DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Nissim ben margolite(nat esses)

Dedicated By
his children and grandchildren

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 1.04 MB)
Is A Person Required To Stand During Chazara (Repetition of the Amidah)

Is one required to stand during the Chazan's repetition of the Amida?

The Rama (Rabbi Moshe Isserles, Poland, 1525-1572), in his glosses to the Shulchan Aruch (124:4), cites the position of the Sefer Ha'minhagim requiring that one stand during the repetition of the Amida. This is the view as well of Rabbi Yitzchak Abuhav (Spain-Israel, 1433-1493), in his work Menorat Ha'ma'or (3:111; listen to audio for precise citation).

Some writers claimed that the Rambam (Rabbi Moshe Ben Maimon, Spain-North Africa, 1135-1204) held this opinion, too, as he writes (Hilchot Tefila 9:3), "Everyone stands and listens to the repetition of the Shali'ach Tzibur." However, Chacham Ovadia Hadaya (Israel, 1890-1969), in his work Yaskil Avdi (vol. 2, Orach Chayim, 2), refutes this claim, arguing that the word "Omedim" (literally, "standing") can also be used in reference to silence, in which case the Rambam here speaks not of standing during the repetition, but rather of remaining silent. Furthermore, had the Rambam held that one must stand during the repetition, the Rama would have cited the Rambam as the source for his ruling, rather than citing the Sefer Ha'minhagim.

Conversely, Rabbi Yaakov Chagiz (1620-1674), in his work Halchot Ketanot, suggests proving that one may sit during the repetition of the Amida from the Gemara's comment (in Masechet Yoma 87b) that Shemuel would rise for the recitation of Viduy (confessional) during the Yom Kippur prayer service. If Shemuel had to rise for the Viduy, then he must have been sitting during the repetition of the Amida, thus proving that one need not stand during the repetition. Others, however, refuted this proof, arguing that Shemuel perhaps sat specifically on Yom Kippur because he felt weak and frail as a result of fasting.

As for the final Halacha, Chacham David Yosef, in his work Halacha Berura (vol. 6, p. 271), writes that those who have the practice to stand for the repetition should continue this practice, as it is rooted in several Halachic sources. He adds, however, that somebody who feels ill or frail may be lenient and sit during the repetition even if he normally follows the practice to stand. Those who follow the practice to sit during the repetition have authorities on whom to rely and may continue doing so, and this is, indeed, the custom among most Sepharadim. However, a person who prays in a congregation where the practice is to stand during the Amida should abide by the local custom and stand, even if his personal practice is to sit. In the converse situation, one may stand during the repetition in a congregation where the custom is to sit.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
May One Enter the Restroom With a Small Torah Book in His Pocket?
If the Hazan Began Reciting “Ata Honen” When Repeating the Amida on Shabbat
Tending on Shabbat to a Patient Whose Condition is Not Life-Threatening
Is One Allowed to Keep Other Items With the Tefillin in the Tefillin Bag?
Should One Expose the Tzitzit of His Tallit Katan?
Sisit: Folding a Tallit and other Garments on Shabbat
Sisit: Selling a Tallit to a Non-Jew, Hashgacha on Sisit, Using a Tallit to Clean Eyeglasses
Sisit: Folding the Tallit
Sisit: Bedsheets and the Earliest Time for Donning a Tallit
Sisit: Why Don't We Make a Beracha on a Tallit Katan?
Sisit: May One Recite a Beracha on a Tallit After Sunset?
Sisit: From What Age Should Boy Wear a Tallit?
Sisit: Using a Borrowed Tallit
Sisit: Can Sisit That Are No Longer Used be Disposed of?
Sisit: If Strings Tear
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found