DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Meda Moses (Meda Lelah Bat Mizlee)
"Meda is undergoing knee replacement and has heart complications as well"

Dedicated By
Isaac Moses

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 590 KB)
Are Women Obligated to Recite Musaf?

Are woman included in the obligation to recite the Musaf prayer on Shabbat, Rosh Hodesh and Yom Tob?

This question is subject to debate among the authorities. Rabbi Akiva Eiger (1761-1837), in a famous responsum, wrote that women are exempt from the Musaf prayer service, because in the times of the Bet Hamikdash women did not participate in the annual half-shekel tax to the Temple treasury. This tax went toward the purchase of animals for the Musaf sacrifices, and thus women did not have a share in the Musaf offerings during the time of the Temple. By extension, then, they are not included in the obligation to recite the Musaf prayer which commemorates the Musaf sacrifices offered in the Temple.

Hacham Ben Sion Abba Shaul (Israel, 1923-1998), however, disputed Rabbi Akiva Eiger’s ruling, noting that males under the age of twenty also did not participate in the half-shekel tax. Even though the half-shekel tax was paid by only males aged twenty and above, it is universally assumed that boys from Bar Misva age are already obligated to recite Musaf. Evidently, Hacham Ben Sion deduces, the Musaf obligation does not depend upon one’s inclusion in the half-shekel tax, and thus even women should be obligated to recite the Musaf prayer.

Hacham Ovadia Yosef follows the ruling of Rabbi Akiva Eiger, and maintains that women are not, in fact, required to recite Musaf. In response to Hacham Ben Sion’s objection to Rabbi Akiva Eiger’s ruling, Hacham Ovadia demonstrates from various sources that males under the age of twenty did, in fact, pay the annual half-shekel tax that funded the public sacrifices. Males under twenty were exempt only from the donations toward the construction of the Bet Hamikdash. They were, however, required to take part in the half-shekel tax that went toward the purchasing of animals for the public sacrifices. It is for this reason, Hacham Ovadia explains, that males are required to recite Musaf already from the age of thirteen, as even at that young age boys were required to take part in funding the Musaf sacrifice. Women, however, were entirely exempt from the half-shekel tax, and are thus likewise entirely exempt from the Musaf prayer.

Hacham Ovadia adds that women who wish to nevertheless recite the Musaf prayer may do so, and this would not constitute Berachot Le’batala (Berachot recited in vain), since some authorities indeed allow women to recite the Musaf service.

Summary: Women are not obligated to recite the Musaf prayer, but may certainly do so if they so desire.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Does Someone Count for a Minyan If He is in a Different Room?
Is There an Obligation to Live in Eretz Yisrael?
May a Woman Return Home From the Hospital on Shabbat After a “False Alarm”?
Revoking Rabbinic Edicts of Past Generations
Accompanying a Woman in Labor to the Hospital on Shabbat
May a Husband be Present During His Wife’s Labor and Delivery?
May Expectant Parents Find Out the Fetus’ Gender?
Is it Permissible to Pray for the Death of a Terminally Ill Patient Who is Suffering?
Using the Mother’s Name When Praying for a Sick Patient
“Opening One’s Mouth to the Satan”
Does One Recite Tefilat Ha’derech Before a Short Flight?
Customs to Observe After Experiencing a Miracle
The Beracha Recited Upon Entering a Cemetery
The Completion of the 13th Daf Yomi Cycle
May a Synagogue Have a Menorah With Seven Branches?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found