According to the Mishnah, the ceremony was conducted on the first day of
Chol HaMoed of
Sukkot, the day after the inaugural festival day on behalf of all who participated in the
Three Pilgrimage Festivals. Trumpets would sound throughout Jerusalem according to the
Tosefta and a large wooden platform would be erected in the
Temple in Jerusalem in the
Court of the Women. The king would sit on this platform, and all in attendance would gather around him. The
hazzan haknesset (, "servant of the synagogue") would hand the Book of the Law to the
archisynagogue, who would hand it to the Deputy High Priest, who would give it to the
High Priest of Israel, who would present it to the king. According to the
Sefer ha-Chinuch, the king would accept the
Torah scroll while standing but could sit while he read it aloud. The rest of Israel was required to stand, which led to
Jeroboam's revolt. The king began the reading with the same blessings over the Torah that are recited before every
aliyah laTorah in
synagogues today. Seven additional blessings were recited after the reading. The reading consisted of the following sections from the Book of Deuteronomy: • From the beginning of the book to the
Shema (6:4); • The second paragraph of the Shema (11:13-21); • "You shall surely tithe" (14:22-27); • "When you have finish tithing" (26:12-15); • The section about appointing a king (17:14-20); • The blessings and curses (28:1-69).
Why children? Many commentators ask why young children were also required to attend this assembly.
Eleazar ben Azariah said: “Men would come to learn and women, to listen. Why would children come? To provide a reward for those who brought them” (
Hagigah 3a). ==Twentieth-century revival==