מעמדות: 'שלב ראשון בתולדותיה של תפילת חז"ל' - כיצד?

Translated title of the contribution: Ma'amadot: A First Stage in the History of Rabbinic Prayer?

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Tannaitic sources attest to public Torah reading throughout the Land of Israel in Temple times, when the members of the watches (mishmarot) of the lay delegations (maꜤamadot) served in the Temple. To these descriptions, the Mishnah (m. TaꜤanit 4:1) adds that, on those days, the priests recite the priestly Benediction four times: ‘(1) at the Morning Service, (2) at the Additional Service, (3) at the Afternoon Service, and (4) at the Concluding Service’. This has led to a widespread scholarly assumption that the lay delegations were a fundamental link in the development of the statutory prayers. But, based on the testimony of the Tosefta and additional sources, which mention the maꜤamadot even after the destruction of the temple, this article argues that while the Temple stood the service of the maꜤamadot was confined to the Torah reading, and that the description of the four prayers on those days refers to the post-destruction period. Analysis of the Mishnah, its language and its internal contradictions, supports this argument and leads to the conclusion that the Mishnah is composed of two strata: one early, which describes the maꜤamadot in Temple times as reading the Torah no more than three times a day; the other later, which describes the maꜤamadot in the post-destruction era. The latter followed the pattern of a public fast, which has four-prayer services in addition to the fast. Against the background of the Torah reading by the maꜤamadot, the article examines the import of the institution of Torah reading in general. This was not simply a didactic setting, but rather a liturgical ceremony of divine worship, and it functioned as such in the context of the lay delegations. This conclusion contradicts the claim that in Temple times there could be no additional forms of divine worship. Thus, although the maꜤamadot cannot be viewed as the source for institutionalized public prayer in the Temple era, such an institution could, based on the conceptual foundation of the Torah reading, have developed while the Temple still stood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] Copyright of Tarbiz is the property of Hebrew University Magnes Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
Translated title of the contributionMa'amadot: A First Stage in the History of Rabbinic Prayer?
Original languageHebrew
Pages (from-to)509-551
Number of pages43
Journalתרביץ: רבעון למדעי היהדות
Volume87
Issue number4
StatePublished - 2020

IHP publications

  • ihp
  • Bible -- Pentateuch -- Reading
  • Eretz Israel -- History -- 586 B.C.-70 A.D., Exilic and Second Temple period
  • Eretz Israel -- History -- 70-638, Destruction of the Second Temple to rise of Islam
  • Prayer -- Judaism
  • Rabbinical literature
  • Synagogues
  • Talmud Bavli -- Ta'anit
  • Temple of Jerusalem (Jerusalem, Israel)
  • War of the Sons of Light Against the Sons of Darkness

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