"After this manner" is not followed by any formula but a word for word prayer still.
He gave an example.
If I were instructing someone in a classroom about how to use language, and I said "say something like this" or "after this manner" I would give an example of a sentence or paragraph, not designed for you to just memorize and repeat that example, but to teach a concept of how a sentence or paragraph is structured so that you could create your own.
What is prayer to you? Is it communication with God, or a religious ritual? I suppose that may be the fundamental difference.
You were told the key word is "vain" but you are ignoring it, If Jesus was against repetition prayer then why is it that he he pray in repetition in Matt 26:24?
I've told you multiple times if you can't distinguish the difference between repeating something 10x in a row in a single prayer vs requesting the same thing on multiple separate occasions then we must have a language barrier or something.
Okay, so vain. Vain means it serves no purpose, it is "for show" explain to me the purpose of repeating the Hail Mary passage 10 times back to back that could not be accomplished simply by saying it once?
Matthew 26:44: So he left them and went away once more prayed the third time, saying the same thing.
I've already clarified that's not what Jesus meant by repetitions, He did not pray the same prayer multiple times in a row in 1 sitting. He prayed, got up, went out and woke up His disciples, still had an unresolved need in His heart, so He prayed again. Paul prayed for relief from an affliction he had 3 times as well, until the Lord answered him. After this he didn't pray for it again, it'd been answered. In each case that Jesus prayed, He left time between for the Father to answer. That is a difference. In having a conversation with someone, you might repeat something after you've given pause and there was no answer. But you don't repeat the same thing over and over again before you've had a chance for the first statement to be received and acknowledged (unless you're doing military radio calls which are repeated once after the initial message because Radio does often lose transmission so the other side misses it).
That all being said, Mary is not your intercessor and that is the other thing that bothers about the Hail Mary, it is a request for Mary to intercede for you.. 1 Timothy 2:5.
Why is it in, Psalm 136: the phrase "His love endures forever" is repeated over and over again?
That's a song, we've been over this.
But you said in the beginning, in post
165, that it was wrong for the Jews to recite the Psalms in repetition, and that Jesus
scolded them for doing so. Then after being given the example of Psalms, and how many Christian churches including the Baptist recite it or have songs with lyrics from it, now "this is different".
Songs are different, the repetitions is for aid in memorization, so that you can remember, and think about the content of the song. That's why there's accompanying music often or it has a melody as well, it makes it easier to remember.
But what I was talking about was Jews were doing repetitive prayers, kind of like the rocking back and forth they do in modern days, that's not biblical that's something they picked up later.
Not that in music form matters, but not all the Psalms are recited in the form of music. Psalms 136, Psalm 145, are all recited in the form of meditation. The famous Psalms 23 "The Lord is my Shepherd", is another example of a prayer that people repeatedly say when they feel they are about to die.
I think all of them are meant to be songs sung in Hebrew.
The reason why the Rosary is repetitive is because it is about meditating on significant events in the life of Jesus. It is not done for Christians to "get heard" but to internalize Jesus' life as told in the gospels.
You literally just admitted to using the Hail Mary as a Mantra, as something you say to aid in meditation.
"as the heathen do"