DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Michael Moses
"Health and safe trip"

Dedicated By
Isaac Moses

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 474 KB)
Arranging the Torah Scrolls on the Teba When Two or More Scrolls are Read

There are numerous occasions over the course of the year when two Sifreh Torah are taken from the Hechal and read in the synagogue.  This Shabbat, for example, is Shabbat Zachor, when we read the weekly Torah portion from one Sefer Torah, and the special section of “Zachor” from a second scroll.  There are even occasions when three Sifreh Torah are read.  This happens on Hanukah, for example, in years when Rosh Hodesh Tebet (which occurs during Hanukah) falls on Shabbat.  In such a situation, we use one Torah scroll for the weekly portion, a second Sefer for the Rosh Hodesh reading, and a third Sefer for the Hanukah reading.

The Poskim rule that whenever two or more Sifreh Torah are taken from the Hechal, the one from which we read first should be placed to the leftmost side.  The one that is used second should be placed to its right, and if a third Sefer Torah is read, it is placed to the right of the second scroll.  The Shulhan Aruch rules that in performing Misvot we always begin to the left and move rightward, and thus the first Sefer Torah should be positioned to the left, with the scrolls read subsequently arranged to its right.  This was the practice of Hacham Yehuda Sadka (1910-1991), and this ruling appears in the work Ner Le’siyon (Halacha 37; listen to audio recording for precise citation).

Summary: When two Sifreh Torah are taken from the Hechal, the one from which we read first is placed to the leftmost side, and the one that is used second is placed to its right.  If a third Sefer Torah is read, it is placed to the right of the second scroll.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Pesah- Use Your Best Dishes & The Proper Time for Kiddush
Pesah – If a Gentile Bring Hametz Into One’s Home
Some Laws of Chol Ha'mo'ed
Pesah-How Much Massa Must One Eat at the Seder?
Passover- Complications of Mechirat Hametz When One Travels Overseas for Pesah
Passover- Bedikat Hametz – Where One is Required to Search; the Custom to Put Ten Pieces of Bread Around the Home Before the Search
Pesah-If a Piece of Wheat is Found in Rice During Pesah
The Sale of Hametz: The Need for a Formal “Kinyan,” and the Status of Wine Sold to a Gentile
Pesah-Baking Massa on Erev Pesah
Pesah-What Massa Must be Used for the Seder Night?
Pesah-Baking Massot on Ereb Pesah
Pesah-The Water Used to Bake Massot
Pesah-What are the practical applications of “Stolen Massa?”
Is it Proper to Recite the 13 Midot on Yom Tob?
How Many Days of Yom Tob Does One Observe if He Always Visits Israel for the Shalosh Regalim?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found