Psalms: Prayer, Praise, and Tikkun
The Book of Psalms (Sefer Tehillim) stands at the center of Jewish devotional life, shaping religious psychology, liturgy, and spiritual imagination for over two millennia. Psalms are simultaneously literary, musical, therapeutic, communal, mystical, and theological. This essay argues that Psalms constitute a uniquely Jewish mode of prayer that transforms emotional life into sacred language, enacting a process of tikkun—repair or restoration—on the psychic, communal, and cosmic planes. Drawing on biblical scholarship, rabbinic theology, medieval and kabbalistic traditions, and modern psychology, this work examines the Psalms as a technology of meaning-making, identity formation, trauma recovery, and divine encounter. Particular attention is given to Rabbi Nachman of Breslov's Tikkun HaKlali—the ten psalms he designated as a comprehensive remedy—and its relationship to contemporary therapeutic practice. The paper integrates concepts of therapeutic tzimtzum, Shekhinah consciousness, and hermeneutic medicine to propose that Psalmic prayer functions as a form of what might be termed 'linguistic surgery'—operating on consciousness through sacred language to restore wholeness where fragmentation has occurred. The analysis concludes by exploring how the Psalms create a grammar of hope that sustains the Jewish imagination through exile and rupture, proposing that Psalmic prayer remains one of Judaism's most enduring engines of spiritual resilience.
