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Violating Torah to Save Your Life: Difference between revisions

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# A woman who is threatened to violate illicit relations does not have to give up her life since she is passive.<ref>Tosfot Ketubot 3b, Tosfot Pesachim 25b s.v. af, Rama Y.D. 157:1</ref>
# A woman who is threatened to violate illicit relations does not have to give up her life since she is passive.<ref>Tosfot Ketubot 3b, Tosfot Pesachim 25b s.v. af, Rama Y.D. 157:1</ref>
===What's included in ''avizrayhu''?===
===What's included in ''avizrayhu''?===
# Lifnei Iver is not included in ''avizrayhu'' since it is a general prohibition.<ref>Ran Pesachim 6a s.v. chutz, Ritva  Avoda Zara 6b s.v. vaf, and Maharam Chalavah 25b s.v. af.</ref>
# [[Lifnei Iver]] is not included in ''avizrayhu'' since it is a general prohibition.<ref>Ran Pesachim 6a s.v. chutz, Ritva  Avoda Zara 6b s.v. vaf, Maharam Chalavah 25b s.v. af, Rama YD 157:1, Taz 157:5, Shach 157:11</ref>
#Yichud is not considered something one needs to give up one's life.<ref>Torat Yichud 10:5. See, however, Tuv Taam Vdaat 192 and Shem Aryeh who consider it ''avizrahu''.</ref>
#Yichud is not considered something one needs to give up one's life.<ref>Torat Yichud 10:5. See, however, Tuv Taam Vdaat 192 and Shem Aryeh who consider it ''avizrahu''.</ref>
# Instituting practices to imitate non-Jewish religious practices is a separate biblical prohibition (Devarim 12:30) but not considered ''avizrayhu'' of [[avoda zara]].<ref>Maharam Shik 165</ref>
# Instituting practices to imitate non-Jewish religious practices is a separate biblical prohibition (Devarim 12:30) but not considered ''avizrayhu'' of [[avoda zara]].<ref>Maharam Shik 165</ref>
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