“随着流行病的肆虐,我很幸运能够尽我的一份力量来战胜它”:探索以色列和美国的COVID-19犹太礼仪和祈祷。

IF 2.2 1区 哲学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Journal of Religion & Health Pub Date : 2024-12-04 DOI:10.1007/s10943-024-02190-6
Elazar Ben-Lulu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,犹太教堂面临关闭,许多非东正教社区将祈祷服务转移到在线平台。这对面临严重社区危机的社区领袖和拉比们提出了重大挑战。出现了一种创新的应对措施,包括新的祈祷和对现有祈祷进行调整,以更好地应对大流行病的独特现实,将卫生、神性、社区和环境等方面结合起来。本研究对这些祈祷进行文本分析,探讨这些祈祷如何反映文化和社会对身体和化身的态度。虽然在2019冠状病毒病期间,身体被视为有问题的、传染病的对象和疾病的传播者(例如,没有保持适当的距离或遮盖),但在这些特定的文本中,它不再被诽谤,而是被揭示为一个听话和纪律严明的媒介。祈祷是为了克服个人与自己的身体以及与其他身体之间关系的中断。祈祷者向信徒提议,在观念上改变传统观念和做法的同时,将身体视为必须被清洁、接种疫苗、净化并允许其继续发挥作用的物体。对活着的身体的健康和死者的尊严的关心延伸到对整个社会和人类的关心。因此,这种礼仪可以被视为促进“人文责任神学”的实用手段。
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"With the Pandemic Still Raging, I am Blessed to Do My Part to Defeat it": Exploring COVID-19 Jewish Liturgy and Prayers in Israel and the United States.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, synagogues faced closure, and many non-Orthodox communities transitioned their prayer services to online platforms. This presented a significant challenge for community leaders and rabbis who were faced with a profound community crisis. An innovative response emerged including new prayers and the adaptation of existing ones to better address the pandemic's unique realities, integrating aspects of health, divinity, community, and the environment. This study engages in a textual analysis of these prayers, exploring how these mirror cultural and social attitudes toward the body and embodiment. While the body was seen during the COVID-19 period as problematic, an object of contagion and spreader of disease (e.g., by not keeping proper distance or masking), in these particular texts it is no longer slandered, but revealed as an obedient and disciplined agent. The prayers seek to overcome the disruption in the individual's relationship with their body and with other bodies. The prayer authors propose to the worshipper, while also conceptually changing traditional ideas and practices, to view the body as an object that must be cleaned, vaccinated, purified, and allowed to continue its function. The concern for both the well-being of the living body and the dignity of the deceased extends to care for society and humanity as a whole. Therefore, this liturgy can be seen as a pragmatic means to promote a "theology of humanistic responsibility."

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
21.40%
发文量
220
期刊介绍: Journal of Religion and Health is an international publication concerned with the creative partnership of psychology and religion/sprituality and the relationship between religion/spirituality and both mental and physical health. This multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary journal publishes peer-reviewed original contributions from scholars and professionals of all religious faiths. Articles may be clinical, statistical, theoretical, impressionistic, or anecdotal. Founded in 1961 by the Blanton-Peale Institute, which joins the perspectives of psychology and religion, Journal of Religion and Health explores the most contemporary modes of religious thought with particular emphasis on their relevance to current medical and psychological research.
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