Yom Kippur (short)
Oct. 13th, 2005 09:45 pmOne sermon both interesting and frustrating (maybe more later). Organ broken, so even late (more-formal) services got piano instead (improvement in my opinion).
Went to early morning service. This left about 2.5 hours to occupy before afternoon service; sweet-talked the key-holder into letting me into library. Spent quality time with talmud investigating a question a friend emailed about on Wednesday (oven of Akhnai, Bava Metzia 59). On the way, studied some about ona'ah (causing people distress); this provided some material to think about before discussing sermon, so on-topic for Yom Kippur after all. Study time briefly interrupted when a congregant who had some sort of seizure was brought in to lie down; seems ok now, but paramedics took her away to be sure. (95 years old.)
Headache began around hour 20. Noticed dehydration around hour 22 (pretty good!), hunger around hour 23.5. Complete sentences departed around hour 24. :-)
Ne'ilah uplifting; Yizkor tedious. May re-evaluate the latter next year. (This is my problem, not the rabbis'.)
Went to early morning service. This left about 2.5 hours to occupy before afternoon service; sweet-talked the key-holder into letting me into library. Spent quality time with talmud investigating a question a friend emailed about on Wednesday (oven of Akhnai, Bava Metzia 59). On the way, studied some about ona'ah (causing people distress); this provided some material to think about before discussing sermon, so on-topic for Yom Kippur after all. Study time briefly interrupted when a congregant who had some sort of seizure was brought in to lie down; seems ok now, but paramedics took her away to be sure. (95 years old.)
Headache began around hour 20. Noticed dehydration around hour 22 (pretty good!), hunger around hour 23.5. Complete sentences departed around hour 24. :-)
Ne'ilah uplifting; Yizkor tedious. May re-evaluate the latter next year. (This is my problem, not the rabbis'.)
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-14 03:22 pm (UTC)Ours is about 45-50 minutes. There are all of these "mood-setting" readings in our machzor -- never mind that we just did the martyrology a few hours ago -- and we have music, and the rabbi speaks (for about 5 minutes, so that's not where the time goes), and we spend a couple minutes reading the names of children who died in the Shoah (sigh... why don't adults rate? but that's another rant), and it just all adds up.
The other times during the year when we do Yizkor, it's tacked onto the morning service and it's about 15 minutes (maybe 20? don't remember; ask again in a couple weeks :-) ). But at Yom Kippur it's its own service, something that people who left after shacharit come back for and feel is important, and I guess the length is a response to that. But really, at the end of the day, shouldn't the focus be on ne'ilah instead? That's the "cap" to Yom Kippur, and it's unique.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-14 03:31 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-14 03:43 pm (UTC)I'm not sure how I feel about placing things to goad people into coming, versus placing them where they make sense and not worrying if ne'ilah is small. Both positions have merit.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-14 03:58 pm (UTC)You're only encouraging them, though.