Rabbi Jill Jacobs:
Some commentators emphasize the individual nature of the statement that each person should see himself or herself as having gone forth from Egypt. The Ritba (Rabbi Yom Tov ben Avraham Ishbili, 125-1330) stresses that “every single individual must see and look at himself as though he had been a slave in Egypt and as though he went forth to freedom.” Whereas the Hagaddah frames in the plural its earlier comment that God redeemed both our ancestors and us, the obligation to see ourselves as former slaves is articulated in the singular. On Pesach, the Ritba suggests, it is not enough to speak of our communal liberation from slavery; rather, we must each experience this redemption also as a personal journey.Taking this emphasis on the individual one step further, the N’tziv (Rabbi Naftali Tzvi Yehuda Berlin, 1817-1893) likens the command to see oneself as having come forth from Egypt to the talmudic comment that each person should say that the entire world was created for his or her sake. In the same way, the N’tziv says, each person should consider the exodus from Egypt as a personal miracle, done only for him or her. One who sees the exodus as having taken place for his or her own benefit cannot help but be grateful to God
~What are the five stages of redemption identified in this passage?
~How might you understand these stages from a psychological perspective?
~Do you see echoes of these stages in your life?
The stages of redemption: "I will free you" from physical enslavement in Egypt; I will "deliver you" from the psychological mind-set of being a slave, which might persist even after you have been physically liberated; "I will redeem you" so that you will think of yourselves as free people; and "I will take you" into a special relationship with Me, for that is the ultimate goal of your liberation.
A first step toward liberation will be freeing themselves from their passivity and their tolerance of the intolerable.
Ultimately, freedom is much much more than the absence of external restraint. Freedom is the ability to assume responsibility for one's own life and for one's community as well. We are most free, most fully human, when we help ourselves and others to live up to our best potential as caring human beings and as serious Jews. Thus, the freedom of Torah - the only true freedom that Jews can enjoy - is a call to responsibility toward spiritual adulthood.
And on a macro-level, the whole story of the Exodus has often been described as 'The Birth of a Nation.' As the Maharal of Praugue says, “When Israel left Egypt, it was as if they were being born at that time.” (Gevurat Hashem Ch. 39)
No slave ever escaped from Egypt.
Before this, they were so deep in exile that they did not feel they were in exile. Now that they understood exile and groaned, a little redemption began.


