Prayer to Shekinah

The early Jewish scholars who compiled the Talmud (+/- 100 BC) gave insights to how God’s people had traditionally understood scripture. Over and over again they referred to passages about the tabernacle in Exodus or Ezekiel’s vision as pictures of the Shekinah of God - the sense of God’s glory and God’s dwelling among us. Since Shekinah in Hebrew is a feminine word, they started using feminine images for God in conjunction with these insights into the text.

Mirabai Starr is a contemporary scholar who has put together much of the history of Jewish tradition around Shekinah into a lovely blessing, focusing on the feminine side of God. As you read over this poem/prayer/blessing, can you let it sink in? Can you allow yourself to trust this gracious Shekinah and see Her all around you?

Prayer to the Shekinah

Mirabai Starr

O Shekinah,

yours is the feminine face of the Holy,

the luminous moon who lights up the night

as we travel from captivity to liberation,

the pillar of fire who guides our way home,

the cloud hovering over the mountain peaks,

living sign that the drought is over.

You are the indwelling presence of the Divine.

Whenever we gather to praise the One

you are here in our midst.

When we cry out for justice

you make our hearts tender.

When we stand with those on the margins

you make our legs strong.

When we create works of art

and parent our children

and harvest our gardens

you guide and sustain us.

You are the Sabbath Bride, the Beloved,

returned from exile.

You restore balance in our relationships

and wholeness to our fragmented souls.

You infuse our lovemaking with honey.

You fill the cup of our hearts,

which tremble with longing,

with the wine of your answering love.

You are the song of our homecoming.

You are the Sabbath Queen, the Great Mother,

who sits at the heart of the table

tearing off hunks of the secret bread

that contains the exact flavor each of us loves best.

You feed us all,

the proud and the repentant,

the believer and the skeptic,

from your own hands.

Your unconditional forgiveness dissolves otherness.

O Shekinah,

we are the vessel for your inflowing.

Your radiance requires the clay of our embodiment.

Your flame burns at the core of the earth.

Your warmth penetrates the seedbed and animates the seedlings.

You bless the head of every animal

and kiss the tear-streaked face of humanity.

You are the vision that builds community,

and you are our refuge

when the fabric of community unravels.

Be with us now

as we navigate the landscape of mystery

where your most cherished attributes —

wild mercy and boundless compassion,

righteousness and wisdom —

seem to be cast aside and trampled

by imperious world powers

and we are paralyzed by helplessness.

Help us.

May we remember you and lift you up.

May we recognize your face and celebrate your beauty

in everything and everyone,

everywhere, always.

AMEN.