This is an archive of prayers written for Rosh Ḥodesh, the New Moon festival celebrating the moon’s renewal, commencing every month in the Jewish calendar. 🌑🌒🌓🌔🌕🌖🌗🌘🌑
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🖖︎ Prayers & Praxes —⟶ 🌔︎ Prayers for the Moon, Month, and Festival Calendar —⟶ Prayers for the Moon's Renewal —⟶ Rosh Ḥodesh 🡄 (Previous category) :: 📁 Shabbat Məvorkhim 📁 Rosh Ḥodesh Nisan (נִיסָן) :: (Next Category) 🡆 Rosh ḤodeshThis is an archive of prayers written for Rosh Ḥodesh, the New Moon festival celebrating the moon’s renewal, commencing every month in the Jewish calendar. 🌑🌒🌓🌔🌕🌖🌗🌘🌑 Click here to contribute a prayer you have written for Rosh Ḥodesh. Filter resources by Collaborator Name Grace Aguilar | Arnaud Aron | Marcus Heinrich Bresslau | Jonas Ennery | Mordecai Kaplan | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer | Moritz Mayer (translation) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) | the Mesorah (TaNaKh) | Yehoshua Heshil Miro | Abraham Regelson (translation) | Zalman Schachter-Shalomi (translation) | Fanny Schmiedl-Neuda | Unknown | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) | Wikisource Contributors (transcription) Filter resources by Tag Barkhi Nafshi | Bohemian Jewry | devotional interpretation | English Translation | English vernacular prayer | French Jewry | French vernacular prayer | Geonic prayers | German Jewry | German vernacular prayer | hymns of creation | interpretive translation | Jewish Women's Prayers | כוונות kavvanot | Masekhet Soferim | memento mori | Nature | new moon | North American Jewry | Nusaḥ Erets Yisrael | Paraliturgical Prayer for the New Month | paraliturgical teḥinot | Openers | Psalm of the Day | Psalms 104 | reconstructed text | שבת מבורכים shabbat mevorkhim | שיר של יום Shir Shel Yom | תחינות teḥinot | teḥinot in English | Teḥinot in German | testament to divine reality | trumpets | 8th century C.E. | 19th century C.E. | 20th century C.E. | 21st century C.E. | 46th century A.M. | 56th century A.M. | 57th century A.M. | 58th century A.M. Filter resources by Category Tehilim Book 4 (Psalms 90–106) | Rosh haShanah la-Melakhim | Rosh Ḥodesh Nisan (נִיסָן) | Rosh haShanah (l’Maaseh Bereshit) Filter resources by Language Filter resources by Date Range Looking for something else? For public readings selected for Rosh Ḥodesh, visit here. For prayers for the Ḳiddush Levanah, go here. For prayers for Shabbat Məvorkhim, the Shabbat before the New Moon, go here. For prayers composed for a specific month: PrayersReadings Resources filtered by LANGUAGE: “Hebrew”” (clear filter) Sorted Chronologically (old to new). Sort most recent first? Psalms 104, translated by Mordecai Kaplan and presented as “God as Creator and Renewer of Nature” can be found on p. 360-5 of his The Sabbath Prayer Book (New York: The Jewish Reconstructionist Foundation, 1945), the first prayer in a subsection of supplementary prayers called “GOD IN NATURE.” . . . Categories: Tags: Contributor(s): Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi, z”l, included his translation of “Barkhi Nafshi” (Psalms 104) for Rosh Ḥodesh in his Siddur Tehillat Hashem Yidaber Pi (2009). To the best of my ability, I have set his translation side-by-side with the verses comprising the Psalm. –Aharon N. Varady . . . An English translation of Psalm 104 set side-by-side with the Masoretic text. . . . Categories: Tags: Contributor(s): This is a litanic Ḳiddush for a Rosh Ḥodesh meal, constructed based on the Ḳiddush for Rosh Ḥodesh in Jerusalem as described in Masekhet Soferim chapter 19:9, mostly following the GRA’s edition. Traditionally it would be done in the presence of twelve town elders and twelve scholars of ritual purity, but today we could adapt it to be recited at a festive meal for Rosh Ḥodesh in the presence of seven — the minyan count according to the traditional Western practice recorded elsewhere in Masekhet Soferim 10:7. . . . Categories: Tags: 46th century A.M., 8th century C.E., Geonic prayers, Masekhet Soferim, new moon, Nusaḥ Erets Yisrael, reconstructed text Contributor(s): “God the Life of Nature” by Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan was first published in his Sabbath Prayer Book (Jewish Reconstructionist Foundation 1945), p. 382-391, where it appears side-by-side with its translation into Hebrew by Abraham Regelson. . . . Categories: Tags: Contributor(s): A ritual for a public blast of the silver trumpet on the new moon, to be inserted before the recitation of the psalm for the new month. It is the hope of the editor that the fulfillment of this joyous mitzvah will once more be practiced throughout all Israel. Or, barring that, at least a few more places. . . . Categories: Tags: 21st century C.E., 58th century A.M., כוונות kavvanot, new moon, Psalm of the Day, שיר של יום Shir Shel Yom, trumpets Contributor(s):
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The Open Siddur Project is a volunteer-driven, non-profit, non-commercial, non-denominational, non-prescriptive, gratis & libre Open Access archive of contemplative praxes, liturgical readings, and Jewish prayer literature (historic and contemporary, familiar and obscure) composed in every era, region, and language Jews have ever prayed. Our goal is to provide a platform for sharing open-source resources, tools, and content for individuals and communities crafting their own prayerbook (siddur). Through this we hope to empower personal autonomy, preserve customs, and foster creativity in religious culture.
ויהי נעם אדני אלהינו עלינו ומעשה ידינו כוננה עלינו ומעשה ידינו כוננהו "May the pleasantness of אדֹני our elo’ah be upon us; may our handiwork be established for us — our handiwork, may it be established." –Psalms 90:17
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