Exact matches only
//  Main  //  Menu

 
⤷ You are here:   Contributors (A→Z)  🪜   Mordecai Kaplan
Avatar photo

Mordecai Kaplan

Mordecai Menahem Kaplan (June 11, 1881 – November 8, 1983), was a rabbi, essayist and Jewish educator and the co-founder of Reconstructionist Judaism along with his son-in-law Ira Eisenstein.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mordecai_Kaplan
Filter resources by Category
Filter resources by Tag

Abraham Joshua Heschel | ageing | American Jewry of the United States | Amits Koaḥ | anti-fascist | anti-racist | anti-war | apotropaic prayers of protection | ayin hara | Barkhi Nafshi | birthday prayers | Burnt Books | capitalism | civic prayers | civil declarations and charters | Classical Antiquity | communal shame | corruption | Decalogue | declarations | Decoration Day | deuterocanonical works | difference disagreement and deviance | Early Reconstructionist | Ecclesiasticus | ecumenical prayers | אל מלא רחמים El Malé Raḥamim | אמת ואמונה Emet v'Emunah | English vernacular prayer | false piety | Hapoel Hatsair | חסידות Ḥasidut | חלול ה׳ Ḥillul Hashem | hymns of creation | improper use of the crown | inclusion and exclusion | interdependence | Jews of Alexandria | labor | labor exploitation | Labor Zionism | lashon hara | loneliness | lonely man of faith | Maḥzor supplements | מי שברך mi sheberakh | מוסר mussar | Nature | Needing Decompilation | Needing Transcription | North America | North American Jewry | Openers | planting trees | pluralism | Prayers adapted from teachings | Prayers as poems | Prayers for Praying | Problematic prayers | prophetic revelation | Ralph Waldo Emerson | reconstructing Judaism | Nusḥaot l'Yahadut Mitkhadeshet | Reconstructionist Jewry | religious hypocrisy | סליחות səliḥot | Siddurim for Shabbat | social anxiety | תשובה teshuvah | טבע Teva | the invisible hand | tolerance and intolerance | Transcendentalism | United States | United States Declaration of Independence | work | work as worship | world government | worship as work | יצר הרע yetser hara | Yom Ha'Avodah | neoḥasidic idealization | Psalms 4 | Psalms 5 | Psalms 104 | 2nd century B.C.E. | 20th century C.E. | 36th century A.M. | 57th century A.M. | 58th century A.M.

Filter resources by Collaborator Name
Filter resources by Language
Filter resources by Date Range

Enter a start year and an end year. BCE years are preceded by a hyphen (e.g., -1000).

Resources filtered by CATEGORY: “🌐 Gregorian New Year's Day (January 1st)” (clear filter)

Sorted Chronologically (new to old). Sort oldest first?

Opening Prayer on the Significance of New Year’s Day, by Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan, J. Paul Williams, and Eugene Kohn (1951)

Contributed by Eugene Kohn | John Paul Williams | Mordecai Kaplan | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) |

This opening prayer for New Year’s Day, “The Significance of the Day,” was first published in The Faith of America: Readings, Songs, and Prayers for the Celebration of American Holidays (Jewish Reconstructionist Foundation 1951), p. 3-4 — as preface to a number of readings selected by Mordecai Kaplan, Eugene Kohn, and J. Paul Williams for the day. . . .


Closing Prayer for New Year’s Day, adapted by Mordecai Kaplan & Eugene Kohn from a prayer by Members of the Faculty of the Colgate Divinity School (1947)

Contributed by Eugene Kohn | John Paul Williams | Mordecai Kaplan | Members of the Faculty of Colgate-Rochester Divinity School | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) |

This “Closing Prayer” for New Year’s Day was adapted by Mordecai Kaplan and Eugene Kohn from a prayer first published by unnamed “Members of the Faculty” of the Colgate-Rochester Divinity School (The Colgate-Rochester Divinity School Bulletin, “Prayers for the New Year,” vol. 19 no. 2 (1947), pp. 65-71). Kaplan & Kohn’s adapted prayer essentially contains excerpts from the prayer of the Faculty (excluding any with explicit Christian content). The adapted prayer was published in The Faith of America: Readings, Songs, and Prayers for the Celebration of American Holidays (Jewish Reconstructionist Foundation 1951), p. 25-26. –Aharon Varady . . .