Search results
Ritual order of Grace after the meal, its recitation is mandated by the Torah for someone who eats bread. Read the text of Birkat Hamazon online with commentaries and connections.
17 gru 2023 · Birkat Hamazon is a special prayer said after eating a meal with bread, thanking God for the food He has given us, as well as beseeching Him to keep providing for us. It contains several blessings, composed by numerous people, including Moshe Rabbeinu, Yehoshua, King David, and Rabban Gamliel.
In this class, we'll learn that if your meal included bread, then (assuming you ate a kezayit quickly enough) you are obligated to say Grace After Meals. This is called Birkat Hamazon (Hebrew for "the food blessing"), and is commonly referred to as bentching – which means "blessing" in Yiddish.
In summary, there were three stages in the development of Birkat haMazon: The Torah’s command, to praise, thank and beseech God after eating; The historical targeting of specific content areas for each blessing; (Moshe – praise for God’s sustenance; Joshua – thanks for the Land; David/Solomon – request for protection of Jerusalem and ...
Something came to my mind. At the end of the Birkat Hamazon we have (Given Thanks to Hashem with the word HODU), but could we consider a shared root in Hebrew when translating the word " India" , because aside from the last phoneme (vowel) they are extremely similar. Is it only a coincidence? Thank you very much. הודו הוֹדוּ לַיי ...
Jerusalem, let my right hand forget its dexterity. Let my tongue cleave to my palate if I will not remember you, if I will not bring to mind Jerusalem during my greatest joy! Remember, O Lord, against the Edomites the day of the destruction of Jerusalem, when they said, “Raze it, raze it to its very foundation!” O Babylon, who are
You only have to say Birkat Hamazon after eating a kzayit of bread or if you eat enough mezunos for a meal. This blessing covers all foods in your meal that included bread. If you did not eat eat bread or enough mezunos then you have to say separate blessings for the food that you ate.