A few questions
Hello Rabbi, thank you for the response that you always respond and answer… it’s not obvious. I wanted to ask a few questions:
1. Are girls allowed to enlist and/or go to national service?
2. Do you think we should study morality? Should we study it every day?
3. Is it permissible to divide the seven blessings at the wedding between several people?
4. When reading the Haftarah. Should one read with the reader in a whisper?
5. A person who owns a bookstore. Is he allowed to sell books that are halachically forbidden to read?
6. Does the value of equality adopted by postmodernism contradict the Torah and Judaism?
7. Regarding the verse: “It is not in the heavens,” the Sages demanded: It will not be found among the scribes and merchants; I asked, and are there also some who are scribes and merchants and among whom Torah is found?
8. A person who saw a prohibited video (meaning the content in it is prohibited. For example: explicit), and liked it. Did he make the like prohibited by holding the hands of the perpetrators of the offense (I am not referring in my question to the prohibition of viewing the video)?
9. Is gambling allowed?
10. Is there an obligation to recite Kaddish? If so, is it for all its parts?
Thank you very much in advance for your consideration…
Discover more from הרב מיכאל אברהם
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
- National service is certainly permitted and very appropriate, and conscription is probably also permitted.
- not.
- Everyday actions.
- not.
- Of course not.
- Not defined. Equality certainly does not contradict Judaism. The question is in the details. The equality of the P.M. is also not defined because there are different opinions (to what extent can P.M. even be considered an opinion).
- There are carpenters and merchants, but not carpenters and merchants. It seems to me that the addition of the noun means that it is a matter of character and not of profession. But of course there is no need for that, since such statements do not claim every detail but rather a general statement.
- perhaps.
- Yes. See reference fences.
- Do you mean to say Amen to Kaddish? Simply put, yes. This is said about blessings, but from my understanding it seems to be the same for Kaddish. See a review here: https://ph.yhb.org.il/10-01-09/
Discover more from הרב מיכאל אברהם
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Leave a Reply
Please login or Register to submit your answer