Tisha Be’av
Jul 8, 2013 By Samuel Barth | Commentary | Tishah Be'av
These words will reach you during the nine days that lead to the fast on Tish鈥檃h Be鈥橝v, the day we mourn the destruction of the first and second Temples and many other tragedies of Jewish history. It is traditionally a complete fast鈥攆rom sunset until sunset鈥攚ith Yom Kippur the only other such fast day in the Jewish calendar. There is a Hasidic teaching that no halakhah concerning fasting on these days is needed, for 鈥渙n the black fast of Tish鈥檃h Be鈥橝v, who could eat, and on the white fast of Yom Kippur, who needs to eat?鈥
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Turn Aside (Haseir) Evil Forces
Jun 25, 2013 By Samuel Barth | Commentary
, we began to explore Hashkiveinu, the blessing unique to the evening service that asks for peace through the night and renewed life in the morning (Siddur Sim Shalom for Weekdays, 140).
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鈥淭o Life. . .to Peace鈥濃擜nswers to the Terrors of the Night
Jun 19, 2013 By Samuel Barth | Commentary
Anomaly invites interpretation. There is a clear pattern to the texts surrounding the Shema鈥; a pattern that is consistent in the morning and the evening. Two blessings precede the biblical Shema鈥, one concerned with the natural cycles of light and darkness, and the second exploring the Torah as vehicle for divine love. Following the Shema鈥, the theme turns to redemption鈥攔ecalling slavery and liberation, ending with praise to God, 鈥Ga鈥檃l Yisrael鈥 (Redeemer of Israel). In the morning we move directly from the blessing of redemption to begin our core prayer, the 鈥楢尘颈诲补丑.
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Evening . . . Mixtures and Beauty
Jun 12, 2013 By Samuel Barth | Commentary
The rhythm of light and darkness is deeply embedded in our humanity. Even if we do not know the precise time (in hours and minutes), we are conscious of the cycle of day and night. The onset of night, as evening falls, is often associated with some sense of foreboding, and the dawning of each new day holds hope and promise. Light is associated in many sources with good, with hope, even with messianic redemption: 鈥渁 sun of righteousness . . . and healing鈥 (Malachi 4:2). Our liturgy speaks of the transition between day and night, and uses the phrase 鈥uma鈥檃vir yom umeivi laila鈥 (God causes the transition from day to night). Using a verb that suggests an unfolding process, rather than an abrupt disjunction, reflects the natural flow of dusk, sunset, and night.
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Subversive Prayer . . . Necessary Trouble
Jun 5, 2013 By Samuel Barth | Commentary
Read More鈥淧rayer is meaningless unless it is subversive, unless it seeks to overthrow and to ruin the pyramids of callousness, hatred, opportunism, falsehood. The liturgical movement must become a revolutionary movement, seeking to overthrow the forces that continue to destroy the promise, the hope, and the vision.鈥[1]
Harshness鈥擴s and Them
May 29, 2013 By Samuel Barth | Commentary
In the preliminary service (Siddur Sim Shalom: A Prayerbook for Shabbat, 66), there is a short paragraph remarkably written in the first person singular鈥攗sing 鈥淚鈥 rather than 鈥渨e.鈥 In the Talmud (BT Berakhot 16b), there are a number of personal prayers of the Sages, the prayers that they would say at the end of the 鈥楢尘颈诲补丑. This text is attributed to Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi and is inserted at this point in the service because it is similar in theme to the previous paragraph. There is a telling, and sometimes uncomfortable, phrase that begins very innocently, 鈥tatzileini hayom . . . me鈥檃zei panim鈥 (save me this day from those with 鈥渉ard faces鈥 [from the arrogant]). This is a reasonable hope and a fine, if unremarkable, prayer; it would be good to pass a day (or even longer) without encountering others who are arrogant. But that is not the end of the sentence. The prayer of R鈥 Yehudah continues, 鈥ume鈥檃zut panim鈥 (and from my own 鈥渉ard face鈥 [my own arrogance]).
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Love鈥擥reat and Eternal
May 24, 2013 By Samuel Barth | Commentary
The first paragraph of the Shema鈥 invites us to affirm the unity of God, and then engages the topic of love, the love from a person to God: 鈥ve鈥檃havat et Adonai Eloheykha鈥 (You shall love Adonai your God). Several important questions present themselves. First, is the phrase 鈥測ou shall love鈥 to be understood as an imperative? The grammar supports such a construction, leading us to wonder how love can be commanded. A command can be given to bring specified sacrifices, to eat matzah on Pesah, and to show deference to the old, but how can we be commanded to love? Some commentators avoid the dilemma by suggesting the meaning is that we are to behave in a way that would express our love for God, but this avoids the deeper question about how and why this love for God is born in our hearts and minds.
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Shavu鈥檕t鈥擧ide and Seek with Torah
May 14, 2013 By Samuel Barth | Commentary | Shavuot
In the kiddush we recite this evening, and in all the traditional services of Shavu鈥檕t, we speak of 鈥chag haShavuot hazeh, z鈥檓an mattan Torateinu鈥 (This Festival of Shavu鈥檕t, season of the giving of our Torah. [Siddur Sim Shalom for Shabbat and Festivals, 42]). There is a subtle yet subversive element to this description of the day: the parallels for Pesah and Sukkot speak of the 鈥渟eason of our liberation鈥 and 鈥渟eason of our rejoicing,鈥 each of which can reasonably be derived from biblical sources; however, there is no biblical source that associates Shavu鈥檕t with the giving of the Torah at Sinai. Shavu鈥檕t is called chag haKatsir in association with the harvest (Exod. 23:16), and the name 厂丑补惫耻鈥檕迟&苍产蝉辫;derives from the 49 days of counting the Omer after Pesah; the Talmud (BT Pesachim 68b) even uses the term Atzeret (conclusion), seeing the day as 鈥渃oncluding鈥 Pesah much as Shemini Atzeret serves as conclusion to Sukkot.
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