Demons and Elijah –
Cups, Doors and Curses
Introduction:
Even if you don’t come back after dinner
to finish up all of the seder, one post meal ritual that is likely to take
place is opening the door for Elijah.
Actually, it’s not just one ritual, it’s two, pouring a glass for Elijah
is, as we’ll see, a ritual unto itself.
And then there is a third, the recitation of the prayer, shefoch
chamatcha or “pour out Your wrath.”
It’s a harsh passage that might seem at odds with the messages of
freedom and concern for the stranger and the other which fill the Haggadah, but
it is yet another piece, though combined with the other two Elijah rituals, add
yet another piece to this portion of the Seder.
Three Separate Rituals:
As we’ll see, the cup is there to welcome
Elijah, and maybe even to encourage him to come, so that he will bring the
Messiah.
Opening the door is a demonstration, as
we will see, that Passover night is a leil shimurim a protected night,
and we Jews show that we are safe from the evils and dangers of the world with
this act.
Doing so while mentioning Elijah and then
reading shefoch take full advantage of the protection the Seder night
offers – we curse the demons and dangers of the world on this night when God’s
power is all the more potent. This way,
we should not suffer at their evil hands in the future.
These rituals were not there in the
Torah’s description of Passover. They
weren’t even there as the basic structure of the seder was laid out in Roman
times. Reciting the prayer as the door
is opened is a custom only about 500 years old and the others seem to date to
the Middle Ages.
Yet these customs are not just odd
add-ons but superstitious ancestors.
They were ways to ritualize and to gain power over a world in which Jews
all too often suffered at the hands of unseen demons like plague and famine,
and demons personified by those who sought to kill them. Praying the night of freedom, the protected
night of the Exodus would be their night of rescue was a brave act of faith and
defiance. An act that can still have
meaning for us today.
Leil Shimurim:
Exodus 12:42 introduces us to this
concept, using the term twice, it is a night that is guarded
by God to take Israel out of Egypt, this night is to God a night
that is guarded throughout the generations.
God guarded the Jews that original
Passover night in two ways, just like the verse alludes to: the Jews were protected from losing their
first-born and the Jews were protected from the interference of the Egyptians
in carrying out the night’s ceremonies.
Additionally, we are taught that the two
references mean for that time and place and for all other Passover nights
everywhere else through time.
Examples of this are that Esther and
Mordecai overcome Haman on Passover night (see the dates mentioned in the Book
of Esther), and the Messiah and Elijah are meant to come on Passover night (as
referred to in the midrash, Exodus Rabbah).
And of course, Moses and Aaron and the original Passover. It is interesting to note that in each case,
a pair of heroes with a Mem name and Aleph name will be the ones to bring about
God’s redemption.
A Cup for Elijah:
Freedom from slavery is
the key idea of the Seder. Furthermore,
telling the story every year undoubtedly leads us to think about the ways in
which others in our history have been enslaved, how we and/or others may be or
may feel enslaved today, and how the threats of various forms of slavery loom
over the future. Invoking Elijah’s name
and praying that he and then the Messiah should come on this night is the
natural evolution of these thoughts about slavery and freedom.
Rabbi Israel Drazin
teaches that if the Seder participants actually opened the door for Elijah and
even poured him a cup of wine, and if they stood to welcome him and say words
of greeting, their behavior would not be for naught; on the contrary, our
ancestors would magically cause Elijah to appear.
Opening the Door:
No doubt you are punctilious about reciting all three
paragraphs of the Shema before you go to be each night. Well, you get a break on Passover night. The Shulchan Aruch tells us you need only say
the v’ahavta paragraph – the other two aren’t needed because it is Leil
Shimurim. The “Bedtime Shema” as it
is sometimes called makes overt reference to “the evil forces that surround us.”
Clearly a connection exists between the danger of demons on any other
night and the fact that on this night, you have freedom from their influence. In fact, if you wanted, you could even unlock your
door and fling it open, because you would be safe – and so we do!
The commentator Magen Avraham notes that while
we can and should unlock our doors on this night to show our faith in God and
our belief we cannot be harmed, we needn’t overdo it – if you live in a place
or have some reason to fear a true threat, unlocking your door but not opening
it is okay.
Leaving our doors unlocked or opening
them altogether allows us to get out to welcome the Messiah quickly as well.
And, another bonus that comes with all
the extra protection, we can drink (Pesachim 109b) four cups of wine on
this night, even though normally that might get you into trouble, it doesn’t at
the Seder.
Shefoch Hamatcha:
The actual text of the prayer/curse is, “Pour out your fury on the nations that
do not know you, upon the kingdoms that do not invoke your name, they have
devoured Jacob and desolated his home.” (Ps. 79:6,7)
“Pour out
your wrath on them; may your blazing anger overtake them.” (Ps. 69.25)
“Pursue
them in wrath and destroy them from under the heavens of the Lord!” (Lam. 3:66)
As we’ve seen, the ritual regarding the door and mentioning
Elijah had to do with scaring away demons.
It would seem then, that this prayer is not so much about God destroying
non-Jews, but rather a use of biblical quotations to scare away “the nation of
demons.”
Conclusion:
We may not believe in
demons at all, yet there is still meaning in these three separate yet related rituals
for us. For the goal of the seder is to
feel as if we are there in Egypt preparing to leave with Moses. Calling to mind those threats to our own lives
and in our own times help us to achieve that bond with the past and help us
realize that like the Israelites, while God may send a prophetic messenger to
guide us, we are still the ones who have to get up and open the door.
Re: A Cup for Elijah
ReplyDeleteMany say that we drink the 4 cups to represent 4 statements of redemption: 1)I will take you out... 2)I will save you... 3)I will redeem you... 4)I will take you as a nation...
But what about the 5th statement of redemption: 5)And I will bring you to the land I promised... ???
Rav Harvey Witman looks to Rabbi Bingo--who lived in the 15th century--to explain the meaning of the Cup of Elijah relative to the statements of redemption. Thus, along side of Elijah, perhaps we should give mention to Rabbi Bingo at our seder.
Rabbi Zelikman Bingo:
https://books.google.com/books?id=ccyFlHhW__cC&pg=PA162&lpg=PA162&dq=Rabbi+Zelikman+Bingo+cup+of+elijah&source=bl&ots=JiMEOiAncg&sig=ACfU3U3YTnbQsyDO2jOIlr4t_bC0LwmyQg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjvou2yn8LvAhXxQd8KHXAfAaQQ6AEwAHoECAcQAw#v=onepage&q=Rabbi%20Zelikman%20Bingo%20cup%20of%20elijah&f=false