The questions asked by the four sons reflect how we handle them. The wise son needs to be reminded that the Seder is to be experienced. The wicked son needs to be exposed as a disrupter.
Devar Torah: The Freedom to Ask — and the Responsibility Behind It
As we approach Pesach, one of the most striking features of the Seder is that it begins—not with declarations—but with questions.
1. A Defining Sign of Freedom
A truly free people ask questions.
- Slaves follow orders
- Free people inquire, challenge, and seek understanding
The Seder is built around curiosity because freedom is not just physical—it’s intellectual and spiritual.
2. Not All Questions Are the Same: The Four Sons
The Haggadah teaches us that how a question is asked matters just as much as what is asked.
The Wise Son — Seeking Growth
He asks:
“What are all the laws and details?”
- His goal: to learn and improve
- He wants clarity so he can do the mitzvot properly
Our surprising answer:
“Do not eat anything after the Afikoman.”
At first glance, this seems unrelated. But the message is profound:
👉 Judaism is not only about technical knowledge—it’s about experience.
👉 The Seder must be felt, not just analyzed.
Lesson:
Even wisdom must lead to living the moment—feeling as if you yourself left Egypt.
The Wicked Son — Seeking to Undermine
He asks:
“What is this service to you?”
- Not a request for knowledge
- A statement of distance and dismissal
Like Korach, who asked clever but insincere questions, this son is not searching—he is challenging authority.
Our response is sharp:
“Blunt his teeth.”
Why?
Because his “questions” are really weapons, not tools of learning.
3. The Deeper Insight — The Power of the Mouth
There’s a beautiful idea:
- The word רשע (rasha – wicked) is tied to misuse of speech
- When misused, speech destroys
- When refined, it transforms into צדיק (tzaddik – righteous)
👉 The same mouth can:
- Build understanding
- Or tear down meaning
4. The Balance: Encouraging Questions, Guarding Purpose
Judaism strongly encourages questioning:
- The Talmud is built on it
- The Seder revolves around it
But there’s a boundary:
| Type of Question | Purpose | Response |
|---|---|---|
| Sincere | To learn | Teach, guide |
| Experiential | To connect | Encourage feeling |
| Disruptive | To undermine | Set limits |
5. Final Message for Pesach
A free person:
- Asks questions
- Seeks truth
- Engages deeply
But also:
- Knows when to experience instead of analyze
- Uses questions to build—not to destroy
Closing Thought
On Pesach night, we don’t just tell a story—we relive it.
So ask.
Ask deeply.
Ask sincerely.
But most importantly—
feel what it means to be free.
