Suj Y EBAYER IN JEWISH LITERAXURE ZX/V/AT LEC)BAECKX$OLLEGE} “~‘ LIBILAEF{/’~”’ ‘ *- In its widest sense, prayer is an attempt on the part of man to establish contact with the Deity. Its immediate aim, therefore, In mysticism that is also the ultimate aim: is communion with God. there are no .ther motiveS, or at least they are considered less important than the goal of communion. But in most religions this mystic form of prayer has been rare: it has been the prayer of the For most people communion with God has been few} not of the many. and is only a means to the satisfaction of same further desire. That desire may be Simply to offer thanks for the goodness of life in general? or for some particular happiness or deliverance. be to acknowledge sins and seek forgiveness. divine :avourfi either a It may It may bé to ask for material blessing, such as rain, fertility, childbirth, recovery from illness, deliverance from oppression or vistory on the field pf battle; or a spiritual blessing, such as enlightenment, wisaom, humility, codrege, moral strength. The desire may be even to make a promise, or vow, to the Deity, to serve God more faithfully, to perform some particular act pleasing to-Him, to dedicate one's li§e, or the life of one's son, to His service. Accordingly prayer may take the form of praise and thanksgiving, confession and repentance, éetition, dedication, or pure communion. All such prayers may be; further, spontaneous or liturgical. By a liturgical prayer I mean one which is deliberately composefl for regular use by others than the author. Both sponseenous and liturgical prayers employ the medium of language. But Spontaneous _ 2 _ prayer can come very near to dispensing with language. That is to say, the WOIShipper can be almost unconscious or the words he'is employing, andi he may certainly utter them.inaudibly$ he may pray only with his mind, and not at all with his lips. LituréicaL prayer is muph more closely tied to human language. It may, of course, be read silently. or chanted. But most often it is read aloud Poetical prayers especialLy are often chanted. Many liturgical prayers are of the nature of poetry; and even those which are in prose émploy, at their best, a kind of elevated, or poetic, PIOBG . Jewish Literature abounds with prayers belonging to every one of these categorise. Some were consciously composed for liturgical use; others were not so intended originally, but were subsequently incorporated into the Jewish Liturgy. their way into the Jewish Prayer-Book; Still others have never found but there is good reason to believe thac.the fineét ofi them will yet find Prayer Books of the future. a place in the Jewidl A It is not easy to discern any clear trends or development in the history of Jewish prayer; but ceitain remarks can be made on this subject. It appears that the earliest praye;g were of the nature of thanksgiving and petition; then came confession; and finally dedibation and pure communion. Spontaneous prayers seem to be more ancient than liturgicgl prayers. And so far as liturgical prayers are concerned, poetry seems to have preceded prose, and chant preceded speech. But by the end of the biblical period, all varieties were well established. One further_distinction can be made, between individual prayer - 3 _ and collective prayer. Both kinds are common in Jewish literature; but in the Jewish liturgy ifself collective prayer tends to Most often prayers are oftened by the Congregation as a whole, on its own behalf, or on behalf of the whole House bf predominate. Israel, or on behalf of mankind. A non—Jewish scholar of comparative religion has expressed the Opinion that the Jewish liturgy is the finest in the world. It is hard to disagree with that conclusion When we think of the Psalms, the religious poetry of the Jews of the Middle Ages, and many other prayers of outstanding depth and beauty composed throughout the various epochs of Jewish history. We Jews are probably insufficigntly conscious of the gggatness of our.heritage And for that reason I am n0w going to present in this respect. a selection of some of the greatest Jewish prayers, expressing the exgériences and longing: of Jewish hearps from the biblical age to our own. i a: * The Bible itself contains many prayers which have becané a permanent part of the Jewish liturgy. The one which comes most readily to mind is the Shame (Deuteronomy 6:4—9). It is not strictly a prayer at all, but a declaration of the Unity of God followeq by an injunction to love Him; i.e. to serve Him, with wholeheartedness. 4/» ‘ But the recitation of this passage as part of the liturgy, which pre-Christian; renders it into a kind of dedicatory prayer. In reciting it we dedicate ourselves to remember and proclaim the unity of God, and to iesyond loyally to God's demQQGS. \ is. -4Another famous passage is the Priestly Benediction which occurs innthe Book of Numbers. numberg 6:22-27. for the gift of peace, or rather of a This is a petition halom, which xafixuaaa describes state of total welfare, physical and spiritual. That sgontaneous,‘silent prayer is comparatively early, even of the dedicatnny kind, can be qecn from the story of Hannah who 1 Samuel 1:10—15. prayed to be granted a son. Petition on behalf of others also occurs in the earliest records. It will be remembered how Abraham interceded with God for the inhabitants of Sodom; how MOSes,ple31cd that God should forgive the Childrén of Israel — Exodus : l- 2; how David prayed how Amos and Jeremiah repeated;y for the recovery of Bathsheba's son; begged God to forgive the Israelites, despite their unfaithfulness An early example of personal thanks— Jeremiah 14;7-9. and 19— 22. giving occurs in Gengsis/ servant") fififlgfi;fl_§2/lo-lL_L£E_IQ.Lflfl£2«&h1 There 819, Of coursg also some very ancient songs or ' praise, especially after National victory, such as the famous Song of M0363, some verses of which have found their way into the Liturgy: Ezfoc‘ma 15:1—2, 11—13, and i1—l8. To my mind the greatest prayer inthe Bible, apart from the Psalms, is that offered by King Solomon on the occasion of the Gonsecraticn of the First Temple: I Kgngs.‘8:22—5 . Finally, before we leéve the Bible, we must pay attentiun to the Psalms, for they age undoubtedly the greatest prayer book of the ancient world. n - 5 _ "They enho the thought and feeling, the aspiration and yearning, of countless men and wqmen in every era. In their matchless phrases the human soul has for tens of centuries found an outlet in its own struggle from the depths tb reach the heights. 'To'weartravellers of every condition infleveiy period of history, the Esalms have been rivqrs of refreshment and wells of consolation. They alone have known no limitations to a particular age, country, or form of faith.’ To all seekers of God they remain a grateful aid in their quest." It is difficult to select from them, because so many have a just claim to distinction. Here are fhree which exhibit particularly well the mood of prayer, especially confession,x Petition, and praise. £5§LQ§_B§£$:2L;; g a I fil:l-L2; ‘;05. a Before proceeding to the next phase in.Jewish Litéruture, which is the Rabbinic, let us hear two prayers from the Apocrypha. The first is the Prayer 0: Menasséh, the Efiifi most notorious of the "bad" kings of Judah. The author imégiues the king to hgve confessed his sins, and prayed for forgiveness, in the follo.ing words. The Pzaye; of Menagseh. The second apocry_hal prayer comes from the Wisdom of Solomon, and is indeed a prgyer for wisaom, uttered, as the author imagines, by King Solomon himself. we WisQOm of Sologog, chagteg . now turn to th: Rabbinic literature, and it is here that _ 6 _ we find many or the greatest prayers included in the Traditional Prayer Book. It may be well to begin by recalling some of the major teacgings of the Rabbis about prayer in general. Rabbis'attachad great value a to prayer. The They said that i$ was substitute fer the sacrifices which used to take place in the Temple, and even that 1;.was more efficacious. They considered it as important, or nearly as important, as the study of the They laid great stress on sincerity and concentration. Torah. "The pious men of old used to wait an hour before they said tm Tefiilah, that they might direct their'heartx toward: God. Even if the King salutes a man he may not return the greeting; and even if a snake was twisted around his heel he may not interrupt his prayer." mechanidal. 6361 5:1) Prayer must not become "When thou prayest make not thy prayer 3 fixed form, but a plea for mercies and supplicetions before God." (Avat 2:13) Preyér is of course to be addressed directly to God, whoéo Fatherly love enableé man to feel his presefice moat 'intimately. Many of the Rabbinic p;ayers begin with the phrase "Our Father"; and we read: "However high God no ébove His world, let a man but enter a Synagogue, stand behind a pillar and pray in a whisper, and the Holy One, Blessed be He, heartens to his prayer.‘ Can there be a God nearer than this, who is close to his creatures as the mouth is to the ear." Women as well as map are obliged to pray. (pBer. 15A.) (Ber.3:3), and nearly all the most impvrtent prayers may be said in any language. (Satan 7(1—2) ow let us listen to some of the greatest prayers tram the Most om them appear for the first time in there is good reason the Talmud, but in some cases XXXxxxflixxinnit to believe that they Rabbinic literature. ~ I go back to the earlier Rabbinic period, and even to pre—Christian times. 1. "Oh my God, the soul which Thou gavest me is pure." 2. "With abounding love hast thou loved us." Ber. 11v.) (Singers P.B. fps 39—40; 3. "Oh my God, guard my tongue from evil." (Singers P.B. p. 54; Ber. 17) (Singers x.B. 9.5; Ber.,60A) lThe Amidah, also known as the Tefillah, and the Here are Shemoneh Esreh was also completed in Rabbinic times. 4. some or the less well—known of the 19 Benedictionsz— Nuzfibers 4, 5, 5. ‘6, s, 9, 13, and 16. 9.13. pps. 46 — so.) One of the greatest prayers, perhaps the greatest, of the Rabbinic period, is the Aleynu. 6. (Singers (gingers P.B. 996. 76 - 77) One or the greatest prayers for New Year , the "Uvechen Ten Pachdecha", is also mentioned in the Rabbinic writings. (Singers 3.3. p.239.+ 24R.) 7. One Rabbi used to pray a private prayer as follows: "May it be acceptable befor Thee, 0 Lord my God and God of my fathers, that no hatred against us may enter the heart of any man nor hatred of any man enter our heart, that no envy.o£ us enter the heart or any man nor envy of any man enter our heart; They Torah be our occupation all the days of our life; words be supplicatién before Thee.‘ added: may and may our To this another Rabbi 'Do Thou unite our hearts in the fear of Thy Name, keep h/k - 8 _ us far tron whatever is "ateful to Thee, bring as near to all that Thou luvest; and do justly with us for the sake of Thy Name' ‘ (9. Ber. 7d) 8. ' Finally there is the great Hymn of Praise, the aflishmat" 68105919 P.B. 125—126) t t t The Middlé Ages are, above all, the period of the ggxxgiggig, £he writers of liturgical poems or ggxxgjgg, many of Which have been incorporated in the liturgy, eSpeciaLly for the High Holydaya. The first 0: these poems which comes to min& is the Adon 019m. It was composed by an anonymous author, probably of the Gaonic Singers P.B. pps Séé. Age, perhaps of the 10th Century. One of the greatest Payyeténim, was a Spanish Jewish poet, Yehudah Halevi, who lived round about the year 1200. The £0110w1ng poem, written by him, is included in the Sephardi ' Liturgy for the Day of Atmnement. . Th. Gaster:' 5 "Festivals of the Jewish Year" pps: 164—155. Probably from the same period comes the famous "Hymn of Glory", which is included in the Traditional Prayer Book. author is unkncwn, but he may have been Judah ben Samuel of Regensburg, also known’as Judah the Saint, who died in 1217. Singer's 9.3. pps. 78 — 79, vs. 1 — 9 and 25 - 31. Its _ 9 _ The famous Leha D63Di is a hymn composed in tLe 16th 0., at Saféd in Pulastifie, by Solomon Halevi, who is also known as Solomon Schechter says about this hymn that it is AlEabetS. "perhaps one existence." I the finest or pieces of religious poetry in (Singers P.B. pys. 111 - 112) Let us conclude tnis éection with a rather interesting baasage ggggfi prayer which was written in Prague about the year 1700 by one Jonah Langsofer, and it occurs in his ethical will. ‘(anxanmnaJianzam_nnh1na1_fliils+_2azx_2+ age. 286 ;_g§§.) ‘ If any evidence is réhuired that the House of Israél has never bebome entirely estranged from its God, that Judaism has never entirely lost its vitality and.its power fox grqwth, that evidence can be fcund in the fact that new prayers have been composed by Jews in evexy age, down to and including our Own. Moreover, some of the modern prayers do not compare at all unfavomrably with these or former ages. Here are three specimens. The iirst was composed by thu Central Conference of American Rabbis. The other two were written by Israel Mattuck. ' God", L.L.P.B. page 24 1. "0 Lord our 2. "0 thou infinite Spirit or the Universe", p.94 3. "In many and diverse ways", p.200 _ lo _ Let us end with another prayer by Rabbi Mattuck, which storms an admirably fitting conclusion to thin attempt of ours to survey, in Selection, the prayers. which Jews have prayed throughout the ages and which héve helped them to attain to communion with their God. _L .L- LB "When we turfi to God in prayer..", - , ’1. l. Numbexs 6:22—27 . 2. 1 Samuel 1:10—16 5. Exodus 32:31q32 4. Jeremiah 14:7—9, 19-22 5. Genesis 32:10-11 (up to "unto thy servant") 6. Exodus 15:1—2, 11—13, 17-18 7. 1 Kings 8:22-53 8. Psalm 25:1-21 9. Psalm 51:1—19 10. 'Paalm- 105 11. The Prayer of Menasseh 12. Wisdom of Soloéon, chapter 9 13. O my God, the soul...", Singer's P.B. p. 5 14. "With abounding love", ditto., pp. 39-40 15. "0 my God, guard my tongue..", ditto., p. 54 \~16. Benedictions 4,5,6,8,9,15 and 16 of the Amiaah, ditto., pp.46-50 17. Thé‘Aleynu, pp. 76—77 181 "Uvechen ten pac£decha", 99.239-240 19. "The breath of every living buiug...", pp. 125—126 Aden Olam, pp. 5-4 I Gaster: Festivals, pp. 164~165 Hymn of Glory, Singer's P.B.; pp.78-79, vv. 1-9,‘25—51 Lechah Dedi, pp. 111—112 Abrahamg: Hebrew Ethical Wills, Pt.II, 99.286-288 -225. Lib. J. Prayer Bobk, p.24, "0 Lord our God" 26. D1tto., 9.94, "0 than infinite Spirit" 2'7. ’28. "In many and diverse ways", p.200 “When we turn to God in prayer...", pp.234—235
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