May one visit other houses before conducting his own Seder, or must one do his own Seder first?
Synopsis
One may choose to visit other houses first without tasting anything, then return home to conduct his own Seder; alternatively, one may conduct his own Seder first and then visit others.
More in The Haggadah and Its Recitation
May one recite blessings and lead a Seder in multiple houses on the same night?
3 opinions
May a person who has already eaten Afikoman recite Birkat Hamazon on behalf of others without eating with them?
1 opinions
May a person recite blessings on behalf of others in other houses if those are blessing of mitzvah (like kiddush and eating matzah) rather than enjoyment (like Birkat Hamazon)?
2 opinions
If one learns how to recite Birkat Hamazon by repeating word-by-word after the leader, is this considered the leader reciting it or the group reciting it themselves?
1 opinions
May one eat in multiple houses on the same Seder night if one has not yet eaten Afikoman in any of them?
2 opinions
Related from other topics
Must one organize/prepare festival prayers (Mussaf and other infrequent prayers) before praying them, or is preparation unnecessary?
Answering Amen During Prayer
At Mussaf and Mincha (where Shema does not precede the Amidah), may one recite other verses before the Amidah?
Shaliach Tzibbur — Prayer Leader
When the Torah is stored in a separate building and the synagogue has two doorways, may congregants exit one doorway before the Torah exits the other?
Reading from Multiple Torah Scrolls
If one poured water on one hand and rubbed it against the other before washing the second hand, is the washing valid?
Washing Vessels and Water Sources
Must the person serving food (feeding others) wash their hands before touching the food?
Who Must Wash
After drinking wine from a cup, how should the cup be cleaned before passing to another or before Birkat Hamazon?
Table Conduct
Discussion
Discussion coming soon.
The Daily Law
One question. Every opinion. Every morning.
A new halakhic question and the full spectrum of rabbinic thought, delivered daily.