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open_content_license: Public Domain (17 U.S. Code §105 - Subject matter of copyright: United States Government works) date_src_start: 2005-05-26 date_src_end: 2005-05-26 languages_meta: [{"name":"English","code":"eng","standard":"ISO 639-3"}] scripts_meta: [{"name":"Latin","code":"Latn","standard":"ISO 15924"}]Date: 2019-11-08
Last Updated: 2025-04-11
Categories: 🇺🇸 United States of America, Opening Prayers for Legislative Bodies
Tags: 109th Congress, 21st century C.E., 58th century A.M., English vernacular prayer, Prayers of Guest Chaplains, U.S. Senate, תחינות teḥinot
Excerpt: The Opening Prayer given in the U.S. Senate on 26 May 2005. . . .
Contribute a translation | Source (English) |
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Eternal One,
Rock of all ages, help us to hear the voices of our forebears that still linger in the silent places of this historic Chamber of debate and decision. |
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Let us draw devotional inspiration
this morning from the life of Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise, founder of the Hebrew Union College, who led this Senate in prayer 135 years ago to this very week. May one brief moment from the life of this famed American clergyman renew in us a commitment to the core of righteous living. |
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For we have been taught that once,
when this rabbi took ill amidst a class and was compelled to descend from his teaching platform, a young, eager student jumped up, grabbed his arm, and said: “May I help you down, Doctor?” |
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In response to this question,
the rabbi uttered words that remind us anew of what is good and what God does require of us all: “Never help a person down,” the rabbi told his student. “Try always to help people up.” |
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In this year,
marking 350 years of Jewish life in America, we offer up our prayerful and reverential gratitude to the Source of Life for implanting within our hearts the vision of our noble Republic, ever striving to help people up. |
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O may all who labor in this House–
and in every house– be inspired anew by the prophet Micah’s exhortation, a charge that the father of this Nation deeply cherished and repeatedly cited: “Do justly, love mercy, and walk humbly with thy God.”[1] Micah 6:8 part. |
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Fervently we pray
that the vision we hallow will animate all of us to live “with malice toward none, with charity for all . . . [so we can] finish the work we are in.”[2] The Second Inaugural Address of Abraham Lincoln, 4 March 1865 |
אָמֵן׃
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Amen.
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109th Congress, 1st Session. Congressional Record, Issue: Vol. 151, No. 72 — Daily Edition (May 26, 2005)
Notes
1 | Micah 6:8 part. |
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2 | The Second Inaugural Address of Abraham Lincoln, 4 March 1865 |
Contributor: the Congressional Record of the United States of America
Co-authors:
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