Source Link: https://opensiddur.org/?p=29581
open_content_license: Creative Commons Zero (CC 0) Universal license a Public Domain dedicationDate: 2020-01-26
Last Updated: 2020-11-24
Categories: the Dry Season (Spring & Summer), Well-being, health, and caregiving
Tags: 20th century C.E., 58th century A.M., depression, English vernacular prayer, liberation from mitsrayim, Y'mei Bein haMitsrim
Excerpt: A prayer anticipating the spring as a metaphor for liberation, mental wellness, and spiritual rebirth. . . .
Contribute a translation | Source (English) |
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O God of the fragrant flower
and the flickering leaf: We call upon Thy Name, at this renascent season, when Thy life-giving spirit quickens the silent earth, and our cold, slumbering world is born anew in the golden glory of jonquils and forsythia. |
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Help us,
the humble denizens of this earth, O Lord, to find rebirth of hope and meaning in our lives, at this season, to see the world with new-born eyes, to believe deeply that life and rapture can begin again for those whose faith matches their need. |
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For
is not this, O Father, Thy first commandment to us, the Children of Israel: “I am the Lord, Thy God, Who brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage?”[1] cf. Exodus 20:2. |
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If our fathers,
sunken in the mire of Egyptian slavery for four hundred years could find in Thee, the strength and the inspiration to cast off the maiming manacles that slashed their wrists and ankles and surge forth to freedom on that memorable spring night thirty two hundred years ago, then, surely, no creature is so lowly, no lot so hopeless, that we cannot, with Thy help, find in it new blessing, and new cause for adoration. |
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Open our eyes,
O Lord, to Thy wondrous works, that we may discern Thee in our lives each day, and behold the world, each morning, as fresh and burgeoning with hope as it was to Noaḥ and his clan after weeks of endless storm, when the sun smiled over the earth again in a golden dawn. |
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Praised be Thou,
O Lord, who bringest forth the bread of life from the dust of the languid earth. Amen. |
Rabbi Abraham Soltes’s “[Prayer for] Rebirth” is an undated prayer published in his collection of prayers, תפלה Invocation: A Sheaf Of Prayers (Bloch 1959). The earliest prayer in that collection dates to 1950 and we are confident this prayer can be dated between that year and the date of publication.
Notes
1 | cf. Exodus 20:2. |
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Contributor: Aharon N. Varady (editing/transcription)
Co-authors:
Featured Image:
Title: daffodil-flower-spring-nature
Caption: Daffodil (credit: n/a, license: CC0)