Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Passover message: Don't be enslaved by fear, hold back desire crowded Hear.




As trade worries increase, religious leaders nationwide are discovering a teaching moment. The Passover festival - with its essential themes of freedom, redemption and faith - provides such an foothold for zone rabbis. Jews are urged to inspect the eight-day festival commemorating the Israelites' relief from slavery in Egypt as if they were experiencing it themselves.



Present-day lessons are tense from the time-worn account, and of the time challenges become metaphorical Egypts. This Passover - which begins today at sundown - rabbis will own up to the contemporaneous solvent turmoil, but the messages they save will not be of doom. "We and the world are abundant this year,'' said Rabbi Jacob Luski of Congregation B'nai Israel in St. Petersburg.






"Economic issues baksheesh acute challenges to individuals and to communal institutions. Yet there is longing today as when we were slaves of Egypt.'' As the furlough approached, Rabbi Michael Torop of Temple Beth-El in St. Petersburg found stimulus in this year's Passover memorandum from CLAL, the National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership. "Passover, as we know, is all about the exposure of getting out of Egypt.



In Hebrew, Egypt is Mitzrayim, which means 'a problematic spot.' We're all struggling with the premonition ethical now of how to get out of a tidy spot. When we manner back and exhibit on what happened in primeval times, we stunner how the past Israelites were able to do it,'' he said.



"CLAL's implication offers a feel of look forward to that we can help to liberate ourselves by expecting the best even when things seem to be at their worst. Jewish rite suggests that foul Miriam and the women of Israel knew that even when things looked exposed and hopeless, rushing out of Egypt, there would come a measure to celebrate. As the epic is told in the Torah, after we got through the Red Sea, Miriam and the women sang with tambourines. We request ourselves, where did these tambourines come from? Why did these women mob tambourines, packet tuneful instruments in the mid-point of an exodus, when there wasn't even 'time for the bread to rise'? They knew that there would come a rhythm to cut a rug and sing.



The only behaviour pattern out of the tiddly spot is to expect the best, to await for a better future and to actively prepare, informed it will be so.'' Passover traditionally is a control when families and friends go all out to be together around the seder table for the practice meal and annual retelling of the Exodus story. Economic circumstances will seduce it harder for many this year.



The United Jewish Communities and Jewish Federations system, which helps the needy, has created a Passover fundraising video sacrifice "an unflinching yet confident message.'' It asks viewers to "open their hearts - and wallets - to those hardship the fallout of the profitable crisis.'' Passover challenges each and every one to send on the sincere substance of freedom, said Rabbi Alter Korf of the Chabad Center of Greater St. Petersburg.



"Passover is a reliable event, but it is something we proceed to experience. Being extricate is an continuing phenomenon. If we regard about exemption in the accurately suspect and fantasize about what we're enslaved to today, folk in America and around the world are enslaved by their own fears,'' Korf said. "Breaking open-handed would be to the feeling that I can forward forward. For some people, it might be looking for a difficulty and not believing that there are no jobs.



For some people, it means troublesome to turn a improve when people say there are no profits to be made. So we should not be giving in to our fears. Freedom is not about geography.



Freedom is the say of obey that you're in.'' Waveney Ann Moore can be reached at wmoore@sptimes.com or (727) 892-2283.

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