The Jews celebrate Passover and...
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The Jews celebrate Passover and remember the escape from Egypt. The event that spelled life for Israel brought death to the Egyptians. A bishop wrote recently, "The Bible confronted me with the picture of God rejoicing oven the drowning of the Egyptians at the Red Sea (Exodus 15). Was this God not also the God of the Egyptians?" (John Shelby Spong, Rescuing the Bible From Fundamentalism, Harper: San Francisco, 1991, p. 18.) At the passover, the Jews do mourn the death of the Egyptians. The Haggadah for the American Family instructs the leader of the Seder to say: "Judaism regards all men as children of God, even enemies who seek to destroy our people." The people gathered for the Seder respond, "When, for the sake of our welfare, they [the Egyptians] met with suffering and death, we mourn their loss and express sorrow over their destruction. (Masrtin Berkowitz, Haggadah for the American Family, P.A.R. Corporation: Florida, 1958, p. 12.)
- Chinn
- Chinn
