DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Yehoshua ben Sarah

Dedicated By
His children and grandchildren

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 634 KB)
Baruch Sheamar

The "Zemirot" section of our morning prayer service begins with the prayer of Baruch She'amar. It is told that this prayer originated from a piece of paper that fell from the heavens containing the words of Baruch She'amar. The Anshei Kenesset Ha'gedola (Men of the Great Assembly, who instituted and composed our liturgy) then incorporated this prayer into the standard morning service.

How are we to understand this account of a letter "falling from the heavens"?

According to one explanation, this account refers to the method by which the Anshei Kenesset Ha'gedola chose which expressions to use in praising God. In Baruch She'amar we mention many different descriptions of God's greatness, such as "Baruch Omer Ve'oseh" ("Blessed is He who carries out His word"), "Baruch Gozer U'mekayem" ("Blessed is He who issues decrees and fulfills them"), and so on. Now obviously there are endless descriptions of praise that can be recited in God's honor, and so the Anshei Kenesset Ha'gedola had to select just a small number of expressions of phrase with which to begin the "Zemirot." They therefore conducted a lottery, whereby they wrote hundreds of expressions of praise and the twelve or thirteen chosen from the box were selected in composing Baruch She'amar. Thus, the words of this prayer "fell from the heavens," as it were, in that it was left in God's hands to decide which expressions of praise would be selected.

The accepted text of Baruch She'amar contains eighty-seven words. Some found an allusion to this number in the verse, "Rosho Ketem Paz" ("His head is fine gold" – Shir Hashirim 5:11), which may be read to mean that the "head," or the beginning, of the prayer service is "Paz," a word with the Gematria (numerical value) of eighty-seven.

There is a widespread custom to kiss one's front Tzitzit strings upon completing the recitation of Baruch She'amar. Many books explain that in Baruch She'amar we recite many blessings to God ("Baruch She'amar…Baruch Omer…Baruch Gozer…"), but we make no mention of God's Name. Every Beracha must include the Name of God, and so we hold the two front Tzitzit, which together contain sixteen strings and ten knots, yielding the number twenty-six – the numerical value of the Divine Name. Thus, by holding the two Tzitzit strings we include the Name of God in the blessings of Baruch She'amar. This demonstrates how all accepted Minhagei Yisrael (customs of Israel), even if we do not understand them at first, have profound meaning and are rooted in sound logic and rationale.

(See Shulchan Aruch, Orach Hayim, Siman 51:1, and Kaf Hachayim Seif Kattan 1)

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Rosh Hashana- Is it Proper to Cry During the Rosh Hashanah Prayers?
Talking in Between the Shofar Blasts
Reciting Shehehiyanu Over a Grafted Fruit on Rosh Hashanah
Exemptions in a Case of a Deferred Fast Day
Rosh Hashana- Blowing the Shebarim and Shebarim-Teru’a Sounds in a Single Breath
Rosh Hashana- A Berit Mila Held on Rosh Hashanah
What Are The Required Qualifications To Be Appointed As Hazan For The High Holiday Services
Why Do We Always Make the Beracha of Shehechiynau After The Beracha of The Mitzvah, For Example As Done On The Shofar On Rosh Hashana
Rosh Hashana- Some Laws Regarding Musaf Including The Topic of Ladies Praying Musaf Or Not
Rosh Hashana- Is It Permissible To Blow The Shofar On Rosh Hashana After Shul, After The Required Tikeeot Are Sounded
Rosh Hashana- The Correct Time for Tashlich & Tashlich on Shabbat
Rosh Hashana- Understanding The Custom of Tashlich
Eating Bread in the Sukka on the First Night of Sukkot; Eating on Erev Sukkot; Rainfall on the First Night of Sukkot
Succot- How Does One Choose a Kosher Etrog?
How does one Choose Hadasim?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found