'', 1310 '' •
Koren Sacks Machzor Series – A growing body of Hebrew-English holiday prayer books that fuses the translation and commentary of Chief Rabbi
Jonathan Sacks with the unique design and layout of
Koren Publishers Jerusalem. The liturgy includes a modern English translation and features prayers for the State of Israel, Israel's Defense Forces, Welfare of the Government and the Safety of the American Military Forces. The Koren Sacks Rosh Hashanah
machzor was released in 2011 and was named a 2011
National Jewish Book Award finalist by The
Jewish Book Council. The Koren Sacks Yom Kippur
machzor was released in 2012 and the Koren Sacks Pesah
machzor was released in March 2013.
The Jewish Press calls the introduction to the Koren Sacks Pesah
machzor "a thematic and theological entree to the very essence of Passover." The vast majority of the piyyutim are contained in an appendix in the back of the volume and are not translated. •
ArtScroll Machzor – Very popular
machzor published by
ArtScroll and used both in the Haredi and Modern Orthodox Jewish community. The text has English translations, commentary, scriptural sources, and choreography (when to sit, stand, bow, etc.) Many versions are available. It contains all of the piyyutim of
Minhag Polin (except for Selichot of Shacharit, Musaf and Mincha on Yom Kippur), but some of the piyyutim have been moved to an appendix in the back and do not contain translation. •
Machzor HaShalem: High Holiday Prayerbook – Edited by
Philip Birnbaum. This book only went out of print around 2000, after having been used for more than 50 years, well before Koren, Artscroll, and Harlow. Many congregations still pray according to their existing stock of it, particularly in the Modern Orthodox Jewish community, and for a time in some
Conservative/Masorti synagogues. The text has English translations, commentary, scriptural sources. It eliminates the vast majority of the
piyyutim for the 3 Festivals, and omits some of the piyyutim for the high holidays. • Rödelheim machzorim - Edited by
Wolf Heidenheim, these machzorim first came out in the early 19th century. They were printed hundreds of times, and they are still used in many
Yekkish communities. There are versions of the machzor according to the Western Ashkenazic rite, as well as according to
Minhag Polin; the former was also published with an English translation. •
Goldschmidt-Fraenkel Machzor - This is an "academic" machzor. It includes piyyutim found only in manuscripts, reconstructs customs of Ashkenazic and French communities in the Middle Ages, and contains critical notes and commentaries on all of the piyyutim. The series currently contains 5 volumes for the five major Festivals Additional volumes for the piyyutim of special Shabbatot in preparation by the Goldschimdt/Fraenkel family. •
Machzor: High Holiday Prayerbook – Edited by Conservative Rabbi
Morris Silverman, this book became the de facto Conservative Jewish
machzor for 30 years. The text has explanatory notes, meditations, and supplementary readings. It is still in use in some congregations today. Published by the Prayer Book Press. •
Machzor for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur – Edited by
Jules Harlow, the official
machzor of
Conservative Judaism from the early 1970s until 2009. 816 pages. This text has much less commentary and instruction than other
machzorim published in the 20th century. The editors focused on the translation, feeling in most places it would be sufficient. It has somewhat fewer poems than other traditional and Conservative
machzorim. The translations are more poetic and less literal. In 2009 the
Rabbinical Assembly and the
United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism announced a new successor volume,
Machzor Lev Shalem, intended to replace this edition. •
Machzor Lev Shalem – The new official
machzor of the Conservative movement. This prayerbook presents a complete liturgy, restoring many traditional prayers that had not been included in the Silverman or Harlow editions, yet also offers options to use the creative liturgical developments presenting the theology and gender equality of non-Orthodox Judaism. It contains a variety of commentaries from classical and modern-day rabbis, gender-sensitive translations, and choreography instructions (when to sit, stand, bow, etc.). It offers more literal translations of the prayers than previous non-Orthodox
machzorim. English
transliterations are offered for all prayers and lines recited aloud by the congregation. The page layout surrounds prayers with a variety of English commentaries and readings, as one finds in classical rabbinic commentaries. This book was designed to be used by Conservative, non-denominational and Traditional-Egalitarian synagogues and chavurot, and by leaving out certain texts and choosing the options to be included, it also can be used in Orthodox or Reform congregations. •
Machzor Hadash – A
machzor edited by two Conservative rabbis, Sidney Greenberg and Jonathan D. Levine, using gender-neutral translations; it is used by Conservative, non-denominational and Traditional-Egalitarian synagogues and chavurot. •
Kol Haneshama: Prayerbook for the Days of Awe, published by the Reconstructionist Press. This is the official
machzor of the Reconstructionist movement. •
Gates of Repentance: The New Union Prayerbook – The official prayerbook of the
Reform movement in Judaism from 1978 to 2015. While significantly smaller and less complete than any of the above books, this prayerbook features a wider range of excerpts and selections from the traditional
machzor than any other Reform work in the 20th century. It features a rich variety of English commentaries, readings and transliterations. The original version was published in 1978, and a gender-neutral edition was published in 1996. Published by the
Central Conference of American Rabbis. •
Days of Awe - the High Holy Days prayer book of the UK
Movement for Reform Judaism. Its eighth edition was published in 1985 and the first edition in 1840. •
Machzor Ruach Chadashah – Published by the
Union of Liberal and Progressive Synagogues (UK) in 2003. •
Mishkan HaNefesh – This Reform Jewish
High Holy Days prayer book was released in 2015; it is intended as a companion to ''
Mishkan T'filah. Mishkan HaNefesh'' can be translated as "sanctuary of the soul." ==See also==