When we pray are we informing G-d of a problem and asking Him to fix it? Do we think he doesn’t know about it?
The point of tefillah is to want what G-d wants, not to get G-d to want what we want.
Rabbi David Aaron shows that the Hebrew word Tefillah comes from the root for imagine or dream. The leader of the prayers in shul is the chazzan; the root means vision. During tefillah we are involved in an exercise to imagine the ultimate dreams. The more we want what G-d wants, the more He wants to give us.
biography, cantor, Kabbalah, Latin, prayer, prayer book, Rabbi Kook, story, Wizard of Oz