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Weekday liturgy

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Weekday liturgy Shacharit (morning service) Mincha (afternoon service) Ma'ariv (evening service) Mincha and Ma'ariv often said back to back. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Weekday liturgy


1
Weekday liturgy
  • Shacharit (morning service)?
  • Mincha (afternoon service)?
  • Ma'ariv (evening service)?
  • Mincha and Ma'ariv often said back to back.

2
Erev Shabbat (Friday Night) Service
  • More relaxed, slower, with more music than
    regular weekday liturgy.
  • Often sung with traditional melodies.
  • Most synagogues have a cantor (hazan) who leads
    the singing, especially on Shabbat and holidays.
  • Orthodox synagogues do not have choirs or music.

3
Erev Shabbat Service
  • Kabbalat Shabbat (welcoming the Sabbath)?
  • Study session or readings (in some synagogues)?
  • Ma'ariv (evening service), modified for Sabbath

4
Kabbalat Shabbat (welcoming the Sabbath)?
  • Service developed 16th century selected and
    ordered by Rabbi Moses Cordero
  • Psalms 95-99 and 29
  • Lecha Dodi
  • Song welcoming the Sabbath queen written
  • 16th century by Rabbi Cordero's brother,
  • Solomon Halevi Alkabetz.
  • Psalms 92 and 93

5
Ma'ariv for Sabbath
  • Shema (Hear O Israel -- most important Jewish
    prayer refers to uniqueness of God)
  • Short passage from Exodus (in some synagogues)?
  • Amidah (silent standing prayer containing 18
    blessings center of Jewish liturgy, recited in
    all prayer services)
  • Short passage on candle lighting (in some
    synagogues)?
  • Kiddush (blessing on the wine)
  • Aleinu (prayer said at end of all services in
    praise of God)?
  • Mourners' kaddish (prayer for the dead)?
  • End with yigdal or adon olam (hymns songs in
    praise of God).

6
Saturday morning services
  • Torah reading
  • Haftarah (smaller reading from one of the
    prophets)?
  • Musaf (Additional Service) commemorates
    sacrifices in the temple

7
Havdalah (end of Sabbath)?
  • Blessing on wine
  • Blessing on spices
  • Blessing on braided candle
  • Blessing for God who distinguishes the sacred
    from the secular

8
Practices
  • Prayer can be done in any language one
    understands, though Orthodox services are
    generally in Hebrew.
  • Orthodox Jews often move their lips nearly
    inaudibly while praying.
  • Also sway back and forth (shockling)

9
  • Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, a great 20th
    century theologian, described the Sabbath as a
    cathedral in time -- a place in time, rather
    than a spatial location, where Jews carry out a
    sacred rest and focus on being in the world
    rather than acting on or transforming the world.

10
Useful terms
  • Kipah (Hebrew), Yarmulkeh (Yiddish) -- Skullcap
  • Siddur (Hebrew/Yiddish) -- Prayer book
  • Daven (Yiddish) -- pray Tfilot (Hebrew) --
    prayers
  • Hazan (Hebrew/Yiddish) Cantor
  • Minyan (Hebrew/Yiddish) quorum of 10 men
    required for certain prayers (in Egalitarian and
    liberal congregations, 10 men and/or women).

11
Shabbat Dinner
  • Blessings
  • Wine (kiddush)?
  • Washing of hands (netilat yadaim)?
  • Bread (hamotzi)?
  • Birkat Hamazon Grace after meals
  • Customary not to speak between washing hands and
    blessing and eating bread
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