Naming God
Avinu Malkeinu-Our Father, Our King
Herausgeber: Hoffman, Rabbi Lawrence A.
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Naming God
Avinu Malkeinu-Our Father, Our King
Herausgeber: Hoffman, Rabbi Lawrence A.
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An in-depth exploration of the complexities-and perhaps audacity-of naming the unnameable. Almost forty contributors from all Jewish denominations and from around the world wrestle with Avinu Malkeinu and the linguistic and spiritual conundrum it presents, asking, "How do we name God altogether, without recourse to imagery that defies belief?"
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An in-depth exploration of the complexities-and perhaps audacity-of naming the unnameable. Almost forty contributors from all Jewish denominations and from around the world wrestle with Avinu Malkeinu and the linguistic and spiritual conundrum it presents, asking, "How do we name God altogether, without recourse to imagery that defies belief?"
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Prayers of Awe Nr.6
- Verlag: Jewish Lights
- Seitenzahl: 326
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Juli 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 531g
- ISBN-13: 9781683362173
- ISBN-10: 1683362179
- Artikelnr.: 45377717
- Prayers of Awe Nr.6
- Verlag: Jewish Lights
- Seitenzahl: 326
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Juli 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 531g
- ISBN-13: 9781683362173
- ISBN-10: 1683362179
- Artikelnr.: 45377717
Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD, has served for more than three decades as professor of liturgy at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in New York. He is a world-renowned liturgist and holder of the Stephen and Barbara Friedman Chair in Liturgy, Worship and Ritual. His work combines research in Jewish ritual, worship and spirituality with a passion for the spiritual renewal of contemporary Judaism.His many books, written and edited, include seven volumes in the Prayers of Awe series: Who by Fire, Who by Water-Un'taneh Tokef; All These Vows-Kol Nidre; We Have Sinned: Sin and Confession in Judaism-Ashamnu and Al Chet; May God Remember: Memory and Memorializing in Judaism-Yizkor; All the World: Universalism, Particularism and the High Holy Days; Naming God: Avinu Malkeinu-Our Father, Our King; and Encountering God: El Rachum V'chanun-God Merciful and Gracious. Hoffman also edited the ten-volume series My People's Prayer Book: Traditional Prayers, Modern Commentaries, winner of the National Jewish Book Award; and coedited My People's Passover Haggadah: Traditional Texts, Modern Commentaries, a finalist for the National Jewish Book Award (all Jewish Lights).Rabbi Hoffman cofounded and developed Synagogue 2/3000, a transdenominational project to envision and implement the ideal synagogue of the spirit for the twenty-first century. In that capacity, he wrote Rethinking Synagogues: A New Vocabulary for Congregational Life (Jewish Lights).
Introduction: Why This Book: And Why It Is the Way It Is Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD Part I: Two Overviews The History, Meaning, and Varieties of Avinu Malkeinu Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD "Our Father and King": The Many Ways That Liturgy Means Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD Part II: The Liturgy Editor's Introduction to Avinu Malkeinu Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD Translator's Introduction to Avinu Malkeinu Dr. Joel M. Hoffman Avinu Malkeinu: A New and Annotated Translation Dr. Joel M. Hoffman Translator's Introduction to Ki Hinei Kachomer Dr. Joel M. Hoffman Ki Hinei Kachomer: A New and Annotated Translation Dr. Joel M. Hoffman Part III: Avinu Malkeinu: The Music The Music of Avinu Malkeinu Gordon Dale, MA Whös Your Daddy? Chazzan Danny Maseng Part IV: Precursors, Foundations, and Parallels Biblical Precursors: Father, King, Potter Dr. Marc Zvi Brettler Father or King: A View from the Psalms Rabbi Jonathan Magonet, PhD Why "Our Father"? Dr. Annette M. Boeckler Prayer and Character: The Story behind Avinu Malkeinu Rabbi Elie Kaunfer, DHL Divine Epithets and Human Ambivalence Rabbi Reuven Kimelman, PhD Our Father, Our King: Old and New Parables Dr. Wendy Zierler Empowerment, Not Police: What Are We to Do with Problematic Liturgical Passages? Rabbi Dalia Marx, PhD Why We Say Things We Don
t Believe Rabbi Karyn D. Kedar Part V: How Prayer Book Editors Deal with Naming God A British Father and a British King? Rabbi Paul Freedman Avinu Malkeinu and the New Reform Machzor (Mishkan HaNefesh) Rabbi Edwin Goldberg, DHL What Is God
s Name? Rabbi David A. Teutsch, PhD Changing God
s Names: The Liturgy of Liberal Judaism in Great Britain Rabbi Andrew Goldstein, PhD, and Rabbi Charles H. Middleburgh, PhD Part VI: Masculine Imagery; Feminist Critique So Near and Oh So Far Rabbi Laura Geller Our Rock, Our Hard Place Catherine Madsen What
s in a Word? Or, How We Read and Hear Our Prayers Ruth Messinger Rescuing the Father-God from Delray Beach Rabbi Jeffrey K. Salkin, DMin I Do Not Know Your Name Rabbi Sandy Eisenberg Sasso, DMin Part VII: What
s in a Name? Abracadabra: The Magic of Naming Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson, DHL My Name Is Vulnerability Rabbi Tony Bayfield, CBE, DD We Are But Dust Dr. Erica Brown Two Pockets Rabbi Joshua M. Davidson Re-imaging God Rabbi Lawrence A. Englander, CM, DHL, DD "Would You Still Love Me If...?" Rabbi Shoshana Boyd Gelfand Celebrating a Conflicted Relationship with God Rabbi Asher Lopatin God the Cashier: A Parable of the Dubner Maggid
s Rabbi Jack Riemer Piety and Protest Rabbi Dennis C. Sasso, DMin The Most Difficult Name for God,
You
Or, How Is Prayer Possible? Rabbi Jonathan P. Slater, DMin Machzor and Malkhut: The Challenge of Naming a King Rabbi David Stern
We Guess; We Clothe Thee, Unseen King
Rabbi Margaret Moers Wenig, DD From Direct Experience to a World of Words: The God We Struggle to Know Rabbi Daniel G. Zemel Appendix A: Avinu Malkeinu through Time Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD Ashkenazi-Polish Rite (Minhag Polin) Our First Extant Prayer Book, Babylonia, circa 860 CE (Seder Rav Amram) France, Eleventh to Twelfth Centuries (Machzor Vitry) Italy, Thirteenth to Sixteenth Centuries (Machzor Roma) Ashkenazi-German Rite (Minhag Rinus) England, Turn of the Twentieth Century (Minhag Sepharad) Yemenite Tikhlal (the Baladi Rite) Chabad (Minhag Lubavitch, Minhag Ari as adapted by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of Chabad) Appendix B: Alternatives to Avinu Malkeinu Rabbi Dalia Marx, PhD From Israel: Kavanat Halev, Reform, 1989 From the UK: Forms of Prayer (Draft Edition), Reform, 2014 From North America: Mahzor Lev Shalem, Conservative, 2010 From North America: Mishkan HaNefesh, Reform, 2015 From North America: Kehilla Community Machzor, Renewal, 2014 Notes Glossary
t Believe Rabbi Karyn D. Kedar Part V: How Prayer Book Editors Deal with Naming God A British Father and a British King? Rabbi Paul Freedman Avinu Malkeinu and the New Reform Machzor (Mishkan HaNefesh) Rabbi Edwin Goldberg, DHL What Is God
s Name? Rabbi David A. Teutsch, PhD Changing God
s Names: The Liturgy of Liberal Judaism in Great Britain Rabbi Andrew Goldstein, PhD, and Rabbi Charles H. Middleburgh, PhD Part VI: Masculine Imagery; Feminist Critique So Near and Oh So Far Rabbi Laura Geller Our Rock, Our Hard Place Catherine Madsen What
s in a Word? Or, How We Read and Hear Our Prayers Ruth Messinger Rescuing the Father-God from Delray Beach Rabbi Jeffrey K. Salkin, DMin I Do Not Know Your Name Rabbi Sandy Eisenberg Sasso, DMin Part VII: What
s in a Name? Abracadabra: The Magic of Naming Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson, DHL My Name Is Vulnerability Rabbi Tony Bayfield, CBE, DD We Are But Dust Dr. Erica Brown Two Pockets Rabbi Joshua M. Davidson Re-imaging God Rabbi Lawrence A. Englander, CM, DHL, DD "Would You Still Love Me If...?" Rabbi Shoshana Boyd Gelfand Celebrating a Conflicted Relationship with God Rabbi Asher Lopatin God the Cashier: A Parable of the Dubner Maggid
s Rabbi Jack Riemer Piety and Protest Rabbi Dennis C. Sasso, DMin The Most Difficult Name for God,
You
Or, How Is Prayer Possible? Rabbi Jonathan P. Slater, DMin Machzor and Malkhut: The Challenge of Naming a King Rabbi David Stern
We Guess; We Clothe Thee, Unseen King
Rabbi Margaret Moers Wenig, DD From Direct Experience to a World of Words: The God We Struggle to Know Rabbi Daniel G. Zemel Appendix A: Avinu Malkeinu through Time Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD Ashkenazi-Polish Rite (Minhag Polin) Our First Extant Prayer Book, Babylonia, circa 860 CE (Seder Rav Amram) France, Eleventh to Twelfth Centuries (Machzor Vitry) Italy, Thirteenth to Sixteenth Centuries (Machzor Roma) Ashkenazi-German Rite (Minhag Rinus) England, Turn of the Twentieth Century (Minhag Sepharad) Yemenite Tikhlal (the Baladi Rite) Chabad (Minhag Lubavitch, Minhag Ari as adapted by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of Chabad) Appendix B: Alternatives to Avinu Malkeinu Rabbi Dalia Marx, PhD From Israel: Kavanat Halev, Reform, 1989 From the UK: Forms of Prayer (Draft Edition), Reform, 2014 From North America: Mahzor Lev Shalem, Conservative, 2010 From North America: Mishkan HaNefesh, Reform, 2015 From North America: Kehilla Community Machzor, Renewal, 2014 Notes Glossary
Introduction: Why This Book: And Why It Is the Way It Is Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD Part I: Two Overviews The History, Meaning, and Varieties of Avinu Malkeinu Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD "Our Father and King": The Many Ways That Liturgy Means Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD Part II: The Liturgy Editor's Introduction to Avinu Malkeinu Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD Translator's Introduction to Avinu Malkeinu Dr. Joel M. Hoffman Avinu Malkeinu: A New and Annotated Translation Dr. Joel M. Hoffman Translator's Introduction to Ki Hinei Kachomer Dr. Joel M. Hoffman Ki Hinei Kachomer: A New and Annotated Translation Dr. Joel M. Hoffman Part III: Avinu Malkeinu: The Music The Music of Avinu Malkeinu Gordon Dale, MA Whös Your Daddy? Chazzan Danny Maseng Part IV: Precursors, Foundations, and Parallels Biblical Precursors: Father, King, Potter Dr. Marc Zvi Brettler Father or King: A View from the Psalms Rabbi Jonathan Magonet, PhD Why "Our Father"? Dr. Annette M. Boeckler Prayer and Character: The Story behind Avinu Malkeinu Rabbi Elie Kaunfer, DHL Divine Epithets and Human Ambivalence Rabbi Reuven Kimelman, PhD Our Father, Our King: Old and New Parables Dr. Wendy Zierler Empowerment, Not Police: What Are We to Do with Problematic Liturgical Passages? Rabbi Dalia Marx, PhD Why We Say Things We Don
t Believe Rabbi Karyn D. Kedar Part V: How Prayer Book Editors Deal with Naming God A British Father and a British King? Rabbi Paul Freedman Avinu Malkeinu and the New Reform Machzor (Mishkan HaNefesh) Rabbi Edwin Goldberg, DHL What Is God
s Name? Rabbi David A. Teutsch, PhD Changing God
s Names: The Liturgy of Liberal Judaism in Great Britain Rabbi Andrew Goldstein, PhD, and Rabbi Charles H. Middleburgh, PhD Part VI: Masculine Imagery; Feminist Critique So Near and Oh So Far Rabbi Laura Geller Our Rock, Our Hard Place Catherine Madsen What
s in a Word? Or, How We Read and Hear Our Prayers Ruth Messinger Rescuing the Father-God from Delray Beach Rabbi Jeffrey K. Salkin, DMin I Do Not Know Your Name Rabbi Sandy Eisenberg Sasso, DMin Part VII: What
s in a Name? Abracadabra: The Magic of Naming Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson, DHL My Name Is Vulnerability Rabbi Tony Bayfield, CBE, DD We Are But Dust Dr. Erica Brown Two Pockets Rabbi Joshua M. Davidson Re-imaging God Rabbi Lawrence A. Englander, CM, DHL, DD "Would You Still Love Me If...?" Rabbi Shoshana Boyd Gelfand Celebrating a Conflicted Relationship with God Rabbi Asher Lopatin God the Cashier: A Parable of the Dubner Maggid
s Rabbi Jack Riemer Piety and Protest Rabbi Dennis C. Sasso, DMin The Most Difficult Name for God,
You
Or, How Is Prayer Possible? Rabbi Jonathan P. Slater, DMin Machzor and Malkhut: The Challenge of Naming a King Rabbi David Stern
We Guess; We Clothe Thee, Unseen King
Rabbi Margaret Moers Wenig, DD From Direct Experience to a World of Words: The God We Struggle to Know Rabbi Daniel G. Zemel Appendix A: Avinu Malkeinu through Time Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD Ashkenazi-Polish Rite (Minhag Polin) Our First Extant Prayer Book, Babylonia, circa 860 CE (Seder Rav Amram) France, Eleventh to Twelfth Centuries (Machzor Vitry) Italy, Thirteenth to Sixteenth Centuries (Machzor Roma) Ashkenazi-German Rite (Minhag Rinus) England, Turn of the Twentieth Century (Minhag Sepharad) Yemenite Tikhlal (the Baladi Rite) Chabad (Minhag Lubavitch, Minhag Ari as adapted by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of Chabad) Appendix B: Alternatives to Avinu Malkeinu Rabbi Dalia Marx, PhD From Israel: Kavanat Halev, Reform, 1989 From the UK: Forms of Prayer (Draft Edition), Reform, 2014 From North America: Mahzor Lev Shalem, Conservative, 2010 From North America: Mishkan HaNefesh, Reform, 2015 From North America: Kehilla Community Machzor, Renewal, 2014 Notes Glossary
t Believe Rabbi Karyn D. Kedar Part V: How Prayer Book Editors Deal with Naming God A British Father and a British King? Rabbi Paul Freedman Avinu Malkeinu and the New Reform Machzor (Mishkan HaNefesh) Rabbi Edwin Goldberg, DHL What Is God
s Name? Rabbi David A. Teutsch, PhD Changing God
s Names: The Liturgy of Liberal Judaism in Great Britain Rabbi Andrew Goldstein, PhD, and Rabbi Charles H. Middleburgh, PhD Part VI: Masculine Imagery; Feminist Critique So Near and Oh So Far Rabbi Laura Geller Our Rock, Our Hard Place Catherine Madsen What
s in a Word? Or, How We Read and Hear Our Prayers Ruth Messinger Rescuing the Father-God from Delray Beach Rabbi Jeffrey K. Salkin, DMin I Do Not Know Your Name Rabbi Sandy Eisenberg Sasso, DMin Part VII: What
s in a Name? Abracadabra: The Magic of Naming Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson, DHL My Name Is Vulnerability Rabbi Tony Bayfield, CBE, DD We Are But Dust Dr. Erica Brown Two Pockets Rabbi Joshua M. Davidson Re-imaging God Rabbi Lawrence A. Englander, CM, DHL, DD "Would You Still Love Me If...?" Rabbi Shoshana Boyd Gelfand Celebrating a Conflicted Relationship with God Rabbi Asher Lopatin God the Cashier: A Parable of the Dubner Maggid
s Rabbi Jack Riemer Piety and Protest Rabbi Dennis C. Sasso, DMin The Most Difficult Name for God,
You
Or, How Is Prayer Possible? Rabbi Jonathan P. Slater, DMin Machzor and Malkhut: The Challenge of Naming a King Rabbi David Stern
We Guess; We Clothe Thee, Unseen King
Rabbi Margaret Moers Wenig, DD From Direct Experience to a World of Words: The God We Struggle to Know Rabbi Daniel G. Zemel Appendix A: Avinu Malkeinu through Time Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD Ashkenazi-Polish Rite (Minhag Polin) Our First Extant Prayer Book, Babylonia, circa 860 CE (Seder Rav Amram) France, Eleventh to Twelfth Centuries (Machzor Vitry) Italy, Thirteenth to Sixteenth Centuries (Machzor Roma) Ashkenazi-German Rite (Minhag Rinus) England, Turn of the Twentieth Century (Minhag Sepharad) Yemenite Tikhlal (the Baladi Rite) Chabad (Minhag Lubavitch, Minhag Ari as adapted by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of Chabad) Appendix B: Alternatives to Avinu Malkeinu Rabbi Dalia Marx, PhD From Israel: Kavanat Halev, Reform, 1989 From the UK: Forms of Prayer (Draft Edition), Reform, 2014 From North America: Mahzor Lev Shalem, Conservative, 2010 From North America: Mishkan HaNefesh, Reform, 2015 From North America: Kehilla Community Machzor, Renewal, 2014 Notes Glossary