DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 682 KB)
Paying a Doctor for Services Rendered on Shabbat; Renting a Hotel Room for Only Shabbat

If a doctor is called to treat an ill patient on Shabbat, he is allowed after Shabbat to charge for his services. Generally speaking, it is forbidden to accept payment for work done on Shabbat. However, Halacha makes exceptions in this regard for services involving a Misva, such as in the cases of Hazanim and Rabbis who work only on Shabbat. This exception applies to medical services, as well, and thus a doctor may charge for treating a patient on Shabbat. This is the ruling of the Shiyureh Kenesset Ha’gedola and other authorities, as cited by Rabbi Moshe Halevi (Israel, 1961-2001) in his work Menuhat Ahaba (vol. 1, chapter 10; listen to audio recording for precise citation).

Is it permissible to rent a hotel room for only Shabbat?

When a person rents a hotel room for a several-day period which includes Shabbat, then this is clearly permissible because he pays one lump sum for the entire period, and he does not pay separately for Shabbat. This is akin to a person hired to perform a certain job all week, including Shabbat, who may certainly receive the full salary, because his payment for Shabbat is incorporated into the total sum, and he does not receive a separate payment for working on Shabbat. But may a person rent a hotel room only for Shabbat, given that he is paying specifically for services rendered on Shabbat?

The Menuhat Ahaba cites the Sitz Eliezer (Rav Eliezer Waldenberg, Jerusalem, 1915-2006) who rules (in vol. 7, Siman 28) that it is permissible to rent a hotel room for only Shabbat. The money paid to a hotel is for not only the use of the room, but also for the food which is offered to him as part of the arrangement. We may therefore consider the payment for use of the room as incorporated within the overall payment, which includes other services, such that no payment is made specifically for services rendered on Shabbat. (Of course, this assumes that food is indeed offered as part of the rental agreement.)

Summary: A doctor who is called to treat a patient on Shabbat may charge for his services after Shabbat. It is permissible to rent a hotel room for only Shabbat, and it goes without saying that one may rent a hotel room for a several-day period that includes Shabbat.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Rosh Hashana- Is it Proper to Cry During the Rosh Hashanah Prayers?
Talking in Between the Shofar Blasts
Reciting Shehehiyanu Over a Grafted Fruit on Rosh Hashanah
Exemptions in a Case of a Deferred Fast Day
Rosh Hashana- Blowing the Shebarim and Shebarim-Teru’a Sounds in a Single Breath
Rosh Hashana- A Berit Mila Held on Rosh Hashanah
What Are The Required Qualifications To Be Appointed As Hazan For The High Holiday Services
Why Do We Always Make the Beracha of Shehechiynau After The Beracha of The Mitzvah, For Example As Done On The Shofar On Rosh Hashana
Rosh Hashana- Some Laws Regarding Musaf Including The Topic of Ladies Praying Musaf Or Not
Rosh Hashana- Is It Permissible To Blow The Shofar On Rosh Hashana After Shul, After The Required Tikeeot Are Sounded
Rosh Hashana- The Correct Time for Tashlich & Tashlich on Shabbat
Rosh Hashana- Understanding The Custom of Tashlich
Eating Bread in the Sukka on the First Night of Sukkot; Eating on Erev Sukkot; Rainfall on the First Night of Sukkot
Succot- How Does One Choose a Kosher Etrog?
How does one Choose Hadasim?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found