<html><head><title>[Aspaqlaria] Why the Middle Matzah?</title><link rel="stylesheet" href="http://www.aishdas.org/asp/wp-content/themes/twentyeleven/style.css" type="text/css" media="screen" /></head><body>Aspaqlaria has posted a new item, '<a href="http://www.aishdas.org/asp/why-the-middle-matzah">Why the Middle Matzah?</a>'<br />
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<p>So, I was asked in the middle of the second seder: Why do we break the middle <em>matzah</em> for <em>Yachatz</em>? Is there some significance to it being the middle <em>matzah</em>?</p>
<p>Here was my off-the-cuff answer, I wonder if it has any truth:</p>
<p>This thought leverages ideas I developed in two earlier posts Bilvavi <a title="Aspaqlaria: Bilvavi, part I" href="http://www.aishdas.org/asp/bilvavi-part-i">part I</a>, and <a title="Aspaqlaria: Bilvavi, part II" href="http://www.aishdas.org/asp/bilvavi-part-ii">part II</a>. Then, I was exploring the question why so much of the Torah describes the Mishkan, which existed for such a short part of Jewish History. To summarize what I wrote then:</p>
<p style="color: #373737;">There are three aspects of the soul that comprise a person’s individuality: <em>nefesh</em>, <em>ruach</em> and <em>neshamah</em>. These ideas are developed in numerous ways, the following is that of the Vilna Gaon in his “Peirush al Kama Agados”, and leverages the Maharal’s understanding of the three pillars R’ Shimon haTzadiq identifies in Avos 1:2.</p>
<p style="color: #373737;"><em>Nefesh</em>: This is man’s connection to the physical world. Through it, we share that world with other people, and work together to address our needs. It is thus holds both the drive for physical comfort and pleasure as well as the ability to relate to other people.</p>
<p style="color: #373737;"><em>Neshamah</em>: A person’s presence in heaven, his connection to a higher calling, sanctity, and the A-lmighty Himself. If that calling is harnessed to serve some baser instinct, one is left with idolatry. On the other hand, as we say upon waking up in the morning, “My G-d, the <em>neshamah</em> which you placed within me is pure” — the <em>neshamah</em> itself is an image of the Divine, never sullied.</p>
<p style="color: #373737;"><em>Ruach</em>: People carry entire worlds in the space between their ears. In there they have models of what is going on outside of them, they plan and imagine outcomes and concepts. The <em>ru’ach </em>is the will that chooses between the conflicting callings and therefore also the egotism that is driven to see that desire be done.</p>
<p style="color: #373737;">Three aspects, each living in a different world, and enabling a different kind of relationship.</p>
<p style="color: #373737;">And similarly, the gemara in Yuma 72a (and explained by Rashi ad loc) identifies three crowns given at Sinai. Each is a perfection of one of these relationships, and each is represented by one of the crowned utensils in the Mishkan: The <em>shulchan</em>, the table with its showbread, sport the crown of kingship, organizing the interpersonal and showing the communal need to provide for everyone. The crown of Torah is “worn” by the <em>aron</em>, containing the <em>luchos </em>and with the manuscript of the Torah between its carrying rods. The golden <em>mizbeich</em>, upon which the incense was burned to provide its intangible offering had the crown of priesthood, of connection with the Divine.</p>
<p>The <em>Mishkan </em>and <em>Beis haMiqdosh </em>had three more, uncrowned, vessels. Outside was the <em>kiyor </em>(washing vessel), which was used to wash the dirt of this world off the kohein’s feet. Next to it, also outside the sanctuary building was the larger Brass <em>Mizbei’ach </em>where most of the <em>Avodah </em>was performed. The <em>menorah</em>, like the <em>aron</em>, represents wisdom. “For a mitzvah is a lamp, and the Torah its light.” (More detail in the posts specifically on this topic.) The uncrowned utensils represents navigating the challenges and opportunities of the three domains, while the crowned ones represent the ideal relationship each domain enables.</p>
<p>Notice that in both sets of three, the symbol of the <em>nefesh</em> is placed in a holier location than the other two. The shulchan and the golden <em>mizbeiach</em> are in the outer room, the <em>aron</em> — in the Holy of Holies. The <i>kiyor </i>and large <em>mizbeiach</em> are outdoors, the <em>menorah</em> — inside. Even though the <em>neshamah</em> is our presence in heaven, our spirituality, it is the <em>ruach</em> where our holiness truly resides. The <em>neshamah</em> is a recipient of holiness; the <em>ruach</em>, the will and power to consciously decide, which creates holiness in true imitation of G-d.</p>
<p>Perhaps we can say something similar in understanding the three <em>matzvos</em>. In is the <em>ruach</em>, torn between our spiritual and animal callings which is broken. Perhaps we can view the crack where the middle <em>matzah</em> is broken is where the two collide; Rav Dessler’s “battlefront” between conflicting desires which force the need for conscious deliberated. This is where free will truly resides. Hopefully, a person moves this front such that more and more good is beyond it, requiring no struggle to be performed.</p>
<p>And so we break the matzah into two uneven pieces, and use the bigger one for the afiqoman. Because our service should be with the middle matzah, that which makes us in the “image of the Divine”, and with the purest of our intentions, which we hope is the larger “half” of our selves.</p>
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