DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 822 KB)
The Obligations and Exemptions from Eating At A Seuda of A Brit Milah

The Shulchan Aruch (Yoreh De'a 265:12) records the custom to conduct a special meal on the day of a circumcision (listen to audio for precise citation).  The Rama (Rabbi Moshe Isserles, Cracow, Poland, 1530-1572), in his glosses to the Shulchan Aruch, adds that this meal has the status of a "Se'udat Mitzva" – a meal involving a Mitzva.  And one who does not participate in this meal, the Rama adds (based on the Gemara in Masechet Pesachim), is considered "excommunicated by the heavens."

 

The Shevet Ha'levi in Helek 8, SIman 217, (work of responsa by Rabbi Shemuel Wosner, a contemporary halachic authority in Bnei-Brak,) addresses the question of whether a Mohel, who, of course, attends many Beritot, must stay for the meal every time he performs a circumcision.  Very often a Mohel must rush to perform another Brit or to examine a baby for a Brit, and it is difficult for him to stay for the meal.  Is he, too, required to participate in the meal after every circumcision he performs?

 

The Shevet Ha'levi rules that somebody who must tend to another Mitzva is undoubtedly exempt from participating in this Se'udat Mitzva, and therefore a Mohel who has other circumcisions to tend to need not stay for the meal.  Furthermore, the Shevet Ha'levi writes that a person who has a regular Shiur (Torah class) or private study session at that time is likewise exempt from participating in the meal following a Brit.  This is also the ruling of Chacham Ovadia Yosef, in his work Yabia Omer, Helek 4, Siman 19.  Chacham Ovadia adds that if somebody cannot stay after a Brit for the meal because he must be somewhere else, he should take some food from the meal and eat it when he arrives.

 

It should also be mentioned that according to some Rabbis, the Halacha mentioned by the Rama, that one faces "excommunication" if he declines an invitation to participate in the meal after a Brit, does not apply nowadays.  The Aruch Ha'shulchan, ibid Seif 37,  (work of Halacha by Rabbi Yechiel Michel Epstein of Navarduk, Lithuania, 1829-1908), for example, writes that the obligation to take part in a Se'udat Mitzva stems from the opportunity these events present to be in the presence and company of Torah scholars.  Nowadays, however, many "improperly-behaved" people participate in these affairs, and therefore the "excommunication" does not obtain.  Others claim that once a Minyan is already present at the Se'udat Mitzva, one does not bear an obligation to participate.  Still others argued that invitations today are given purely for the purpose of etiquette, and do not actually impose an obligation upon a person to participate in the Se'udat Mitzva.

 

Therefore, although one should certainly endeavor to participate in the Se'udat Mitzva after a Brit, a person who must tend to a Mitzva or other pressing matters is allowed to leave without taking part in the meal.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
If Milk Was Cooked in a Meat Pot
May One Cook Parve Food in a Meat Pot With the Intention of Eating it With Dairy Foods?
Must One Wait Six Hours Before Eating Dairy After Eating Parve Food Cooked With Meat?
Eating Meat on a Table Containing Dairy Foods
May Meat and Dairy Foods be Stored Alongside One Another in a Refrigerator or Freezer?
Mixing Meat and Milk in the Drain or Trash Bin
Is it Permissible to Use the Same Dishwasher for Meat and Milk, and Pesah?
Halachot of Ovens and Microwave Ovens
If Acquaintances Eat Meat and Dairy at the Same Table
Three Preparations Needed before Eating Meat after Dairy
Meat and Fish Together at the Same Table, in the Same Oven, or on the Same Grill
Eating Meat After Fish
The Prohibition of Eating Meat with Fish
Selling Non-Jewish Wine or Giving it as a Gift; The Status of Wine Which a Non-Jew Touched But Did Not Move
The Status of Grapes at a Fruit/Smoothie Bar
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found