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The Ger Family
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Steven Charles Ger

  • Steven Ger grew up in a Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York and Aberdeen, New Jersey, where he was educated in both church and synagogue due to his distinctive heritage as a Jewish Christian.
  • Read more here
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Sample Steve! LISTEN

Passover

Atonement

Hanukkah
Pentecost
Sabbath
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Events Calendar

June 2008 July 2008 August 2008
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Week 28 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Week 29 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
Week 30 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
Week 31 27 28 29 30 31
Passover Seder Preparation Print E-mail

Choice of Presentation

There are three ways to hold this presentation in your church. Each way is equally effective; the difference is simply in how elaborate you desire the presentation or what your church facility allows.
  • Style #1: The simplest form is a demonstration only. This is usually done in the sanctuary and requires congregational participation only for communion. 50 - 75 minutes.
  • Style #2: This is a "demonstration plus", usually held in a fellowship hall with the congregation seated at tables, participating in the tasting of the various Passover elements as well as communion. 75 - 90 minutes.
  • Style #3: The most elaborate version. It is style #2 with the addition of a full meal, either catered, cooked on site or pot-luck. The meal can be successfully served mid-way through the presentation (usually best), or prior to or after the presentation. For those choosing this full Seder dinner, the choice of meat is up to the host. Examples of successful meals to complement the Passover demonstration would be chicken, brisket, lamb, etc. One choice not recommended, however, would be pork, particularly if the possibility exists for Jewish people to be in attendance. 130 - 150 minutes.

Speaker

  • One podium for Steven
  • A microphone (lavaliere - which pins on lapel - if possible)
  • One small table next to podium for Steven to display Seder demonstration items
  • 2 candles (white, preferably) in candlesticks, plus lighter/matches at Steven's demo table
  • 3 whole UNBROKEN sheets of matzah on Steven's demo table
  • One place setting as per other participants at speaker's table (Elijah's place)
  • A small prize for a child (or a dollar) if children will be present - style #2/3 only
Participants
  • One plastic cup per person - style #2/3 only (style #1 can use standard communion cups)
  • One paper plate (small is okay) per person - style #2/3 only
  • Enough grape juice/wine in pitchers/bottles (or pre-poured in cups) for 3 quarter cups per person - style #2/3 only

The following can be placed in common bowls on the table within reach of all seated, or a dollop of each can be placed individually on place settings- style #2/3 only :

  • ground horseradish (preferably purple but white is okay) - one spoonful per participant
  • parsley (one sprig per participant)
  • charoset (a mixture of apples and nuts - recipe available on back of page)
  • matzahs (approx. enough for 1/3 sheet per person - usually available in the supermarket - ask)
  • salt water in a bowl (not to be placed in a drinking glass!)
  • a roasted (not raw) lamb shankbone (no meat, just bone) only one per event needed, on Steven's table (sometimes Steven already has one - ask ahead of time)

We will use the matzah and grape juice/wine for communion at the climax of the presentation.

Ministry Resources

Please set up a six-eight foot table for the display of Sojourner Ministries' resource materials and have a volunteer ready to assist Steven with sales.

Recording

Copyright guidelines allow one audio recording for archival purposes only, which can only be copied and distributed to those individuals who could not participate due to church duties (nursery, etc.).

Charoset Recipe

4 red apples, coarsely chopped
½ cup chopped walnuts
8 oz. raisins
1T cinnamon
1T lemon juice
½ cup red wine, sparkling fruit juice, or regular grape juice

One day ahead of the event, chop the apples and walnuts and toss them with the lemon juice. Add in the raisins and cinnamon and mix well. You may food process/blend the ingredients to enhance consistency. Allow flavors to blend and congeal in the refrigerator overnight.

If you have not used the food processor, just before the event, add in ½ c of red wine or sparkling grape juice (or regular grape juice). If you have used the food processor, add the liquid during processing.

The goal is for this mixture to resemble chunky mortar. However, there is no wrong way to prepare it as there are innumerable charoset recipes. For a demonstration or for a seder meal, each person needs only a taste, so a tablespoon per person should be more than enough.

Alternate recipe - just as good!

6 peeled apples, coarsely chopped
2/3 cup chopped almonds
3 tablespoon sugar, or to taste
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1 grated rind of 1 lemon
4 tablespoon sweet red wine

Combine all, mixing thoroughly. Add wine as need. Blend to desired texture -- some like it coarse and crunchy, others prefer it ground to a paste. Chill. Makes 3 cups.

 
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Verse of The Day

“In that day you will say: "Give thanks to the LORD, call on his name; make known among the nations what he has done, and proclaim that his name is exalted.” (Isaiah 12:4)