Jews can now tweet prayers to God

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wkuhillhound
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Re: Jews can now tweet prayers to God

Post by wkuhillhound »

citdog wrote:I just tweeted Jehovah and asked him to give a certain 600lb darkie sickle cell

appaholic is right if A Joo can't figure it out it can't be done. Perhaps they are too busy running hollywood, finance, diamond markets, newspapers, magazines, and tv, and the world to even take the time to bother with twitter.


Btw appa space bar works about as well as your goddamn phone. Phone probably doesn't like the rain either.

That tweet hasn't been answered. Since you are not talking about me, then I'm good to go. I'm being blessed everyday, much to your dismay. I may be dark, but I haven't had any complaints from the masses as CS.com, so fuck off! :rofl:
Last edited by wkuhillhound on Mon Jul 27, 2009 4:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Jews can now tweet prayers to God

Post by Ibanez »

polsongrizz wrote:Jews, always trying to find a shortcut to "Gawd" :mrgreen:

New service lets Jews tweet a prayer to God

* By STEVE WEIZMAN, AP

JERUSALEM -

Judaism's holiest prayer site has entered the Twitter age.

The Western Wall now has its own address on the social networking service, allowing believers around the globe to have their prayers placed between its 2,000 year-old-stones without even leaving their armchairs.

The service's Web site says petitioners can tweet their prayers and they will be printed out and taken to the wall, where they will join the thousands of handwritten notes placed by visitors who believe their requests will find a shortcut to God by being deposited there.

The wall, in Jerusalem's Old City, is all that remains of the second biblical Jewish temple, destroyed by the Romans in 70 A.D. It stands where the bible says King Solomon built the first temple, which was destroyed by the Babylonians more than 600 years earlier.

The Tweet Your Prayers site does not identify its founders, saying only that the driving force behind it is a "young man from Tel Aviv".

No charge is made for placing a prayer at the wall. Visitors to the Web site are invited to make donations by credit card and it has sponsored links to an outdoor reception hall on the nearby Mount of Olives and a publisher of custom-made prayer books.

Throughout the ages, Jews have prayed at the Western Wall, and many others have made courtesy calls.
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