DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 428 KB)
Reciting Keri’at Shema While Lying on One’s Side

Is it permissible to recite the Shema while lying down? For example, if a person went to bed and, while lying on his bed, he remembers that he must recite Shema, must he sit up, or perhaps even stand, for the recitation, or may he remain lying while reciting Shema?

The Gemara in Masechet Berachot addresses this question in two different contexts. From one discussion, it appears that one should not recite Shema while lying down, whereas in the second context is seems that one may lie on his side while reciting Shema. To reconcile these different rulings, Rabbenu Yona (Spain, 1210-1268) distinguishes between lying completely on one’s side, and lying on one’s back slightly tiled to the side. When the Gemara forbade reciting Shema while lying on one’s side, Rabbenu Yona explains, it refers to someone who is lying on his back and is turned to the side slightly. Reciting Shema in such a position is considered an expression of arrogance, and is therefore forbidden. It is permissible, however, to read the Shema while lying completely on one’s side, and this is the situation addressed by the Gemara when it allows reciting Shema in a lying position.

Rabbenu Yona also offers a second answer to resolve these seemingly conflicting sources, but most Rishonim (Medieval Halachic scholars) accept the first approach, as discussed above. This is, indeed, the ruling of the Shulhan Aruch (Orah Haim 63). Thus, it is permissible to recite Shema while lying on one’s side, provided that he is lying entire on his side, and not just leaning slightly to the side.

Hacham David Yosef, in his Oserot Yosef, adds that according to the Shulhan Aruch, it is acceptable to recite Shema in a lying position even "Le’chatehila" (optimally). A person who had gone to bed therefore does not have to sit up for Shema, and may remain lying for the recitation.

Summary: If a person had gone to bed and remembers that he must recite Shema, he may recite it while lying down on his side, provided that he lies completely on his side, and does not just turn slightly to the side.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Minimum Age Requirement for a Judge
Must One Immerse in a Mikveh Before Praying or Learning After Becoming Tameh?
Living in Eretz Yisrael
Giving Charity "Intelligently"
May One Recite Birkat Ha’ilanot During the Month of Adar?
Avoiding Contact With Members of the Opposite Gender
Verifying a Couple’s Status as Husband and Wife Based on a “Hazaka”
If a Woman is Widowed or Divorced While Pregnant or While Nursing an Infant
Remarrying in a Different County After Divorce or a Wife’s Death
Does the Prohibition Against Marrying an Egyptian, Edomite, Amonite or Moabite Apply Nowadays?
The History of the Prohibition Against Bigamy
If One’s Parents Disapprove of His or Her Choice of a Marriage Partner
How Many Times a Day Must a Person Stand in His Parents’ Honor?
Calling a Sinner for an Aliya to the Torah
The Daily Reading of a Verse Corresponding to One's Name
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found