About this Siddur
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Here are some local features of the Siddur that you may find interesting:
- A discussion of the spiritual journey of Jewish prayer, with guides
to the stages of the journey interspersed throughout the morning service
- A discussion of meditations and their role in a prayer service
- A new closing prayer for the Amidah that focuses on how we can remind
ourselves of God’s presence on an everyday basis
- A translation of Psalm 23 that focuses on what it means to live in
God’s house
- Translations that attempt to recapture the “Wow!” experience
that the authors of sections of the prayerbook tried to capture in their
prayers
- Translation of the Kedushah in which we imagine ourselves as the
heavenly choir
- A new prayer in the Amidah in which we ask God for assistance in
our daily lives
- Special thanksgiving blessings that can be inserted into the Amidah
on various occasions
- Discussions of issues such as reward and punishment, chosenness,
God’s existence, God’s reliability and our responsibility
- Alternative versions of the opening lines of Aleinu and the closing
line of Ein Keiloheinu that can be sung to the traditional melodies
- Alternative versions of passages in the Siddur that deal with chosenness,
resurrection, and redemption, as well as the traditional texts of these
passages
- “Mi shebeirach” prayers for various occasions –
births, engagements, marriages, birthdays, bar/bat-mitzvahs, anniversaries,
and accomplishments, and a new “Mi shebeirach” prayer for
those in need of healing
- New prayers for shalom, for Israel, for our leaders, and for the
future
- Yizkor service that provides for mention of colleagues, teachers,
and friends as well as relatives, and for partners as well as spouses,
and that does not romanticize our relationships with those we have lost
- Special prayers said on festivals, including Hallel, T’fillat
Tal, hakkafot for Simchat Torah (and songs for parading with the Torah
scrolls), an egalitarian T’fillat Geshem, and a partial translation
of Akdamut that can be sung to the traditional melody
- An "Al Hanissim" prayer for Israel Independence Day and Hatikvah
- A guide for the service leader, including a sample traditional service,
and a guide for the meditation leader, including a sample meditation
service
- A glossary of terms used in the Siddur
- Indices of “perspectives”, “meditations”,
and “guideposts” that appear in the Siddur, and a complete
list of references to the Bible, Talmud, and other sources
If you already have a copy of this Siddur, you can download
a PDF version of the above list that includes page numbers for each
of these features.
The perspective and title of this siddur
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