The month of Nisan we celebrate our freedom. We declare that we are in control of our destiny so long as we follow God’s commandments. That we determine our destiny, not the stars or anything else such as that.
This month of Nisan is unique. One of the reasons we do not say Tachanun is because Nisan is the month of redemption, the month of Pesach, the time when the Jewish people became free. In a very real sense, this is the beginning of the Jewish national year. Tishrei may mark the creation of the world and the creation of man, but Nisan marks the birth of the Jewish people as a nation.
That is why the first mitzvah given to the Jewish people as a people was the commandment to declare the new month: “Ha-chodesh ha-zeh lachem rosh chodashim” — “This month shall be for you the first of the months.” A free people must control its own calendar. A slave lives on the schedule of his master. A free person sets his own time.
But freedom is not acquired in a moment. You cannot take a nation of slaves and simply announce that they are free. They have to learn it, feel it, and live it.
That helps explain the remarkable command before the Exodus: the Jews were told to take a lamb, keep it before their homes for several days, slaughter it publicly, eat it, and place its blood on their doorposts. According to many authorities, the lamb was associated with Egyptian worship. In effect, the Jewish people were making a public declaration to their former masters: your gods have no power over us. We are no longer afraid. We are no longer slaves.
For the Egyptians, this was a humiliation. For the Jews, it was a test of courage. It was the first act of national self-respect. Before they could leave Egypt physically, they had to leave Egypt spiritually. They had to stop thinking like slaves.
So first comes Rosh Chodesh Nisan: the freedom to define time. Then comes Pesach: the freedom to shape destiny. In the ancient world, people believed their lives were ruled by the stars, by fate, by the whims of the gods. The Torah teaches otherwise. Israel is not bound by zodiac or destiny. We are called to live in covenant with God, and within that covenant we are responsible for our choices.
That is the key point: freedom does not mean license. Freedom means responsibility. The Torah is not a burden placed on a slave; it is the constitution given to a free people. On Rosh Chodesh Nisan and throughout this month, we are reminded that true freedom is not doing whatever we want. True freedom is living with purpose, dignity, and responsibility before God.
Something to think about.
