Source Link: https://opensiddur.org/?p=34737
open_content_license: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA) 4.0 International copyleft license date_src_start: 1951-00-00 date_src_end: 1951-00-00 languages_meta: [{"name":"English","code":"eng","standard":"ISO 639-3"}] scripts_meta: [{"name":"Latin","code":"Latn","standard":"ISO 15924"}]Date: 2020-12-22
Last Updated: 2025-04-11
Categories: 🌐 Gregorian New Year's Day (January 1st)
Tags: 20th century C.E., 58th century A.M., American Jewry of the United States, civic prayers, ecumenical prayers, English vernacular prayer
Excerpt: 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. . . .
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O God,
we have assembled here at the beginning of the new year, to rededicate our lives to the sacred ideals of America. We gratefully acknowledge all that the past year has brought to us and our fellow countrymen of life and health, of love and joy, of beauty and truth, of fortitude and courage. Whatever of good we have known, we recognize as coming from you. Therefore are we emboldened, Our Guardian, to pray for further gifts of your grace. |
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We cannot be contented with ourselves and our achievements,
or with the world in which we live— a world in which injustice, cruelty, and deceit hold sway. Disillusioned with ourselves and with our failure to rise to the height of our national ideals in the service of humanity, we entreat you to help us fulfill the promise of America. |
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Give us the courage to be honest:
to be true to ourselves and to deal sincerely and forthrightly with our neighbors. |
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Give us the forbearance
that lets live and the love that helps live. |
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Give us the fortitude
to endure the blows of misfortune with serenity. |
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And when fortune smiles upon us,
give us the humility to accept prosperity as your gift, to be used in accordance with your will. |
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Help us to build on these shores
a free nation of free people. Open our hearts to the truth that every human soul has a worth of its own and must be free to develop that worth to the utmost. Grant that our nation may further the welfare of all its citizens and be of service to them in their pursuit of happiness. Bind all its citizens to the nation and to one another by ties of loyalty. May they ever be willing to share in the nation’s enterprise, ever ready to make sacrifices for the good of all. We know that there is no liberty but one: the right, which is also a duty, of making oneself and others free through absolute allegiance to the final goal of humanity. Keep us aware of all that we owe to our country, that its expectations of us may curb our impulses to do evil and give free rein to our will to do good, for our own true happiness and that of our nation. Amen. |
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. It is unclear from this publication whether the prayer was written by Mordecai Kaplan, J. Paul Williams, or Eugene Kohn separately or together in collaboration. I have replaced archaisms in this prayer (thee, thy, thou, etc.) and replaced “Father” with “Guardian” in addition to other gender-neutral changed. –Aharon Varady
Contributor: Aharon N. Varady (transcription)
Co-authors:
Featured Image:
Title: ‘January’_by_Grant_Wood,_1940-41,_Cleveland_Museum_of_Art
Caption: January (Grant Wood 1940-41)