{"id":6434,"date":"2010-01-21T03:00:38","date_gmt":"2010-01-21T01:00:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/?p=6434"},"modified":"2018-05-24T12:10:15","modified_gmt":"2018-05-24T09:10:15","slug":"02-21-03","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/02-21-03\/","title":{"rendered":"03 – What Is Nefillat Apayim?"},"content":{"rendered":"
At first, it was customary to perform the Nefillat Apayim<\/i> prayer by prostrating or by bowing down. Prostration means that the person drops his whole body to the ground, and spreads out his hands and feet. Bowing means that the person gets down on his knees, bends his head forward, and rests it down on the ground (Berachot<\/i> 34b; Rambam Tefillah<\/i> 5:13-14).<\/p>\n
However, due to a number of concerns, the custom to pray Nefillat Apayim<\/i> by bowing down or prostrating oneself on the ground was annulled. Some of the reasons are halachic, dealing with the prohibition against prostrating oneself on a stone floor; and the prohibition of an important person falling on his face before the congregation without a guarantee that he will be answered like Yehoshua bin Nun.[2]<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n Still, the main reason is written in the Zohar<\/i> (Numbers 121:1), which greatly reinforces the virtue of Nefillat Apayim<\/i>, during which the person praying must sacrifice his soul to Hashem and view himself as if he has left the world, thereby atoning for all his sins. \u201cThis restorative act must be performed with great kavanah<\/i> of one\u2019s heart. Then HaKadosh Baruch Hu<\/i> has mercy on him and absolves his sins. Great is the person who knows how to entice his Master and eagerly serve Him with kavanah<\/i> of the heart. Woe to the one who entices his Master with a distant heart bereft of desire. As it is written (Psalms 78:36-7), \u2018They beguiled Him with their mouths and lied to Him with their tongue, for their heart was untrue to Him.\u2019 He says, \u2018I lift my soul up to You\u2019 (Psalms 25:1), but his words emanate from a distant heart, and that causes him to leave this world before his time.\u201d Since we are concerned that perhaps we are unable to have the necessary full kavanah<\/i> and are unworthy, we refrain from prostrating ourselves, or from bowing down.<\/p>\n In practice, it is the custom of all Ashkenazim<\/i> and some Sephardim<\/i> to bend down and cover their faces on the shirtsleeve of their arm. By doing so, one maintains a certain aspect of Nefillat Apayim<\/i>, for that is a type of bow, yet it is not a complete bow, and there is no fear of prostration on a stone floor (Bei\u2019ur Halachah<\/i> 131:1). Perhaps so as not to encounter the danger mentioned in the Zohar<\/i>, Ashkenazim<\/i> were accustomed not to recite the psalm \u201cEilecha Hashem Nafshi Essa<\/i>\u201d (\u201cI lift my soul up to You\u201d) (Psalm 25), which is explained in the Zohar<\/i> to mean the surrender of one\u2019s soul, and instead they recite Psalm 6 (Magen Avraham <\/i>131:5). Those who follow the Ben Ish Chai<\/i> are careful not to fall on their faces at all, and that is how many people from Eidot HaMizrach<\/i> practice.[3]<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n
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