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[HANASHIR:16428] Re: Shabbat services



Hi all!

Thank you all so much for your generous responses to my questions. As a
lay leader with a fair bit of ojt, but not much in the way of academic
preparation, I often find myself at a loss when I'm asked for things
"rabbinic".

I appreciate your welcome into the HavaNashira community and your
willingness to share. Wish I'd had you all a few years back. Oh well,
I've found you now, and that's the important part.

B'shalom (and baby, it's COLD up here!)

Deb

Deborah Ginsburg
Congregation Beth Sholom
Anchorage, AK
andmg (at) uaa(dot)alaska(dot)edu


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-hanashir (at) shamash(dot)org [mailto:owner-hanashir (at) 
shamash(dot)org] On
Behalf Of Adrian Durlester
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 8:12 PM
To: hanashir (at) shamash(dot)org
Subject: [HANASHIR:16408] Re: Shabbat services

Sue:

Thank you for bringing this up. I have on several occasions, including
one
fairly recent message on this list, made the point that what has
sloppily
come to be called "the" Mi Shebeirach commonly in (predominantly) Reform
settings in the U.S. is really just the Mi Shebeirach for refuah
shleima.
Because Debbie Friedman wrote such a lovely song for it and simply
titled it
Mi Shebeirach, and because, as you suggest, the custom of a mi
shebeirach
being offered for all who have an aliyah during the Torah service has
largely been lost or forgotten at many (but not all) Reform synagogues,
the
words Mi Shebeirach have largely come to denote only the refuah shleima
form.

I will note that many Reform leaders and websites do try and make it a
point
to use the phrase "Mi Shebeirach for healing" or "for the sick" or
something
of that nature. Sadly, a search of the web will find just as many sites
that
simply call "the Mi Shebeirach" the "Jewish prayer for healing." And
I'll
wager that a random survey of American Reform Jews would indicate that
most
simply think "the" Mi Shebeirach" is "the" Jewish prayer for healing. In
fact, I wonder how many even realize it's a prayer at all, rather than
simply a pretty song. [I wish to cast no slur or aspersion on Debbie's
setting of the Mi Shebeirach for healing. It is a remarkable musical and
spiritual phenomenon that I know comes from a place deep inside its
composer, and has taken its well-deserved place in contemporary worship
minhag. I suspect she herself might be among the first to remind us that
the
Mi Shebeirach prayer has more than one form and more than one usage.]

Mi Shebeirach is a utility prayer, and can be celebratory as well as for
healing. Even in celebratory settings, it is generally invoked for the
purpose of praying for well-being--as, for example, after one has given
birth, or prior to a circumcision, and for those who read the Torah or
have
a Torah aliyah. There are even some forms of the Mi Shebeirach that do
not
begin with the words "Mi Shebeirach."

Torah teaches us to be careful with our words. I reiterate my call on
this
list to educate ourselves and our congregations that the Mi Shebeirach
is
one of Judaism's utility prayers, with a number of differing versions
for
differing situations/occasions, with the "refuah shleima" version being
just
one of them. If we could all just start saying and writing things like
"A Mi
shebeirach for healing"  rather than "The Mi Shebeirach" or "Debbie
Friedman's (or Lisa Levine's) setting of the Mi Shebeirach prayer for
healing" perhaps we can stem the tide.

B'vracha,

Adrian

Adrian A. Durlester, MTS
E-mail: adrian (at) durlester(dot)com  www.durlester.com
Director of Education & Congregational Life, Bethesda Jewish
Congregation,
Bethesda, MD
www.bethesdajewish.com
Co-Director, Hazamir/JTAI Choir of Greater DC
Past Conf Chair, CAJE 27, August 4-8, 2002, Trinity University, San
Antonio,
TX
List Owner, hanashir (at) shamash(dot)org; Jewish Songleaders/Performers List
www.ehavanashira.org
Co-Owner, l-torah (at) shamash(dot)org; Liberal Torah Discussion List


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-hanashir (at) shamash(dot)org [mailto:owner-hanashir (at) 
shamash(dot)org] On
Behalf Of Sue Esterman
Sent: Monday, January 05, 2004 10:02 PM
To: hanashir (at) shamash(dot)org
Subject: [HANASHIR:16406] Re: Shabbat services


This discussion started me thinking about the differences! in NZ, it is
the
custom to give a (not The) mishabeirach for every aliyah to the Torah. I
gather from this discussion that the term is often applied in the US to
the
blessing for a refuah shlemah.  That being sorted, [snip]


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------------------------ hanashir (at) shamash(dot)org -----------------------+
Hosted by Shamash: The Jewish Network, http://shamash.org  
a service of Hebrew College, which offers online courses and an
online MA in Jewish Studies, http://hebrewcollege.edu/online/

To unsubscribe email listproc (at) shamash(dot)org and have your message read:
unsubscribe hanashir
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