DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Elazar Ben Yechezkel

Dedicated By
NS

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 504 KB)
Eating a Large Meal on Ereb Shabbat

It is forbidden to eat a large meal anytime on Ereb Shabbat, from the morning until the onset of Shabbat.  We refer here to a large feast that one does not ordinarily eat during the week, except on special occasions.  Of course, one may eat normal meals that he ordinarily eats during the week; this prohibition applies to the kind of meal that one does not normally eat.

There are a number of exceptions to this rule.  Hacham Ovadia Yosef rules that it is permissible to conduct a large meal to celebrate a Berit Mila or Pidyon Ha’ben.  This applies even in the case of a Berit Mila held after the infant’s eighth day, or a Pidyon Ha’ben held after the thirtieth day.  Even though these occasions take place later than the optimal time, they warrant a large celebration that overrides the prohibition against eating large meals on Ereb Shabbat.  Hacham Ovadia adds, however, that in such situations, the meal should be held specifically during the morning hours, before midday, to show honor to Shabbat.

A Bar Misva celebration, too, may be held on Friday morning.  The Zohar Hadash emphasizes the importance of holding a celebration to mark the occasion of a Bar Misva, comparing the Bar Misva meal to the meal conducted at a wedding.  If the child’s thirteenth birthday falls on Ereb Shabbat, and the parents wish to make a celebration on that day, they may conduct a large, lavish feast on Friday morning.  It must be emphasized that the meal should preferably be held in the morning, before midday.

Hacham Ovadia writes that if a person completes a Masechet (Talmudic tractate) on Friday, and he wants to host a large Siyum celebration, then he should delay the celebration until after Shabbat.  Although it is certainly worthwhile and important to make a Siyum celebration upon completing a Masechet, one who plans on making a large meal in honor of this occasion should not schedule such an event for Friday – even Friday morning – and should instead delay the celebration until Mosa’eh Shabbat or Sunday.

Summary: It is forbidden to eat anytime on Friday a meal that is larger than the meals he ordinarily eats during the week.  The exceptions to the rule are large meals that celebrate the occasion of a Berit Mila, Pidyon Ha’ben or Bar Misva, which may be held on Friday morning, but preferably not on Friday afternoon.  A large meal to celebrate the completion of a Masechet should not be made on Friday.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Chanukah- The Proper Position When Lighting Chanukah Candles in the Synagogue
Chanukah- The Procedure for Torah Reading When Rosh Chodesh Tevet Falls on Shabbat
Chanukah- Birkat Roeh- When A Person Knows He Will Be Unable To Light The Menorah
Chanukah- Does One Repeat The Berachot At Home If He Already Lit The Menorah With The Berachot In Shul
Chanukah- A Dignified Menorah
Chanukah- When Your Neighbor Does Not Have Enough Money To Buy Oil To Light The Menorah
Chanukah- Is It Permissible To Rekindle or Light The Menorah After Lighting Shabbat Candles on Erev Shabbat
Chanukah- Is Al Ha’nisim Required In Arbit On The First Day Of Chanukah, Or In Musaf Shabbat and Rosh Chodesh
Chanukah- Hallel for Men and Women On Chanukah
Chanukah- The Proper Time for Lighting Chanukah Candles
Chanukah- The Traveler At Time of Menorah Lighting
Chanukah- Menorah Lighting in Shul
Chanukah- Is It Permissible To Allow A Child to Light Chanukah Candles
Chanukah- 2 Halachot: Eating Dairy Products on Chanukah, and The Proper Procedure of Lighting Before and After Shabbat
Chanukah- Is It Permissible To Answer To Other Berachot During Hallel
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found