DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For The Hatzlacha of
 Roku business of Salvador

Dedicated By
Yehoshua

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 1.44 MB)
Melava Malka

There is a small and utterly indestructible bone in the body called the "luz" bone. It is the bone which sits at the base of the neck. It is from this bone that G-d will reconstruct the entire body when the time arrives for the resurrection of the dead. The "luz" bone is nourished only from the Se’udat Melava Malka, the Saturday night fourth meal.

The Melava Malka has three benefits. First, the meal has the benefit of Kabod, honor. It honors the Shabbat queen by escorting it. Second, it brings" Parnassah", success and bounty to the whole week. Third, it brings" Refua", healing to ones aches and pains. The first letters of these three words" Kabod"" Parnassa"and" Refua" spell" Kaper" which numerically equals 300. This might be why Maran put the Halachot of Melava Malka in Siman 300.

If one went to sleep on Saturday night without eating the Melava Malka and woke up after Hasot should he eat the Melava Malka at this point? Hacham Ben Sion Abba Shaul (Israel 1923-1998) follows the opinion of the kabbalists that once a person falls asleep and wakes up after Hasot he should not eat until after he prays Shaharit. Hacham Ovadia Yosef argues that as long as Alot Hashahar, dawn, did not yet arrive one can still eat even if he did not pray shahrit.

Rav Haim Palachi (Turkey, 1788-1869) writes that one should have 2 loaves of bread at this meal. One doesn’t have to break from these two breads rather it is there to show honor to the meal.

Parents should bless their children and rabbis their students at this meal.

The Ben Ish Hai (Rabbi Yosef Haim, Baghdad 1833-1909) writes that in the Birkat Hamazon one should say "Migdol Yeshu’ot Malko" instead of "Magdil". One should follow the custom to light candles in memory of the rabbis at this meal. The Passuk says "Ve’hene Sulam Mu’sav Arsa Ve’Rosho Ma’gia Ha’shamayma", which literally means "and behold the ladder was on the ground and its top reaching the sky". The Ben Ish Hai writes that the word "Sulam" stands for the words "Seudat Levayat Malka", the meal that escorts the Shabbat. The passuk means that this meal of Melava Malka is occasionally thrown to the ground without people treating it with respect, however its true worth reaches the highest levels in heaven.


 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Making a Zimun When a Third Person Joins After the First Two Finished Eating
Can People Form a Zimun if One Person’s Food is Forbidden for the Others?
When is Birkat Ha’mazon a Torah Obligation?
Can People Sitting at Separate Tables Join Together for a Zimun?
Birkat HaMazon If One Ate a Ke’zayit of Bread Slowly, Over the Course of an Extended Period
Kavana During Birkat Ha’mazon
Must the One Who Leads Birkat Ha’mazon Hold the Cup Throughout the Sheba Berachot?
“She’hakol” and “Boreh Nefashot” if One is Drinking Intermittently in One Location
Using for Kiddush or Birkat Ha’mazon a Cup of Wine From Which One Had Drunk
If the Group or Part of the Group Recited Birkat Ha’mazon Without a Zimun
If Three People Ate Together and One Needs to Leave Early
Should Abridged Texts of Birkat Ha’mazon be Printed in Siddurim?
Making a Zimun When a Third Person Joined After the First Two Finished Eating
The Importance of Using a Cup of Wine for Birkat Ha’mazon; Adding Three Drops of Water to the Cup
If One Ate Half a “Ke’zayit” of Fruit Requiring “Al Ha’etz,” and Half a “Ke’zayit” of Other Fruit
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found