💾 Archived View for scholasticdiversity.us.to › scriptures › jewish › t › Shulchan%20Arukh%2C%20Orac… captured on 2024-05-10 at 12:35:00. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Shulchan Arukh, Orach Chayim 110

Home

Shulchan Arukh

110 ‎[1] **The Traveler and Laborers - What Should They Pray? And the Order of the Prayer During Travel and of the Study Hall. Containing 8 Seifim:**

In a extenuating circumstance, such as when one is on the road or when one was standing in a place where one is distracted, and one fears that they will interrupt one, or if one is not able to pray the full [Amidah] prayer with intention - one prays "Havineinu" [i.e. the digest version of the middle 13 Amidah blessings] after the first three [blessings of the Amidah] and, after it, say the last three [blessings of the Amidah], and it is necessary to say them while standing. And when one arrives at one's house, it is not necessary to go back and pray [again]. And one does not pray "Havineinu" in the rainy season, and not at the departure of Shabbat [i.e. Saturday night] nor a holiday. ‎[2] The laborers who do their work near the proprietor - if [the proprietor] doesn't give them payment beyond their meals, they pray eighteen [blessings the Amidah], they do not descend before the Ark [i.e. they do not appoint a prayer leader to lead them], and they do not "raise their hands" [i.e. if any of them are Kohanim, they do not recite the Priestly Blessings]. And they are given payment, they pray "Havineinu." And nowadays, it is not the way [of proprietor] to be strict regarding this, and it's assumed that they hired them with the understanding that they will [interrupt their work to] pray the Shemoneh Esrei [i.e. the full Amidah]. ‎[3] The one who is walking in a place [where there are] bands of wild animals or robbers prays "The needs of your people are numerous, etc.", and there is no need - not the first three [blessings of the Amidah], and not for the final three. And one may pray this on the road, as one is going, but if one is able to stand, one [should] stand. And when one arrives at a settlement and one's mind has calmed down, one goes back and prays the Eighteen Blessings [i.e. the full Amidah]. (And if one did not go back to pray, it is considered as if one forgot to pray entirely. And this was explained above in Siman 108) (And this is also understood from the Beit Yosef) ‎[4] One who leaves to travel should pray: "May it be your will Lord our God and the God of our ancestors, that you lead us to peace, etc." And one must say it in plural language, and if it is possible, one should refrain from going while one says it. And if one was riding, one need not dismount. ‎[5] It is not necessary to say [this prayer] more than once a day even if one rests in a city in the middle of the day. But if one's thought is to lodge in the city, and then afterwards, one reconsiders and leaves it [so as to] to pass outside of it or to return to one's home, one must go back and pray [the prayer] another time. ‎[6] The Mahar"am of Rottenburg, when he was traveling in the morning, he would say it [i.e. the prayer for travelers mentioned above in Seif 4] after the [morning blessing of] "May it be your will..." in order to juxtapose it with the blessing of "The One who bestows kindness" and it would therefore be a blessing that is juxtaposed with another. ‎[7] One should say it after one has hit the road. And one should not say it other than in the case that one has to go a parsah [approx. 4 km]; but [if] less than a parsah one should not end [the prayer] with "barukh...". And ab initio, one should say it within the first parsah (Rashi and the R"i) And one forgot to say it, one may say it the entire time one is on the road, as long as one did not yet reach within the parsah adjacent to the city in which one wants to lodge; and from that point on, one should say it without the blessing. ‎[8] One who enters the study hall prays "May it be your will, Lord, our God and the God of our ancestors, that I not falter in any legal matter, etc." And upon one's departure, one says "I give thanks before You, Lord my God, that placed my portion among those who sit in the the study hall, etc."

Previous

Next

Version Info

Version: Sefaria Community Translation

Source: https://www.sefaria.org

License: CC0

Jewish Texts

Powered by Sefaria.org