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There is a fundamental difference between the times set for reciting the Shema and all other prayers. Whereas our sages linked the times for prayers to the times of the Temple sacrifices, the time for reciting Shema is fixed by the Torah itself – “beshochbechah uvekumechah” – when you lie down and when you get up.
Accordingly, the morning Shema is to be recited when people usually get up. The earliest time the Shema can be recited is just after Amud Hashachar, which is the time the first ray of light begins to shine on the Eastern horizon. Amud Hashachar itself would be too early because it is still dark and one would not be able to fulfill the requirement of seeing the tzitzit when reciting the third paragraph of the Shema.
The preferred time for reciting Shema in the morning is just before hanetz hachamah,” sunrise. Hanetz hachamah is when the sun begins to shine from the mountaintops and it is about one and one-fifth of an hour after Amud Hashachar. This is the preferred time because it is especially meritorious to recite the Shema immediately before reciting the Amidah prayer. But since the Amidah prayer cannot be recited before sunrise, the only way to avoid a break between Shema and the Amidah is to recite the Shema immediately before sunrise and the Amidah immediately thereafter.
In case of emergency, such as when one has to leave on a journey right after dawn and will not be able to recite the Shema until beyond its latest permissible time, one may recite Shema at the crack of dawn because there are at least some people who get up at that early hour.
The latest time Shema may be recited in the morning is the time by which most people have already risen. That time is set by the sages to be when the first quarter of the day is over – which is the end of the third halachic hour of the day. A halachic hour is the unit of time derived by dividing the period of time between sunrise and sunset by twelve. It can be more or less than sixty minutes depending on the time of the year. Thus, if there were eighteen hours between sunrise and sunset on a summer’s day, the latest time for reciting the Shema would be four-and-a-half hours after sunrise.
In the summer, when the sun rises early, that would occur earlier than one might think. If there were only nine hours between sunrise and sunset on a winter’s day, the latest time for reciting the Shema would be two-and-a-quarter hours after sunrise. Taking into account that the sun rises earlier in summer than in winter, the latest time for reciting Shema occurs at an earlier hour in the summer than it does in the winter.
Accordingly, whereas during the month of December the latest time for reciting the Shema is 9:03 a.m., in June the latest time is 8:37 a.m. In view of the fact that the times for reciting the Shema are fixed by the Torah itself, particular care must be taken to recite it before the first quarter of the day.
The timely recital of the Shema is so important that if one cannot reach the synagogue or access ones tallit or tefillin before the first quarter of the day, one must recite the Shema in private or without tallit and tefillin and then repeat it later on in the synagogue or when tallit and tefillin are at hand. Particular care should be taken to recite the Shema at home if one attends a synagogue that begins late on Shabbat morning.
The evening Shema is to be recited at the time people go to bed. Accordingly, the earliest time for reciting the evening Shema is when three stars are visible in the sky or would be visible were the sky not obscured by clouds.
There is much discussion among halachic authorities on the proprietary of the custom to recite the evening Shema during a Ma’ariv service held immediately following the recital of Minchah one and a quarter hours before night, a time known as Plug Haminchah. The problem is that at that time there is still light and it is difficult to call it nighttime because people do not go to bed while it is still light outside.
The custom to recite Ma’ariv immediately following Minchah arose from the concern of some rabbis that some individuals who attended the Minchah prayer would not return to the synagogue after dark to recite Ma’ariv and would perhaps forget to recite the Shema in their homes altogether. Therefore, it would be better to recite the Shema early than not at all.
According to Tosafot, it is perfectly proper to recite the Shema in Ma’ariv immediately after Minchah even though it is still light. According to Rashi, even though it is appropriate to recite the Shema in Ma’ariv while it is still light, one should repeat at least the first paragraph at home when it is dark. For this purpose, it is sufficient to recite the first paragraph of the Shema before going to sleep as part of the bedtime prayers. According to the Mishneh Berurah, however, one must recite all three paragraphs of the Shema at home after dark.
Although according to the Torah the nighttime Shema may be recited until dawn because some people go to bed after midnight, the rabbis decreed that the evening Shema should be recited before midnight so as to avoid a situation where people will fall asleep and miss reciting the Shema.
In cases of emergency, however, the rabbis permit the recital of the Shema until dawn. In situations of dire emergency, such as when a person is sick, the evening Shema may even be recited after dawn and before sunrise provided it is not accompanied by the blessing of Hashkiveinu.
Raphael Grunfeld’s book, “Ner Eyal on Seder Moed” (distributed by Mesorah) is available at OU.org and your local Jewish bookstore.
He can be contacted at rafegrunfeld@gmail.com.
About the Author: Raphael Grunfeld’s book, “Ner Eyal on Seder Moed” (distributed by Mesorah) is available at OU.org and your local Jewish bookstore. His new book, “Ner Eyal on Seder Nashim & Nezikin,” will be available shortly.
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When in a quandary we must always turn to our holy books and search for answers.

In this week’s parshah Bilam decides to approach Balak with the intention of cursing the Bnei Yisrael. En route his donkey refused to continue on the path, continuing to veer to the side of the road. At one point the donkey smashed Bilam’s leg into the wall. Bilam hit his donkey three different times. The reason that his donkey would not proceed is because it saw that there was a malach standing in the road with his sword drawn.

The GPS had not been invented when Shelly set off on a Friday afternoon many years ago to join the Bnei Akiva camp in the English countryside. The organizers always managed to find a farmer who welcomed young campers under adult supervision; thus they set up their tents and during the week took the opportunity to learn the halachot of building an eruv. There would be no problems on Shabbat and they would be able to carry within the campsite.
The Rambam, therefore, adds a second component: by getting angry, Moshe misled the people as to the nature of God. The masses felt that Moshe’s anger was reflective of God’s anger.
One of the most complex Tanach personalities is the central figure of this week’s Haftorah: Yiftach, the Shofet, Judge.
“I saw an advertisement for group swimming lessons during the summer,” Mr. Leiner said to his wife. “I think it would be good for our Pinchas.”
She is my first child to reach this stage and, frankly, I’m worried.
Rabbeinu Tam Tefillin
‘Transgressing Bal Tigra’
(Eruvin 100a)
Question: As Shavuot is fast approaching – a holiday on which we dwell on the story of Ruth and the origins of the royal house of David – I was wondering if you could help me resolve something. The Mishnah never makes any mention of the Hasmonean kings, the mitzvah to light a Chanukah menorah, or the miracle of the oil that lasted eight days. Some people say that Rabbi Yehudah HaNassi – the redactor of the six orders of the Mishnah and a scion of King David – omitted these topics because the Hasmoneans improperly crowned themselves, ignoring the rule that all Jewish kings are supposed to come from the tribe of Yehudah. They argue that this is also why the Talmud does not include a separate tractate on Chanukah. Is this true?
Menachem
(Via E-Mail)
In this week’s parshah the Torah discusses many halachos of tumah. One halacha is that a person who is tamei may not enter the Mikdash. Doing so makes him liable for kareis.
The highway was packed with bumper-to-bumper traffic, and there I sat with hands gripped tightly on the steering wheel, begging the cars to move. My heart swelled at the thought of seeing my son, who was just coming back from his year of learning in Eretz Yisrael. How I had missed him! Though I was used to him being away (if you can ever really get used to a child being away), a special space in my heart was empty – as I waited for him.
No one lives in a vacuum. No, that doesn’t mean we didn’t get sucked up through a vacuum cleaner hose in the pre-Pesach cleaning frenzy, it means that whether we like it or not, our environment—the people and things around us—makes a big impact on who we are.
According to biblical law, once an area has been converted in to a reshut hayachid by enclosing it with a halachically acceptable eruv, one may carry inside the enclosed area. But according to rabbinical law, it is simply not enough to enclose an area in which one wants to carry with an eruv. This alone will not permit carrying from the home into the street or vice versa. Neither will it alone permit carrying from a condominium apartment into the lobby or other common areas.
Yidsville had a small but dedicated Jewish community. There was one Orthodox synagogue, led by Rabbi Well, a day school, women’s mikveh, kosher butcher shop, pizza store and restaurants.
According to biblical law, once an area has been converted in to a reshut hayachid by enclosing it with a halachically acceptable eruv, one may carry inside the enclosed area. But according to rabbinical law, it is simply not enough to enclose an area in which one wants to carry with an eruv. This alone will not permit carrying from the home into the street or vice versa. Neither will it alone permit carrying from a condominium apartment into the lobby or other common areas.
One of the thirty-nine prohibited melachot on Shabbat is carrying an object from a private domain, reshut hayachid, to a public domain, reshut harabim, or carrying an object a distance of four amot, six to eight feet, in a reshut harabim. The Torah does permit, however, carrying within the reshut hayachid itself. The definition of a reshut hayachid and a reshut harabim is crucial, therefore, to the laws of carrying on Shabbat.
In order to carry from one’s home into the street (even when the area is enclosed by a properly constructed eruv), the eruvin ceremony must be performed. This ceremony involves the placing of food in one designated home on behalf of all Sabbath observers in the enclosed area. In order for the eruvin ceremony to be valid, however, it must be performed on behalf of all owners of streets and homes in the enclosed area.
The purpose of the eruv is to enclose on all sides the area in which one wants to carry, so that it becomes a private domain, a reshut hayachid. If the area in question is a karmelit, a space that qualifies neither as a public domain nor as a private domain, gaps in the eruv structure may be bridged by means of a constructive or symbolic doorway called tzurat hapetach. A tzurat hapetach is made up of two posts, each called a lechi, and a crossbeam or overhead wire called a korah.
“On Shabbat, every person must remain in his residence,” said Moshe to the people, forbidding them to walk more than a certain distance beyond their desert encampment. This distance, which measures two thousand amot – about two thirds of a mile – is known as techum Shabbat. It is the same distance that stretched from the perimeters of the Levite cities to their outlying suburbs.
In the movie “The Paper Chase,” a Harvard student rips out a page of the law report so that his fellow student will be unable to read it and will come to the lecture unprepared. About 2,000 years earlier a student lay feverishly ill in the academy of Rabbi Akiva in Bnei Brak. So caught up were the other students in the competitiveness of their learning that they found no time to visit him or take care of him. As the student lay dying, Rabbi Akiva himself entered the sick room, fed him, made him comfortable and swept the dust from the floor. The sick student survived. His peers did not.
Football’s 49ers rarely drop the ball. But how many of us make it through 49 nights from the second night of Pesach all the way to Shavuot without losing count? Sometimes we never even make it to the first yard line. We are so busy preparing for second night Seder that we miss evening prayers in shul and forget to count Day One.
What is chametz? What are the various categories of chametz? Does the prohibition of chametz on Pesach apply also to non‑food products? Can medication containing chametz be taken on Pesach? Can vitamins produced with no Pesach supervision be used? What about liquid medicine such as cough mixture? Can non- supervised body soap or liquid detergent be used? What about toothpaste? May one use rubbing alcohol? May one eat egg matzah?
Printed from: http://www.jewishpress.com/judaism/halacha-hashkafa/the-proper-times-for-reciting-shema/2012/08/01/
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