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Unanswered Questions

475 questions with no upvoted or accepted answers
2 votes
0 answers
122 views

Is there a gemara that explains why our forefathers' prayers were answered right away?

I think I remember a gemara that says the reason why our fathers were answered right away as opposed to us is because they knew G-d's name. I am searching for it but I have not found it yet.
2 votes
0 answers
79 views

Mispronouncing G-d's name "Adee-noy"

If a shaliach tzibur pronounces the name of G-d as "Adeenoy", can one say "amen"? Can one say "Boruch hu uvaruch shemo"? Does one fulfil the requirement of tefila B'...
0 votes
0 answers
77 views

Order of Selichos

In most siddurim used by ashkenazim, nussach Ashkenaz or Sefard, we have a daily addition for selichos sandwitched between tefilas Amidah and Tachnun. Some people suggested to me that it was taken ...
2 votes
0 answers
74 views

Touching dogs obstructs prayers - source?

One of the first things I learned in yeshiva was that there is some source that says that: if one touches a dog, then their prayers are "held up in heaven" for 40 days. I don't remember ...
4 votes
0 answers
131 views

Is it permissible to say personal prayers either sitting or laying down?

By "personal prayer" I mean expressing personal thoughts, hopes, and concerns, unlike the structured prayers found in the Siddur.
1 vote
0 answers
89 views

Can Nusach be changed throughout the day?

Is there an issue with davening, for example, Nusach HaArizal for Shacharit, and then Mincha according to Nusach Ashkenaz?
1 vote
0 answers
36 views

Why do some people from Nusach Sefard say Shalom Rav only by Mincha - not by Maariv

Every day, towards the end of שמונה עשרה for שחרית, after ברכת כהנים we say the ברכה of שלום. To be specific, we say שים שלום, regardless of what נוסח you Daven. At מנחה and מעריב - people who Daven ...
0 votes
0 answers
32 views

Customs for a ceremony for changing back the Torah covers

We would like to make a special ceremony for changing back our Torah covers (me'ilim) after the High Holidays. Are there any special readings and/or prayers said when changing the Torah covers from ...
0 votes
1 answer
61 views

Standards of a Place for Davening

Is a Jew allowed to daven in bed? Can one daven in their pajamas in a place? Can a Jew daven in the same room as an unmade bed? PS: This question is alluding to ALL contexts (i.e. whether is person is ...
4 votes
0 answers
58 views

Why specify individuals in a mi sheberach?

The standard template for a "mi sheberach" always ends with something along the lines of, "V'et kol khal hakadosh hazeh". That being the case, why do Olim laTorah (and gabbaim) ...
1 vote
0 answers
103 views

Grammar of Pausal Forms in Selichos, Hoshanos, etc

In the S'lichos of Nusach Lita we read towards the end a tefila, which is stated using the ךָ-ֶ (-ekha) pausal form: עֲשֵׂה לְמַֽעַן אֲמִתֶּךָ. עֲשֵׂה לְמַֽעַן בְּרִיתֶךָ. עֲשֵׁה לְמַֽעַן גָּדְלֶךָ ...
0 votes
0 answers
46 views

Hakol Yoducha versus HaMeir La'Aretz on Shabbat Yom Tov

Why is it that according to minhag Ashkenaz (Nusach Sfard) the blessing of the Me'orot (in Shacharit) on Yom Tov that falls on Shabbat, they say Hakol Yoducha (הכל יודוך), while if Yom Tov falls on a ...
0 votes
0 answers
51 views

2 Oseh Shaloms for the price of one?

One finishes both Shmone Esre and Kaddish with the very same "Oseh Shalom", often including 3 steps back. One can say Kaddish before one said Shmone Esre's "Oseh Shalom" When the ...
2 votes
0 answers
49 views

Origins/Information sought for the words דּוֹק and חֶלֶד, which appear in אַדִּיר וְנָאוֹר - translated as "Heaven and Earth"? (RH/YK Machzor)

I've never seen דּוֹק וָחֶלֶד before except in this prayer. Looking them up hasn't been particularly useful - I can't find a second source that defines דּוֹק as heaven (and can't find any uses in ...
3 votes
0 answers
128 views

Hypothetically, if one only has half an hour to pray the Yom Kippur evening service, what are the most important prayers to include?

I was wondering if there is prayers that are absolutely necessary to be said at the Yom Kippur evening service, (such as Kol Nidre, or Shema) if someone was in a situation where they had to do an ...

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