("Come, my Beloved"). Opening words and title of a
Sabbath eve hymn written by the mystic and poet Solomon ben Moses ha-Levi
Alkabets. His Hebrew name, Shelomoh ha-Levi, appears as an acrostic in the first eight stanzas. He spent most of his life in Safed, where the 16th-century Lurianic
Kabbalah developed. Inspired by the midrashic concept of the Sabbath as Israel's bride (Gen. R. 11.9), Alkabets and his fellow mystics adopted the practice of leading a joyful procession through the countryside around Safed each week, chanting psalms and verses from the
Song of Songs to welcome the Sabbath Queen and Bride. That personification also derived from the rabbis (
Shab. 119a), and the customs associated with ushering in the Day of Rest in Safed eventually found a permanent place in the Sabbath eve service.
Lekhah Dodi, composed around 1540, ranks first among all the hymns written in Safed and quickly won a place in most liturgical rites, German
Ashkenazim reciting it since the early 17th century. The two opening words are a direct quotation from Song of Songs (7:12) and allude to the Safed practice of "going out into the field" as the Sabbath drew near. Stylistically, the hymn is a patchwork of biblical phrases and echoes, enhanced by puns, alliteration, and multiple rhyme.Recited toward the end of
Kabbalat Shabbat, which forms a prelude to the Friday
Evening Service,
Lekhah Dodi may be sung responsively or else by the entire congregation. In many communities, mourners remain outside while the hymn is recited and then enter the synagogue to be greeted with the traditional words of comfort. Before singing the final stanza, worshipers turn to face west, toward the entrance of the synagogue, and bow in symbolic homage to the Sabbath Queen as she makes her appearance. Some of the stanzas are omitted in Reform temples. No fewer than 2,000 different melodies have been used for
Lekhah Dodi over the past 350 years, and others are still being composed.