu meleḵ hāʿolām ʾəšer qiddəšānu bəmiṣwāṯāw wəṣiwānu ʿal bəʿor ḥāmeṣ

The search is then usually conducted by the head of the household joined by his family including children under the supervision of their parents.

It is customary to turn off the lights and conduct the search by candlelight, using a feather and a wooden spoon: candlelight effectively illuminates corners without casting shadows; the feather can dust crumbs out of their hiding places; and the wooden spoon which collects the crumbs can be burned the next day with the hametz. However, most contemporary Orthodox authorities permit using a flashlight, while some strongly encourage it due to the danger coupled with using a candle.

Because the house is assumed to have been thoroughly cleaned by the night before Passover, there is some concern that making a blessing over the search for hametz will be in vain (bracha l'vatala) if nothing is found. Thus, 10 morsels of bread or cereal smaller than the size of an olive are traditionally hidden throughout the house to ensure that some 'hametz will be found.

Upon conclusion of the search, with all the small pieces safely wrapped up and put in one bag or place, to be burned the next morning, the following is said:

Any chametz or leaven that is in my possession which I have not seen and have not removed and do not know about should be annulled and become ownerless like the dust of the earth.[68]

Morning of 14th of Nisan

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Note that if the 14th of Nisan is Shabbat, many of the below will be celebrated on the 13th instead due to restrictions in place during Shabbat.

Fast of the Firstborn

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On the day preceding the first Passover seder (or on Thursday morning preceding the seder, when the first seder falls on Motza'ei Shabbat), firstborn sons are commanded to celebrate the Fast of the Firstborn which commemorates the salvation of the Hebrew firstborns. According to Exodus 12:29, God struck down all Egyptian firstborns while the Israelites were not affected.[69] However, it is customary for synagogues to conduct a siyum (ceremony marking the completion of a section of Torah learning) right after morning prayers, and the celebratory meal that follows cancels the firstborn's obligation to fast.

Burning and nullification of leaven

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On the morning of the 14th of Nisan, any leavened products that remain in the householder's possession, along with the 10 morsels of bread from the previous night's search, are burned (s'rayfat chametz). The head of the household repeats the declaration of biyur chametz, declaring any chametz that may not have been found to be null and void "as the dust of the earth":

Any chametz or leaven that is in my possession which I have not seen and have not removed and do not know about should be annulled and become ownerless like the dust of the earth.

The original declaration, as recited in Aramaic, is:[68]

כל חמירא וחמיעא דאכא ברשותי דלא חמתה ודלא בערתה ודלא ידענא לה לבטל ולהוי הפקר כעפרא דארעא

Should more chametz actually be found in the house during the Passover holiday, it must be burnt as soon as possible.

Unlike chametz, which can be eaten any day of the year except during Passover, kosher for Passover foods can be eaten year-round. They need not be burnt or otherwise discarded after the holiday ends.

The historic Passover sacrifice has not been brought following the Romans' destruction of the Second Temple approximately two thousand years ago, and it is therefore still not part of the modern Jewish holiday.

In the times when the Jewish Temples stood, the lamb was slaughtered and cooked on the evening of Passover and was completely consumed before the morning as described in Exodus 12:3–11.[70]

Not eating matzah from sunrise until sunset (day before Passover)

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Even matzot that are kosher for Passover cannot be eaten all day on during the daylight hours before Passover eve.[71] Some even practice this up to 30 days before.[72]

Passover sacrifice

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The main entity in Passover according to Judaism is the sacrificial lamb.[57] During the existence of the Tabernacle and later the Temple in Jerusalem, the focus of the Passover festival was the Passover sacrifice, also known as the Paschal lamb, eaten during the Passover Seder on the 15th of Nisan. Every family large enough to completely consume a young lamb or wild goat was required to offer one for sacrifice at the Jewish Temple on the afternoon of the 14th day of Nisan,[73] and eat it that night, which was the 15th of Nisan.[74] If the family was too small to finish eating the entire offering in one sitting, an offering was made for a group of families. The sacrifice could not be offered with anything leavened,[75] and had to be roasted, without its head, feet, or inner organs being removed[76] and eaten together with unleavened bread and bitter herbs (maror). One had to be careful not to break any bones from the offering,[77] and none of the meat could be left over by morning.[78]

Because of the Passover sacrifice's status as a sacred offering, the only people allowed to eat it were those who had the obligation to bring the offering. Among those who could not offer or eat the Passover lamb were an apostate,[79] a servant,[80] an uncircumcised man,[81] a person in a state of ritual impurity except when a majority of Jews are in such a state,[82] and a Gentile. The offering had to be made before a quorum of 30.[83] In the Temple, the Levites sang Hallel while the priests performed the sacrificial service. Men and women were equally obligated regarding the offering (Pesahim 91b).

Today, in the absence of the Temple, when no sacrifices are offered or eaten, the mitzvah of the sacrifice is memorialized in the Seder Korban Pesach, a set of scriptural and Rabbinic passages dealing with the Passover sacrifice, customarily recited after the Mincha (afternoon prayer) service on the 14th of Nisan,[84] and in the form of the zeroa, a symbolic food placed on the Passover Seder Plate (but not eaten), which is usually a roasted shankbone (or a chicken wing or neck). The eating of the afikoman substitutes for the eating of the sacrifice at the end of the Seder meal (Mishnah Pesachim 119a). Many Sephardic Jews have the custom of eating lamb or goat meat during the Seder in memory of the sacrifice.

Matzah

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Machine-made shmura matza

A symbol of the Passover holiday is matzah, an unleavened flatbread made solely from flour and water which is continually worked from mixing through baking, so that it is not allowed to rise. Matzo may be made by machine or by hand. The Torah contains an instruction to eat matzah, specifically, on the first night of Passover and to eat only unleavened bread (in practice, matzah) during the entire week of Passover.[85] Consequently, the eating of matzah figures prominently in the Passover Seder. There are several explanations for this.

The Torah says that it is because the Hebrews left Egypt with such haste that there was no time to allow baked bread to rise; thus flat, unleavened bread, matzah, is a reminder of the rapid departure of the Exodus.[86] Other scholars teach that in the time of the Exodus, matzah was commonly baked to travel because it preserved well and was light to carry (making it similar to hardtack), suggesting that matzah was baked intentionally for the long journey ahead.

Matzo has also been called Lechem Oni (Hebrew: "bread of poverty"). There is an attendant explanation that matzah serves as a symbol to remind Jews what it is like to be a poor slave and to promote humility, appreciate freedom, and avoid the inflated ego symbolized by more luxurious leavened bread.[87]

Hand-made shmura matzah

Shmura matzah ("watched" or "guarded" matzah), is the bread of preference for the Passover Seder in Orthodox Jewish communities. Shmura matzah is made from wheat that is guarded from contamination by leaven from the time of summer harvest[49] to its baking into matzot five to ten months later.

In the weeks before Passover, matzot are prepared for holiday consumption. In many Orthodox Jewish communities, men traditionally gather in groups to bake handmade matzah for use at the Seder, the dough being rolled by hand, resulting in a large and round matzah. Groups also work together in machine-made matzah factories, which produce the typically square-shaped matzah sold in stores.

The baking of matzah is labour-intensive,[49] as less than 18 minutes is permitted between the mixing of flour and water to the conclusion of baking and removal from the oven. Consequently, only a small number of matzot can be baked at one time, and the group members are enjoined to work the dough constantly so that it is not allowed to ferment and rise. A special cutting tool is run over the dough just before baking to prick any bubbles which might make the matza puff up;[88] this creates the familiar dotted holes in the matzah.

After the matzot come out of the oven, the entire work area is scrubbed down and swept to make sure that no pieces of old, potentially leavened dough remain, as any stray pieces are now hametz and can contaminate the next batch of matzah.

Some machine-made matzot are completed within five minutes of being kneaded.[49]

Passover seder

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Table set for the Passover Seder

It is traditional for Jewish families to gather on the first night of Passover (first two nights in Orthodox and Conservative communities outside Israel) for a special dinner called a seder (Hebrew: סדר seder – derived from the Hebrew word for "order" or "arrangement", referring to the very specific order of the ritual). The table is set with the finest china and silverware to reflect the importance of the meal. During this meal, the story of the Exodus from Egypt is retold using a special text called the Haggadah. A total of four cups of wine are consumed during the recitation of the Haggadah. The seder is divided by the haggadah into the following 15 parts:

  1. Qāḏēš קָדֵשׁ – recital of the Kiddush and drinking of the first cup of wine
  2. Urḥaṣ ורחץ lit.'"and wash"' – the washing of the hands – without blessing
  3. Karpas כרפס – dipping of the karpas in salt water
  4. Yaḥaṣ יחץ – breaking the middle matzah; the larger piece becomes the afikoman which is eaten later during the ritual of Ṣafun
  5. Maggiḏ מגיד – retelling the Passover story, including the recital of "the four questions" and drinking of the second cup of wine
  6. Raḥṣā רחצה – second washing of the hands – with blessing
  7. Moṣi מוציא – traditional blessing before eating bread products
  8. Maṣā מצה – blessing before eating matzah
  9. Maror מרור – eating of the maror
  10. Korēḵ כורך – eating of a sandwich made of matzah and maror
  11. Shulḥān ʿorēḵ שולחן עורך – lit. "set table" – the serving of the holiday meal
  12. Ṣafun צפון – eating of the afikoman
  13. Bareich/ Barēkh ברךblessing after the meal and drinking of the third cup of wine
  14. Hallel הלל – recital of the Hallel, traditionally recited on festivals; drinking of the fourth cup of wine
  15. Nirṣā נירצה – conclusion

These 15 parts parallel the 15 steps in the Temple in Jerusalem on which the Levites stood during Temple services, and which were memorialized in the 15 Psalms (#120–134) known as Shir HaMa'a lot (Hebrew: שיר המעלות shiyr ha-ma'alôth, "Songs of Ascent").[89]

The seder is replete with questions, answers, and unusual practices (e.g. the recital of Kiddush which is not immediately followed by the blessing over bread, which is the traditional procedure for all other holiday meals) to arouse the interest and curiosity of the children at the table. The children are also rewarded with nuts and candies when they ask questions and participate in the discussion of the Exodus and its aftermath. Likewise, they are encouraged to search for the afikoman, the piece of matzah which is the last thing eaten at the seder. Audience participation and interaction is the rule, and many families' seders last long into the night with animated discussions and singing. The seder concludes with additional songs of praise and faith printed in the Haggadah, including Chad Gadya ("One Little Kid" or "One Little Goat").

Maror

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Types of maror: grated horseradish, romaine lettuce, whole horseradish root

Maror (bitter herbs) symbolizes the bitterness of slavery in Egypt. The following verse from the Torah underscores that symbolism: "And they embittered (Hebrew: וימררו ve-yimareru) their lives with hard labor, with mortar and with bricks and with all manner of labor in the field; any labor that they made them do was with hard labor" (Exodus 1:14).

Silver seder plate

Four cups of wine

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There is a Rabbinic requirement that four cups of wine are to be drunk during the seder meal. This applies to both men and women. The Mishnah says (Pes. 10:1) that even the poorest man in Israel must drink. Each cup is connected to a different part of the seder: the first cup is for Kiddush, the second cup is connected with the recounting of the Exodus, the drinking of the third cup concludes Birkat Hamazon and the fourth cup is associated with Hallel. A fifth cup of wine is poured near the end of the seder for the prophet Elijah, a symbol of the future redemption, which is left un-touched.[90]

The four questions and participation of children

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Children have a very important role in the Passover seder. Traditionally the youngest child is prompted to ask questions about the Passover seder, beginning with the words, Mah Nishtana HaLeila HaZeh (Why is this night different from all other nights?). The questions encourage the gathering to discuss the significance of the symbols in the meal. The questions asked by the child are:

Why is this night different from all other nights?
On all other nights, we eat either unleavened or leavened bread, but tonight we eat only unleavened bread?
On all other nights, we eat all kinds of vegetables, but tonight, we eat only bitter herbs?
On all other nights, we do not dip [our food] even once, but tonight we dip twice?
On all other nights, we eat either sitting or reclining, but tonight we only recline?

Often the leader of the seder and the other adults at the meal will use prompted responses from the Haggadah, which states, "The more one talks about the Exodus from Egypt, the more praiseworthy he is." Many readings, prayers, and stories are used to recount the story of the Exodus. Many households add their own commentary and interpretation and often the story of the Jews is related to the theme of liberation and its implications worldwide.

Afikoman

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14th century Haggadah

The afikoman – an integral part of the Seder itself – is used to engage the interest and excitement of the children at the table. During the fourth part of the Seder, called Yachatz, the leader breaks the middle piece of matzah into two. He sets aside the larger portion as the afikoman. Many families use the afikoman as a device for keeping the children awake and alert throughout the Seder proceedings by hiding the afikoman and offering a prize for its return.[49] Alternatively, the children are allowed to "steal" the afikoman and demand a reward for its return. In either case, the afikoman must be consumed during the twelfth part of the Seder, Tzafun.

Concluding songs

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After the Hallel, the fourth glass of wine is drunk, and participants recite a prayer that ends in "Next year in Jerusalem!". This is followed by several lyric prayers that expound upon God's mercy and kindness, and give thanks for the survival of the Jewish people through a history of exile and hardship. "Echad Mi Yodea" ("Who Knows One?") is a playful song, testing the general knowledge of the children (and the adults). Some of these songs, such as "Chad Gadya" are allegorical.

Hallel

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During Passover, the recitation of Hallel a collection of Psalms praising and thanking God, is an integral part of the daily prayer service. On the initial day(s) of Passover, it is recited in its entirety, similar to the practice observed on Shavuot and throughout Succot. However, for the subsequent days of the Passover holiday, only half of the Hallel is recited. This traditional practice is widely observed by adherents of the Jewish faith as a way of expressing gratitude and celebrating the significance of Passover, while maintaining variations in the recitation of Hallel based on specific days within the festival.[91][92]

Counting of the Omer

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Beginning on the second night of Passover, the 16th day of Nisan,[93] Jews begin the practice of the Counting of the Omer, a nightly reminder of the approach of the holiday of Shavuot 50 days hence. Each night after the evening prayer service, men and women recite a special blessing and then enumerate the day of the Omer. On the first night, for example, they say, "Today is the first day in (or, to) the Omer"; on the second night, "Today is the second day in the Omer." The counting also involves weeks; thus, the seventh day is commemorated, "Today is the seventh day, which is one week in the Omer." The eighth day is marked, "Today is the eighth day, which is one week and one day in the Omer," etc.[94]

When the Temple stood in Jerusalem, a sheaf of new-cut barley was presented before the altar on the second day of Unleavened Bread (Passover). Josephus writes:

On the second day of unleavened bread, that is to say the sixteenth, our people partake of the crops which they have reaped and which have not been touched till then, and esteeming it right first to do homage to God, to whom they owe the abundance of these gifts, they offer to him the first-fruits of the barley in the following way. After parching and crushing the little sheaf of ears and purifying the barley for grinding, they bring to the altar an issaron for God, and, having flung a handful thereof on the altar, they leave the rest for the use of the priests. Thereafter all are permitted, publicly or individually, to begin harvest.[95]

Since the destruction of the Temple, this offering is brought in word rather than deed.

One explanation for the Counting of the Omer is that it shows the connection between Passover and Shavuot. The physical freedom that the Hebrews achieved at the Exodus from Egypt was only the beginning of a process that climaxed with the spiritual freedom they gained at the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai. Another explanation is that the newborn nation which emerged after the Exodus needed time to learn their new responsibilities vis-a-vis Torah and mitzvot before accepting God's law. The distinction between the Omer offering – a measure of barley, typically animal fodder – and the Shavuot offering – two loaves of wheat bread, human food – symbolizes the transition process.[96]

Chol HaMoed: The intermediate days of Passover

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In Israel, Passover lasts for seven days with the first and last days being major Jewish holidays. In Orthodox and Conservative communities, no work is performed on those days, with most of the rules relating to the observances of Shabbat being applied.[97]

Outside Israel, in Orthodox and Conservative communities, the holiday lasts for eight days with the first two days and last two days being major holidays. In the intermediate days necessary work can be performed. Reform Judaism observes Passover over seven days, with the first and last days being major holidays.

Like the holiday of Sukkot, the intermediary days of Passover are known as Chol HaMoed (festival weekdays) and are imbued with a semi-festive status. It is a time for family outings and picnic lunches of matzah, hardboiled eggs, fruits and vegetables, and Passover treats such as macaroons and homemade candies.[97]

Passover cake recipes call for potato starch or Passover cake flour made from finely granulated matzah instead of regular flour, and a large amount of eggs to achieve fluffiness. Cookie recipes use matzah farfel (broken bits of matzah) or ground nuts as the base. For families with Eastern European backgrounds, borsht, a soup made with beets, is a Passover tradition.[98]

A Passover brownie cake baked in a Wonder Pot

While kosher for Passover packaged goods are available in stores, some families opt to cook everything from scratch during Passover week. In Israel, families that do not kasher their ovens can bake cakes, casseroles, and even meat[99] on the stovetop in a Wonder Pot, an Israeli invention consisting of three parts: an aluminium pot shaped like a Bundt pan, a hooded cover perforated with venting holes, and a thick, round, metal disc with a center hole which is placed between the Wonder Pot and the flame to disperse heat.[100]

Seventh day of Passover

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Shvi'i shel Pesach (שביעי של פסח, 'seventh [day] of Passover') is another full Jewish holiday, with special prayer services and festive meals. Outside the Israel, in the Jewish diaspora, Shvi'i shel Pesach is celebrated on both the seventh and eighth days of Passover.[101] This holiday commemorates the day the Children of Israel reached the Red Sea and witnessed both the miraculous "Splitting of the Sea" (Passage of the Red Sea), the drowning of all the Egyptian chariots, horses and soldiers that pursued them. According to the Midrash, only the Pharaoh was spared to give testimony to the miracle that occurred.

Hasidic Rebbes traditionally hold a tish on the night of Shvi'i shel Pesach and place a cup or bowl of water on the table before them. They use this opportunity to speak about the Splitting of the Sea to their disciples, and sing songs of praise to God.[102]

Second Passover

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The "Second Passover" (Pesach Sheni) on the 14th of Iyar in the Hebrew calendar is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible's Book of Numbers[103] as a make-up day for people who were unable to offer the pesach sacrifice at the appropriate time due to ritual impurity or distance from Jerusalem. Just as on the first Pesach night, breaking bones from the second Paschal offering or leaving meat over until morning is prohibited.[104][105]

Today, Pesach Sheni on the 14th of Iyar has the status of a very minor holiday (so much so that many of the Jewish people have never even heard of it, and it essentially does not exist outside of Orthodox and traditional Conservative Judaism). There are not really any special prayers or observances that are considered Jewish law. The only change in the liturgy is that in some communities Tachanun, a penitential prayer omitted on holidays, is not said. There is a custom, though not Jewish law, to eat just one piece of matzah on that night.[106]

Notable events on Passover

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Biblical

  1. Abel offered the lamb which was accepted.[107]
  2. The war of Abraham and the four kings when he went to rescue Lot.[108]
  3. The Covenant Between the Parts (1743 BCE): God forged a special covenant with Abraham. Genesis 15:13–18[109]
  4. Abraham receives three visitors and prepares a meal for them. He receives the promise that Sarah will have a child next year.[110]
  5. The two angels go to Lot's house and spend the night with Lot. The next morning Sodom is destroyed.[110]
  6. Isaac was born on the first day of Passover.[108] The Akedah happened on the same day as well, years later.[111]
  7. Issac asking Esau to prepare a meal for him so he can bless him.[108]
  8. Jacob wrestles with an angel and his name is changed to Israel. Genesis 32:25–29[109]
  9. Moses at the burning bush. One year before the exodus, God speaks to Moses from the burning bush to go and deliver Israel.[109]
  10. The Exodus. The children of Israel were protected by the blood of the lamb during the plague of the death of the firstborn. They were miraculously healed that night and walked out of Egypt in the morning. God gave them favour with their neighbors and they asked and received precious articles which was used to build the tabernacle.[109]
  11. Gideon's victory over Midian and the barley cake dream.[112]
  12. King Hezekiah was healed and the Assyrian army defeated by an angel, killing 185,000 soldiers.[113]
  13. Queen Vashti is executed by King Achashverosh paving the way for Esther to become queen.[109]
  14. Esther's fast was proclaimed during the Passover. Haman erected the gallows for Mordecai on the first night of the Passover. The same night, King Ahasuerus could not sleep and that resulted in the downfall of Haman.[112]
  15. Daniel spends a night in the Lion's Den.[109]
  16. King Belshazzar of Babylon made use of the vessels of the temple and was subsequently judged by the handwriting on the wall.[112]

Modern Day

  1. 1979 – Uganda – Judaism was banned by Idi Amin in 1971. On Wednesday, 11 April 1979, corresponding to 14 Nisan 5739, Passover Night the new Government, composed of Ugandan rebels and Tanzanian troops, declared freedom of worship. And Passover was commemorated.[114]

Traditional foods

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Matzah brei (fried matzah and egg), a popular Passover dish

Because the house is free of leaven (chametz) for eight days, the Jewish household typically eats different foods during the week of Passover. Some include:

Ashkenazi foods

  • Matzah breiMatzo softened in milk or water and fried with egg and fat; served either savory or sweet
  • Matzo kugel – A kugel made with matzah instead of noodles
  • Charoset – A sweet mixture of fruit, fresh, dried or both; nuts; spices; honey; and sometimes wine. The charoset is a symbol of the mortar the Israelites used for building while enslaved in Egypt (See Passover seder)
  • Chrain – Horseradish and beet relish
  • Gefilte fish – Poached fish patties or fish balls made from a mixture of ground, de-boned fish, mostly carp or pike
  • Chicken soup with matzah balls (kneydlach) – Chicken soup served with matzah-meal dumplings
  • Passover noodles – Noodles prepared from potato flour and eggs, served in soup. Batter is fried like thin crepes, which are stacked, rolled up and sliced into ribbons.[115]

Sephardi foods

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  • That slaves can go free, and that the future can be better than the present, has inspired a number of religious sermons, prayers, and songs – including spirituals (what used to be called "Negro Spirituals"), within the African-American community. Philip R. Alstat, known for his fiery rhetoric and powerful oratory skills, wrote and spoke in 1939 about the power of the Passover story during the rise of Nazi persecution and terror:[116]
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Some see in Passover an important ecological lesson important to the contemporary situation with different ecological threats like climate change. For example, Rabbi Yonatan Neril, founder and executive director of the Interfaith Center for Sustainable Development, compares the impact of climate change to the Plagues of Egypt and the refusal of modern society to change its way of thinking to the refusal of the Pharaoh to free the Jewish slaves.[133] Scientists discovered evidence for climatic change at the end of the rule of Ramesses II, which could potentially impact the flow of the Nile, leading to red algae bloom. This could explain what is described as the ten plagues. According to Neril: "The Egyptians were very happy to have a free source of labor in the form of Israelite slaves. When God said this needs to stop, they were reluctant to change…Fossil fuels, in the past 150 years, have replaced slave labor as the key driver of human society. There's a Pharaoh within us that wants to continue to do something that's not right."[134][135]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Passover, known in Hebrew as Pesach (פֶּסַח), is a major annual Jewish holiday commemorating the biblical Exodus of the Israelites from slavery in Egypt, as detailed in the Book of Exodus where God instructed the Israelites to sacrifice a lamb and mark their doorposts with its blood so that the divine plague would pass over their homes. The festival begins on the 15th day of the Hebrew month of Nisan, typically in March or April, and lasts seven days in Israel or eight days in the Diaspora, emphasizing themes of liberation and divine intervention. Central observances include the thorough removal of chametz (leavened grains) from homes to evoke the unleavened bread (matzah) eaten during the hurried departure from Egypt, and the Seder, a ritual meal on the first one or two nights featuring symbolic foods, the recitation of the Haggadah to retell the Exodus narrative, and four cups of wine representing stages of redemption. While rooted in the Torah's account, scholarly analysis suggests Passover may have incorporated elements from earlier spring harvest rituals before fully aligning with the Exodus commemoration.

Etymology and Terminology

Linguistic Origins

The Hebrew term for Passover, Pesach (פֶּסַח), originates from the triliteral root p-s-ḥ (פ.ס.ח), first attested in the in Exodus 12:13, 23, and 27, where it describes the divine agent's action of sparing Israelite homes marked with lamb's blood during the tenth plague on . This root appears elsewhere in 31:5, paired with verbs meaning "protect" and "deliver," indicating connotations of shielding or deliverance. Scholarly analysis identifies potential homonyms within the root, reflecting Hebrew's limited phonemic inventory and semantic evolution, with distinct usages including "to hop" or "skip" in 1 Kings 18:21. Traditional interpretations derive pesach from "to pass over" or "skip," as in the angel of death bypassing protected homes, a rendering adopted in English translations like William Tyndale's Bible (c. 1530) and the King James Version (1611), yielding the term "Passover." This view aligns with medieval commentators such as and Rashbam, who emphasize skipping, and early sources like the Septuagint's partial rendering and . However, critics argue this does not fully fit the narrative, as the destroyer enters all homes but spares those with blood, suggesting instead "to protect" or "hover protectively," supported by Targum Yonatan, the , and Isaiah's context. An alternative biblical-era meaning is "to have compassion" or "show ," reflected in ' translation ve’eychos ("and I will have compassion") for Exodus 12:13, and echoed by Saadya Gaon, who termed the paschal lamb a " of ," as well as Mechilta's of pesach with chayis (). Comparative Semitics bolsters protective senses: Arabic cognates of p-s-ḥ imply "to expand," "save," or "clear a ," potentially evoking sheltering, while some link it to "" or "jump," though these are secondary to Exodus' salvific usage. No single etymology is undisputed, with modern lexicons like Clines' listing multiple entries for the root to account for . In other languages, the holiday is known by terms that reflect its core elements, such as the prohibition on leavened bread. For instance, in Turkish, Passover is called "Hamursuz Bayramı," meaning "Unleavened Holiday."

Biblical Hebrew Terms

The primary biblical Hebrew term for Passover is Pesach (פֶּסַח), derived from the root p-s-ḥ, denoting "to " or "to spare," as articulated in Exodus 12:13, where the declares that the will pasach () the ' marked doorposts during the tenth plague, sparing their while striking Egypt's. This term initially designates the paschal lamb slaughtered as a protective offering on the fourteenth day of (Exodus 12:21), but extends to the commemorative observance itself, emphasizing divine protection and exemption from judgment. Scholarly analysis confirms the verbal form in Exodus aligns with "skipping over" or "hovering protectively," rejecting alternative etymologies like "limping" as secondary or contextually irrelevant to the narrative. Distinguished from Pesach in the Torah is Chag HaMatzot (חַג הַמַּצּוֹת), or "Festival of ," mandated in Exodus 12:17 and Leviticus 23:6 as a seven-day observance beginning on the fifteenth of , immediately following the Pesach sacrifice, during which must eat unleavened bread and abstain from leaven to recall the haste of their departure from . Biblically, this feast constitutes a pilgrimage festival (chag), separate yet contiguous with Pesach, with Deuteronomy 16:16 listing it among the three annual shlosh regalim (pilgrimage festivals), though later texts like 2 Kings 23:21 and Ezekiel 45:21 occasionally conflate the terms as Chag HaPesach. The distinction underscores Pesach as the sacrificial rite on Nisan 14, while Chag HaMatzot encompasses the broader period of ritual purity and remembrance from Nisan 15 to 21. Central to these observances are terms for dietary prohibitions and offerings: (מַצָּה), referring to baked without to symbolize affliction and urgency (Exodus 12:8, 39), and chametz (חָמֵץ), denoting any leavened product—formed when , , or similar grains contact water and ferment—which must be removed from homes and not consumed under penalty of excision (Exodus 12:15, 19; Deuteronomy 16:3). Chametz derives from a root implying acidity or souring, distinct from raw leaven (se'or, שְׂאוֹר), and its biblical ban evokes separation from corruption, paralleling the narrative's themes of redemption. The korban Pesach (קָרְבַּן פֶּסַח), or Passover offering, specified as a yearling lamb or kid roasted whole and eaten with matzah and bitter herbs (Exodus 12:3–11), functions as zevach Pesach ("sacrifice of Passover" in Exodus 12:27), a communal meal binding families in covenantal remembrance. These terms collectively frame the biblical Passover as a multifaceted of sacrifice, abstention, and feasting, rooted in the Exodus events.

Historical Origins and Evidence

Pre-Biblical Influences and Theories

Scholars propose that the core Passover ritual, known as Pesach, originated as a pre-Israelite rite among semi-nomadic shepherds in the ancient , conducted in spring during lambing season to safeguard flocks and households from malevolent forces. This apotropaic practice involved the slaughter of a yearling lamb or kid at the tent entrance, smearing its on doorposts and lintels to avert a "" or , followed by a of the roasted with bitter , prohibiting broken bones or until morning—elements suggestive of a mobile, herding lifestyle rather than settled urban observance. The term pesach, interpreted as "protection" or "hovering over" in 31:5, aligns with this defensive function, predating its historicization as the divine "passing over" Israelite homes during the tenth plague in Exodus 12:21-23. Distinct from Pesach, the Feast of (hag ha-matzot) reflects agricultural origins tied to the early barley harvest in the month of (spring), practiced by settled farming communities to mark the depletion of winter stores with hastily prepared flatbreads lacking time for leavening. Archaeological evidence from sites like Kiryat Hayovel indicates such seasonal agrarian cycles among pre-monarchic villagers, where served practical utility amid harvest urgency. These two festivals, pastoral and agricultural, likely coexisted among early populations before their synthesis into a unified observance. The merger occurred during the Israelite monarchy, particularly under King Josiah's centralizing reforms circa 622 BCE, which relocated sacrifices to the and linked the combined rite to the Exodus narrative for national cohesion, as reflected in Deuteronomy 16:5-6 and 2 Kings 22. This evolution transformed disparate seasonal customs into a commemorative pilgrimage festival (shalosh regalim), though textual discrepancies—such as Exodus 12's decentralized, nomadic prescriptions versus Deuteronomy's temple focus—preserve traces of the older strata. Ancient Near Eastern parallels bolster these theories, including Mesopotamian maqlû anti-witchcraft rituals and incantations against demons like Lamashtu, which employed blood daubed on thresholds to protect vulnerable newborns and livestock, mirroring Pesach's protective logic. Biblical motifs, such as the "bridegroom of blood" episode in Exodus 4:24-26 or the scapegoat rite in Leviticus 17, further evoke chthonic blood appeasement akin to regional ancestor or deity cults, as argued by scholars like Ziony Zevit. While empirical traces of such rituals are elusive due to their perishable nature, the ethno-cultural profile of early Israelites as semi-nomads transitioning to sedentism supports pastoral primacy over a purely Egyptian-derived etiology. These hypotheses, drawn from form-critical analysis, contrast with traditional views tying Pesach exclusively to the Exodus event, emphasizing instead endogenous Levantine adaptations of broader spring renewal practices.

Archaeological and Egyptian Records

No direct Egyptian records mention the biblical events, including the plagues, the mass departure of Hebrew slaves, or the figure of . Egyptian royal inscriptions and administrative papyri from the New Kingdom period (c. 1550–1070 BCE), when the Exodus is typically dated by scholars favoring a historical core, focus on victories and omit major defeats or internal upheavals, yet the absence of any reference to catastrophic losses of workforce or army personnel is notable given the administrative detail in surviving documents. The , erected by (r. c. 1213–1203 BCE), contains the earliest extrabiblical Egyptian reference to "," portraying it as a non-urbanized people group ("ysrỉꜣr" determined as people, not city) in that has been devastated: " is laid waste; its seed is no more." Discovered in 1896 at Thebes and dated to c. 1208 BCE, this inscription confirms 's existence in the southern Levant by the late 13th century BCE but describes subjugation rather than origin from , aligning potentially with a Ramesside-era Exodus chronology while contradicting a 15th-century BCE dating due to the stele's post-Amenhotep III context. Archaeological excavations in the , particularly at (), reveal substantial Semitic (Asiatic) populations from the Middle Bronze Age onward, including rulers and laborers with Canaanite , such as Levantine-style houses and burials, indicating migration and settlement rather than enslavement followed by exodus. The expulsion c. 1550 BCE, documented in Egyptian texts like the and Ahmose stelae describing the siege and flight of foreign kings from , involved elite Asiatics retreating northward to Sharuhen, not a slave multitude escaping to the south with , and occurred centuries before Merneptah's reference to . Sinai Peninsula surveys, including those by Israel Finkelstein and others spanning decades, have uncovered no pottery, campsites, or faunal remains consistent with a seminomadic population of 2–3 million (as implied by biblical census figures in Numbers) traversing the region for 40 years; instead, sparse Bronze Age artifacts suggest limited, small-scale pastoralist activity attributable to Egyptian mining expeditions or local nomads, not a unified Israelite migration. Egyptian mining inscriptions from Serabit el-Khadim (c. 19th–15th centuries BCE) mention Semitic workers ('Apiru, possibly akin to Habiru outsiders) but provide no link to organized Hebrew tribes or divine plagues.

Lack of Direct Corroboration

No archaeological surveys of the have uncovered evidence of a large-scale migration or encampment consistent with the biblical description of the ' 40-year sojourn, such as shards, tools, or settlement remains from the Late Bronze Age (circa 1550–1200 BCE), the period typically associated with . Extensive excavations, including those conducted by teams from and others since the mid-20th century, reveal only sparse nomadic activity insufficient to support a of two million or more as implied in Exodus 12:37. This absence persists despite the durability of such artifacts in arid environments, leading scholars like to conclude that no trace of a mass exodus exists in the material record. Egyptian historical records, including royal annals, temple inscriptions, and administrative papyri from the New Kingdom (circa 1550–1070 BCE), contain no references to the ten plagues, a catastrophic slave revolt, or the sudden departure of a Semitic labor force numbering in the hundreds of thousands. Pharaohs such as Ramesses II, often proposed as the Exodus ruler, documented military campaigns and building projects involving foreign laborers, including Semites (known as 'Apiru or Habiru), but these texts emphasize control and tribute rather than mass escapes or divine judgments disrupting the Nile-based economy. The Ipuwer Papyrus, sometimes cited as a parallel due to descriptions of societal chaos, dates to the Middle Kingdom (circa 2000 BCE) and lacks specific ties to Israelite events, with Egyptologists viewing it as literary rhetoric rather than historical corroboration of Exodus plagues. The lack of direct extra-biblical attestation extends to the Passover narrative's core elements, such as the marking of doorposts with blood to avert the tenth plague (Exodus 12:7–13), which finds no parallel in Egyptian mortuary or texts despite meticulous of religious rituals and epidemics. While smaller-scale migrations of Semitic groups into and out of are archaeologically plausible—evidenced by Hyksos expulsions around 1550 BCE or Shasu nomads mentioned in Amenhotep III's lists—these do not align with the unified tribal or the plagues' scale described in the . Mainstream biblical scholars, drawing on this evidentiary gap, regard the Passover origins as etiologically symbolic rather than literally verifiable, though apologetic interpretations argue that perishable nomadic evidence or Egyptian suppression of defeats could explain the silence.

Biblical Narrative

Core Account in Exodus

The Book of presents the inaugural Passover as the tenth and culminating plague inflicted upon to compel to release the from . On the tenth day of the first month, commands to instruct each Israelite household to select an unblemished male lamb or kid, about one year old, and keep it until the fourteenth day. The animal is then slaughtered at twilight, with its blood applied to the doorposts and lintel of the houses where the meal is eaten, serving as a sign for the to those dwellings during the plague. The flesh must be roasted whole over fire, consumed with and bitter herbs, and eaten in haste with loins girded, on feet, and staff in hand, as the prepare for immediate departure. No bones are to be broken, leftovers burned by morning, and foreigners or uncircumcised individuals excluded from participation unless incorporated through and observance. That night, at midnight, the strikes down every firstborn in —from Pharaoh's heir to the captive's child and livestock—while sparing the ' firstborn due to the blood marking. Widespread lamentation ensues in , prompting to summon and urgently, granting permission for the people and their flocks to depart, accompanied by Egyptian gifts of silver, , and as the find favor. Approximately 600,000 adult Israelite men, plus women, children, and a mixed multitude, leave Ra'ames and Succoth, taking before it could leaven. This exodus occurs on the fifteenth day of the first month, exactly as foretold. The narrative mandates perpetual observance: for seven days, no leaven is to be found in Israelite homes or eaten, with the first and seventh days as holy convocations for assemblies, during which no laborious work occurs except food preparation. This commemorates the haste of departure, when the dough lacked time to rise. Parents must teach children the ritual's origin, linking it to the Lord's acts of judgment on and deliverance of , symbolized by recounting, "It is the to the Lord, who passed over the houses of the people of ." The ordinance binds all future generations, with firstborn males—human and animal—consecrated to , redeemable by lamb substitution except for donkeys, and unredeemed human firstborn dedicated to service. Exodus frames this event as divine initiative, with Moses relaying precise instructions from , emphasizing ritual purity, communal participation, and memorialization to instill covenantal identity. The account integrates Passover with the Feast of , establishing it as an enduring statute observed in the month of (later ), tied causally to the plagues' sequence and Egypt's refusal to release the slaves despite escalating judgments.

References in Torah and Prophets

The Torah contains several legislative references to Passover (Pesach) outside the foundational narrative in Exodus. Leviticus 23:5–8 mandates the observance of Passover on the fourteenth day of the first month, followed by seven days of unleavened bread during which no leavened food may be eaten and a sacred assembly is required on the first and seventh days. Numbers 9:1–14 establishes provisions for a "second Passover" (Pesach sheni) one month later, on the fourteenth of the second month, for individuals who were ritually unclean due to contact with a corpse or were on a journey and unable to participate initially; this allowance underscores the importance of inclusion while maintaining the core ritual of the paschal lamb sacrifice. Numbers 28:16–25 further details the sacrificial offerings for Passover, including two lambs without blemish as burnt offerings alongside the paschal sacrifice, emphasizing daily grain and drink offerings throughout the festival. Deuteronomy 16:1–8 integrates Passover with the Feast of Unleavened Bread, directing that the paschal lamb be slaughtered and roasted at the "place that the Lord your God will choose" as a central sanctuary, prohibiting consumption of the meat raw or boiled and requiring its burning of remains by morning; this passage shifts emphasis toward centralized worship and family-centered observance without delay. In the Prophets, historical books record instances of Passover observance that affirm its continuity post-Exodus. 5:10–11 describes the celebrating Passover on the fourteenth day of the first month at , immediately after crossing the and prior to the cessation of ; on the following day, they ate the produce of the land, marking a transition to settled agrarian life. During the monarchy, 2 Kings 23:21–23 recounts King Josiah's command in the eighteenth year of his reign (circa 622 BCE) to observe Passover as prescribed in the Book of the Covenant, noting it as the most significant such celebration since the days of the judges and no king before him had done likewise, linking it to religious reform amid idolatry's purge. 2 Chronicles 30 details King Hezekiah's initiative circa 715 BCE to revive Passover after temple purification, extending invitations across Judah, Benjamin, , and Manasseh despite irregular timing (second month due to insufficient ), with the prolonged to fourteen days amid widespread participation and divine for latecomers. 2 Chronicles 35:1–19 elaborates on Josiah's Passover, specifying the number of offerings (30,000 lambs and kids, 3,000 bulls from the king and officials) contributed by the Levites and , conducted by prepared under Hilkiah's oversight, and unparalleled since Samuel's time. In the Latter Prophets, 45:21 envisions Passover in a future temple restoration, to be observed for seven days starting on the fourteenth of the first month with , as part of priestly ordinances for equitable land divisions and sacred offerings. These references collectively portray Passover as a recurring covenantal rite, periodically revitalized during periods of national renewal, though lapses occurred amid .

Post-Biblical Interpretations

Following the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, rabbinic authorities adapted Passover observance from Temple-centered sacrifices to home-based rituals centered on the Seder meal, as codified in the Mishnah tractate Pesachim. This shift emphasized the retelling of the Exodus narrative, with chapter 10 of Pesachim detailing the order: sanctification over the first cup of wine, handwashing, breaking matzah, eating bitter herbs, the second cup, recitation starting from Deuteronomy 26:5 ("Arami oved avi"), and explanations of the Pesach offering, matzah, and maror as symbols of divine protection, haste in redemption, and enslavement's bitterness, respectively. The Babylonian Talmud in Pesachim 116b further interprets the obligation to recount the Exodus, mandating that participants begin with ancestral degradation—idolatry in Mesopotamia—and progress to praise for God's redemption, framing the story as a personal experience: "In every generation, one must see oneself as having personally come forth from Egypt." This interpretive requirement underscores causal themes of divine intervention against oppression, with the Seder's structure—including four cups of wine symbolizing stages of redemption and child-initiated questions—designed to educate across generations, adapting biblical commands like Exodus 13:8 to ensure experiential transmission. Midrashic literature, such as collections in the drawn from tannaitic and amoraic sources, expands the biblical account with elaborations on plagues, Pharaoh's decrees, and women's pivotal roles in preserving faith, portraying as a of ultimate redemption encompassing physical, spiritual, and messianic liberation. The , evolving from oral traditions by the CE into written form by the 8th-9th centuries, integrates these midrashim—e.g., the four sons from earlier exegeses—to emphasize praiseworthy elaboration on the story, linking Passover to ongoing Jewish resilience against assimilation and . Later kabbalistic interpretations, as in the , infuse mystical layers, viewing the Seder as invoking divine influx through symbolic acts, though rooted in rabbinic frameworks prioritizing empirical fidelity to Exodus themes over allegorical excess.

Debates on Historicity

Arguments Supporting Literal Event

Egyptologist James K. Hoffmeier has examined New Kingdom records and argued that they align with the biblical portrayal of Semitic groups laboring in the , including building supply cities like those in Exodus 1:11, with archaeological remains of storage facilities at sites such as Tell el-Retaba confirming such projects around 1450–1250 BC. Similarly, Kenneth A. Kitchen contends in his analysis of ancient Near Eastern texts that the narrative reflects authentic ian administrative and cultural details from the Ramesside or earlier periods, without anachronisms that would indicate late invention. Papyrus Brooklyn 35.1446, from the late Middle Kingdom (ca. 1800 BC), inventories over 95 household servants of West Semitic origin, including names like špr.t resembling the biblical Shiphrah (Exodus 1:15), evidencing Asiatic slaves in whose descendants could correspond to the Israelite sojourn described in Genesis–Exodus. Tomb paintings from the 18th Dynasty, such as in Rekhmire's Theban (ca. 1450 BC), depict Semitic laborers manufacturing mud under overseer complaint, directly paralleling the oppression in Exodus 5:6–19. Extra-biblical inscriptions support Israelite presence post-departure: the Merneptah Stele (ca. 1208 BC) records the first mention of "Israel" as a people in Canaan, consistent with an Exodus dated to either the 15th or 13th century BC followed by conquest and settlement. An inscription from Amenhotep III's Soleb temple (ca. 1400 BC) references "Shasu of Yhw," linking nomadic herders to the name Yahweh in southern Canaanite territories, predating widespread Israelite settlement. Excavations at Avaris (Tell el-Dab'a) reveal a thriving Canaanite/West Semitic community in the Delta from the 12th Dynasty onward, peaking in the Hyksos period before declining sharply after the reign of Amenhotep II (ca. 1425–1400 BC), a proposed Exodus pharaoh whose military campaigns weakened post-1446 BC, potentially due to loss of labor forces as in Exodus 12–14. Egyptian loanwords in the Pentateuch, such as tĕbâ for "ark" (Exodus 2:3) akin to Egyptian db3t for chest, and references to the Nile as "river," reflect an insider's knowledge of Egyptian milieu, as would be expected from Moses raised in Pharaoh's court (Acts 7:22). The (Leiden 344, possibly 19th–13th century BC) laments societal collapse with motifs like bloodied rivers, destroyed crops, and elite deaths mirroring plague descriptions (Exodus 7–12), though its dating precedes the New Kingdom setting, suggesting a cultural memory of catastrophe rather than direct record. Place names like Raamses (Exodus 1:11) correspond to , a Delta capital built under (1279–1213 BC), while as "Reed Sea" fits marshy lakes near canals evidenced in reliefs (ca. 1290 BC), supporting a feasible escape route over a mythical crossing. These convergences counter claims of pure , as Egyptian records systematically omit defeats or slave revolts to preserve pharaonic prestige, explaining the silence on a mass departure; mainstream often stems from presupposing no elements, yet the cumulative data from primary sources affirms a historical kernel to the Passover-linked Exodus events around 1446 BC per biblical chronology (1 Kings 6:1).

Arguments Against Mass Exodus

The biblical account describes a mass departure of Israelites from Egypt involving approximately 600,000 men of fighting age, implying a total population of two to three million including women, children, and dependents (Exodus 12:37; Numbers 1:46). This scale would represent roughly two-thirds of Egypt's estimated New Kingdom population of three to four million, yet contemporary Egyptian economic and demographic records show no disruption or population collapse consistent with such a loss of labor or slaves. Egyptian texts from the Ramesside period (circa 1292–1075 BCE), including administrative papyri and temple inscriptions, document Semitic laborers and Asiatic migrations but omit any reference to the ten plagues, a royal confrontation over firstborn deaths, or the annihilation of a pursuing in the Reed Sea, events that would have warranted extensive recording given Egypt's bureaucratic detail on calamities and military setbacks. Archaeological surveys of the Sinai Peninsula, spanning over a century of exploration, have yielded no material traces—such as large-scale encampments, pottery concentrations, or faunal remains—of a nomadic group of this magnitude sustaining itself for forty years, despite the region's aridity preserving artifacts well. In Canaan, excavations at sites like Jericho, Ai, and Hazor reveal no synchronized destruction layers or sudden cultural shifts aligning with the proposed Exodus timelines (15th or 13th century BCE); instead, Iron Age I settlements in the central highlands exhibit continuity with Late Bronze Age Canaanite pottery and architecture, suggesting early Israelites developed endogenously from marginalized local populations rather than through mass external migration. Archaeologists such as contend that the Exodus narrative functions as an etiological founding myth, possibly echoing fragmented recollections of smaller Hyksos-related movements circa 1550 BCE, but incompatible with empirical settlement data indicating no foreign influx. Similarly, William Dever highlights the absence of Egyptian evidence for a historical or large-scale slave , attributing Israelite origins to internal Canaanite social upheavals rather than invasion or migration.

Scholarly Views and Minimalist Perspectives

Scholarly consensus holds that the biblical account of a mass exodus from , culminating in the Passover events, lacks direct archaeological or extrabiblical corroboration, rendering a literal interpretation improbable. Excavations in the have yielded no traces of the purported encampments or migrations of hundreds of thousands over four decades, despite extensive surveys since the mid-20th century. Egyptian records from the New Kingdom period, including administrative papyri and monumental inscriptions, document Semitic laborers and Asiatic slaves but contain no references to a Hebrew of the scale described in Exodus or to catastrophic plagues or a sudden departure of slaves that would have disrupted the economy. Demographic analysis further challenges the narrative: the rapid growth from 70 individuals to approximately 600,000 adult males (implying 2-3 million total) within 430 years exceeds plausible rates without external influxes, and post-exodus settlement patterns in show cultural continuity with local Canaanite populations rather than a disruptive invasion. Many scholars posit that the and Passover traditions preserve dim cultural memories of smaller-scale migrations or escapes by Semitic groups from during the around 1200 BCE, possibly amalgamated into a foundational myth for ite identity. The (ca. 1207 BCE), the earliest extrabiblical mention of "" as a people in , aligns temporally with such a but describes them as defeated nomads in the region, not recent Egyptian escapees. Passover itself may derive from an ancient pastoral rite marking spring renewal and averting harm to flocks, evidenced by Deuteronomy 16:1-3's emphasis on nomadism and the smearing of blood on doorposts, which parallels apotropaic practices in Near Eastern cultures predating the monarchy. This view reconciles the absence of mass-event evidence with the narrative's role in forging , though it attributes the Torah's elaboration to exilic or post-exilic redaction for theological purposes. Biblical minimalists, including figures associated with the Copenhagen School such as Niels Peter Lemche and , argue that the Exodus-Passover complex is a wholly ahistorical construct invented in the II period (ca. 8th-6th centuries BCE) to legitimize Judahite monarchy and priestly authority. They contend that early emerged endogenously from Canaanite highland villagers around 1200 BCE, with no Egyptian sojourn or conquest; pottery, settlement, and linguistic data indicate continuity rather than rupture. In this framework, Passover evolves from a localized agricultural into a national etiology during the Assyrian or Babylonian eras, retrojecting origins to explain disparate tribal confederations as a unified "." Minimalists critique maximalist interpretations as apologetically driven, emphasizing that the Hebrew Bible's composition postdates purported events by centuries, rendering it unreliable for pre-9th century history absent independent verification. This position, while influential in Scandinavian and some European scholarship, faces pushback for undervaluing potential oral traditions and indirect evidences like Hyksos expulsions, though it underscores the narrative's symbolic primacy over empirical claims.

Calendar and Observance Framework

Date and Lunar Calculation

Passover commences at sunset on the 15th day of , the first ecclesiastical month of the . This timing aligns the holiday with the full moon, as the 14th of —when the Passover offering was historically sacrificed—culminates "between the evenings," marking the onset of the full lunar phase on the 15th. The , formalized in the 4th century CE under Hillel II, employs a calculated lunisolar system to synchronize lunar months with the solar year, preventing Passover from drifting into autumn. Months begin at the molad, the arithmetically determined moment of mean lunar conjunction (new moon), calculated from an set to October 7, 3761 BCE in the . Each lunar month averages 29 days, 12 hours, 793 parts (where a part is 1/1080 of an hour), yielding approximately 29.5306 days per synodic month. A comprises 12 months totaling 353, 354, or 355 days, while insert an extra Adar (Adar II) for 383, 384, or 385 days; occur 7 times in a 19-year (years 3, 6, 8, 11, 14, 17, and 19), producing an average year of 365.2468 days, closely approximating the tropical solar year of 365.2422 days. Nisan's commencement is derived backward from Tishri (the seventh month, starting ), ensuring the 15th of falls after the vernal to maintain its spring association per Exodus 12:2 and Deuteronomy 16:1. In pre-calculated eras, began when barley ripened (), confirming post- timing observationally; the fixed system embeds this via the cycle, though ancient rules deferred intercalation if the fell after 15. 's date incorporates four postponement (dehiyyot) rules to adjust the molad of Tishri: (1) no if molad after noon; (2) no if molad after noon; (3) no ; (4) no if prior year was long. These deferrals, up to two days, refine year lengths and indirectly safeguard 's seasonal placement, with 15 typically occurring between March 22 and April 25 in the . Over centuries, minor drifts occur due to the calendar's mean-month approximation versus actual astronomy, but no systematic corrections are applied.

Duration and Diaspora Variations

The Torah mandates observance of Passover for seven days, commencing on the 15th day of the month of and concluding on the 21st, during which no leavened bread may be eaten and the first and seventh days are designated as holy convocations with work prohibitions. This duration aligns with the biblical narrative of the ' exodus, symbolizing the haste of departure from without time for dough to rise. In the , this seven-day period remains the standard observance today, as the proximity to the in ancient times ensured accurate determination of and festival dates. Outside Israel, traditional Jewish communities—particularly Orthodox and most Conservative—extend the holiday to eight days by adding the 22nd of , treating it as an additional day of festival with similar restrictions on work and leaven. This extra day originated in the Second Temple period and earlier, when the Jewish relied on eyewitness reports of the new moon sighted in ; delays in communication to distant locales risked communities beginning or ending festivals prematurely, prompting rabbinic authorities to institute a second day as a safeguard to fulfill the correctly. Even after the was mathematically fixed by Hillel II around 359 CE, eliminating such uncertainties, the practice persisted to honor ancestral custom and avoid of the holy day. Reform Judaism, emphasizing adaptation to contemporary conditions, typically observes only seven days worldwide, aligning with the biblical prescription and Israeli practice, though individual adherence varies. The diaspora extension includes a second Seder meal on the evening preceding the eighth day, mirroring the first night's to recount .

Preparatory Rituals and Prohibitions

Prohibition and Removal of Chametz

The against during Passover derives from explicit commandments requiring the removal of leaven from one's possession and forbidding its consumption. Exodus 12:15 mandates, "Seven days you shall eat ; on the first day you shall remove leaven from your houses, for whoever eats leavened from the first day until the seventh day, that person shall be cut off from ." This establishes both a positive to eliminate chametz and a negative prohibition against eating it, punishable by karet, a spiritual excision. Additional verses reinforce the ban on possession, such as Exodus 12:19, "Seven days no leaven shall be found in your houses," and Deuteronomy 16:4, prohibiting any leaven from being seen or found within one's borders during the . Chametz refers specifically to products of the five species of grain—wheat, barley, spelt, rye, and oats—that have come into contact with water and begun to ferment, typically after 18 minutes, resulting in leavening. Jewish law extends the prohibition beyond mere consumption to ownership and any form of benefit, rendering even the slightest quantity forbidden, with rabbinic authorities deriving this from the Torah's emphasis on total removal to symbolize haste in the Exodus and avoidance of corruption symbolized by leaven's fermentation. The restriction begins at the fourth halachic hour (approximately 10-11 a.m., varying by location and sunrise) on the morning preceding Passover, known as Erev Pesach, and persists until the holiday's conclusion. Removal of chametz fulfills the biblical imperative through a multi-step process culminating in its destruction or transfer from Jewish possession. On the evening of 14 , the night before Passover, householders perform , a formal search by candlelight, feather, and quill to locate any overlooked leaven, preceded by a blessing: "Blessed are You... who has sanctified us with His commandments and commanded us concerning the removal of ." Any found chametz is set aside. The following morning, during the fifth halachic hour, remaining chametz is burned in a ritual called biur chametz, accompanied by a nullification declaration (kol chamira) renouncing ownership of any undetected leaven, recited in to ensure comprehension even by the unlearned. To avoid waste, much is sold via rabbinic agents to non-Jews before the takes effect, stored inaccessible during Passover, and repurchased afterward; this practice, rooted in the (Pesachim 21a), aligns with the Torah's focus on non-possession rather than physical destruction of all leaven. Failure to remove or nullify chametz renders one liable for ongoing violations throughout the holiday, underscoring the commandment's stringency as a safeguard against inadvertent transgression.

Search, Sale, and Nullification of Leaven

![Woodcut depicting the burning of chametz following the search][float-right] The search for leaven, known as , is performed at nightfall on the 14th of , the evening preceding the start of Passover, to locate and remove any from the home and possessions. This ritual fulfills the biblical injunction against owning during the holiday, as derived from Exodus 12:15 and 13:7, which mandate its removal. Participants recite a before the search: "Blessed are You... who has sanctified us with His commandments and commanded us concerning the removal of ." The search employs traditional tools including a for illumination, a for sweeping crumbs, a wooden spoon for collection, and a for containment, covering all potential areas such as rooms, cellars, attics, and storage spaces where might be present. Found is set aside for burning the next morning, ensuring thorough physical elimination. Immediately after completing the search, the nullification declaration, bitul chametz, is recited to disown any undetected chametz, rendering it legally ownerless. The Aramaic text states: "All chametz and leaven in my possession, whether I have seen it or not, whether I have removed it or not, whether I have destroyed it or not, is hereby nullified and ownerless as the dust of the earth." This verbal act, rooted in rabbinic interpretation of the Torah's removal requirement, prevents inadvertent ownership violations by treating unseen chametz as non-existent in Jewish law. A similar declaration follows the burning of collected chametz on the morning of 14 Nisan, reinforcing the nullification before Passover commences at sunset. To accommodate chametz that cannot be destroyed, such as commercial quantities, the sale of leaven, mechirat chametz, transfers ownership to a non-Jew for the duration of Passover, typically arranged through a rabbinic agent who acts on behalf of the seller. This practice, first documented in the (Pesachim 2:6) for cases like a Jew at unable to dispose of chametz, allows storage in sealed areas while legally evading the ownership prohibition. The transaction includes a nominal price and a post-Passover repurchase option, ensuring the chametz remains accessible but not possessed by during the holiday. Rabbis facilitate bulk sales for communities, appointing themselves as agents via , with sold chametz often stored in designated warehouses. This mechanism balances strict halachic observance with practical realities, as owning even small amounts of chametz incurs severe penalties under Jewish law.

Fast of the Firstborn

The Fast of the Firstborn, known in Hebrew as Ta'anit Bechorim or Ta'anit Bekhorot, is a minor fast observed by firstborn males in on Erev Pesach, the afternoon of 14 , the day preceding the . This observance involves abstaining from food and drink from dawn until nightfall, distinguishing it as the only fast applying exclusively to a specific subgroup rather than the broader community. The practice commemorates the tenth plague in , during which the firstborn sons of the were spared due to the protective blood of the Passover lamb on their doorposts, as recounted in Exodus 12:29-30 and subsequent rabbinic . It also expresses gratitude for this divine intervention and serves as a minor act of atonement or humility before the holiday, though it originated as a rabbinic custom rather than a biblical commandment. The fast's requirements are less stringent than those of major fasts like , permitting actions such as bathing or wearing leather shoes, and it can be adjusted to 12 if Passover falls on a to avoid conflicts with preparations. Obligation falls upon males who are the firstborn son of their mother, regardless of whether they have older sisters or were born via , as the status derives from the mother's firstborn child opening the womb (Exodus 13:2). Fathers typically fast on behalf of minor sons under bar age, while adult firstborns observe personally; female firstborns are generally exempt, though some authorities encourage their symbolic participation via siyum attendance. A widespread custom mitigates the fast through attendance at a siyum, the celebratory completion of a tractate of the or similar milestone, which transforms the gathering into a se'udat (festive obligatory meal) exempting participants from under rabbinic leniency for joyous occasions. These events are commonly held in synagogues or study halls on Erev Pesach morning, allowing firstborns to break their fast with food and wine shortly after, reflecting the custom's flexibility as a non-obligatory minhag (practice) rather than a binding halachic requirement. Pregnant women, the ill, or those for whom fasting poses hardship are exempt, aligning with broader Jewish principles prioritizing health over ritual stringency.

Core Ritual Elements

Matzah and Its Significance

Matzah, or , consists solely of flour and water baked rapidly to prevent , forming a staple of Passover observance. According to Exodus 12:39, the baked unleavened dough into matzah during their hasty exodus from , as there was no time for it to rise before departing. This biblical event underscores matzah's role as a direct commemoration of the redemption's urgency, where the dough they carried from remained unleavened due to the sudden liberation. The mandates eating for seven days during Passover, alongside prohibiting leavened products (), as detailed in Exodus 12:15-20, to recall both the affliction of slavery— symbolizing the "bread of affliction" or poor man's staple—and the swift divine deliverance. Rabbinic tradition, as in the (Pesachim 10:5), requires explaining 's significance at the Seder: it represents the dough that did not leaven in the haste of exodus. Beyond historical reenactment, some interpretations view as embodying and moral simplicity, contrasting 's puffiness with ego or excess. Halachic production rules ensure matzah's validity: only one of the five grains (, , , , oats) mixed with —no other liquids or additives—must be baked before natural begins, traditionally within 18 minutes from when contacts , though precise timing starts from dough resting per some authorities like Rambam. This limit derives from Talmudic estimates of leavening onset after a mil (about 18 minutes of walking), preventing even trace . must be "gebrochts" compliant or specially prepared, and used is often "mayim shelanu" (drawn at night to minimize prior moisture). Two primary types exist for Passover: regular matzah, supervised from milling to baking and often machine-produced in squares for year-round or intermediate days' use; and shmurah matzah, guarded against moisture from harvest (shmurah means "watched"), typically handmade into rounds by pious workers reciting , required for the Seder's obligatory portions to maximize ritual purity and symbolic intent. Machine shmurah variants exist but are less preferred; all must bear kosher certification. Observant prioritize shmurah for the Seder's matzah , while regular suffices otherwise, reflecting degrees of stringency in custom.

The Passover Sacrifice in Antiquity

The Passover sacrifice, known as the korban Pesach, originated as a ritual commanded in the for the in on the tenth day of the first month (later designated ), involving the selection of a lamb or kid without blemish, aged one year, for slaughter on the fourteenth day at twilight. The animal's was to be applied to the doorposts and lintels of houses, and its flesh roasted whole over fire, consumed that night with and bitter herbs, leaving none until morning, with bones unbroken and remnants burned. This one-time observance, termed Pesach Mitzrayim, commemorated divine protection from the tenth plague, with the term pasach denoting the act of sparing or protection. Subsequent biblical legislation in Numbers and Deuteronomy adapted the rite for annual observance, initially permitting household slaughter but later mandating centralization at the sanctuary or Temple to prevent idolatrous practices at multiple sites. By the Second Temple period, the sacrifice occurred exclusively in Jerusalem on the afternoon of 14 Nisan, with participants forming groups (chavurot) of at least ten to share one lamb or kid, ensuring the animal's size matched the group's needs. Pilgrims registered in advance, and the rite involved ritual slaughter by household heads in the Temple courts, followed by priests catching the blood in basins and dashing it against the altar base, while the entrails were burned on the altar. The meat was then taken home or to lodging for roasting on a spit—entirely, without breaking bones—and eaten after nightfall with matzah and maror, in a reclining posture symbolizing freedom, concluding before dawn. In the late Second Temple era, the scale of the sacrifice was immense, reflecting widespread participation; the historian Flavius recorded that during one Passover under Ananus (circa 62 CE), 256,500 lambs were slaughtered, serving approximately 2.7 million pilgrims, with logistical arrangements including three nights of Temple preparation and guards to manage crowds. This central rite underscored communal unity and covenantal remembrance of , distinct from sin offerings as it emphasized protection and redemption rather than . The practice ceased abruptly with the Roman destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE, eliminating the site required for valid sacrifice, though maintained a parallel observance on .

Maror and Symbolic Foods

![Passover Seder plate displaying symbolic foods including maror][float-right] , or bitter herbs, constitutes a central element of the , symbolizing the bitterness of the ' enslavement in as described in Exodus 1:14, where their lives were embittered with hard labor. Traditionally, root (often grated), , or serves as maror, selected for their sharp or bitter taste to evoke the affliction of bondage. During the Seder, a portion of maror is consumed alone in the step known as Maror, dipped minimally in if desired, fulfilling the biblical commandment in Numbers 9:11 to eat with bitter herbs. Additionally, maror forms part of the Korech sandwich, combining , maror, and , based on Hillel's ancient practice of eating the Passover offering with these elements, as recorded in the Pesachim 2:6. The Seder plate (ke'arah) features alongside other symbolic foods that represent aspects of narrative. Karpas, a green vegetable such as or , is dipped in saltwater to recall the tears of slavery and the springtime renewal associated with the holiday's occurrence in . , a mixture of fruits, nuts, wine, and spices (variations include apples, walnuts, and in Ashkenazi tradition or dates and sesame in Sephardi), symbolizes the mortar used by Israelite slaves in brick-making, its sweetness contrasting the bitterness of to reflect hope amid . The , a roasted shank bone (or poultry neck in some customs), commemorates the Passover lamb sacrifice (korban pesach) detailed in Exodus 12:3-8, though not consumed today following the Temple's destruction in 70 CE. A roasted egg (beitzah) on the plate represents the festival sacrifice (korban chagigah) offered on Passover and other holidays, or in some interpretations, the cycle of life and mourning for the Temple, with its round shape evoking continuity despite loss. These items, arranged centrally on the table, prompt discussion during the section of the Seder, where their meanings are expounded from the to educate participants on the historical deliverance from . Customs vary; for instance, some communities place an orange or other modern symbols, but traditional observance adheres to the core biblical and rabbinic symbols without alteration.

The Passover Seder

Order and Structure

The Passover Seder follows a prescribed sequence of fifteen steps, known as the Seder—Hebrew for "order"—designed to fulfill the biblical commandment to recount the Exodus from Egypt in every generation as if personally experienced (Exodus 13:8). This structure, codified in the Mishnah (Pesachim 10) and elaborated in the Haggadah, interweaves ritual actions, recitations, symbolic foods, and four cups of wine to educate participants, particularly children, about the historical deliverance from slavery. The steps proceed methodically from sanctification and preparation to the meal, storytelling, and praise, ensuring a balanced ritual experience lasting several hours. The fifteen steps are:
  1. Kadesh: The leader recites the Kiddush over the first cup of wine, sanctifying the holiday and reclining to the left as a sign of . Participants drink while reclining.
  2. Urchatz: Hands are washed without a , preparing for handling food, emphasizing purity.
  3. Karpas: A vegetable (typically or ) is dipped in salt and eaten after a , symbolizing spring renewal and the of enslavement.
  4. Yachatz: The middle is broken; the larger piece is hidden as the for later retrieval, representing the haste of and future redemption.
  5. Maggid: The core narrative unfolds with the Four Questions asked by the youngest participant, retelling story, the Ten Plagues, and song, accompanied by the second cup of wine.
  6. Rachtzah: Hands are washed with a , preparing for the and meal.
  7. Motzi: over is recited, specifically for as the "bread of affliction."
  8. Matzah: Matzah is eaten with the specific blessing for unleavened bread, fulfilling the commandment to consume it.
  9. Maror: Bitter herbs are eaten after a blessing, evoking the bitterness of slavery.
  10. Korech: A sandwich of matzah and maror (Hillel's sandwich) is consumed, combining symbols of freedom and bitterness per Talmudic tradition (Pesachim 115a).
  11. Shulchan Orech: The festive meal is served and eaten, excluding leavened foods or in some customs.
  12. Tzafun: The is found and eaten as the "dessert," concluding the meal with .
  13. : Grace after meals is recited, followed by the third cup of wine.
  14. Hallel: Psalms of praise (113–118) are sung, with the fourth cup of wine, expressing gratitude for redemption.
  15. Nirtzah: The Seder concludes with songs like and , affirming acceptance ("Next year in ").
This sequence ensures interactive participation, with customs varying slightly by community but preserving the core rabbinic framework.

Four Cups of Wine and Questions

The four cups of wine, known as arba kosot in Hebrew, constitute a central rabbinic obligation during the Passover Seder, requiring each participant—men, women, and children of sufficient understanding—to consume a majority of four designated cups of wine or grape juice at specific points in the ritual. This practice derives from the Mishnah and Talmud in tractate Pesachim, where it is mandated to commemorate the Exodus, though it is not a direct Torah commandment but a rabbinic enactment to ensure festive joy and fulfillment of the Passover offering's requirements in Temple times. Each cup must contain at least approximately 3.8 fluid ounces (about 113 ml) of kosher wine, with the drinker consuming at least a majority (revi'it measure per Talmudic standards), and the cups are recited over during blessings: the first at Kadesh (sanctification), the second concluding Maggid (narrative), the third after Birkat Hamazon (grace after meals), and the fourth during Hallel (psalms of praise). These cups symbolize the four expressions of redemption articulated by God to in Exodus 6:6–7: "I will bring out [vayotzi]" from labor, "I will deliver [vehitzalti]" from servitude, "I will redeem [vaga'alti]" with an outstretched arm, and "I will take [velakachti]" as a people—phrases that rabbinic tradition interprets as stages of liberation from Egyptian bondage. Alternative interpretations in Talmudic sources link them to Pharaoh's four decrees against the (decreed subjugation, immersion in the , bitter servitude, and bricks/torment) or the four cups of Pharaoh's court from which the were excluded until redemption, emphasizing divine reversal of . The requirement extends even to the indigent, with communal provision mandated to avoid exclusion, underscoring the mitzvah's role in evoking personal participation in the historical deliverance. ![Passover wine cup](./assets/Kieliszek_pesachowy%252C_M%C5%BB_45_33 The Four Questions, or Ma Nishtanah ("Why is this night different from all other nights?"), form the opening of the section, traditionally recited by the youngest child capable of speech to initiate the retelling of and stimulate inquiry into the Seder's distinctive practices. The questions, rooted in Talmudic discussions (Pesachim 116a–b) and formalized in the by at least the , query four contrasts: eating leavened or (chametz vs. ), consuming any or bitter herbs (), dipping foods once or twice, and eating upright or reclining—highlighting the Seder's departure from ordinary meals to evoke slavery's bitterness and freedom's dignity. The full text in Hebrew begins: Sheb'khol ha-leilot anu okhlin u-; ha-lailah hazeh kulo ("On all other nights we eat chametz or matzah; this night, all matzah"), followed by the others, with the parent or leader responding via the Haggadah's narrative of redemption. If no child is present, an adult poses the questions to fulfill the obligation of awakening curiosity, as the emphasizes fulfilling the verse "one should ask" (Exodus 12:26) even among adults to reinforce the educational imperative of transmitting the Exodus account. This recitation precedes the second cup of wine, linking the questions directly to the elaboration of redemption themes embodied in the cups, ensuring the Seder's interactive structure prompts reflection on historical causation—from divine intervention against Pharaoh's tyranny to the ' emergence as a .

Afikoman and Child Involvement

The consists of the middle piece of from the three matzot placed on the Seder table at the outset of the ; it is broken in half during the yachatz step, with one half reserved and wrapped for later consumption as the final of the meal. This reserved portion serves as a symbolic substitute for the paschal lamb sacrifice consumed in Temple times, ensuring no other food follows it to maintain the ritual's sanctity, and it must be eaten reclining to evoke freedom. The consumption occurs during the tzafun ("hidden") stage of the Seder, typically before midnight, without a preceding , underscoring its role as the meal's conclusion. A longstanding custom, particularly among , involves hiding the —either by an adult concealing it in the home for children to search or by children "stealing" it from the table to ransom back for gifts or treats—transforming the into an interactive . This practice derives from a Talmudic directive to "snatch matzahs" during the Seder to prevent children from falling asleep amid the lengthy proceedings, thereby sustaining their attention and participation. In families following the hiding variant, adults may provide verbal clues like "hotter" or "colder" to guide the search, heightening excitement and ensuring the Seder cannot conclude without its recovery. Child involvement through the exemplifies the Seder's emphasis on transmitting to the next generation, as the ritual's disruption—via hiding or —delays the evening's end, compelling young participants to remain engaged and prompting questions about Passover's narrative of redemption. Observers note that this element counters the natural fatigue of children during the multi-hour observance, fostering active learning; for instance, prizes awarded upon return of the reinforce positive association with the holiday's themes without compromising the mitzvah's fulfillment. Sephardi and Mizrahi customs may omit the hiding, opting instead for simpler reservation, yet the 's centrality persists across denominations to symbolize hope and future continuity.

Hallel and Concluding Elements

The Hallel portion of the Passover Seder consists of Psalms 113 through 118 from the Book of Psalms, recited as an expression of praise and gratitude for divine redemption. These psalms are divided into two segments during the Seder: the initial part (Psalms 113–114) follows the recitation of the Haggadah's core narrative and the second cup of wine, prior to the festive meal, while the remainder (Psalms 115–118) occurs after the meal and precedes the fourth cup of wine. This bifurcation mirrors ancient Temple practices, where Hallel was intoned during the consumption of the Passover offering, adapting the ritual for post-Temple observance. Unlike Hallel on other festivals, where participants stand, the Seder recitation is performed while seated to symbolize the freedom attained through the Exodus. A blessing, al ha-Hallel, is recited before the second segment, invoking gratitude for the opportunity to fulfill this mitzvah. The full Hallel is obligatory only on the Seder nights, with responsive elements—such as repeating "Hallelujah" after select verses—incorporated to enhance communal participation, though customs vary on whether women or children join in the obligation. Thematically, these psalms evoke miracles of redemption, including the Exodus, the splitting of the Red Sea, Torah revelation, resurrection, and the Messianic era. Following the completion of and the fourth cup, the Seder enters the Nirtzah ("acceptance") phase, signaling the ritual's conclusion with prayers affirming divine approval of the service rendered. This includes the declaration L'shana haba'ah b'Yerushalayim ("Next year in "), expressing hope for future redemption and ingathering of exiles, recited by all participants. Customary concluding songs, such as (cumulatively recounting Jewish tenets from one to thirteen) and (a of escalating divine justice via a narrative of a kid goat), are sung to reinforce themes of providence and historical continuity. These elements, drawn from medieval Haggadot, serve didactic and celebratory purposes, often engaging children through melody and repetition, before the household disperses.

Intermediate and Concluding Days

Chol HaMoed Activities

During the intermediate days of Passover, known as Chol HaMoed, which span the third through sixth days in and the third through seventh days in the , Jewish law permits a range of activities that balance semi-festive observance with practical needs, while prohibiting consumption and ownership as on the holiday's outset. These days feature reduced work restrictions compared to the yom tov (full festival) days, allowing essential labor or tasks that cannot be deferred, such as or if necessary for sustenance, but discouraging non-essential activities like laundry or haircuts to preserve the holiday's sanctity and joy. is emphasized, often focusing on Passover themes, and festive meals continue with , though without the full seder ritual. Religious practices include daily prayers with additions like recited on Chol HaMoed mornings, and customs regarding vary by community—Ashkenazi tradition generally omits them, viewing the days as extensions of the festival, while Sephardi practice includes them. Mourning and fasting are prohibited to maintain the celebratory mood, even if a occurs, with observance delayed until after the holiday. Families often engage in or educational discussions about , aligning with the holiday's narrative of redemption. Recreational outings form a key part of Chol HaMoed, particularly in where schools close and public sites draw crowds for hikes, beach visits, zoos, amusement parks, and nature reserves, all while adhering to kosher-for-Passover provisions. In the , similar family-oriented activities like park visits or community events prevail, emphasizing joy and rest from routine amid the leaven-free diet. These practices underscore Chol HaMoed's role as a bridge between the intense rituals of yom tov and the holiday's conclusion, fostering communal bonding without diluting Passover's spiritual focus.

Seventh Day Observance

The seventh day of Passover, known as Shevi'i Shel Pesach, commemorates the miraculous splitting of the and the ' safe passage through it, events described in Exodus 14 as the culmination of their deliverance from Egyptian pursuit. This day marks the transition from enslavement to freedom, with rabbinic tradition associating it specifically with the seventh day following the on the 15th of . Biblically, Leviticus 23:8 mandates it as a holy convocation with no servile work permitted, alongside the seven-day prohibition on leavened products. Observance follows Yom Tov restrictions, prohibiting most labor except for food preparation, with synagogue services featuring the from Exodus 13:17–15:26, which recounts the sea crossing and includes the (Shirat HaYam) chanted responsively. Hallel psalms are recited, emphasizing themes of redemption and divine intervention, and in many communities, —a memorial prayer for deceased relatives—is observed during morning services. Homes host festive meals with , avoiding , and some customs include consuming fish or dairy products to evoke the sea's role in the miracle, though these vary by tradition. The day carries eschatological significance in Jewish thought, symbolizing future ultimate redemption, with prayers and teachings linking the Red Sea events to messianic hopes. In , it concludes the seven-day festival, while in the , an additional eighth day follows; however, the seventh retains its distinct focus on the sea's parting across all observances.

Second Passover Provision

The Second Passover Provision, known as , originates from an incident recorded in the , where individuals who had become ritually impure through contact with a corpse approached and during the first Passover observance in the second year after from , inquiring how they could participate in the sacrificial offering despite their impurity. instructed that such persons, along with those on a distant journey who could not attend the initial Passover on 14 Nisan, were permitted to observe the rite exactly one lunar month later, on 14 Iyar, under the same procedural requirements as the original Passover, including the consumption of () and bitter herbs () with the lamb, and the prohibition of leavened products in their dwellings for that observance. This provision emphasized that willful neglect by those who were ritually clean and present incurred severe consequences, such as being cut off from the community, underscoring the mandatory nature of the Passover sacrifice when feasible. In antiquity, during the periods when the or Temples stood, Pesach Sheni involved the public offering of the Passover lamb at the sanctuary in the afternoon of 14 , followed by its consumption that evening in family or group settings, roasted whole without breaking bones, as prescribed for the primary Passover. Eligibility was strictly limited to cases of corpse-related impurity or genuine travel impediments that prevented prior notification and preparation; later rabbinic interpretations, such as those in the (Pesachim 9:1-2), clarified that the distant journey must exceed a certain distance (approximately 15-30 miles, depending on context) and that impurity from other sources did not qualify, maintaining the provision's exceptional status rather than broadening it into a general makeup opportunity. Unlike the full Passover festival, Pesach Sheni did not entail additional holy days or work restrictions, functioning solely as a deferred sacrificial observance without the leavening extending beyond the meal itself. In the absence of the Temple since 70 CE, the sacrificial aspect of Pesach Sheni ceased, as the Passover offering required the central altar, rendering literal observance impossible under current halakhic conditions. Contemporary Jewish practice thus commemorates the date through minor liturgical adjustments, such as the omission of Tachanun (supplicatory prayers) in daily services on 14 Iyar, reflecting its semi-festive character, and some communities, particularly among Hasidim, customarily eat matzah to evoke the original rite, though this is not universally mandated. The day has acquired symbolic significance as a paradigm of divine mercy and second chances, with rabbinic sources like the Talmud (Pesachim 95a) and later commentators portraying it as an opportunity for spiritual rectification, though it does not alter the core Passover obligations or serve as a substitute festival. Observance remains modest, without widespread communal gatherings or dietary stringencies akin to Nisan, aligning with its biblical framing as a targeted provision rather than an independent holiday.

Denominational and Regional Variations

Ashkenazi Customs

adhere to the custom of prohibiting kitniyot—foods such as , corn, millet, , and certain seeds—during Passover, a stringency originating in medieval to avoid any potential resemblance or confusion with , despite these items not actually capable of leavening. This practice, not mandated by core halachah but upheld as a communal safeguard, significantly limits dietary options compared to Sephardi traditions, which permit kitniyot. Many Ashkenazi communities, especially Hasidic and some Lithuanian groups, observe the gebrochts custom, avoiding that has absorbed liquids after baking, due to concerns that residual flour particles might inadvertently leaven upon moistening. This leads to forgoing soaked matzah products like kneidlach (matzah balls) in soup or soft matzah kugel, though not universally followed among all Ashkenazim and absent in Sephardi practice. Charoset in Ashkenazi tradition consists primarily of grated apples, chopped walnuts, cinnamon, and sweet or grape juice, blended to a chunky, mortar-like paste symbolizing the clay used by Israelite slaves in . This contrasts with denser, date-based Sephardi versions and emphasizes tart fruit for texture over sweetness. During the seder, Ashkenazim dip the (green vegetable) in salt water to evoke tears of enslavement, rather than , and prioritize thin, often machine-baked supervised from milling (shmura matzah) for the . House preparation involves exhaustive cleaning to eradicate traces, culminating in biur chametz—public burning of any remnants on the eve of Passover—followed by symbolic sale to a non-Jew. These customs reflect heightened caution against leavening risks, rooted in historical rabbinic interpretations.

Sephardi and Mizrahi Practices

Sephardi and Mizrahi communities, originating from the , , and the , incorporate regional flavors and historical adaptations into Passover observance, emphasizing communal feasting with permitted such as rice, lentils, and chickpeas alongside matzah-based dishes. Unlike Ashkenazi customs that prohibit these foods to avoid resemblance to , Sephardi and Mizrahi traditions derive from rabbinic rulings by authorities like , who viewed as non-leavening and thus kosher for the holiday, enabling diverse recipes like rice-stuffed vegetables or legume soups during the Seder and subsequent meals. During the Seder, Sephardim often prepare as a thick paste from dates, nuts, wine, and spices like or ginger, symbolizing the mortar of with a texture evoking clay rather than the fruitier Ashkenazi version; this mixture is also used to dip , combining bitterness and sweetness in one bite. is typically soft and chewy, baked by hand shortly before use to preserve moisture, contrasting the crisp, machine-produced sheets favored elsewhere, and —often or —is dipped in lemon juice instead of for its sharp acidity. The piece is circulated among participants for each to break off a portion, fostering shared participation rather than a search by children, while the Four Questions may follow a sequence prioritizing the double dipping of and . Mizrahi variations, such as those among Iraqi or , further adapt rituals to local ingredients and customs; Iraqi Seders dispense with a centralized Seder plate, instead arranging symbolic items like shankbone, egg, and bitter herbs in individual bowls across the table for accessibility. Yemenite tables feature abundant green vegetables and spicy dukkah—a and spice —as accompaniments, reflecting agrarian roots and enhancing the meal's sensory elements without altering core mitzvot. These practices underscore a emphasis on familial continuity and regional abundance, with post-Seder celebrations like the Moroccan —marked by sweet wheat-flour treats symbolizing prosperity—extending the holiday's themes into the night after its conclusion.

Kitniyot and Gebrochts Debates

The custom of avoiding —a category encompassing , corn, , millet, beans, and similar foods that are not among the five grains susceptible to leavening (, , , oats, and )—developed among Ashkenazi Jewish communities in medieval but has no basis in biblical or Talmudic law. This , first referenced by rabbis in 13th-century , served as a safeguard against inadvertent consumption of or confusion with leavened products, as kitniyot could be processed into flour-like substances or swell when cooked, potentially mimicking dough. Sephardi and , by contrast, have historically permitted kitniyot during Passover, viewing the restriction as an Ashkenazi minhag (custom) without universal applicability, which aligns with the absence of such a practice in ancient or among non-European Jewish communities. Debates over kitniyot intensified in modern times, particularly in Israel, where intermarriage and cultural blending between Ashkenazi and Sephardi populations have prompted calls for unification of practices. Proponents of abolition argue that the custom artificially divides Jewish unity and lacks compelling halakhic rationale, especially given advancements in food processing that mitigate confusion risks; some rabbis, like Zvi Leshem, have issued rulings permitting Ashkenazim to partake. Orthodox authorities, however, uphold the prohibition as a venerable tradition rooted in rabbinic caution, emphasizing its role in preserving distinct communal identities and preventing even remote chametz exposure. In 2015, the Conservative movement's Committee on Jewish Law and Standards approved a teshuvah by rabbis Amy Levin and Israel Reisner, permitting Ashkenazi Jews to eat kitniyot by a vote of 19-1 with two abstentions on December 24, framing it as a non-binding custom reversible in light of historical evidence and contemporary needs. The custom, observed primarily by certain Hasidic and Lithuanian (Litvish) Ashkenazi groups, prohibits that has been soaked, broken, or come into contact with liquids during Passover, out of concern that residual uncooked flour in the matzah—due to imperfect kneading—might ferment and become when wetted. Traced to 18th-century Hasidic figures such as , this stringency (chumra) reflects heightened yirat shamayim (fear of heaven) during the holiday, avoiding foods like matzah balls (knaidlach) or soaked matzah preparations, though it is not universally binding and many Ashkenazim disregard it. Adherents maintain dry matzah exclusively for the seder and meals to ensure ritual purity, with some communities breaking the restriction symbolically on the final day of Passover by consuming gebrochts items. Controversies surrounding center on its necessity given modern machine-supervised production, which minimizes uncooked flour risks, versus its value as a psychological and spiritual bulwark against complacency in Passover observance. Lenient voices, including some Orthodox rabbis, deem it an overextension of caution unnecessary for hand-baked shmura , while strict observers cite kabbalistic sources linking it to deeper metaphysical protections against spiritual "leavening" like ego or haste. Unlike , lacks formal denominational overturns but persists as a voluntary , with debates often resolving along familial or communal lines rather than halakhic mandates.

Modern Practices and Adaptations

Orthodox and Traditional Observance

Orthodox Jews observe Passover in strict accordance with halachic requirements, prohibiting ownership, consumption, or benefit from —leavened products derived from (, , , oats, spelt)—for outside and seven days within it, beginning at the 15th of . Preparations involve thorough home cleaning to remove all traces of chametz, often culminating in the ceremonial burning (biur chametz) on the morning before the Seder, and formal sale of remaining chametz to a non-Jew via a rabbinic agent to comply with the biblical injunction against possession. This process reflects a commitment to narrative's themes of haste and purity, with families employing separate Passover dishware and utensils to maintain kosher standards distinct from year-round use. The central ritual, the Passover Seder on the first two nights (one night in ), follows the Haggadah's prescribed order, incorporating four cups of wine, reclining to symbolize freedom, and symbolic foods on the Seder plate: shankbone for the paschal lamb, roasted egg for the festival offering, bitter herbs () for slavery's bitterness, for mortar, (vegetable) dipped in saltwater for tears, and . Orthodox practice mandates hand-baked shmurah —guarded from moisture since harvesting—to fulfill the commandment of eating , avoiding machine-made varieties preferred by some for convenience but deemed inferior for the Seder's . Participants recite psalms, ask the Four Questions, and retell story, with children actively engaged; full observance includes consuming significant quantities of and , not mere symbols. During Chol HaMoed (intermediate days), work is permitted but restricted compared to yom tov (holy days), with continued chametz avoidance and preference for festive meals featuring Passover-appropriate foods like matzah-based dishes or kitniyot-avoidant staples in Ashkenazi tradition. The final days mirror the first in sanctity, with services and memorial prayers. Surveys indicate near-universal adherence among American Orthodox Jews, with 99% participating in a Seder, far exceeding rates in non-Orthodox denominations (58% overall), underscoring the community's emphasis on halachic fidelity amid modern secular pressures. This observance reinforces communal bonds, often in large family or settings, preserving practices codified in the without adaptations diluting core prohibitions. In contemporary Orthodox enclaves, such as those in or , these rituals adapt logistically—e.g., certified kosher-for-Passover products from supervised factories—but retain stringency, rejecting leniencies like ( soaked in liquid) in many Haredi circles to prevent inadvertent leavening. High observance rates persist due to institutional reinforcement via yeshivas and rabbinic authority, contrasting with broader trends documented in demographic studies.

Reform and Secular Interpretations

In , Passover observance emphasizes the holiday's core themes of liberation from slavery, ethical imperatives for , and the ongoing pursuit of freedom, often interpreting narrative as a model for contemporary struggles against rather than a strictly literal historical event. Reform congregations typically hold a single seder, aligning with Israeli practice of seven days total rather than the traditional eight observed by Orthodox outside , reflecting a prioritization of historical authenticity over rabbinic extensions for conditions. The seder is adapted to include modern haggadot that incorporate discussions of civil rights, refugee crises, and , viewing the story's moral lessons—such as empathy for the stranger—as binding ethical obligations derived from principles like "you shall not oppress the stranger" (Exodus 22:21). While prohibition remains central, enforcement is less rigorous than in Orthodox practice, with some Reform Jews permitting (legumes and rice) based on historical evidence that these were not universally restricted in ancient Jewish custom, prioritizing intent over exhaustive ritual stringency. Secular and humanistic Jewish interpretations of Passover decouple the holiday from theological supernaturalism, reframing it as a cultural commemoration of historical resilience, seasonal renewal, and universal human aspirations for autonomy. These observances often employ secular , such as "The Liberated Haggadah," which highlight as an archetypal tale of collective emancipation from tyranny—drawing on archaeological and textual evidence of ancient Near Eastern liberation motifs—while omitting miraculous elements like divine plagues in favor of naturalistic explanations of societal upheaval. Participants, including many identifying as culturally Jewish or atheist, conduct seders focused on storytelling, symbolic foods representing oppression and hope (e.g., as "bread of affliction" symbolizing haste in flight), and discussions of modern parallels like or anti-colonial movements, fostering community without invoking or covenantal . Surveys indicate high participation rates among secular , with about 80% attending seders annually in communities like the , underscoring Passover's endurance as a marker of ethnic identity and shared narrative over religious doctrine. This approach contrasts with traditional views by emphasizing empirical history—such as the likely 13th-century BCE context of Israelite emergence from Canaanite-Egyptian interactions—over faith-based , though critics from more observant denominations argue it dilutes the holiday's ritual discipline and transcendent meaning.

Challenges in Recent Decades (COVID-19 to 2025 Conflicts)

The profoundly disrupted Passover observances in 2020, as global lockdowns and mandates prevented traditional in-person family gatherings for the Seder. Community Seders were widely canceled, prompting many Jewish families to adopt virtual formats using platforms like Zoom and to conduct rituals remotely. Rabbis, particularly in non-Orthodox communities, deemed these virtual Seders permissible provided technological connections were established before the holiday's onset to avoid violations of and holiday restrictions on electronics. This shift enabled broader participation, including with distant relatives, but introduced logistical challenges such as time zone differences and emotional disconnection from the absence of shared physical elements like the Seder plate. Subsequent Passovers during the pandemic's later phases saw gradual returns to hybrid or in-person formats as restrictions eased, though health concerns lingered and virtual elements persisted for inclusivity. By 2024, observance challenges shifted dramatically due to the Israel-Hamas war initiated by Hamas's October 7, 2023, attack, which killed over 1,200 Israelis and resulted in the abduction of 253 hostages, with 133 still held in Gaza as of Passover. In Israel, families marked empty seats at Seder tables to symbolize the captives, infusing celebrations with grief and calls for their release, while protests and heightened security measures underscored the war's toll. Globally, the conflict exacerbated a surge in antisemitic incidents, with the Anti-Defamation League documenting 8,873 cases in the U.S. in 2023—a 140% increase from the prior year—and the FBI reporting 1,832 anti-Jewish hate crimes, prompting fears that affected communal gatherings. Passover 2025 occurred amid unresolved aspects of the conflict, including ongoing situations and persistent military operations in Gaza, fostering a climate of anxiety and division within Jewish communities. Reports highlighted continued emotional strain from the war's duration, with families in and the confronting the absence of released or rescued loved ones during rituals evoking themes of liberation and . remained elevated, with ADL data indicating 1,694 campus incidents in 2024 alone—an 84% rise from 2023—and broader normalization of anti-Jewish rhetoric post-October 7, leading some communities to enhance security at synagogues and events. In the U.S., 94% of viewed as a serious problem, per the , influencing subdued observances marked by vigilance rather than festivity. These pressures tested traditional practices, with emphases on resilience and unity amid empirical evidence of heightened threats.

Theological and Cultural Impact

Jewish Theological Meaning

Passover, known as Pesach in Hebrew, fundamentally commemorates the redemption of the Israelites from slavery in Egypt, as recounted in Exodus chapters 12 and 13 of the Torah. The holiday marks God's intervention through ten plagues upon Egypt, culminating in the tenth plague of the death of the firstborn, during which the divine presence "passed over" the homes of the Israelites marked with the blood of the Pesach lamb, sparing their firstborn sons. This event established Passover as an eternal statute, commanding perpetual observance as a memorial of the Exodus to instill in future generations the reality of divine deliverance. Theologically, it underscores God's sovereignty in executing judgment on oppressors while protecting the faithful, fulfilling promises made to Abraham regarding his descendants' enslavement and subsequent liberation with great possessions. Central to Passover's is the theme of redemption, portraying the transition from physical bondage to national as a of divine faithfulness and human obedience. The ' application of the lamb's blood served as a sign of their trust in God's word, averting destruction and initiating the covenantal relationship that defined as a distinct people. Rabbinic tradition interprets this not merely as historical escape but as a model for spiritual liberation, where adherence to commandments demonstrates alignment with divine will, echoing the merit of ancestral sacrifices like Isaac's. The festival's timing in spring further symbolizes renewal and the birth of the Jewish , linking physical to the eventual revelation at Sinai and the Torah's ethical framework. Symbolic elements reinforce these meanings: the roasted Pesach lamb represented protection and atonement through substitutionary marking; unleavened evoked the haste of departure and affliction of slavery, prohibiting fermentation to symbolize purity from corruption; and bitter herbs () recalled the harshness of oppression. During the Seder, participants ritually recount the story, fulfilling the Torah's mandate to explain to children, thereby transmitting theological truths of God's miraculous power and the imperative of gratitude and ethical living. This retelling combats forgetfulness, ensuring the event's causal reality—divine causation overriding natural order—remains a foundational assertion of monotheistic realism against idolatrous worldviews prevalent in . In broader Jewish theology, Passover affirms collective destiny under , where redemption from prefigures ultimate messianic restoration, emphasizing that true freedom entails responsibility to observance rather than mere autonomy. Medieval rabbinic commentators, responding to alternative interpretations, stressed the sacrifice's role in unifying the community in faith, countering views that detached it from national covenantal identity. Thus, Passover theologically integrates history, , and , privileging empirical remembrance of verifiable divine acts to foster resilience against assimilation or despair.

Influence on Christianity and Other Faiths

The Gospels depict the as occurring in the context of Passover, with the Synoptic accounts (Matthew 26:17-30, Mark 14:12-26, Luke 22:7-20) explicitly stating that ' disciples prepared the Passover meal and that the supper itself was that ritual observance, involving elements like and wine that repurposed to symbolize his body and blood in the institution of the or Lord's Supper. However, the full rabbinic Seder ritual, including the structured and , developed after the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE and thus post-dates the historical , leading some scholars to argue it was a Passover meal but not identical to the later formalized Seder. In Johannine chronology, ' crucifixion aligns with the slaughter of Passover lambs on the afternoon of 14, reinforcing typological links where Christ's death is seen as fulfilling the lamb's sacrificial role in averting divine judgment, as echoed in Paul's declaration that "Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed" (1 Corinthians 5:7). This Passover typology permeates , interpreting deliverance as prefiguring redemption from sin through Christ's , with the lamb's blood on doorposts symbolizing protection via the cross and representing purity and haste in salvation. Early like (c. 150 CE) explicitly connected Passover to Christ's passion, influencing liturgical practices where the draws on Passover motifs of remembrance and covenant renewal. The dating of further reflects this influence, set as the first Sunday after the full moon following the vernal equinox to approximate Passover's lunar timing, though discrepancies arose from the Quartodeciman controversy (c. 190 CE), where some Christians observed Easter on 14 regardless of weekday, leading to the Council of Nicaea (325 CE) standardizing a solar-adjusted calculation independent of Jewish calendars. Beyond Christianity, Passover exerts negligible direct doctrinal influence on other faiths, though thematic parallels in spring renewal festivals—such as themes of liberation and sacrifice—appear in ancient Near Eastern rites like those of Mesopotamian Akitu or Persian Nowruz, predating or contemporaneous with biblical Passover without causal borrowing established by evidence. In Islam, no formal adoption occurs, despite occasional calendrical overlaps with Ramadan prompting interfaith dialogues on fasting and exodus motifs, but Quranic references to the Exodus (e.g., Surah 7:138-141) treat it as historical warning rather than ritual model. Samaritanism, a related Abrahamic tradition, observes a distinct Passover on Mount Gerizim with sacrificial elements akin to ancient Temple practices, diverging from rabbinic Judaism but sharing core Exodus commemoration without broader interfaith emulation.

Criticisms and Contemporary Debates

Scholarly consensus among archaeologists and historians holds that the narrative, central to Passover, lacks direct , with no Egyptian records documenting a mass enslavement or departure of approximately 600,000 Israelite men (implying over 2 million total) as described in Exodus 12:37, and no corresponding traces in Sinai desert from the proposed 13th-15th century BCE periods. Critics, including biblical scholar Bart Ehrman, argue the account functions as a foundational rather than verifiable , potentially amalgamating smaller migrations or cultural memories without literal plagues or Red Sea parting. Proponents of historicity, often from perspectives, cite indirect supports like Semitic names in Egyptian texts or parallels to plagues, but these remain contested and do not confirm the scale or miracles depicted. This debate influences Passover observance, with some educators and online discussions labeling recitation of the Haggadah's story as ethically problematic if presented uncritically to children as fact, given academic rejection of its . Contemporary political interpretations of Passover's liberation theme have sparked debates, particularly regarding its alignment with and Israeli policies. Anti-Zionist Jewish voices, such as those in , contend that invoking Egyptian oppression ignores alleged parallels to Palestinian experiences under Israeli control, framing the Seder as hypocritical or racially selective in its empathy. Author has called for an "exodus from " during Passover 2024, arguing the holiday's freedom narrative indicts ongoing conflicts in Gaza as incompatible with Jewish ethical traditions. Conversely, Zionist advocates emphasize as affirming Jewish return to ancestral land, rejecting anti-Zionist seders as distortions that sever the holiday from its biblical telos of national redemption in . Post-October 7, 2023, amid Israel-Hamas hostilities, some Jewish commentators reported diminished Seder joy due to moral qualms over Gaza casualties, while others viewed the holiday as reinforcing resilience against existential threats. Criticisms of Christian adaptations of Passover seders highlight concerns over cultural appropriation and historical . Jewish organizations and online forums decry churches recreating Jewish rituals to symbolize as the "Paschal Lamb," viewing it as erasing Jewish context and evoking medieval blood libels tied to Passover timings. The Church of England's 2021 Maundy Seder drew backlash for similar reasons, with critics arguing it supplants Jewish covenantal meaning with supersessionist theology. Defenders claim sincere interfaith learning, but detractors note such practices risk minimizing Jewish exclusivity of the rite. Commercialization of Passover has elicited complaints of profiteering, including service providers like car washes raising prices discriminatorily during the holiday, prompting warnings from New York in April 2024 against illegal surcharges targeting Jewish observance. Observers lament the shift from austere remembrance of to consumer-driven sales of kosher-for-Passover products, diluting spiritual focus amid marketing and themed merchandise. Rare modern attempts to revive the paschal lamb sacrifice, such as demonstrations in , faced 2016 court challenges on animal cruelty grounds, though rejected, underscoring tensions between ancient ritual and contemporary ethics.

References

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