Western Wall • Psalms

About Prayed Paper
Sometimes one has difficulty in choosing the right words to express messages of gratitude, support, condolences, speedy recovery from an illness, wishes of success in a new job or for a test, or congratulations. Buying a generic greeting card which conveys “their” message is so impersonal and never hits the spot. But with the unique Prayed Paper, the inscribed wish is directly from your heart and soul. We have only given you the heavenly inspiration to write it. Prayed Paper is a novel concept that interweaves a special life force throughout your message. You can write or print your wish on paper upon which was recited the original Hebrew words of King David’s Psalm that express the same theme of your message with which he beseeched God. The recitation of your Psalm of choice was prayed upon this very paper at the holy site of the Western Wall in Jerusalem where all walks of life come to pray.
If Psalms can change the molecular structure of water and plants, it can infuse your well-wish paper with a special spiritual life force to support your message and hasten its fruition. This is the opportunity to send an extraordinary one of a kind wish, to a family member, loved one or friend which they will definitely appreciate and make them feel much supported by you and God.
We have recited for you King David’s original prayer at the Western Wall. All you have to do is write your message on the Prayed Paper of your personal wish and then send it. May God be with you as he was with King David when he beseeched Him, and as He is with us daily at the Western Wall.
Psalms & Water
Dr. Masaru Emoto, a visionary researcher from Japan, through repeatable experiments demonstrated that human thoughts and emotions can alter the molecular structure of water. Now, for the first time, there is physical evidence that the power of our thoughts can change the world within and around us.
Tomer Rabiav, a chemistry student at Bar Ilan University, after hearing the research of Dr. Emoto, did the following experiment. In each of three Petri dishes I placed white beans on a bed of cotton and watered them over a period of two weeks. One dish was watered with standard tap water without any of my speaking or thinking any particular thoughts. As I watered the second dish I uttered curses. And as I watered the third dish I recited Psalms and had thoughts of gratitude to God over the blessing of water in our world. After two weeks I could see significant differences between the bean sprouts of the three dishes.
For time immemorial, whenever Jews found themselves in difficult situations, whether individually or communally, they would open up the Book of Psalms and use King David’s ageless poetic praises and supplications to beseech G-d for mercy.
The ancient Rabbis tell us that when King David compiled the Psalms, he had in mind himself and every generation. No matter who you are and what the situation, the words of the Psalms speak the words of your heart and are heard On High.
If we only knew the power of Psalms and the effects of its recitation, we would recite them constantly. “Know that the chapters of Psalms shatter all barriers, they ascend higher and still higher with no interference; they prostrate themselves in supplication before the Master of all worlds, and they effect and accomplish with kindness and compassion.”
Western Wall
The Western Wall is one of four retaining walls that surrounded the Temple Mount at the end of the Second Temple Period. It is a place of great holiness.The ancient Jews brought sacrifices to the Temple, and study and prayer were conducted there as well.For many centuries, Jews came to pray at the wall, both for individual requests and for the rebuilding of the Temple and the return of sovereignty to the Jewish people. People of all religions come to pray at the wall. It is established practice to place a note with a specific request in between the stones of the Western Wall. Over a million notes are placed in the wall each year, and twice a year the rabbi of the Western Wall collects the notes and buries them in a dedicated area of the Mount of Olives cemetery.
