Passover 2025 |
פסח 5785
Hag Pesah Sameah!
חג פסח שמח
Passover is a holiday of hope, renewal, and life. Nature’s spring is the backdrop for our people’s Exodus story of beginnings and freedom. Passover’s message and mood encourage and inspire us. As spring begins, Passover reminds us we are keepers of a vision, advocates for redemption. Celebrating Pesah, by gathering with family and friends around our Seder tables and joining in community, we attach our personal lives and concerns to the grand and potent moral principles for which God brought our ancestors out of Egypt as we retell and remember the Jewish people’s master story.
Pesah Schedule: Services & Programming
BEIT Adult Learning: Passover Prep Class in person & online
Tuesday, April 3
7:00 PM
Come explore the nature of spirituality in Judaism. Where it comes from and how we understand and experience it. As an example, we’ll prepare for and frame our Passover celebration through spiritual insights and practices.
We’ll explore Jewish spirituality, especially as it pertains to our daily lives and demonstration of our Jewish values. We’ll explore how Jews think and act spiritually. And we’ll anticipate Passover by discussing the spiritual meaning of our Seder celebrations and holiday observances.
FIRST DAY OF PASSOVER in person & online
Sunday April 13
9:30 AM
Festival Morning Service in the Stone Family Sanctuary
SECOND DAY OF PASSOVER "SEDER SERVICE" in person only
Monday April 14
9:30 AM
Join us IN PERSON ONLY in the Stone Family Sanctuary as we sit around tables to share in a “Seder Service” during which we’ll intersperse insights, teaching, and brief discussions into our recitation and festival prayer.
SHABBAT & SEVENTH DAY OF PASSOVER in person & online
Friday April 18 – 6:15 p.m.
Saturday April 19 – 9:30 a.m.
Shabbat & Festival Morning Services in the Stone Family Sanctuary
EIGHTH DAY OF PASSOVER in person & online
Sunday April 20 – 9:30 a.m.
Festival Morning Service in the Stone Family Sanctuary
Yizkor Memorial Prayers will be recited.
Join us for Kiddush Lunch following the service.

Together with Jewish Family Service, we will provide traditional Passover foods to homebound seniors and families in need to help brighten the Passover holiday. We will be collecting 50 of each of the following items through April 4.
You may participate by donating funds below, or by bringing the following items to the admin office at Congregation Beth El. All items must be Kosher for Passover.
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750 ml grape juice
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Jarred gefilte fish
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Matzo
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Matzo meal
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Matzo ball soup mix
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Jam
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Jelly candies
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Pareve chocolate
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Dairy chocolate
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Macaroons
Please contact Tikkun@cbe.org with any questions.

CHAI CHAMETZ AND CHILL
Sunday April 20 – 8 - 10 p.m.
You made it through eight days of matzah—now it’s time to feast! Join Chai @ BJ’s for Chametz & Chill, a delicious post-Passover celebration with all the carbs you’ve been craving. Pizza, beer, and great company—what better way to wrap up the holiday? Connect with fellow 20s & 30s for a fun, relaxed night out.
Be a Hesed Haver and help us grow our Beth El community of lovingkindness.! Hesed Haverim help congregants by visiting those who are ill or homebound, making Shiva calls, attending a Minyan, sending a card, preparing a meal and so much more. Whatever your talents, we always need more help.


Haggadah Hineni
Haggadah Hineni is a personal participation Passover Haggadah. Use this Haggadah, written and compiled by Rabbi Ron Shulman, as a resource to guide your Seder guests to enjoy a "talking Seder" in which you and they tell the story and message of Passover through active discussion and engagement.
Haggadah Hineni
2025 Haggadah Hineni coming soon..
Be a Hesed Haver and help us grow our Beth El community of lovingkindness.! Hesed Haverim help congregants by visiting those who are ill or homebound, making Shiva calls, attending a Minyan, sending a card, preparing a meal and so much more. Whatever your talents, we always need more help.


Sell my
Hametz!
Hametz may be sold by completing this form until Monday morning April 11, 2025. Hametz that is sold reverts to your ownership when Pesah is concluded on Sunday evening, April 20, 2024.
It is a time-honored tradition to help the less fortunate purchase goods for their own Passover observance. At Congregation Beth El, we collaborate with Jewish Family Service to provide Passover foods to homebound seniors and families in need. Please consider making a financial contribution. As well, we support Mazon: A Jewish Response to Hunger at this holiday season.
Sell my Hametz
Be a Hesed Haver and help us grow our Beth El community of lovingkindness.! Hesed Haverim help congregants by visiting those who are ill or homebound, making Shiva calls, attending a Minyan, sending a card, preparing a meal and so much more. Whatever your talents, we always need more help.


Your practical how-to-guide for observing Pesah. Updated for 2025, published by the Conservative Movement's Rabbinical Assembly.
Rabbinical Assembly
Passover Guide
Rabbinical Assembly Passover Guide
The Meaning of
Food on Passover
Passover is a season of hope, renewal, and life.
Nature’s spring is the backdrop for our People’s story of beginnings and freedom. Passover’s
message and mood lift us up and encourage us to look ahead to better days and brighter times.
As we get ready for our holiday, we pause to consider the meanings of freedom and human
dignity we celebrate during the days of Passover. Anticipating Pesah, we are optimistic.
In the course of time we may feel differently, but before our festival we look forward.
As spring begins, we need Passover’s reminder. We are keepers of the vision,
advocates for redemption.
Celebrating Pesah by gathering with family and friends around our Seder Tables, we attach our personal lives and concerns to the grand and potent moral principles for which God brought our ancestors out of Egypt.
On Passover the food we eat teaches us to pay proper attention to each and every person we meet. Matzah symbolizes freedom and human dignity. Matzah represents goodness and truth. It is made of any grain that can ferment or become Hametz: wheat, rye, oats, barley, or spelt. On Passover, Hametz, fermented grains and foods, suggests human arrogance and injustice. Of course, grain is not honest or unjust, good or bad. We are. That’s why limiting ourselves to the pure, unleavened grains of Matzah we eat on Passover reminds us to live for and to do good, to open ourselves to others, to form relationships and honor every person.
The freedom and equality we seek for all people requires humility, not arrogance. We wish not to live as people serving our own wills. Fermented grain implies personal and social excess. Unleavened bread suggests modesty. Passover teaches us that human arrogance is held in check by awareness of existence beyond ourselves. The change we make from Hametz to Matzah symbolizes that our efforts in life are in service of God and the values of God’s presence in our world.
Matzah was there from the beginning to the end. It was not only the dough which our ancestors did not have the time to let rise as they left Egypt, but the bread of affliction which they ate as slaves. Matzah, the bread of slaves, became the sustenance of a free people.
On Passover we turn our basic need for food and nourishment into the symbolic agent through which we express our faith and personal values. Just as all Matzah is potentially Hametz, so are we descendants of unpretentious slaves potentially the hardened and conceited of heart and mind. One week each year we return to the core ideals and basic visions of the goodness, honesty, and dignity our lives should reflect.
The physical process of cleaning, preparing, and changing our homes and kitchens is intended to inform our spiritual identities. Ritual and tradition without ethics is also ritual and tradition without deeper meaning.
