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Friday Evening

Wine, candles, and challah bread partially covered with an embroidered cloth on a table.

Friday night is a festive occasion—a time to slow down, eat well, sing, and engage deeply with one another. Traditionally, we welcome the Sabbath bride by lighting candles, reciting Kiddush, and saying a blessing over challah. We bless the children among us and some of us turn to bless each other. We sing a song to welcome angels and welcome guests to our table. Some people find Shabbat peace in simply joining together to watch a movie or play a game. As we gather with loved ones or take time for ourselves, Friday night offers us the opportunity to look back on the week that has passed. We begin to slow down and unwind as we open to the peace of Shabbat.
 

Latest Rituals

A new description of the woman of valor inserted alongside the traditional wording for Eshet Hayil
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A poem for Friday night acknowledging the transition from day to night
sundown, a woman prays

A thoughtful adaptation of the Shabbat Amidah using feminine god-language in Hebrew and English

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A meditation connected the words of the Shema to our bodies
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A ritual for returning home and letting go of the day that has past

Older couple embracing warmly in a cozy kitchen with wooden furnishings and natural light.

A meditation before candle-lighting that includes Kos Miryam along with blessings for healing and renewal

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A liturgical poem based on the first two lines of the Shema

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An upbeat and funky melody for this popular song from Pslam 133

A woman plays guitar in front of a collage, smiling. Text: Hinay Ma Tov, includes bonus music video DVD.

An original melody for the Psalm for Shabbat

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A family shares their “trickle down” multi-generational version of blessing their children

Man in a white suit playing a guitar at an indoor event, smiling with people in the background.

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