-40%

MESSIANIC SILVER SHOFAR for ANOINTING OIL+GIFT Bottle Hebraic Jewish Hebrew Root

$ 57.18

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Shofar Type: 925 Sterling Silver gold Plated, Sealed, for oil
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Israel
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • For Anointing Oils: Biblical perfumed incense, medical religious oils
  • Handmade: Yes
  • Free Gift: Bottle of Anointing oil bible healing perfume
  • judaica symbol: 7 branch jewish temple menorah candelabra
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)
  • Shofar Size: About 13 inch / 34 cm. Length along chofar spine
  • Material: Ram Horn Kosher Animal, Silver plated, Gold accent
  • Anointing Oils: king solomon, queen Esther, hyssop, Spikenard
  • Design: Messianic Seal of Jerusalem Grafted In hebrew root
  • religious: Christian, Messiah yeshua followers, jesus christ
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Symbols: magen Star of David Jerusalem menorah fish
  • Use: Purify, Spiritual, Ceremonial, church, Communal
  • Country of Manufacture: handmade in Israel, holy land, land of the bible
  • Condition: New
  • Fit for oil types: Rose of Sharon, light of Jerusalem Frankincense, Myrrh,

    Description

    Messianic Seal Jewish Shofar, Ram's Horn, For Holding
    Anointing Oil
    Beautiful Handcrafted Silver plated Shofar, Made in The Holy Land of Israel
    Comes with a Free Gift
    - Small Bottle of
    Anointing
    Oil
    This Shofar is
    Specially Designed for Holding Anointing Oil with Seal and Strap Holding (Sealed on both ends)
    Size approximately
    13 Inch / 34 cm* (Length as measured on circumference)
    But if
    some of the branches were broken off, and you,
    although a wild olive shoot, were grafted in among the others and now share in the nourishing root of the olive tree.
    Do not be arrogant toward the branches. If you are, remember it is not you who support the root, but the root that supports you.
    (Romans 11:17-18)
    The Shofar is finely handcrafted and decorated with a thick copper sheet all around, plated 925 Sterling Silver, with the Jewish Star of David and Jerusalem Temple Menorah (7 branch lamp) embossed and colored in shiny Gold color.
    Strong and durable, curved shape, hand made in Israel from high quality African ram's horns, the horns are drilled, shaped and polished, showing the original colors of the horn. All Shofars are cleaned and sterilized.
    Nice for display or use, wonderful gift for Christian, Religious Holidays, family heirloom piece
    This Shofar is sealed on both sides, has a cork on wire, to hold inside the Shofar biblical anointing oil. It is n
    ot for Blowing. See more silver plated shofars, regular shofars, painted shofars and shofars for anointing oils in our store
    Click here to see more Jewish Shofars - Kudu and Ram Horns in store
    Click here for more Biblical
    Anointing Oils
    from the Holy Land
    Shipping from Israel, arrival time 3-5 weeks
    The Shofars come in assorted different colors, designs and patterns,
    please see the pictures.
    We will choose color
    randomly
    ,
    but if you prefer a specific color (dark or bright) - please write it in the note at payment, and we will try our best to match color - as possible
    Approximate Size (Length*)  :
    13 inch  /  34 cm
    (Sizes will slightly vary from Shofar to Shofar)
    * Length is measured on the circumference -
    from tip to tip - from the mouthpiece to the shofar's "trumphet" opening
    You are welcome to check more Judaica arts and crafts, made in Israel items at
    Liorel, Art from Israel
    ebay store
    Authentic religious gift from Israel, the Shofar is nice for display and for use, Jewish people are blowing the shofar horn around the Jewish new year, when people make soul seeking and pray for answers and forgiveness. it is a great Mitzvah to hear the Shofar blows at synagogues at Rosh Hashanah and Yom kippur (the high Jewish holidays), and take our prayers high and through the doors of the sky, to be heard and answered, and hopefully fulfilled.
    Liorel Art from Israel
    Directions for storage
    : store in a cool and dry place. No special maintenance needed - the shofar is a live tissue (bit like nails). Using wax, detergents, solvents etc will harm it.
    No two animal horns look alike and no two shofars sound exactly the same. As the ram or kudu (African Antelope) grow older, their horns get larger and become more and more twisted into a curve or even a spiral, especially with rams. Horns of older rams often form two or three complete loops. Larger ram's horn shofars are rare and more difficult to get nowadays
    The
    Messianic Seal
    of Jerusalem is a symbol for
    Messianic Judaism
    and
    Christians
    . The sym
    bol is seen as a depiction of the
    Menorah
    , an ancient
    Jew
    ish
    symbol, together with the
    Ichthys
    , an ancient depictive representation of
    Christian faith
    and the community of
    Jesus
    followers, creating a
    Star of David
    at the intersection.
    [1]
    The Messianic Seal is not the only symbol of Messianic Judaism, which has other graphical representations such as the Menorah and Star of David, the cross in the Star of David, among others.
    In
    Romans 11:11–24
    Paul compares Israel to the natural branches of a cultivated olive tree and the Gentile believers to the branches of a wild olive tree. The natural branches (Israel) were broken off, and the wild branches (Gentiles) were grafted in (verse 17). The Gentiles, then, have been made partakers of the promises and inherit the blessings of God’s salvation.
    The
    holy anointing oil
    (
    Hebrew
    : ??? ?????
    shemen ha-mishchah
    , "oil of anointing") formed an integral part of the ordination of the
    priesthood
    and the
    High Priest
    as well as in the consecration of the articles of the
    Tabernacle
    (Exodus 30:26) and subsequent
    temples in Jerusalem
    . The primary purpose of
    anointing
    with the holy anointing oil was to cause the anointed persons or objects to become
    qodesh
    , or "most holy" (Exodus 30:29).
    Originally, the oil was used exclusively for the priests and the Tabernacle articles but was later extended to include prophets and kings (I Samuel 10:1). It was forbidden to be used on an outsider (Exodus 30:33) or to be used on the body of any common persons (Ex. 30:32a) and the
    Israelites
    were forbidden to duplicate any like it for themselves (Ex. 30:32b).
    Christianity
    has continued the practice of using holy anointing oil as a devotional practice, as well as in various liturgies.
    [1]
    The holy anointing oil described in
    Exodus
    30:22-25 was created from:
    [2]
    [3]
    Pure
    myrrh
    (?? ????
    mar deror
    ) 500
    shekels
    (about 6 kg)
    Sweet
    cinnamon
    (?????? ???
    kinnemon besem
    ) 250 shekels (about 3 kg)
    Kaneh bosem
    (???-???
    kaneh bosm
    ) 250 shekels (about 3 kg)
    Cassia
    (???
    kiddah
    ) 500 shekels (about 6 kg)
    Olive oil
    (??? ???
    shemen sayith
    ) one
    hin
    (about 5 quarts according to Adam Clarke; about 4 liters according to
    Shiurei Torah
    , 7 liters according to the
    Chazon Ish
    )
    More on the shofar: A
    shofar
    [?o'fa?]
    (
    Hebrew
    :
    ????
    (
    help
    ·
    info
    )
    ) is a
    horn
    , traditionally that of a
    ram
    , used for
    Jewish
    religious purposes. Shofar-blowing is incorporated in
    synagogue
    services on
    Rosh Hashanah
    and
    Yom Kippur
    . Shofars come in a variety of sizes.
    Bible and rabbinic literature
    [
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    beta
    ]
    The
    shofar
    is mentioned frequently in the
    Hebrew Bible
    , the
    Talmud
    and
    rabbinic literature
    . The blast of a shofar emanating from the thick cloud on
    Mount Sinai
    made the
    Israelites
    tremble in awe (Exodus 19:16).
    Shofar (by Alphonse Lévy) Caption says: "To a good year"
    The shofar was used to announce holidays (Ps. lxxxi. 4), and the
    Jubilee year
    (Lev. 25:9). The first day of the seventh month (
    Tishri
    ) is termed "a memorial of blowing" (Lev. 23:24), or "a day of blowing" (Num. 29:1), the shofar. They were for signifying the start of a war (Josh. 6:4; Judges 3:27; 7:16, 20; I Sam. 8:3). Later, it was also employed in processions (II Sam. 6:15; I Chron. 15:28), as musical accompaniment (Ps. 98:6; comp. ib. 47:5) and eventually it was inserted into the temple orchestra by David (Ps. 150:3). Note that the 'trumpets' described in Numbers 10 are a different instrument, described by the Hebrew word 'trumpet' (
    Hebrew
    :
    ??????
    ?; hasosrah), not the word for shofar (
    Hebrew
    :
    ????
    ?).
    The
    Torah
    describes the first day of the seventh month (1st of Tishri = Rosh ha-Shanah) as a
    zikron teru?ah
    (
    Hebrew
    :
    ????? ?????
    ?; memorial of blowing; Lev. xxiii) and as a
    yom teru?ah
    (
    Hebrew
    :
    ??? ?????
    ?; day of blowing; Num. 29). This was interpreted by the Jewish sages as referring to the sounding of the shofar.
    In the
    Temple in Jerusalem
    , the shofar was sometimes used together with the
    trumpet
    . On New Year's Day the principal ceremony was conducted with the shofar, which instrument was placed in the center with a trumpet on either side; it was the horn of a
    wild goat
    and straight in shape, being ornamented with gold at the
    mouthpiece
    . On fast days the principal ceremony was conducted with the trumpets in the center and with a shofar on either side. On those occasions the shofarot were
    rams' horns
    curved in shape and ornamented with silver at the mouthpieces. On Yom Kippur of the
    jubilee year
    the ceremony was performed with the shofar as on New Year's Day.
    On Rosh Hashanah and other full holidays (Day of Atonement, Ingathering of the harvest (
    Sukkot
    ), Passover and the Feast of Weeks – Pentecost) a single Priest perfected two sacrifices in honor of the full holiday, (Note that festivals such as Hanukah and Purim, are not considered full holidays requiring an extra sacrifice). On Rosh Hashanah, something special occurred during the special sacrifice. Arguably two Shofar Sounders played the long notes and one Trumpet player played the short note. Accordingly, Rosh HaShanah is called Yom Teruah (the day of the blast) Otherwise, the Trumpets had "top billing." Rosh Hashanah27a, supports this claim: "Said Raba or it may have been R. Joshua B. Levi: What is the scriptural warrant for this? – Because it is written, "With trumpets and the sound of the Shofar shout ye before the King in the Temple, we require trumpets and the sound of the Shofar; elsewhere not."
    [1]
    Indeed, on Yom Kippur, the Shofar was sounded to announce the
    Jubilee Year
    (every 50 years, Jews were granted forgiveness, debts were forgiven, indentured Israelites were granted freedom, and the fields "shall become owned by the priests." Shofar first indicated in Yovel (Jubilee Year - Lev. 25:8-13). Indeed, in Rosh Hashanah 33b, the sages ask why the Shofar sounded in Jubilee year. Further support
    [
    clarification needed
    support of what?
    ]
    is found in Rosh Hashanah 29a, where the Talmud talks of trumpets for sacrifices but Shofar in the Jubilee Year does not apply to priests who are exempt from the obligations of the jubilee. Perhaps,
    [
    citation needed
    ]
    we have the first mention of Shofar Sounding by non-Priests. Perhaps the first distancing away from the Sacrificial Cult.
    [
    citation needed
    ]
    Otherwise, for all other special days, the Shofar is sounded shorter and two special silver Trumpets announced the sacrifice. When the trumpets sound the signal, all the people who were within the sacrifice prostrate themselves, stretching out flat, face down and on the ground.
    The shofar was blown in the times of
    Joshua
    to help him capture
    Jericho
    . As they surrounded the walls, the shofar was blown and the Jews were able to capture the city. The shofar was commonly taken out to war so the troops would know when a battle would begin. The person who would blow the shofar would call out to the troops from atop a hill. All of the troops were able to hear the call of the shofar from their position because of its distinct sound.
    [
    citation needed
    ]
    Post-Biblical times
    [
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    |
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    beta
    ]
    In
    post-Biblical
    times, the shofar was enhanced in its religious use because of the ban on playing musical instruments as a sign of mourning for the destruction of the temple. (It is noted that a full orchestra played in the temple.) The shofar continues to announce the New Year,
    [2]
    and the new moon,
    [
    dubious

    discuss
    ]
    , to introduce
    Shabbat
    ,
    [
    dubious

    discuss
    ]
    to carry out the commandment to sound it on Rosh Hashanah, and to mark the end of the day of fasting on Yom Kippur once the services have completed in the evening.
    [3]
    Secular uses have been discarded (see a notable exception in a section
    further down
    ).
    [4]
    The shofar is primarily associated with Rosh Hashanah. Indeed, Rosh Hashanah is called "Yom T’ruah" (or "Yom Teruah") (the day of the shofar blast). In the
    Mishnah
    (book of early rabbinic laws derived from the
    Torah
    ), a discussion centers on the centrality of the shofar in the time before the destruction of the second temple (70 AD). Indeed, the shofar was the center of the ceremony, with two silver trumpets playing a lesser role. On other solemn holidays, fasts, and new moon celebrations, two silver trumpets were featured, with one shofar playing a lesser role. The shofar is also associated with the
    jubilee year
    in which, every fifty years, Jewish law provided for the release of all slaves, land, and debts. The sound of the shofar on Rosh Hashanah announced the jubilee year, and the sound of the shofar on Yom Kippur proclaimed the actual release of financial encumbrances.
    The
    halakha
    (Jewish law) rules that the shofar may not be sounded on Shabbat due to the potential that the ba’al tekiyah (shofar sounder) may inadvertently carry it which is in a class of forbidden Shabbat work.
    [5]
    The historical explanation is that in ancient Israel, the shofar was sounded on Shabbat in the temple located in Jerusalem. After the temple’s destruction, the sounding of the shofar on Shabbat was restricted to the place where the great
    Sanhedrin
    (Jewish legislature and court from 400 BCE to 100 C.E.) was located. However, when the Sanhedrin ceased to exist, the sounding of the shofar on Shabbat was discontinued.
    [6]
    The shofar says, "Awake, sleepers from your sleep, and slumberers arise from your slumber!" Mishneh Torah, Laws of Repentance 3:4.
    [7]
    Mitzvah
    [
    edit source
    |
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    beta
    ]
    The Sages indicated that the
    mitzvah
    was to hear the sounds of the shofar. They went so far as to consider a shofar blown into a pit or cave and to decide whether a person who hears the original sound or the echo has fulfilled the mitzvah. Mishnah (Rosh Hashanah 27b). The Shulchan Aruch sums up that if the hearer hears the reverberation, the mitzvah is not valid. However, if the listener perceives the direct sounds, he fulfils the mitzvah.
    [8]
    Thus, most modern halakhic authorities hold that hearing a shofar on the radio or the Internet would not be valid to satisfy the mitzvah because "electronically reproduced sounds do not suffice for mitzvot that require hearing a specific natural sound. . . . However, one should consult a competent rabbi if an unusually pressing situation arises, as some authorities believe that performing mitzvot through electronically reproduced sound is preferable to not performing them at all."
    [9]
    According to
    Jewish law
    women and minors are exempt from the commandment of hearing the shofar blown (as is the case with any positive, time-bound commandment), but they are encouraged to attend the ceremony.
    If the Baal Tekiyah (shofar sounder) blows with the intention that all who hear will perform the mitzvah, then anyone listening—even someone passing by—who intends to hear the Shofar can perform the mitzvah because the community blower blows for everybody. If the listener stands still, it is presumed he intends to hear.
    [10]
    If one hears the blast but with no intention of fulfilling the mitzvah, then the mitzvah has not been fulfilled.
    Qualifications
    [
    edit source
    |
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    beta
    ]
    The expert who blows (or "blasts" or "sounds") the shofar is termed the
    Tokea
    (lit. "Blaster") or
    Ba'al T'qiah
    (lit. "Master of the Blast"). Being a Ba'al T'qiah (shofar sounder) is an honor. Every male Jew is eligible for this sacred office, providing he is acceptable to the congregation. "The one who blows the shofar on Rosh Hashanah . . . should likewise be learned in the Torah and shall be God-fearing; the best man available." If a potential choice will cause dissension, he should withdraw his candidacy, even if the improper person will be chosen.
    [11]
    If a blind blower was dismissed, but the community did not find a blower as proficient, he should be appointed as community blower.
    The Shulchan Aruch discusses who is fit to blow the shofar on behalf of a congregation:
    Anyone not obligated to fulfill the mitzvah of sounding the shofar cannot fulfill the commandment for (cover) another whose duty it is to perform the mitzvah.
    Although a woman (who is exempt from this mitzvah because it is time bound) may not blow the shofar for men (whose duty it is to perform the mitzvah), a female
    Ba'alat
    T'qiah may intone the shofar for herself and other women. Similarly, she may say a blessing over the mitzvah even though it is not mandatory (the requisite blessing contains the words "asher kid'shanu b'mitzvotav v’tzivanu", "who sanctified us with His commandments [mitzvot] and commanded us to ...", but women are not commanded in this mitzvah).
    Only a freeman (not even a slave who will become free in the next month) can be a Ba'al T'qiah.
    [12]
    The
    Ba'al T'qiah
    shall abstain from anything that may cause ritual contamination for three days prior to Rosh Hashanah.
    [13]
    from wikipedia
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