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Sample B'nai Mitzvah Parent's Blessings

  • 1. May you live to see your world fulfilled,

    May you live to see your world fulfilled,
    May your destiny be for worlds still to come,
    And may you trust in generations past and
    yet to be.

    May your heart be filled with intuition
    and your words be filled with insight.
    May songs of praise ever be upon your tongue
    and your vision be on a straight path before you.

    May your eyes shine with the light of holy words
    and your face reflect the brightness of the heavens.
    May your lips speak wisdom
    and your fulfillment be in righteousness
    even as you ever yearn to hear the words
    of the Holy Ancient One of Old.

    Brachot 17a

  • 2. May your eyes sparkle with the light of Torah,

    May your eyes sparkle with the light of Torah,
    and your ears hear the music of its words.
    May the space between each letter of the scrolls
    bring warmth and comfort to your soul.
    May the syllables draw holiness from your heart,
    and may this holiness be gentle and soothing
    to you and all God’s creatures.

    May your study be passionate,
    and meanings bear more meanings
    until Life itself arrays itself to you
    as a dazzling wedding feast.
    And may your conversation,
    even of the commonplace,
    be a blessing to all who listen to your words
    and see the Torah glowing on your face.

    Danny Siegel, based on Brachot 17a and Eruvin 54a

  • 3. Wherever you journey, may your steps be firm...

    Wherever you journey, may your steps be firm
    and may you walk in just paths and not be afraid.
    Whenever you speak,
    may your words be words of wisdom and friendship.
    May your hands build and your heart preserve
    what is good and beautiful in our world.
    May the voices of the generations of our people move through you
    and may the God of our ancestors be your God as well.
    May you know that there is a people, a rich heritage, to which you belong
    and from that sacred place you are connected to all who dwell on the earth.
    May the stories of our people be upon your heart
    and the grace of the Torah rhythm
    dance in your soul.

    Rabbi Sandy Eisenberg Sasso

  • 4.May use as basis of remarks: Martin Buber wrote...

    May use as basis of remarks:

    Martin Buber wrote:

    Every person born into this world represents some­thing new, something that never
    existed before, something original and unique. It is the duty of every person in Israel to know and consider that he is unique in the world in his particular character, and that there has never been someone like him before. For if there had been someone like him before, there would be no need for him to be in the world. Every single person is a new thing in the world and is called upon to fulfill his particularity in the world.

  • 5. For a daughter... Embrace this young woman with blessing, Holy One...

    For a daughter – 

    Embrace this young woman with blessing, Holy One;
    Draw her near to You with learning and faith.
    May her life be filled with delight
    Nurtured in wholeness, her family’s embrace.

    Alert her to all Your world’s beauty,
    Renewed before her eyes, flowering.
    Inspire her with tales of her ancestors,
    Enriched by her own good deeds.
    Bless her with strength and goodness,
    A life for Your honor and praise.

    Adapted from Debbie Perlman

  • 6. For a son... Draw Your arms around this young man, Holy One...

    For a son –

    Draw Your arms around this young man, Holy One,
    Let Your blessings be abundant.
    May his days be filled with learning,
    With wonders and challenges, laughter and delight.

    Anchor his life with family and friends,
    Kindness his portion and gift;
    Send him Your strength to grow and mature,
    Keeping close to his strong heritage.
    Embrace him with wholeness, with peace,
    Ever praising Your name.

    Adapted from Debbie Perlman

  • 7. For a son - May you be as Ephraim and Menasheh...

    For a son – 

    May you be as Ephraim and Menasheh
    of whom we know nothing
    but their names
    and that they were Jews.
    And may you be as all Jews
    whose names are lost
    as witnesses to God’s care,
    love, and presence.
    Remember them in your words,
    and live Menschlich lives
    as they lived Menschlich lives.

    Danny Siegel, based on the traditional blessing
    of parents to their children on Erev Shabbat

  • 8. For a daughter - May you be as Sarah, Rivka, Rachel, and Leah...

    For a daughter-

    May you be as Sarah, Rivka, Rachel, and Leah,
    whose names and deeds
    are our inheritance;
    who bore us, raised us,
    guided and taught us
    that a touch
    is a touch of Holiness,
    and a laugh is prophecy;
    that all that is ours,
    is theirs;
    that neither Man or Woman alone
    lights the sparks of Life,
    but only both together,
    generating light and warmth
    and singular humanity.

     Danny Siegel, based on the traditional blessing
    of parents to their children on Erev Shabbat

  • 9. We wish for our child a life of Torah...

    We wish for our child a life of Torah,
    of never-ending fascination with study and learning
    With a book, he/she will never be alone.

    We wish for our child an adulthood consecrated by chupah,
    To never-ending growth as a human being
    capable of giving and receiving love.
    With a loving mate, he/she will never be alone.

    We wish for our child a life of ma’asim tovim,
    of never-ending concern for family 
    and community, justice and charity.
    If he/she cares for others, he/she will never be alone.

    We pray for wisdom to help our child achieve these things,
    To fulfill the needs of his/her mind and body,
    May he/she be strong when he/she needs to be strong,
    May he/she be gentle when he/she needs, to be gentle,
    As our child grows to adulthood, we pledge to
    always be there when he/she needs us.

    source unknown

  • 10. On this Shabbat, when our child becomes Bar/Bat Mitzvah...

    On this Shabbat when our child becomes Bar/Bat Mitzvah, we have come with him/her and our loved ones to join in worship and to offer our prayer of thanksgiving.

    We are grateful for the privilege of passing along the gift of life which You gave us, thus sharing with You the miracle of creation. We are grateful for the years of nurturing this life, for the unnumbered joys and challenges which these years have brought us. Praise to You, God, for keeping us alive, for sustaining us, and for enabling us to reach this day.

    Bless him/her, O God; watch over, protect, and guide him/her. Help him/her continue to grow in body and mind, in soul and character.  Keep him/her loyal to our people and to the teachings of our Torah. May his/her life be rich and rewarding. May all his /her deeds bring pride and honor to the House of Israel. Amen.

    Entrances to Holiness are Everywhere, (JCC of White Plains), 1993

  • 11. The prophet Elijah said...

    The prophet Elijah said: “And all your children shall be taught about God, and great shall be the peace of Your children.”

    We give thanks for this day, and for the years of growth and learning that have preceded it. Now as our child steps forth to affirm her/his commitment to the ideals and Mitzvot of our faith, our soul is joyful, our mind is at peace.

    Ba-ruch a-ta Adonai,
    Eh-lo-hei-nu meh-lech ha-o-lam,
    sheh-heh-cheh-ya -nu, v’ki-y’ma–nu,
    v’higi-a-nu la-z’man ha-zeh.

    We praise You, Eternal God, Sovereign of the universe, for giving us life, for sustaining us, and for enabling us to reach this season.

    We pray that this day’s service may long echo in our child’s memory. May it engrave on his/her heart the understanding that this day initiates a life more firmly dedicated to the study of Torah and the fulfillment of Mitzvot,to deeds of justice and kindness, to faithful membership in the Household of Israel.

    AN INDIVIDUAL SAYS:

       O, God, make me a worthy example to my children. Let nothing estrange me from them and from You. Help me, too, again and again to renew my attachment to the Covenant of Israel, to walk hand in hand with my child in the ways of righteousness and truth. Amen.

    A COUPLE  SAYS:

       O God, make each of us a worthy example to our children. Let nothing estrange us from them and from You. Help us, too, again and again to renew our attachment to the Covenant of Israel, to walk hand in hand with our child in the ways of righteousness and truth. Amen.

    On the Doorposts of Your House (CCAR Press)

  • 12. The days come and go...

    The days come and go. Imperceptibly our lives change. We grow older and are
    hardly aware of it. Our children grow up and we hardly notice. Then, suddenly, we
    come to this time and we realize that our sons and daughters are children no longer.
    They have become young men and women, ready to take their first step into adulthood.

    We are grateful that we have been able to bring them this far. We are thankful for the
    strength to cope with the stresses and responsibilities of rearing them. And we give
    thanks for the pleasure and pride we have had in them.

    Now we realize they are children no longer. Only another year, two, three, and they
    will begin to go from our homes to find their own way in the world.

    We ask ourselves, have we truly prepared them for this? Have we done enough,
    taught them enough? We are almost afraid to let them go.

    Yet it was for this that we raised them, that they might grow up to take their places
    in the world.

    Kol HaNeshamah: Shabbat V’Chagim (1995)

  • 13. O God, we have tendered...

    O God, we have tendered
    With hope this seed
    of our youth.
    We have watched
    from springtime
    the ripening and growth.
    Now come the harvest days
    And our child stands before You.
    Bless this life with wisdom
    To serve You with love.

    A Jewish home opens its heart,
    a child is born and its link
    to the generations is proclaimed.

    Today, that child, nearly grown,
    is called to read from the Torah
    and is welcomed into the congregation.

    May this moment in time be blessed.

    Vetahair Libaynu (1980)

  • 14. Our God and God of all generations...

    Our God and God of all generations,
    we are grateful for the gift of Your Torah,
    that links one generation to another,
    this generation to those which have come before,
    and every generation to the generations of Abraham and Sarah.

    We are thankful,
    especially on this day,
    for the blessing of children and family
    for the meaning and happiness
    which you have brought to our lives.

                      (Child’s name)                                                     ,
    May you continue to grow
    in health and in strength,
    in wisdom and love, and with joy.
    May your life be guided by the lessons of the Torah,
    and may your life be filled with compassion for others,
    and gemilut hasidim, acts of kindness.

  • 15. Into our hands, You have placed Your Torah

    Into our hands, O God, You have placed Your Torah, to be held high by parents and children, and taught by one generation to the next. Whatever has befallen us, our people have remained steadfast in loyalty to the Torah. It was carried into exile in the arms of parents that their children might not be deprived of their birthright.

    And now I pray that           Child’s name        may always be worthy of this inheritance. Take its teaching into your heart, and in turn pass it on to your children and those who come after you. May you be a faithful Jew, searching for wisdom and truth, working for justice and peace. Thus will you be among those who labor to bring nearer the day when God shall be One, and God’s children shall be one.

    May the God of our people, the God of all humankind, bless and keep you. May the One who has always been our guide inspire you to bring honor to our family and to the House of Israel.

    Ba-ruch a-ta Adonai, Eh-lo-hei-nu meh-lech ha-o-lam,
    sheh-heh-cheh- ya-nu v’k-y’ma-nu v’hi-gi-a-nu la-z’man ha-zeh.

    We praise You, Eternal God, Sovereign of the universe, for giving us
    life, for sustaining us, and for enabling us to reach this season.

    Gates of Prayer for Shabbat and Weekdays (1994)

  • 16. Mi Sheberach for Bar/Bat Mitzvah...

    May the one who blessed our ancestors Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, Sarah, Rebekah, Rachel, and Leah, bless____________ the son/daughter of                                   ,who has risen today for the honor of the Omnipresent, and for the honor of Torah and of this mitzvah. May God’s presence fill his/her life in days to come, as God’s sustenance has been with him/her since the day of his/her birth. May he/she grow in health of body and of spirit, in wisdom, and in graciousness, humility and love of others, and in love of Torah. May he/she find favor and distinction, in the eyes of God and of his/ her fellow human beings, and let us say: Amen.

    Kol HaNeshamah: Shabbat v’Chagim

  • 17. On this Shabbat when our son/daughter becomes a Bar/Bat Mitzvah...

    “This is the day the Lord has made; Let us rejoice and celebrate on it.”
    Psalm 118:24

    On this Shabbat when our son/daughter becomes a Bar/Bat Mitzvah, we have come with him/her and our loved ones to join in worship and to offer our prayer of thanksgiving.

    We are grateful, O God, for the privilege of passing along the gift of life which You gave us, thus sharing with You in the miracle of creation. We are grateful for the thirteen years of nurturing this life, for the unnumbered joys and challenges which these years have brought us. Praise to You, O Lord, for keeping us alive, for sustaining us, and for enabling us to reach this day.

    Bless our son/daughter, O God; watch over him/her, protect him/her, guide him/her. Help him/her to continue to grow in body and mind, in soul and character. Keep him/her loyal to our people and to the teachings of our Torah. May his/her life be rich and rewarding. May all his/her deeds bring pride to us, honor to the house of Israel, and glory to Your name. Amen.

    Siddur Hadash (Prayerbook Presss) 1991

  • 18. We thank You, O God, for the joyous fulfillment we feel as our son/daughter reaches the threshold of adulthood.

    “This is the day the Lord has made; Let us rejoice and celebrate on it.”
    Psalm 118:24

    We thank You, O God, for the joyous fulfillment we feel as our son/daughter reaches the threshold of adulthood.

    How privileged we feel that he/she is our son/daughter, and that he/she is bound to us by bonds of love, of memory, and of hope!

    Praise to You, O Lord our God, who has kept us alive, and sustained us, and enabled us to reach this day.

    O God, accept our thankfulness for the thirteen years that have come and gone; bless our hope for the years that are yet to be. May Your mercy and guidance accompany this Bar/Bat Mitzvah at all times, in a life marked by reverence for Torah and love of all Your children. Amen.

    SiddurHadash (Prayerbook Press) 1991

  • 19. May You Always Have Enough

    May You Always Have Enough

    May you always have –

    Enough happiness to keep you sweet,
    Enough trials to keep you strong,
    Enough hope to keep you happy,
    Enough failure to keep you humble,
    Enough success to keep you eager,
    Enough friends to give you comfort,
    Enough wealth to meet your needs,
    Enough enthusiasm to look forward,
    Enough faith to banish depression,
    Enough determination to make each day better than yesterday,
    And let us all say: Amen

    Rabbi Harry H,. Epstein

     

  • 20. We are...

    We Are . . .

    For each child that’s born
    a morning star rises and sings to the universe
    who we are

    We are our grandfather’s prayers
    We are our grandmother’s dreamings
    We are the breath of the ancestors
    We are the spirit of God

    We are
    Mothers of courage
    Fathers of time
    Daughters of dust
    The sons of great visions
    Brothers of love
    Lovers of life
    Builders of nations
    Seekers of truth
    Keepers of faith
    Makers of peace
    Wisdom of ages . . .

    Ysaye Maria Barnwell

  • 21. May you be...

    May you be guided by the heavenly light,
    May your dreams become solid and sound,
    May your goals be well chosen and surely formed,
    May your deeds be touched by decency and grace,
    And above all, may you find the time to be kind.

    Leonard Nimoy

  • 22. A Modern Blessing

    A Modern Blessing

    Let (name: son/daughter) be a person whose heart will be clear, whose goals will be high, a person who will master herself before she seeks to master others, one who will learn to laugh, yet neverforget how to weep, one who will reach into the future, yet never forget the past.  After all these things are hers, this we pray, enough sense of humor that she may always be serious but never take herself too seriously.  Give her humility so that she may always remember the simplicity of true greatness, the open mind of true wisdom, the meekness of true strength. Then we, her family and friends, will dare to whisper that we too have been enriched.

  • 23. The crown of the aged are children's children...

    The crown of the aged are children’s children
    And the glory of children are their parents.

    From Proverbs 17:6

  • 24. Traditional Blessing over a Daughter

    Traditional Blessing over a Daughter

    Yismech Elohim k’Sarah, Rivkah, Rachel v’Leah,
    Yivarechecha Adonai v’yismarecha. 
    Ya’er Adonai panav alayich v’yichooneyich.
    Yisah Adonai panav alayich, v’yasemsam lach shalom.

     

    May God make you like Sarah, Rebecca, Rachel and Leah.
    May God bless you and guard you.
    May God cause al light to shine on you and be gracious to you.
    May God lift up his face to you and grant you peace.

     

  • 25. How Shall I Bless Her?

    How Shall I Bless Her?

    “How shall I bless her, how shall this daughter be blessed?” asked the angel.
    With a smile full of light,
    Wide eyed to see,
    Each flower and bird and creature that lives,
    And a heart that can feel for all that she sees.

    “How shall I bless her, how shall this daughter be blessed?” asked the angel.
    With feet that can dance on and on without end,
    And a soul to remember all the melodies she hears,
    With hands to collect pretty shells by thesea,
    And an ear that’s attuned to all things great and small.

    “How shall I bless her, how shall this daughter be blessed?” asked the angel.
    We have blessed her with all in our power to give;
    Songs and smiles and feet that can dance,
    A gentle hand,
    A heart that beats true,
    And a soul that is filled with unbounding love.

  • 26. A Parent's Prayer for a Daughter

    A Parent’s Prayer for a Daughter

    On this day, as our daughter becomes a Bat Mitzvah, we take this special moment, in the midst of our congregation, to give thanks for the privilege of being parents.  As we have watched our daughter grow and mature into the young woman she has become we are reminded that we have been witnessing the very unfolding of life itself, and now on the day she becomes a Bat Mitzvah, we wish for her an understanding of the beauty of our heritage and the love that we have for her.

    May the God of our people, the God of the universe, bless you.  May the Onewho has always been our guide inspire you to bring honor to our family and to our people Israel.

    Ba-ruch a-ta Adonai,Eh-lo-hei-nu meh-lech ha-o-lam,
    sheh-heh-cheh-ya -nu, v’ki-y’ma–nu,v’higi-a-nu la-z’man ha-zeh.

    We give thanks to You, Eternal God, Ruler of the universe, for giving us life, for sustaining us, and for enabling us to reach this day of joy. Amen.

  • 28. They came into our lives....

    Parents’ Prayer

    They came into our lives
    Much as the stars appear
    To light the darkened skies
    When dusk begins the night.

    As God created the sky
    The sun, the moon and all the wonder that surrounds us
    So God has created
    The wonder of them.

    To fill our days
    With love and hope
    With beauty and fulfillment
    That we may know the meaning of life.

    O God, as we come before you on this most joyous of Shabbats, we pray, and we thank You for this blessing of life you have bestowed upon us.   We are grateful for our children and the joy they have brought to us.

    Bless our children, O God, watch over them, protect them, guide them.  Help them to continue to grow in body and mind, soul and character.  Bless them with the gifts of love and loyalty. May their lives be rich and rewarding. May all their deeds bring pride to us, honor to the house of Israel and glory to Your Name.

    Author Unknown

  • 29. As we have watched you grow...

    Parents’ Prayer

    As we have watched you grow, it has appeared to us that many of your accomplishments come naturally to you. We want to say a few words to you today to help you realize how much you have, and how much you have to share with others.

    You have played, may you invite others to participate.
    You have learned, may you share your knowledge.
    You have been loved, may you show your love to others.

    You are proud, may you help others find confidence.
    You are happy, may you make someone smile.
    You are a good son and brother, may you cherish your family.
    You are a helper, may you continue to assist.

    You have dreamt, may you express hope for others less fortunate.
    You have faith, may you seek to understand others.
    You are generous, may you continue to care.
    You have lead, may you allow others to show you new ways.

    Today, you have become a Bar/Bat Mitzvah. May you cherish the memories of what you’ve learned as a foundation for a bright future.

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