User Contributed Dictionary
Etymology
From Hebrew שבת (shabbat), meaning to stop or rest.Proper noun
- The Jewish Sabbath, from
sundown Friday to sundown Saturday, commemorating God's rest on the
seventh day in the book of Genesis.
- I leave early on Fridays, as I don't work on Shabbat.
- The ceremonial Shabbat meal, in which candles are lit and bread
and wine consumed.
- Please join us for Shabbat tonight.
Related terms
Extensive Definition
Shabbat or Shabbos (Hebrew:
שבת, shabbāt, shabbes, "rest/inactivity"), is the weekly Sabbath or day of rest
in Judaism,
symbolizing the seventh day in Genesis, after the
six days of creation. Though it is commonly said to be the Saturday of each
week, it is observed from sundown on Friday until the
appearance of three stars in the sky on Saturday night. Shabbat is
ushered in by lighting candles. Candle-lighting time
changes from week to week and from place to place, depending on the
time of the sunset at the location (see Hebrew
calendar).
Etymology
The Hebrew word Shabbat comes from the Hebrew verb shavat, which literally means "to cease." Although Shabbat (or its anglicized version, "Sabbath") is almost universally translated as "rest" or a "period of rest," a more literal translation would be "ceasing", with the implication of "ceasing from work." Thus, Shabbat is the day of ceasing from work; while resting is implied, it is not a necessary denotation of the word itself. For example, the Hebrew word for "strike" (as in work stoppage) is shevita, which comes from the same Hebrew root as Shabbat, and has the same implication, namely that striking workers actively abstain from work, rather than passively.Some people ask why
God needed to "rest" on the seventh day of
Creation according to Genesis. If the meaning of the word is
understood as "ceasing from labor" rather than "rested," this is
more consistent with the biblical view of an omnipotent
God.
Shabbat is the source for the English
term Sabbath, and
for the word denoting this day of the week in many languages.
The word "sabbatical" - referring to
the sabbatical year in the Bible, or a year that one takes off from
work, mainly in the academic world, also comes from this
root.
Biblical source
The commandment to observe the Sabbath is mentioned many times in the Tanakh, the Hebrew Bible, most notably as the fourth of the Ten Commandments (Bible verse |Exodus|20:8-10|HE and Bible verse |Deuteronomy|5:12-14|HE).- Remember the sabbath day, and keep it holy. For six days you shall labour and do all your work. But the seventh day is a sabbath to the Lord your God; you shall not do any work... For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in them, but rested the seventh day; therefore the Lord blessed the sabbath day and consecrated it.
It should be noted, however, that this is not the
first appearance of the commandment in the Tanakh. In Bible verse
|Exodus|16:26|HE, Moses commands the Israelites to leave off the
gathering of manna on the seventh day, the Sabbath:
- Six days ye shall gather it; but on the seventh day, which is the sabbath, in it there shall be none.
Other instances are Bible verse
|Exodus|31:12-17|HE and Bible verse |Exodus|35:2-3|HE, Bible verse
|Leviticus|19:3|HE Bible verse |Leviticus|19:30|HE and Bible verse
|Leviticus|23:3|HE and Bible verse |Numbers|28:9-10|HE (the
sacrifices).
It is referred to directly by the prophets Bible
verse |Isaiah|56:4,6|HE, Bible verse |Ezekiel|20:13|HE Bible verse
|Ezekiel|22:8|HE Bible verse |Ezekiel|23:38|HE and Bible verse
|Nehemiah|9:14|HE.
Status as a holy day
The Tanakh and siddurim describe Shabbat as having three purposes:- A commemoration of the Israelites' redemption from slavery in ancient Egypt;
- A commemoration of God's creations of the universe; on the seventh day God rested from (or ceased) his work;
- A taste of the world in Messianic times.
Judaism accords Shabbat the status of a joyous
holy day. In many ways, Jewish law gives Shabbat the status of
being the most important holy day in the Jewish calendar:
- It is the first holy day mentioned in the Bible, and God was the first to observe it with the cessation of Creation (Genesis 2:1-3).
- Jewish liturgy treats the Sabbath as a "bride" and "queen."
- The Sefer Torah is read during the Torah reading which is part of the Saturday morning services, with a longer reading than during the week. The Torah is read over a yearly cycle of 54 parshiot, one for each Shabbat (sometimes they are doubled). On Shabbat the reading is divided into seven sections, more than on any other holy day, including Yom Kippur. Then, the Haftarah reading from the Hebrew prophets is read.
- A tradition states that the Jewish Messiah will come if every Jew properly observes two consecutive Sabbaths (Talmud, tractate Shabbat 118).
- The punishment in ancient times for desecrating Shabbat (stoning) is the most severe punishment in Jewish law.
Shabbat rituals
Shabbat is a day of celebration as well as one of prayer. It is customary to eat three festive meals on Shabbat. These include dinner on Friday night, lunch on Saturday and another meal before the conclusion of Shabbat later in the afternoon.Many Jews attend synagogue services on Shabbat
even if they do not do so during the week. Services are held on
Friday night and Saturday morning.
With the exception of Yom Kippur,
which is referred to in the Torah as the "Sabbath of the Sabbaths,"
days of public fasting are postponed or advanced if they coincide
with Shabbat. Mourners sitting shivah (week of mourning
subsequent to the death of a spouse or first-degree relative)
outwardly conduct themselves normally for the duration of the day
and are forbidden to express public signs of mourning.
According to Rabbinic
literature, God via the Torah commands Jews to observe (refrain
from forbidden activity) and remember (with words, thoughts, and
actions) the Shabbat, and these two actions are symbolized by
lighting candles late Friday afternoon (in most communities,
eighteen minutes before sunset is customary) by Jewish women,
usually the mother/wife, though men who live alone are required to
do so themselves. It is customary to light two candles, although
some families light more, sometimes in accordance with the number
of children.
Although most Shabbat laws are restrictive (see
below), the fourth of the Ten
Commandments in Exodus is taken by
the Talmud
to allude to the positive commandments of the Shabbat. These
include:
- Recitation of kiddush, or "sanctification," over a cup of wine at the beginning of Shabbat before the first meal and after the conclusion of morning prayers (see list of Jewish prayers and blessings)
- Eating three festive meals (shalosh seudot). Meals begin with a blessing over two loaves of bread (lechem mishneh), usually a braided challah. It is customary to serve meat or fish, and sometimes both, for Friday night dinner and Shabbat lunch. The third meal, eaten late Saturday afternoon, is called Seudah Shlishit (literally, "third meal"). This is generally a light meal and may be parve or dairy.
- Recitation of Havdalah, or "separation," at the conclusion on Saturday night (over a cup of wine, and with the use of fragrant spices and a candle)
- Enjoying Shabbat (Oneg Shabbat). Engaging in pleasurable activities such as eating, singing, spending time with the family and marital relations.
- Honouring Shabbat (Kavod Shabbat) Preparing for the upcoming Shabbat by bathing, having a haircut, and cleaning and beautifying the home (with flowers, for example), or on Shabbat itself, wearing festive clothing and refraining from unpleasant conversation.
It is customary to avoid talk about money or
business matters on Shabbat.
Prohibited activities
The 39 categories
Jewish law (halakha) prohibits doing any form of melachah (מְלָאכָה - commonly translated as "work", plural "melachot") on Shabbat, with some exceptions. Melachah does not correspond to the English definition of the term "work".Different denominations view the prohibition on
work in different ways. Observant Orthodox
and Conservative
Jews do not perform the 39 categories of activity (39 melachot)
listed in Mishnah Tractate
Shabbat 7:2. These categories are exegetically derived - based on
juxtaposition of corresponding Biblical passages - from the kinds
of work that were necessary for the construction of the Tabernacle.
They are not directly listed in the Torah; elsewhere, the Mishnah
observes that "the laws of the Sabbath [...] are like mountains
hanging by a hair, for they are little Scripture but many laws"
(Hagigah 1:8). Many religious
scholars have pointed out that these labors have in common
activity that is "creative," or that exercises control or dominion
over one's environment.
The 39 categories of melachah are sowing,
ploughing, reaping, binding sheaves, threshing, winnowing,
selecting, grinding, sifting, kneading, baking, shearing wool,
washing wool, beating wool, dyeing wool, spinning, weaving, making
two loops, weaving two threads, separating two threads, tying,
untying, sewing stitches, tearing, trapping, slaughtering, flaying,
tanning, scraping hide, marking hides, cutting hide to shape,
writing two or more letters, erasing two or more letters, building,
demolishing, extinguishing a fire, kindling a fire, putting the
finishing touch on an object and transporting an object between the
private domain and the public domain, or for a distance of 4
cubits within the public
domain.
Each melachah has derived prohibitions of various
kinds. There are, therefore, many more forbidden activities on the
Shabbat; all are traced back to one of the 39 above principal
melachot.
Given the above, the 39 melachot are not so much
activities as "categories of activity." For example, while
"winnowing" usually refers exclusively to the separation of
chaff from grain, and "selecting" refers
exclusively to the separation of debris from grain, they refer in
the Talmudic sense to any separation of intermixed materials which
renders edible that which was inedible. Thus, filtering undrinkable
water to make it drinkable
falls under this category, as does picking small bones from
fish. (Gefilte fish
is one solution to this problem.)
Use of electricity
Orthodox and some Conservative authorities rule that it is prohibited to turn electric devices on or off as falling under one of the "39 categories of work (melachot)". However, the authorities are not in agreement about exactly which category (or categories) this would fall under. One view is that tiny sparks are created in a switch when the circuit is closed, and this would constitute "lighting a fire" (category 37). If the appliance is one whose purpose is for light or heat (such as an incandescent lightbulb or electric oven) then the lighting or heating elements may be considered as a type of fire; if so, then turning them on constitutes both "lighting a fire" (category 37) and "cooking" (a form of baking, category 11), and turning them off would be "extinguishing a fire" (category 36).Another view is that a device which is plugged
into an electrical outlet of a wall becomes part of the building,
but is nonfunctional while the switch is off; turning it on would
then constitute "building" and turning it off would be
"demolishing" (categories 35 and 34). Some schools of thought
consider the use of electricity to be forbidden only by rabbinic
injunction, rather than because it violates of one of the
original categories.
A common solution to the problem of electricity
involves pre-set timers (Shabbat
clocks) for electric appliances, to turn them on and off
automatically, with no human intervention on Shabbat itself. Some
Conservative authorities reject altogether the arguments for
prohibiting the use of electricity.
Automobiles
Orthodox and many Conservative authorities completely prohibit the use of automobiles on Shabbat as a violation of multiple categories include "igniting a fire" (category 37), "extinguishing a fire" (category 36) and "transferring between domains" (category 39). However, the Conservative movement's Committee on Jewish Law and Standards permits driving to a synagogue on Shabbat, as an emergency measure, on grounds that if Jews lost contact with synagogue life they would become lost to the Jewish people.A halachically-authorized Shabbat
module added to an Amigo power operated
vehicle may be used on the observance of Shabbat for those with
walking limitations. Manufactured by Zomet Institute in Israel,
each Shabbat module application is individually inspected and
certified by a Zomet representative. Intended only for individuals
whose limited mobility is dependent on a POV/scooter or automobile
consistently throughout the week.
Shomer Shabbat
The term shomer shabbat is used for a person (or organization) who adheres to Shabbat laws consistently. The shomer shabbat is an archetype mentioned in Jewish songs (e.g., Baruch El Elyon) and the intended audience for various treatises on Jewish law and practice for the Sabbath day (e.g., Shmirat Shabbat ke-Hilkhata).Extenuating circumstances
In the event that a human life is in danger (pikuach nefesh), a Jew is not only allowed, but required, to violate any Shabbat law that stands in the way of saving that person. (In fact, any law in Judaism, excluding murder, idolatry, and forbidden sexual acts, must be broken if doing so will help save the life of one who is in grave danger.) The concept of life being in danger is interpreted broadly: for example, it is mandated that one violate Shabbat to bring a woman in active labor to a hospital. Lesser, rabbinic restrictions are often violated under much less urgent circumstances (a patient who is ill but not critically so).Various other legal principles closely delineate
which activities constitute desecration of the Shabbat. Examples of
these include the principle of shinui ("change" or "deviation") - a
severe violation becomes a non-severe one if the prohibited act was
performed in a way that would be considered abnormal on a weekday.
Examples include writing with one's non-dominant hand (according to
many rabbinic authorities). This legal principle operates bedi'avad
(ex
post facto) and does not cause a forbidden activity to be
permitted barring extenuating circumstances.
Technology in the service of Shabbat
When there is an urgent human or medical need which is not life-threatening, it is possible to perform seemingly "forbidden" acts by modifying the relevant technology to such an extent that no law is actually violated. An example is the "Sabbath elevator". In this mode, an elevator will stop automatically at every floor, allowing people to step on and off without anyone having to press any buttons, which would normally be needed to work. (Regenerative braking is also disabled if it is normally used, shunting energy collected from downward travel, and thus the gravitational potential energy of passengers, into a resistor network.) This prevents "violation" of the Sabbath prohibition against doing "useful work." Many rabbinical authorities consider the use of such elevators by those who are otherwise capable as a "violation" of the Sabbath, with such workarounds being for the benefit of the frail and handicapped and not being in the spirit of the day.Many observant Jews avoid the prohibition of
"carrying" in the absence of an eruv by making their keys into a
tie bar,
or part of a belt
buckle or brooch. The key
thereby becomes a legitimate article of clothing or jewelry, which
may be worn, rather than carried.
In recent years, the Shabbat lamp
has been developed to allow a light in a room to be turned on/off
at will while the electricity remains on. A special mechanism
blocks out the light when the off position is desired without
violating Shabbat.
Reform and Reconstructionist views
Adherents of Reform Judaism and Reconstructionist Judaism, generally speaking, believe that it is up to the individual Jew to determine whether to follow those prohibitions on Shabbat or not. For example, some Jews might find writing or other activities (such as cooking) for leisure and enjoyment purposes to be an enjoyable activity that enhances Shabbat and its holiness, and therefore encourage such practices. Many Reform Jews believe that what constitutes "work" is different for each person; thus only what the person considers "work" is forbidden. http://www.shamash.org/lists/scj-faq/HTML/faq/18-04-17.htmlOn the more rabbinically traditional side of
Reform and Reconstructionism, it is believed that these halakhot in
general may be valid, but it is up to each individual to decide how
and when to apply said laws. Thus one can find a small fraction of
Jews in the Progressive Jewish community who accept these laws in
much the same way that Orthodox Jews do.
Permitted activities
The following activities are encouraged on Shabbat among all Jewish denominations:- Spending Shabbat together with others;
- Synagogue attendance for prayers;
- Visiting family and friends (within walking distance);
- Hosting guests (hachnasat orchim, "hospitality");
- Singing zemirot, special songs for the Shabbat meal (commonly sung during or after a meal).
- Reading, studying and discussing Torah and commentary, Mishnah and Talmud, learning some Halakha and Midrash.
- Sexual relations between husband and wife, particularly on Friday night. (The Shulkhan Arukh describes this as a "double mitzvah," as it combines procreation with enjoyment of Shabbat, both of which are considered to be mandated by the Torah.)
Special Sabbaths
The Special
Sabbaths are associated with important Jewish
holidays that they precede: For example, Shabbat Hagadol, which
is the Shabbat before Passover, Shabbat Zachor is the Shabbat
before Purim, and Shabbat Teshuva is the Shabbat before Yom
Kippur.
Adaptation by other religions
The principle of a weekly day of prayer and rest, derived from Shabbat, was eventually adopted and instituted by other religions as well. Christianity moved observance of the Sabbath from Saturday to Sunday in the process of its theological and historical split from Judaism. The Seventh-day Adventist Church and the True Jesus Church observe the Sabbath from Friday sunset to Saturday sunset as mentioned in Bible, as do "Seventh-Day" factions of other Christian denominations, such as Seventh Day Baptists and Churches of God. None of these religions currently keep Shabbat in the Jewish way. .See also
References
Further reading
- The Modern Jewish Mom's Guide to Shabbat" Meredith Jacobs,HarperCollins Publishers
- The Sabbath Abraham Joshua Heschel
- The Sabbath: A Guide to Its Understandings and Observance Dayan Isadore Grunfeld, Philipp Feldheim Inc.
- A Guide to Jewish Religious Practice Isaac Klein, Ktav, 1992
- The Artscroll Siddur Ed. Nosson Scherman, Mesorah Publications
- The Encyclopaedia Judaica, entry on "Shabbat", Keter Publishing House Ltd
- Siddur Sim Shalom for Shabbat and Festivals Ed. Leonard S. Cahan, The Rabbinical Assembly and the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism
- Siddur Sim Shalom Ed. Jules Harlow, The Rabbinical Assembly and the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism
- Sabbath - Day of Eternity by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan - online version.
- The Laws of Shabbat (A 37-part self study course)'' Rabbi Daniel Schloss - here
External links
- Online Shabbat Guide
- FAQ about Shabbat shamash.org
- FAQ about Shabbat askmoses.com
- Candle Lighting Times for Shabbat World Wide
- Molad - Freeware Jewish Calendar with Shabbat candle lighting times for Mobiles.
- Information on Shabbat from the Union of Orthodox Congregations
- a more detailed summary of the laws of Shabbat from Torah.org, based on the Shulchan Aruch
- The Laws of Shabbat (A 37-part self study course) by Rabbi Daniel Schloss
- Honoring Shabbat
- Shabbat Candle Lighting Instructions
- Shabbat Candle Lighting Times
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