As we close out the Seder every Pesach, our families sing “three are the fathers and four are the mothers.” But is this true? No doubt there are three fathers, but what is the correct number of mothers? Were there four? Perhaps there are only three? The most accurate answer actually might be six. Our member Rabbi Steven Ettinger explains:
When we bless our daughters, we beseech Hashem to imbue them with the qualities of Sarah, Rivka, Rachel and Leah—the four mothers. In Parshat Vayeshev, Bilhah and Zilpah are clearly identified as wives of Yaakov (“neshei aviv”), this might support six. Rachel is the one who eternally weeps for her children in exile, she was solely designated for Yaakov (Leah believed she was destined for Eisav: see Rashi to Bereishit 29:17) and she, the younger sister, not Leah who birthed such a large number of tribes, is mentioned third in the weekly blessing (we also note Rashi on Bereishit 31:33, who states that Yaakov’s regular abode was in Rachel’s tent and that generally Rachel is the only one designated in the Torah as “eshet Yaakov.”)
Turning back to Seder night, the focus
seems to be on the fours—the four cups, the four sons, the four expressions of
redemption, and so on. But it is actually the threes that have primacy: one
does not fulfill one’s obligation without mentioning three things (Pesach,
Matzah, Maror) and the Ten Plagues are condensed into a three-part acronym.
Our people are a nation of threes, as Rav
Chisda expresses in Shabbat 88a: “Blessed is the Merciful One who gave the
threefold Torah (Torah, Neviim, Ketuvim) to the threefold nation (Kohanim,
Leviim, Yisraelim), through the third born (Moshe) on the third day of
separation in the third month (Sivan).” Indeed, there is an even earlier
three to be associated with our people: according to the Midrash, Avraham Avinu
recognized Hakadosh Baruch Hu at the tender age of three years old.
What is the significance of three and how
does this relate to the elevated status of Rachel?
While Three Dog Night may have designated
one as “the loneliest number,” it is, in fact, the most important number. It is
Hashem and it represents unity. With no other (ein od milvado), there is
only clarity. There can be no
contradiction or confusion.
When a second is introduced, when there are
two, there is opposition and conflict. Adam might not have sinned without his “negdo,”
the one opposite him. Yitzchak prayed for children, but that prayer was “lenochach
ishto,” opposite his wife. This is not to imply that a man and woman are in
a perpetual state of conflict. Quite the
contrary, their ideal state is one of shalom bayit. Nevertheless, this
cannot be achieved without a center point, without a third, a three,
that integrates their disparate personalities and natures.
Our nation has three fathers, but we are most closely identified as the children of only the third: we are the sons of Yaakov, we are identified as Benei Yisrael. A parent cannot spoil and indulge a child with love: Avraham is the parent of love. Likewise, a parent cannot always be strict and exacting, as represented by Yitzchak. The most fitting parent blends together these two characteristics into a path of truth and clarity – “titen emet leYaakov.” The third father was the center point that provided our foundation.
If we focus on Rachel, we see that she,
more than any of the matriarchs, represented this same center point. She took
action at two critical junctures that displayed contradictory behavior. When
Lavan substituted Leah when Rachel was to marry Yaakov, she refused to allow
her sister to face embarrassment and she honored her father. In other words,
she showed love, compassion and respect.
Yet she was willing to disrespect Lavan,
even to the point of risking her own safety and that of her family, by removing
the idols from his home; they were a complete anathema to her. Rachel, like
Yaakov, was a mixture of love and justice (In contrast, Leah showed no
compassion to Rachel after she asked for the flowers from Reuven. Leah demanded
payment in the form of extra time with Yaakov.).
As the children of Yaakov and Rachel, our
spiritual DNA contains the capacity to experience the world in three dimensions,
not two. There is a time for love and life and mercy and peace. Likewise, there is a time to be strict, to
fight, to kill, to make war and to be vengeful. The first is ideal, the second
is sometimes and reluctantly necessary. However, the guiding principle is
always truth and what is right – and that is what our three, our Torah, demands
from us.
Unfortunately, much of the world exists in
a two-dimensional reality. We are surrounded by those who believe that there is
only a single path—the path of death and hate.
In their world there is their way or no way. Three Dog Night had it wrong. One is not the
loneliest number…but two is – the two of conflict, the two of deceit and
manipulation and the two of mutual destruction. Any solution involving two is
likely one doomed to fail.
Post Script: We all know the old joke about the two Jews stranded on the island having three shuls: one for each and the third that neither would go to. Thinking about this a little more, this explanation does not hold up. They each already had one they would not pray in, this being the shul the other Jew occupied. It is more logical to believe that the third shul was the place where they prayed together; it was the third point where, as the children of Yaakov and Rachel, they would have cried out together be rescued.















