David Einhorn
David Einhorn (November 10, 1809 – November 2, 1879) was a German-Jewish rabbi and leader of Reform Judaism in the United States. Einhorn was chosen in 1855 as the first rabbi of the Har Sinai Congregation in Baltimore, the oldest congregation in the United States that has been affiliated with the Reform movement since its inception. While there, he compiled a siddur in German and Hebrew, one of the early Reform Jewish prayerbooks in the United States. (The siddur, later translated to English, became one of the progenitors of the Reform Movement's Union Prayer Book.) In 1861, Einhorn's life was threatened by a mob angered by his strong abolitionist anti-slavery views, and was forced to flee to Philadelphia. There he became rabbi of Reform Congregation Keneseth Israel. He moved to New York City in 1866, where he became rabbi of Congregation Adath Israel. (from his wikipedia article)
Weekday Amidah | Arvit l'Shabbat | Morning Baqashot | Bedtime Shema | Entering Sacred Spaces | Maariv Aravim | Comprehensive (Kol Bo) Siddurim | Se'udat Leil Shabbat | Musaf l'Shabbat | Shabbat Siddurim | 🇺🇸 United States of America | War
אדון עולם Adon Olam | Slaveholders' Rebellion (1861-1865) | American Reform Movement | עמידה amidah | Angels | blessings prior to the shema | centos | Classical Reform | cosmological | אלהי נצור Elohai Netsor | English vernacular prayer | German Jewry | German Reform Movement | German-speaking Jewry | German translation | German vernacular prayer | חתימות ḥatimot (concluding prayers) | מעריב ערבים ma'ariv aravim | מה טבו mah tovu | Needing Decompilation | Needing Transcription | North America | paraliturgical elohai netsor | paraliturgical shalom aleikhem | petiḥah | Openers | פיוטים piyyutim | Prayers for Praying | Private Amidah | שלום עליכם shalom aleikhem | 11th century C.E. | 19th century C.E. | 21st century C.E. | 49th century A.M. | 57th century A.M. | 58th century A.M.
Prayer for the United States of America on Thanksgiving Day, by Rabbi David Einhorn (26 November 1863)
Contributed on: 05 Aug 2022 by David Einhorn | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) | ❧
This prayer by Rabbi David Einhorn was offered at the conclusion of his “Sermon delivered on Thanksgiving Day, November 26th, 1863,” (page 13). . . .