Dr. Leo Merzbacher. Tephilah – The Order of Prayer for Divine Service.

AUCTION 64 | Thursday, March 19th, 2015 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Autograph Letters, Ceremonial Objects, Maps and Graphic Art

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Lot 29
(AMERICAN JUDAICA).

Dr. Leo Merzbacher. Tephilah – The Order of Prayer for Divine Service.

Revised by Dr. Samuel Adler. Text in Hebrew and English on facing pages. Two volumes. Vol. I: pp. xviii, 181. Two pages of manuscript notes. Thalmessinger, Cahn & Benedicks, 1860. <<* WITH>> Vol. II: pp. 397, (6), 32. One manuscript page: “Hymn on the Consecration Day of the Temple Emanuel, Curacao, 12 Sept 1867.” Thalmessinger & Cahn, 1863. Modern boards. 12mo. Singerman 1667 (recording just one copy) and 1780 (two copies).

New York: 1860 and 1863

Est: $20,000 - $30,000
<<First edition of Samuel Adler’s revised edition of Leo Merzbacher’s 1855 prayer-book>> . The first prayer-book to contain an English rather than German translation of the prayers. Despite the modest title-page, Adler’s production here was not merely a revision, but in actuality he completely reworked. added to and entirely altered the liturgy. Rabbi Leo Merzbacher’s original version of the prayers was quite traditional. “As resourceful and accomplished a liturgist as Merzbacher proved to be, he seldom sought to …willfully turn aside from the traditional cannon” (Friedland p. 36). Samuel Adler, on the other hand (Merzbacher’s successor at Temple Emanu-El of New York) had no such reservations about adopting radical change to the structure of the prayer-book. In his version of the “Order of Prayer” Adler did not rely on sources in Jewish tradition, rather he changed the prayers according to his subjective views of how synagogue services should be conducted. (See Eric Lewis Friedland, (Brandeis University dissertation) The Historical and Theological Development of the non-Orthodox Prayerbooks in the United States, 1967). Indeed it was precisely this 1860 version of the “Order of Prayer” that was adopted by Temple Emanuel in New York, and all subsequent issues of the “Order of Prayer” utilized this version containing Samuel Adler’s revisions. The Union Prayerbook itself was largely based on Adler’s 1860 revision. Consequently, this prayer-book was also the cause of much controversy. Orthodox Rabbi Bernard Illowy of St. Louis fumed, that whomsoever utilized this “so-called” prayer-book was to be “entirely excluded from all religious communion” (see Michael A. Meyer, Response to Modernity: A History of the Reform Movement (1995) p. 237). Leo Merzbacher (1809-56) received his Rabbinic ordination from the celebrated R. Moses Sofer of Pressburg (the “Chasam Sofer”), the leading opponent of the Reform movement. Merzbacher immigrated to America in the 1840’s and was appointed the first rabbi of Temple Emanuel in New York where he served until his death. He adopted changes in synagogue custom such as the prominent use of an organ and eradicating the observance of the second day of festivals. Samuel Adler (1809-91) replaced Merzbacher in Temple Emanuel in 1857, following the later’s death, where he served until 1891. Adler’s son, Felix, was the founder of the Ethical Culture movement. <<Exceptionally rare. No record of the 1860 volume in WorldCat.>> Neither Deinard (nos. 966 and 968) nor Goldman (no. 48) record these editions. The final 38 pages of German and English hymns in Vol. II are unique to this copy.