Halachah 1 — Blessings of Praise and Shehecheyanu
The Sages instituted many blessings and expressions of praise that do not have an opening or closing formula, such as blessings within prayer.
Among these:
- One who builds a new house or acquires new belongings recites Shehecheyanu, whether or not he owns similar items already.
Halachah 2 — Seeing a Friend or Seasonal Fruit
When one sees a friend after:
- 30 days → recite Shehecheyanu.
- 12 months → recite “Who revives the dead.”
Similarly, upon seeing seasonal fruit for the first time in its season, one recites Shehecheyanu.
Halachah 3 — Blessings Over Good and Bad Tidings
For good news → recite Hatov vehametiv.
For bad news → recite Dayan ha’emet.
One is obligated to bless God for misfortune with acceptance and love, just as one blesses for good, fulfilling the command to love God in all circumstances.
Halachah 4 — Present Reality Determines the Blessing
Blessings are based on the present experience, not future possibilities:
- Apparent good that may later bring harm → Hatov vehametiv.
- Apparent harm that may later bring benefit → Dayan ha’emet.
Halachah 5 — Blessings Over Rain
For abundant rain:
- Sole landowner → Shehecheyanu.
- Joint owners → Hatov vehametiv.
- One without land → a special praise‑filled thanksgiving prayer.
Halachah 6 — When the Rain Blessing Is Recited
The blessing for rain is recited when rainfall is heavy enough that bubbles form and merge in standing water.
Halachah 7 — Inheritance and Death
If one hears that his father died and he inherits:
- With brothers → Dayan ha’emet, then Hatov vehametiv.
- Alone → Shehecheyanu.
Principle:
Benefit shared with others → Hatov vehametiv;
Benefit to oneself alone → Shehecheyanu.
Halachah 8 — Birkat HaGomel
Four people must give thanks:
- One who recovered from illness,
- One released from prison,
- One who completed a sea journey,
- One who completed a land journey.
They recite Birkat HaGomel in the presence of:
- Ten people, including two Torah scholars.
Halachah 9 — Miracles and Places
Seeing places where national miracles occurred →
“…Who performed miracles for our ancestors in this place.”
Personal miracles → recited by the individual, his son, and grandson.
Seeing places of:
- idolatry → blessing acknowledging divine patience,
- uprooted idolatry → blessing praising its removal (with added prayer).
Halachah 10 — Jewish Homes and Graves
- Seeing Jewish settlements → “Who establishes the border of the widow.”
- Seeing destroyed Jewish homes → Dayan ha’emet.
- Seeing Jewish graves → a full blessing acknowledging divine justice and resurrection.
Halachah 11 — Large Gatherings, Scholars, and Kings
Seeing:
- 600,000 Jews in Eretz Yisrael → “The Wise Who knows secrets.”
- Great Jewish sages → “…Who gave wisdom to those who fear Him.”
- Non‑Jewish sages → “…Who gave wisdom to flesh and blood.”
- Jewish king → “…Who gave glory and strength to those who fear Him.”
- Non‑Jewish king → “…Who gave glory to flesh and blood.”
Halachah 12 — Unusual or Altered Creatures
Seeing people or animals with unusual appearance →
“Who altered His creations.”
Seeing afflicted individuals:
- if acquired later → Dayan ha’emet,
- if congenital → “Who altered His creations.”
Halachah 13 — Beauty in Creation
Seeing beautiful creations or trees →
“Whose world is like this.”
In Nisan, seeing blossoming trees →
a special blessing thanking God for creating beauty to give pleasure to mankind.
Halachah 14 — Awe‑Inspiring Phenomena
Upon witnessing:
- fierce winds,
- lightning,
- thunder,
- meteors,
- comets,
one recites:
- “Whose power and might fill the world,”
or - “Who performs the work of creation.”
Halachah 15 — Natural Landscapes
Seeing mountains, rivers, deserts, or seas after 30 days →
“Who performs the work of creation.”
Seeing the ocean after 30 days →
“Who created the ocean.”
Halachah 16–17 — Rainbow and New Moon
Rainbow → “Who remembers the covenant…”
New moon → a lengthy blessing praising divine order and renewal.
It must be recited standing, ideally until the 16th of the month.
Halachah 18 — Solar and Astronomical Cycles
At the 28‑year solar cycle (Birkat HaChamah), the blessing Oseh ma’aseh bereishit is recited.
The same blessing is recited for certain rare astronomical alignments.
Halachah 19 — Gentile Settlements
Seeing gentile settlements:
- inhabited → verse of divine judgment,
- destroyed → verse of retribution.
Gentile graves → verse of national disgrace.
Halachah 20–25 — Daily Life Prayers
Short prayers are recited for:
- entering and leaving a bathhouse,
- medical procedures (bloodletting),
- measuring grain,
- entering and leaving a city,
- entering and exiting a house of study.
These requests seek future mercy, while thanks are offered for past deliverance.
Halachah 26 — The Guiding Principle
A person should:
- pray for the future,
- thank God for the past,
- and praise Him constantly and abundantly.
One who does so is worthy of praise.
Core Principle of the Chapter
This chapter teaches that every experience in life—joy or sorrow, wonder or danger, routine or extraordinary—can and must be transformed into conscious recognition, gratitude, humility, and trust in God, through precisely defined blessings and prayers.