The Priestly Blessing, (in Hebrew: Birkat Kohanim, ברכת כהנים), also known as Nesiat Kapayim (Raising of the hands) is a Jewish ceremony and prayer recited during certain Jewish services. It is based on the Biblical verses:
On certain occasions, in Orthodox and some Conservative synagogues, this blessing is said by actual descendents of Aaron, called Kohanim (priests), members of Judaism's priestly clan, through a special ceremony.
Some Christian denominations also use the same blessing text as a Benediction, although with a different context and ceremony from the Jewish Nesiat Kapayim.
Over the course of the blessing, the hands of the Kohanim are spread out over the congregation, with the fingers separated to make three parts, to make the special sign of the priestly blessing. Usually, the tallitot cover the arms as well, up to the palms of the hands. During the reading of the text, it is customary to close one's eyes and rock gently side to side. Performing the ceremony of the priestly blessing is known in Yiddish as duchening.
This ceremony is traditionally performed daily in Israel, and among most Sephardic Jews worldwide, during the repetition of the Shacharit Amidah (prayer during the morning service), and on Shabbat, Pesach, Shavuot, Sukkot, Rosh Hashanah, and Yom Kippur during the repetition of the Shacharit amidah and during Mussaf. On Yom Kippur the ceremony is performed during the Neilah service as well.
In the Diaspora in Ashkenazic Orthodox communities, the ceremony is performed only on Pesach, Shavuot, Sukkot, Rosh Hashanah, and Yom Kippur during Mussaf only. On week-days and Shabbat the priestly blessing is recited by the shaliach tzibbur, or a chazzan, after the Modim prayer, towards the end of the Amidah.
This is the oldest known Biblical text that has been found; amulets with these verses written on them have been found in graves in dating from the First Temple Period, and are now in the Israel Museum, Jerusalem (see Ketef Hinnom).
Various interpretations of these verses connect them to the three Patriarchs; Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, or to three attributes of God; Mercy, Courage, and Glory.
In liberal (and American Reform) congregations, the concept of the priesthood has been largely abandoned, along with other caste and gender distinctions, so as to provide equality among all Jews. Thus, this blessing is usually omitted or simply read by the hazzan. North American Reform Jews omit the Mussaf service, as do most other liberal communities, and so if they choose to include the priestly blessing, it is usually appended to the end of the Shacharit Amidah. Some congregations, especially Reconstructionist ones, have the custom of the congregation spreading their tallitot over each other and blessing each other that way. This custom was started when a Reconstructionist rabbi from Montreal saw children in Pisa, Italy run under their father's tallitot for the blessing, and he brought it home to his congregation.
Jewish law and rituals | Jewish liturgy | Hebrew Bible quotations
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Priestly Blessing".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world