Chabad of North and South Brunswick
 
Sunday, May 19, 2024 - 11 Iyyar 5784
 
About us | Donate | Contact us
The Rebbe
News & Events
Parsha
Magazine
Holidays
Torah Study
Ask The Rabbi
Jewish Calendar
Upcoming Events
Yartzeit
Find a Chabad Center
Audio
Videos
Photo Gallery
Donate
Chabad in the News
Contact Us
About Us
 
Email EMAIL UPDATES
Join our e-mail list
& get all the latest news & updates
 
Email CANDLE LIGHTING
6:59 PM in South Brunswick, NJ
Shabbat Ends 8:06 PM
Friday, 24 May 2024
Parashat 
»   Get Shabbat Times for your area
 
 
Email DONATE
Help support southbrunswickchabad.com by making a donation. Donate today!
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Share |
The need to pray for Moshiach

Question:

G-d promised in the Torah that Moshiach would come. If so, why is there a need to pray and demand his coming?

Answer:

Prayers for the Redemption take up a large percentage of our daily prayers. The eighteen blessings of the amidah (silent prayer of requests that Jews recite three times a day) includes no less than six blessing beseeching G-d to gather in the exiles, return us to Zion, and restore the Davidic monarchy. Why are these prayers necessary if G-d assured us in the Torah that He would send the redeemer?

Maimonides defines the mitzvah of prayer thus: "One should request [of G-d] all of his needs." In other words, when we are in need of something, we should turn to G-d and ask Him to grant it to us. If this is true of personal needs such as health and livelihood, how much more so for needs that are both personal and communal.

Despite the fact that we are confident that we will eventually be redeemed, we cannot sit back passively and wait for the Redemption to come "tomorrow." We must be persistent in our demand that Moshiach should come immediately.

When we simply wait passively, we are indicating that the Redemption is not really a primary goal or need of ours. It indicates apathy – we are satisfied with life in exile and don't feel a need for change. Requesting and demanding the Redemption sends a clear message that exile is not satisfactory for us – the Redemption is a necessity.

There is no doubt that requesting Moshiach's coming in our prayers can hasten his arrival – sooner than he would have arrived without our prayers. For this reason, our sages instituted the prayers for Redemption as part of the daily liturgy.
 

 


About us | Donate | Contact us | The Rebbe | News | Parsha | Magazine | Holidays | Questions & Answers | Audio | Video

 
 

A Project of Chabad of North and South Brunswick
4100 Route 27, South Brunswick, NJ 08540
Email: rabbi@southbrunswickchabad.com • Tel: (732) 522-5505

Powered by ChabadNJ.org © 2007 All rights reserved.