
Aharon Varady is the founding director of the Open Siddur Project. A community planner (M.C.P, DAAP/University of Cincinnati.) and Jewish educator (M.A.J.Ed., the William Davidson School of Education), his work in open-source Judaism has been written about in the Yiddish Forverts, the Atlantic Magazine, Tablet, and Haaretz. If you find any egregious mistakes in his work, please let him know. Shgiyot mi yavin; Ministarot naqeni שְׁגִיאוֹת מִי־יָבִין; מִנִּסְתָּרוֹת נַקֵּנִי "Who can know all one's flaws? From hidden errors, correct me" (Psalms 19:13). If you'd like to directly support his work, please consider donating via his Patreon account. (Varady also transcribes and translates prayers, besides serving as the primary shammes of the Open Siddur Project.)
https://aharon.varady.net Filter resources by Category Addenda | Additional Preparatory Prayers | Advocacy | During the Aliyot | Art & Craft | Morning Baqashot | Blessings After Eating | Birkat Kohanim | Birkhot haTorah | Tehilim Book 2 (Psalms 42–72) | 🇺🇸 National Brotherhood Week | Cantillation Systems | Slavery & Captivity | Community News | Conflicts over Sovereignty and Dispossession | Counting Days | Development | Dreaming | Earth, our Collective Home & Life-Support System | Rosh Ḥodesh Elul (אֶלוּל) | Erev Shabbat | Essays | 🇺🇸 Flag Day (June 14) | Rosh haShanah la-Behemah | Rosh haShanah la-Melakhim | Ḥanukkah | Ḥanukkah Madrikhim | Hekhalot Writings | Solitude | 🇺🇸 Independence Day (July 4th) | 🇺🇸 Indigenous Peoples' Day (2nd Monday of October) | 🌐 International Women's Day (March 8th) | Learning, Study, and School | Meteorological and Astronomical Observations | Midrash Aggadah | Midrash Halakhah | 🇺🇸 Mother's Day (2nd Sunday of May) | Mourning | Mussar (Ethical Teachings) | Nirtsah | Pesaḥ | Ḳadesh | Self-Reflection | Repenting, Resetting, and Reconciliation | Roleplaying | Rosh haShanah (l’Maaseh Bereshit) | Rosh haShanah la-Behemah Readings | Rosh haShanah Readings | Rosh Ḥodesh Readings | Sefirat ha-Omer | Sefirat haOmer Readings | Se'udah haShlishit | Se'udat Leil Shabbat | Se'udat Yom Shabbat | Shabbat | Shabbat Readings | Shabbat Siddurim | Shavuot | the Shema | Shiviti | Source Texts | Sukkot | Tehilim (Psalms) | 🇺🇸 Thanksgiving Day (4th Thursday of November) | the Zohar | Theurgy | Liturgical traditions | Tu b'Av | Tu biShvat Readings | 🇬🇧 United Kingdom | 🇺🇸 United States of America | Well-being, health, and caregiving | Labor, Fulfillment, and Parnasah | 🇮🇱 Yom ha-Atsma'ut (5 Iyyar) | 🇮🇱 Yom ha-Ém (30 Shəvat) | Yom haḲeshet (27 Iyyar) Readings | Yom haMabul (Day of the Flood, 17 Iyyar, Lev ba-Omer) | Yom haQeshet (Day of the Rainbow, 27 Iyyar) Filter resources by Tag Filter resources by Collaborator Name Filter resources by Language Filter resources by Date Range Resources filtered by COLLABORATOR: “Rabbi Natan Slifkin” (clear filter)Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Rabbi Natan Slifkin | Aharon N. Varady | ❧ Talmudic and midrashic sources contain hymns of the creation usually based on homiletic expansions of metaphorical descriptions and personifications of the created world in the Bible. The explicitly homiletic background of some of the hymns in Perek Shira indicates a possible connection between the other hymns and Tannaitic and Amoraic homiletics, and suggests a hymnal index to well-known, but mostly unpreserved, homiletics. The origin of this work, the period of its composition and its significance may be deduced from literary parallels. A Tannaitic source in the tractate Hagiga of the Jerusalem (Hag. 2:1,77a—b) and Babylonian Talmud (Hag. 14b), in hymns of nature associated with apocalyptic visions and with the teaching of ma’aseh merkaba serves as a key to Perek Shira’s close spiritual relationship with this literature. Parallels to it can be found in apocalyptic literature, in mystic layers in Talmudic literature, in Jewish mystical prayers surviving in fourth-century Greek Christian composition, in Heikhalot literature, and in Merkaba mysticism. The affinity of Perek Shira with Heikhalot literature, which abounds in hymns, can be noted in the explicitly mystic introduction to the seven crowings of the cock — the only non-hymnal text in the collection — and the striking resemblance between the language of the additions and that of Shi’ur Koma and other examples of this literature. In Seder Rabba de-Bereshit, a Heikhalot tract, in conjunction with the description of ma’aseh bereshit, there is a clear parallel to Perek Shira’s praise of creation and to the structure of its hymns. The concept reflected in this source is based on a belief in the existence of angelic archetypes of created beings who mediate between God and His creation, and express their role through singing hymns. As the first interpretations of Perek Shira also bear witness to its mystic character and angelologic significance, it would appear to be a mystical chapter of Heikhalot literature, dating from late Tannaitic — early Amoraic period, or early Middle Ages. . . .
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