Pesach is a holiday of freedom. We celebrate and relive our redemption from the Egyptian exile over three thousand years ago. But its real purpose is to inspire ourselves for the imminent future redemption.... We start with the two sedorim, two evenings filled with customs and meaning designed to help us relive the days in Egypt as if we were just there, and remember the bitter exile and the awesome redemption as if we personally experienced it. Then come the last days. The Jewish people suddenly find themselves trapped by the sea, about to see their short-lived freedom about to come to a horrific end, and moments later they see the amazing miracle of the splitting of the sea, and all the Jewish people finally escape their pursuing captors. And, moments later, when the waters settle, and they see the entire Egyptian army destroyed, they finally experience another redemption, a spiritual and emotional one, as they realize that those dark days of exile are really over, because the mighty Egyptian nation is now gone forever...

Even though we went out of Egypt, it was not a complete redemption and we remain in a different exile. It’s is less physically demanding, we aren’t forced to build cities, or flogged and beaten daily, but our distraction from G-d and the challenge focus on spirituality, and G-d’s truth, remains just the same. The only difference is that we now have even harder taskmasters controlling us: Ourselves


haggadah Section: -- Exodus Story
Source: http://moshiachcampaign.com/media/pdf/529/xWCv5297556.pdf