Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

Download print

Shabbat HaGadol: The Power of Mesirut Nefesh

The Shabbat before Pesach is famously called "Shabbat Ha’gadol" – "the Great Shabbat." The most common explanation for this name is that offered by the Tur (Rabbenu Yaakob Ben Asher, Germany-Spain, 1269-1343), who writes that this Shabbat commemorates a miracle which occurred on the last Shabbat before the Exodus from Egypt. As the Torah tells in Parashat Bo, G-d commanded Beneh Yisrael to select a sheep for the Korban Pesach (paschal sacrifice) on the 10th of Nissan – four days before it was to be slaughtered, the afternoon of the 14th of Nissan. That year, the 10th of Nissan fell on Shabbat. The Egyptians regarded sheep as a sacred article, and so when they saw Beneh Yisrael preparing sheep, they naturally approached them and asked what this was about. Beneh Yisrael proudly and unabashedly proclaimed that they were preparing sheep to be sacrificed to the one, true G-d. This was, quite obviously, an affront to the Egyptians’ faith, and they were incensed. Miraculously, however, they felt helpless, and did nothing to harm Beneh Yisrael. This is the great miracle that we commemorate on Shabbat Ha’gadol.

The commentaries elaborate further on the significance of these events which transpired on the Shabbat before the Exodus.

Many years earlier, G-d had informed Abraham Abinu of His decree that Abraham’s descendants would be enslaved and oppressed for 430 years. As we know, however, G-d brought Beneh Yisrael out of Egypt after they had been there for just 210 years. Moreover, according to tradition, the period of harsh labor lasted just 86 years – from the time of the birth of Miriam, Moshe’s sister, until the Exodus. This means that Beneh Yisrael endured just one-fifth of the decreed period of oppression (86 is one-fifth of 430). G-d saw that if Beneh Yisrael had remained in Egypt any longer, they would have been fully assimilated into Egyptian society, and would not have been able to be redeemed. Over the course of their stay in Egypt, Beneh Yisrael adopted the Egyptians’ pagan beliefs and practices, to the point where had they remained any longer, they would never have spiritually recovered from their depths of paganism and immorality. G-d therefore mercifully brought them out of Egypt much earlier than they were to have been redeemed.

This is one of the reasons for the Misva of Arba Kosot – the four cups of wine we drink at the Seder. The word "Kos" ("cup") in Gematria equals 86, and thus the four cups of wine represent the four-fifths of the 430 years which were deducted from the amount of years that the bondage was to have endured. We drink these four cups to celebrate the 344 years of suffering which our ancestors were spared.

The question, however, arises, as to how the decree could be changed. If Beneh Yisrael were to endure 430 years of harsh labor, how could G-d have freed them after only 86 years?

The answer, the commentaries explain, is found in the events of Shabbat Ha’gadol.

We need to appreciate the great self-sacrifice that Beneh Yisrael displayed at that time. Despite still living under Egyptian rule, and having been submerged in Egyptian beliefs and culture for so long, they mustered the faith, courage and resolve to publicly renounce Egyptian paganism, and openly prepare to sacrifice a sheep to G-d. During the four days before the sacrifice – from the 10th of Nissan, when they first selected the sheep, until the 14th, the day the sacrifice was offered – they displayed extraordinary faith. At any point during that period, an angry Egyptian could have come along and killed them. But they were not deterred. They placed their faith in G-d, and faithfully obeyed His command despite the threat entailed, throughout this four-day period.

This remarkable Mesirut Nefesh (self-sacrifice) exhibited during those four days compensated, as it were, for the four-fifths of the period of bondage which Beneh Yisrael were spared. Each day "covered" 86 years of slavery, and this is how they were freed after just 86 years of harsh labor.

This shows us the precious value of Mesirut Nefesh, of making difficult sacrifices for the sake of fulfilling G-d’s will. There is nothing more beloved to the Almighty then a Jew sacrificing something dear to him for the service of Hashem. Anytime Torah law requires us to give up something of value, whether it’s money or some enjoyable activity, we must remember just how precious Mesirut Nefesh is, and how the rewards we accrue through our selfless devotion to G-d far outweigh whatever it is that we sacrificing.


Related Parasha
Parashat Tazria: The Self-Destructive Power of Arrogance - 2022 Year
Parashat Tazria-Mesora: Self-Destructive Arrogance - 2021 Year
Parashat Tazria-Mesora: Revealing Our Hidden Treasures - 2020 Year
Shabbat Ha’gadol – Celebrating Our Status as Hashem’s Children - 2019 Year
Parashat Tazria: Eliyahu Ha’nabi and the Berit Mila “Redemption” - 2019 Year
Parashat Tazria- A Gossiper’s Prayer - 2018 Year
Parashat Tazria-Mesora: The Way to Ruin Your Children’s Future - 2017 Year
Parashat Tazria: Childrearing and Prayer - 2016 Year
Parashat Tzaria: Sara’at and Confronting Hardship - 2015 Year
Parashat Mesora: Correcting the Sin of Lashon Ha’ra - 2014 Year
Parashat Tazria: Learning From the Sacrifices - 2014 Year
Parashat Tazria: Looking Out for Today’s Mesora - 2013 Year
Parashat Tazria: Childbirth and Eliyahu Hanabi - 2012 Year
Shabbat Morning Class - Parasha Tazria / Metzora - 2012 Year
Parashat Mesora- Why a Kohen? - 2011 Year
Parashat Tazria- Divisiveness Within the Family - 2011 Year
Shabbat Morning Class - Parasha Tazria / Metzora - 2010 Year
Sefer/Parasha:
Parashat Korah: “It Is Not From My Heart “- The Torah is From God
Parashat Shelah- The Importance of the Sadik
Parashat Be'Haalotecha- Cultivating Cravings
Parashat Naso- Marital Harmony
Shabuot – The Holiday of Torah She’be’al Peh
Parashat Behar-Behukotai- The Torah’s Concept of “Freedom”
Parashat Emor- Man and Beast
Kedoshim: Kedusha – A Group Effort
Parashat Tazria- A Gossiper’s Prayer
Parashat Shemini: The Inherent Value of Preparation
Pesah- Our Response to the Wicked Son
Parashat Sav: Making Sacrifices
Parashat Vayikra- The Danger of a Scholar Who Lacks Manners
Parashat Vayakhel: The Definition of a Misva
Parashat Ki Tissa- Enabling Our Misvot to Ascend
1002 Parashot found