Leaving was easy
The desert walks within us
Still learning to stop
The Exodus took the Jews out of Egypt.
Shabbat asks whether Egypt is out of us.
On Shabbat during Passover, we are invited to reflect on what happens after freedom.
The Children of Israel experience liberation for the first time, yet almost immediately they long for the leeks and garlic of Egypt. Not slavery itself, but the familiarity of it.
That longing wasn’t really about food; it was about fear. Freedom, it turns out, is harder than escape.
In the wilderness, something new emerges. Alongside manna—the daily sustenance from heaven—comes the first experience of Shabbat as a lived reality. A double portion falls before the seventh day. There is enough. No gathering required.
For the first time, people are asked to stop. To trust. To live one day without striving.
Every week, Shabbat sets that same test before us. It does not ask whether we remember Egypt. It asks whether we have actually left.
The double portion of manna—echoed in the two challahs on every Shabbat table—offers a quiet but radical idea: you do not need to overwork to survive. There will be enough. You can stop. The world will not fall apart.
But stopping is difficult.
Most of us carry our own version of Egypt: the anxiety that hums when we are not producing, the phone we reach for out of habit, the thoughts that continue even when our hands are still. We have been freed from many external constraints, yet the internal Pharaoh still cracks the whip.
Passover breaks open the question once a year. Shabbat brings it back every week, candle by candle, cup by cup.
Not as a command.
As an invitation.
The question is not whether we are free.
It is whether we are living like we are.
Dinner Discussion Questions
- What is one thing in your life that you have “left”… but are still carrying?
- What is one habit, worry, or pattern that follows you even when you have time to rest—and what would it mean to set it down, just for tonight?
Related Readings: What Does Freedom Mean · What Freedom Tastes Like · Passover: Spring Cleaning for the Soul · Candles, Kiddush & Wine · Mustard & Manna






