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Seder Gems - Night One

Recommended Price $60.00

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Recommended Price $60.00

Minimum price allowed$1.00

Before the Seder begins, every rabbi faces the same challenge:
How do you take familiar words and make them feel new, urgent, and alive?

These gems do exactly that.
They are short, sharp, and built for the table — each one delivering a clear idea, a compelling story, and a takeaway your guests will remember.

Here is a brief summary:

 An Opening Thought — Coal or Constellation: How a People Is Formed

What is it that brings a people into being? Is it the hostility of others, or the call of a shared purpose? This opening reflection traces two defining moments in the birth of the Jewish people: in Egypt, where we are first named a nation by Pharaoh, and at Sinai, where we are called a holy nation by G-d. One is identity imposed from without; the other, identity awakened from within. Through the image of coal and constellation, it reveals a deeper truth: we are not merely shaped by what the world does to us, but by the divine vision that calls us to become more. The Seder becomes the bridge between these two identities—between a past of survival and a future of purpose.

מָה הָעֲבוֹדָה הַזֹּאת לָכֶםThe Wicked Child Who Wasn’t
Two children use the same language — one is praised, the other condemned. This gem uncovers a startling possibility: the labels may say more about the parent than the child. A powerful reframe that transforms the Seder from a test of children into a test of our capacity to truly listen.

בְּכָל־דּוֹר וָדוֹר עוֹמְדִים עָלֵינוּ — The Real Cause of Anti-Semitism
Clear, bold, and deeply compelling. This piece tackles one of the hardest questions Jews are asking today and gives a framework that is both intellectually satisfying and spiritually empowering, rooted in the Rebbe’s teachings. It doesn’t just explain antisemitism; it gives your audience a sense of purpose and pride.

אִלּוּ נָתַן לָנוּ אֶת הַשַּׁבָּתThe Wisdom of the Cinder Block
A simple architectural innovation becomes a profound metaphor for life. Strength, it turns out, comes not from what we add, but from what we leave empty. Shabbat emerges as Judaism’s radical answer to a world that confuses fullness with meaning.

מַצָּה זוֹ שֶׁאָנוּ אוֹכְלִיןThe Myth of Gradual Change
We imagine growth as slow and steady. The Exodus tells a different story. Real transformation happens in a moment — a decision that redraws an entire life. Matzah becomes not just a memory of haste, but a symbol of the courage to change now.

וְהִגַּדְתָּ לְבִנְךָBenji Don’t
A haunting story of a child who became defined by what he was not opens into a deeper truth: we don’t only rob people by taking from them, but by failing to give them what they need. A moving reflection on parenting, love, and the responsibility to pass on not just tradition, but affirmation and identity

 

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