Rabbi Avi Baumol
Source:
Mizmor 125 declares that those who have faith in God will be protected and will not falter. Jerusalem sits surrounded by mountains protecting it from her...
Rabbi Avi Baumol
Source:
Mizmor 122 focuses on Jerusalem as the place where the Beit HaMikdash stands, a place of great social and judicial significance, and a place that...
Rabbi Avi Baumol
Source:
Mizmor 121 uses drama as a literary tool. As opposed to most Mizmors that involve direct or indirect speech between the poet and God, or between the poet...
Rabbi Avi Baumol
Source:
The first section of Mizmor 92 discusses praising God, and the blossoming of evil. The significance of a brief middle section of four words is discussed....
Rabbi Avi Baumol
Source:
Mizmor 95, the introductory Mizmor to Kabalat Shabbat, combines the universal desire to praise God, with God's demand for reciprocity from His Nation in...
Rabbi Avi Baumol
Source:
Mizmor 99 focuses on God’s relationship with the Jewish Nation. The Mizmor is divided into three sections based on the word holiness. Through an analysis...
Rabbi Avi Baumol
Source:
The progression of the praising of God is noted: from the universal natural, to the nations of the world and ultimately culminating with the righteous...
Kabbalat Shabbat (Part 2)
Rabbi Avi Baumol
Source: ;
A comparison between Mizmors 96 and 98 mirror the two aspects of Shabbat previously described. Mizmor 96 calls out to the world and to nature to praise...
Rabbi Avi Baumol
Source:
The dual nature of Shabbat is presented: Universal - stemming from the creation of the world - and national - stemming from the Exodus from Egypt and the...
"Haleluya!" - An analysis of the Last Five Mizmorim
Rabbi Avi Baumol
Source:
An overview of the Halleluya Mizmorim: Mizmor 146 is an individual praise of God; Mizmor 147 is a public praise touching on God’s great deeds and...